1. Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

Do You Really Believe The Full Gospel?

Discussion in 'Free-For-All Archives' started by KenH, Feb 19, 2003.

  1. KenH

    KenH Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2002
    Messages:
    43,035
    Likes Received:
    1,641
    Faith:
    Baptist
    I assume you have read Philippians 2:10-11 -

    [10] That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; [11] And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

    According to your eternal torture viewpoint does "every" include those being eternally tortured? If so, are being forced to "cry uncle" and bend their knee and confess?
     
  2. neal4christ

    neal4christ New Member

    Joined:
    Nov 1, 2002
    Messages:
    1,815
    Likes Received:
    0
    I would like Scriptural proof, not other Universalists, please.

    Neal
     
  3. neal4christ

    neal4christ New Member

    Joined:
    Nov 1, 2002
    Messages:
    1,815
    Likes Received:
    0
    Good try, Ken, but you are comparing apples and oranges. Every knee will bow, but not every knee will be in heaven.

    Neal
     
  4. neal4christ

    neal4christ New Member

    Joined:
    Nov 1, 2002
    Messages:
    1,815
    Likes Received:
    0
    1) Yes, but He does not force anyone to come to Him.

    2) Yes, and He has done this. Death no longer is victorious, Christ has overcome it so that we do not have to abide in it. However, not everyone will accept this gift. That does not mean that death has a victory, but Christ does, because He has overcome it.

    Neal
     
  5. KenH

    KenH Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2002
    Messages:
    43,035
    Likes Received:
    1,641
    Faith:
    Baptist
    If people are being tortured, why would they bend their knee - which I assume you believe they do by their own free choice?
     
  6. CatholicConvert

    CatholicConvert New Member

    Joined:
    Jun 15, 2001
    Messages:
    1,958
    Likes Received:
    0
    Wow. I'm sorry I didn't look at this thread earlier!! I thought it was about Charismaniacs, and I don't care to entertain discussion of "spiritual gifts" at this time.

    THIS, however, is a topic which is growing ever near and dear to my heart.

    I see an awful lot of heat being exchanged on the subject. Wonder if we could all step back and ask some questions of ourselves and each other:

    1. What is the ontology of God, at least as we know it revealed in the Holy Scriptures. It is this

    1Jo 4:8 He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love.

    1Jo 4:16 And we have known and believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.


    Here is a truth and a starting point to begin with. God IS love. Not the mushy sentimental "touchy feely" stuff that human beings try to pass off as love, and not the kind of "love" that really is a self-centered desire to have something, but real and true love. St. Paul further gives a description of love in 1 Corin. 13. It is completely "other centered," i.e., it thinks of and desires the BEST for the object of its affections.

    Therefore, I would state that a good starting point would be to understand that God also desires this, even for His enemies:

    Mt 5:44 But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you;

    45 That ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.

    46 For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans the same?

    47 And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? do not even the publicans so?

    48 Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.


    Therefore, since God loves even those who hate Him, He is going to nonetheless give them that which is the very BEST thing in the whole universe --

    He will give them HIMSELF, just as He will give Himself to us. In fact, God is so loving that He will indeed give Himself to every man, woman, and child who has ever lived.

    BUT ----

    Here's the rub....will WE be able to accept Him.

    I have posted before a link to a paper called THE RIVER OF FIRE. This is a very thought provoking paper and one I hope each of you on this thread will take a few minutes to read.

    Here is the part I find most interesting:



    Paradise or hell depends on how we will accept God's love. Will we return love for love, or will we respond to His love with hate? This is the critical difference. And this difference depends entirely on us, on our freedom, on our innermost free choice, on a perfectly free attitude which is not influenced by external conditions or internal factors of our material and psychological nature, because it is not an external act but an interior attitude coming from the bottom of our heart, conditioning not our sins, but the way we think about our sins, as it is clearly seen in the case of the publican and the Pharisee and in the case of the two robbers crucified with Christ. This freedom, this choice, this inner attitude toward our Creator is the innermost core of our eternal personality, it is the most profound of our characteristics, it is what makes us that which we are, it is our eternal face — bright or dark, loving or hating.

    No, my brothers, unhappily for us, paradise or hell does not depend on God. If it depended on God, we would have nothing to fear. We have nothing to fear from Love. But it does not depend on God. It depends entirely upon us, and this is the whole tragedy. God wants us to be in His image, eternally free. He respects us absolutely. This is love. Without respect, we cannot speak of love. We are men because we are free. If we were not free, we would be clever animals, not men. God will never take back this gift of freedom which renders us what we are. This means that we will always be what we want to be, friends or enemies of God, and there is no changing in this our deepest self. In this life, there are profound or superficial changes in our life, in our character, in our beliefs, but all these changes are only the expression in time of our deepest eternal self. This deep eternal self is eternal, with all the meaning of the word. This is why paradise and hell are also eternal. There is no changing in what we really are. Our temporal characteristics and our history in life depend on many superficial things 'which vanish with death, but our real personality is not superficial and does not depend on changing and vanishing things. It is our real self. It remains with us when we sleep in the grave, and will be our real face in the resurrection. It is eternal.

