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John 5:28,29, World English
John 5:28 Don't marvel at this, for the hour comes, in which all that are in the tombs will hear his voice,
John 5:29 and will come forth; those who have done good, to the resurrection of life; and those who have done evil, to the resurrection of judgment.
The just are raised in the resurrection of life, the unjust are raised in the resurrection of judgment.
Jesus died so that all may be released from the condemnation of the death that results in the condition of the Bible hell (sheol, corresponding in the NT to hades). -- Ecclesiastes 9:10; Romans 5:12-19; 1 Corinthians 15:21,22.
Matthew 25:41-46 says nothing about hades/sheol, but this tells of the result of the judgment day, the "last day", when the unbelievers of this age will be judged. (John 12:47,48) As shown in the parable of the sheep and goats, when the Yahweh through Jesus comes to judge the nations, the world that in this age does not recognize him., Satan will have been abyssed, so that he will not be permitted to deceive the nations. (Psalm 96; Psalm 98; Isaiah 2:2-4; Matthew 25:31,32; John 1:10; 12:47,48; Revelation 20:1-4) Then the books will be opened to them (Revelation 20:12); the words of Jesus, so that they will be judged by what is written in those books opened to them, according to their works in that age to come. (John 12:47,48) Those heathen (the unbelieving nations of this age) who are obedient in that coming age will be permitted in the city of God, but those heathen who do not at heart repent will be left outside the city, and will be eventually be destroyed in the lake of fire, just as sheol/hades had been destroyed in the lake of fire. -- Revelation 20:13-15; 21:24-27.
God's justice calls for death as the wages of sin, not an eternity of conscious suffering. (Genesis 2:17; Romans 6:23) The wages of sin is upon us all through the one transgression of Adam; Jesus paid the wages of sin for Adam and all who are dying by means of Adam's transgression. (Romans 5:12-19; 1 Corinthians 15:21,22) Jesus is not now suffering for an eternity to pay the wages of sin. Rather, we read: "Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures." (1 Corinthians 15:3) "While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." (Romans 5:8) "Died" - past tense; Jesus is not suffering consciously for all eternity to pay the wages of sin. Peter wrote: "Christ also suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous." -- 1 Peter 3:18, World English.
When God told Adam of sin’s wages, He did not say, “In the day that you eat from it you will be kept alive forever in eternal suffering,” but He told him the truth: “dying thou dost die [Hebrew transliterated: "muth temuth" (more literally, to die, you will die) i.e., cease to live- or "dying, thou shalt die" - margin of KJV].” — Genesis 2:17, Young’s Literal Translation.
Adam began to die in that very (dying, thou shalt die — see KJV margin) day he ate the forbidden fruit. He has died is no longer conscious anywhere, until he is raised in the last day. However, no one at would be raised in the last day if it had not been for the ransom sacrifice of Jesus. Adam, and all who are dying by means of Adam's transgression, would be dead for eternity. Thus, Jesus, was not raised back to human life, but, as Peter wrote, he "was to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit." - 1 Peter 3:18.
Yes, those in this age who do not accept Jesus so as to be counted as justified remain under the wrath of God; they are judged already through Adam, and the judgment through Adam remains upon them; if they die without Christ, they die in their sins, since their sins have not been removed through faith in the blood of Jesus. This does not mean that they are not "saved" so as to be judged anew in the 'last day'.
If they do not become written in the "book of life" (Revelation 20:12,15) that is opened to them in that age, yes, they will be eternally destroyed in the lake of fire, the "eternal punishment" that Jesus spoke of as recorded in Matthew 25:46; however, as whole, the Revelation says that the nations - the heathen - without Satan's deceptions, and with the waters of life and trees of life offered in that age to come, will obey, will be healed. -- Revelation 21:24,25; 22:1,2.
No where in the Bible do we find any thought that God's justice demands an eternity of conscious suffering as the wages of sin.
>>He has died is no longer conscious anywhere
Adam began to die in that very (dying, thou shalt die — see KJV margin) day he ate the forbidden fruit. He has died is no longer conscious anywhere, until he is raised in the last day. However, no one at would be raised in the last day if it had not been for the ransom sacrifice of Jesus. Adam, and all who are dying by means of Adam's transgression, would be dead for eternity. Thus, Jesus, was not raised back to human life, but, as Peter wrote, he "was to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit." - 1 Peter 3:18.
Yes, those in this age who do not accept Jesus so as to be counted as justified remain under the wrath of God; they are judged already through Adam, and the judgment through Adam remains upon them; if they die without Christ, they die in their sins, since their sins have not been removed through faith in the blood of Jesus. This does not mean that they are not "saved" so as to be judged anew in the 'last day'.
If they do not become written in the "book of life" (Revelation 20:12,15) that is opened to them in that age, yes, they will be eternally destroyed in the lake of fire, the "eternal punishment" that Jesus spoke of as recorded in Matthew 25:46; however, as whole, the Revelation says that the nations - the heathen - without Satan's deceptions, and with the waters of life and trees of life offered in that age to come, will obey, will be healed. -- Revelation 21:24,25; 22:1,2.
No where in the Bible do we find any thought that God's justice demands an eternity of conscious suffering as the wages of sin. EOQ
The teaching you are presenting here is not biblical and very wrong. We move from physical conscious existence to Spiritual conscious existence. We never cease to be conscious. The teaching you are bringing up is a spin from Universalism and is not welcome in this community.
David V.
Volunteer NET Moderator.
The Bible does not teach universalism, that is, the idea that all will live forever. The Bible definitely teaches that wicked will be destroyed.
Whether tried in this age (2 Corinthians 5:10; 1 Peter 1:7; 4:12), or in the age to come when Yawheh comes to judge the earth by means of Jesus and the saints (Psalm 96:13; 98:9; Isaiah 2:2-4; 26:9,10; Daniel 7:22; Matthew 25:31,32; John 5:22; Acts 17:31; 1 Corinthians 6:2; Revelation 20:4,13), after an individual trial, those who prove themselves to be disobedient will pay the penalty: eternal destruction (2 Thessalonians 1:9); they 'bring upon themselves swift destruction' (2 Peter 2:1, 12); their "end is destruction" (Philippians 3:19); they "shall go away into eternal punishment [not eternal suffering or eternal torturing, but death, for 'sin, when it is finished, brings forth death' (James 1:15; 4:12); everlasting death is the everlasting punishment], but the righteous [who only will have everlasting life after the final judgment -- Psalm 37:9-11] into eternal life. — Matthew 25:46.
Nevertheless, if the owners of this site will not tolerate an examination of what God has revealed (and what He has not revealed) by means of His Holy Spirit in the Bible, I will stop posting here, and address the matter on my websites.
In service of Jesus,
Ronald
Ronald, it's enlightening to see which ancient words were translated "destruction" in the passages you cited above, and then to see how those words were used in antiquity in the Scriptures and elsewhere. You'll find that they rarely meant the complete cessation of existence.
Also, there is no indication in the Bible that the death which is called the wages of sin or the punishment for sin refers to a cessation of existence. Rather, it clearly refers to a separation from God and the blessings of God which is what all of the Apostolic Fathers affirmed.
In decades of participating in discussions like this, I have invariably found that those who espouse annihilationism begin with the assumption that humans are not dual physical/spiritual beings, that the "spirit" simply refers to "breath". Frankly, I find that belief incomprehensible in light of such inspired utterances as, "Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit!", and "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit!".
Let us examine it then, no problem. I am so glad you do not subscribe to Universalism. The teaching you are presenting above is believed by them as well . Brother LT and Michael raise good points.
Blessings
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