    God is a loving fire, and He is a loving fire for all: good or bad. There is, however, a great difference in the way people receive this loving fire of God. Saint Basil says that "the sword of fire was placed at the gate of paradise to guard the approach to the tree of life; it was terrible and burning toward infidels, but kindly accessible toward the faithful, bringing to them the light of day." 44 The same loving fire brings the day to those who respond to love with love, and burns those who respond to love with hatred.

    Paradise and hell are one and the same River of God, a loving fire which embraces and covers all with the same beneficial will, without any difference or discrimination. The same vivifying water is life eternal for the faithful and death eternal for the infidels; for the first it is their element of life, for the second it is the instrument of their eternal suffocation; paradise for the one is hell for the other. Do not consider this strange. The son who loves his father will feel happy in his father's arms, but if he does not love him, his father's loving embrace will be a torment to him. This also is why when we love the man who hates us, it is likened to pouring lighted coals and hot embers on his head.

    "I say," writes Saint Isaac the Syrian, "that those who are suffering in hell, are suffering in being scourged by love.... It is totally false to think that the sinners in hell are deprived of God's love. Love is a child of the knowledge of truth, and is unquestionably given commonly to all. But love's power acts in two ways: it torments sinners, while at the same time it delights those who have lived in accord with it" (Homily 84).

    God is love. If we really believe this truth, we know that God never hates, never punishes, never takes vengeance. As Abba Ammonas says, "Love never hates anyone, never reproves anyone, never condemns anyone, never grieves anyone, never abhors anyone, neither faithful nor infidel nor stranger nor sinner nor fornicator, nor anyone impure, but instead it is precisely sinners, and weak and negligent souls that it loves more, and feels pain for them and grieves and laments, and it feels sympathy for the wicked and sinners, more than for the good, imitating Christ Who called sinners, and ate and drank with them. For this reason, showing what real love is, He taught saying, 'Become good and merciful like your Father in Heaven,' and as He rains on bad and good and makes the sun to rise on just and unjust alike, so also is the one who has real love, and has compassion, and prays for all." 45

    XVIII
    Now if anyone is perplexed and does not understand how it is possible for God's love to render anyone pitifully wretched and miserable and even burning as it were in flames, let him consider the elder brother of the prodigal son. Was he not in his father's estate? Did not everything in it belong to him? Did he not have his father's love? Did his father not come himself to entreat and beseech him to come and take part in the joyous banquet? What rendered him miserable and burned him with inner bitterness and hate? Who refused him anything? Why was he not joyous at his brother's return? Why did he not have love either toward his father or toward his brother? Was it not because of his wicked, inner disposition? Did he not remain in hell because of that? And what was this hell? Was it any separate place? Were there any instruments of torture? Did he not continue to live in his father's house? What separated him from all the joyous people in the house if not his own hate and his own bitterness? Did his father, or even his brother, stop loving him? Was it not precisely this very love which hardened his heart more and more? Was it not the joy that made him sad? Was not hatred burning in his heart, hatred for his father and his brother, hatred for the love of his father toward his brother and for the love of his brother toward his father? This is hell: the negation of love; the return of hate for love; bitterness at seeing innocent joy; to be surrounded by love and to have hate in one's heart. This is the eternal condition of all the damned. They are all dearly loved. They are all invited to the joyous banquet. They are all living in God's Kingdom, in the New Earth and the New Heavens. No one expels them. Even if they wanted to go away they could not flee from God's New Creation, nor hide from God's tenderly loving omnipresence. Their only alternative would be, perhaps, to go away from their brothers and search for a bitter isolation from them, but they could never depart from God and His love. And what is more terrible is that in this eternal life, in this New Creation, God is everything to His creatures. As Saint Gregory of Nyssa says, "In the present life the things we have relations with are numerous, for instance: time, air, locality, food and drink, clothing, sunlight, lamplight, and other necessities of life, none of which, many though they be, are God; that blessed state which we hope for is in need of none of these things, but the Divine Being will become all, and in the stead of all to us, distributing Himself proportionately to every need of that existence. It is plain, too, from the Holy Scriptures that God becomes to those who deserve it, locality and home and clothing and food and drink and light and riches and kingdom, and everything that can be thought of and named that goes to make our life happy" (On the Soul and the Resurrection). 46

    In the new eternal life, God will be everything to His creatures, not only to the good but also to the wicked, not only to those who love Him, but likewise to those who hate Him. But how will those who hate Him endure to have everything from the hands of Him Whom they detest? Oh, what an eternal torment is this, what an eternal fire, what a gnashing of teeth!

    Depart from Me, ye cursed, into the everlasting inner fire of hatred," 47 saith the Lord, because I was thirsty for your love and you did not give it to Me, I was hungry for your blessedness and you did not offer it to Me, I was imprisoned in My human nature and you did not come to visit Me in My church; you are free to go where your wicked desire wishes, away from Me, in the torturing hatred of your hearts which is foreign to My loving heart which knows no hatred for anyone. Depart freely from love to the everlasting torture of hate, unknown and foreign to Me and to those who are with Me, but prepared by freedom for the devil, from the days I created My free, rational creatures. But wherever you go in the darkness of your hating hearts, My love will follow you like a river of fire, because no matter what your heart has chosen, you are and you will eternally continue to be, My children.


    You see, what we become here in relationship to Jesus Christ is what we will be forever. If we hate Christ here and in this life, we shall be unable the change ourselve in eternity, and that love which the Father gives will torment us, for we do not wish nor desire us. Souls filled with lusts of every kind will still desire those fleshly passions, but will burn with the torment of having those lusts INFULFILLABLE forever.

    We can hope that perhaps there is still the ability for change in the next world, but it seems that Scripture denies this:

    Heb 9:27 And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment

    Why warn men of this if they can repent after death? Certainly St. Paul spent a great deal of time on this subject, and I think there is a reason. The Judgment is nothing less than the PURE AND TRUE LIGHT OF GOD revealing us as we really are. All pretense is stripped away, and in neverending eternity, our state is sealed. If we have hated God and His Christ, we continue in that eternal mode, tormented to be in the very presence of the One we have hated forever. His love will be a river of fire, but as such, will not be warm and loving, but harsh and hateful to us, not because there is any hate in God, but because we hate Him.

    This, I think, answers BOTH ARGUMENTS found on this site: God is NOT the author of an eternal torment that never ends, making Him an evil person worse than any tyrannt ever known by man could hope to be, but it does not deny the Scriptures either which warn the wicked God haters of an eternal STATE OF TORMENT, which comes about by their own free will rejection of God and His kingdom.

    I do hope you will read the whole article. It is very well written, but most of all, it has the honor of God's character at stake. It is not He, but WE, who send ourselves to our final estate.

    Let us therefore live lives of continued repentance before Him, changing ourselves, by HIS GRACE AND HELP UPON OUR WEAK EFFORTS, into the likeness of Christ Jesus, so that upon seeing Him, our hearts will be filled with joy and not terror and revulsion.

    Cordially in Christ, our only hope,

    Brother Ed
     
  7. neal4christ

    neal4christ New Member

    Joined:
    Nov 1, 2002
    Messages:
    1,815
    Likes Received:
    0
    You really shouldn't assume. Honestly, whether free will or not, it won't matter, because every knee will bow. I doubt it will be free will because there won't be much choice in it, knees will bow just because of who God is.

    Neal
     
  8. GH

    GH New Member

    Joined:
    Jul 6, 2002
    Messages:
    478
    Likes Received:
    0
    Hi Singer,

    I've had several epiphanies beginning in childhood. I can remember being a small child and pondering what the nun's told me: God is, was and always will be. At the age of 10 I went to a Baptist church in Dallas, TX (I'm from NY but my parents separated and my mom, brother and I moved to Big D). A friend's Dad was the preacher. I walked the aisle and accepted Jesus into my heart. In fact, I prayed the sinner's prayer after every Billy Graham crusade I watched on TV for years. But it wasn't until a neighbor of mine invited me to her ladies bible study that God revealed Himself to me and the most incredible love filled me. I have never been the same since.

    This is significant because what I heard from then on was what I had to do for Christ - when He had expressly shown me what HE HAD DONE FOR ME.

    After a while, I was fortunate to have found, by God's great grace, teachers who taught grace and not law. God's love, acceptance, mercy and goodness sunk deeeeeeeeeeep into my heart even more and this admid great sorrows and sadness (which continue to the very day).

    I was prevented from going to church to church because of my husband who is not a believer. God has shown me the path of love is not easy. Despite this, God sent teachers to me and I learned of Him. Beautiful! The most beautiful thing in my life is my Father and Jesus Christ His Son by the power of the Holy Spirit.

    Like most believers I went through a very "religious" phase - seeking things rather than God. During this time I learned about tongues and other manifestations of the Spirit. I do not discount them, but I personally have not experienced these things. God has chosen another way for me which I have accepted with thanksgiving. I must seek Him only. If He never gives me another thing.....well, that's just fine with me. His grace is sufficient.

    I've come to the place where I must lift up Jesus Christ and His finished work on the cross. Some here may think that I'm pushing universalism but I'm not. To me pushing concepts and doctines and denominations is nowhere. Universalisam = the glorious gospel. As Paul said: Jesus Christ, Savior of the world, especially of those who believe. I do it in the hope that some may come to see His love for all people. It isn't about what we do, it's about what He had already done. He will have all men to be saved. \o/

    Well, Singer, that's the short version. And hey, thanks for asking. Will you tell me your story? I know it's an exciting one for He is so good.

    Blessings to you in Jesus.

    GH
     
  9. GH

    GH New Member

    Joined:
    Jul 6, 2002
    Messages:
    478
    Likes Received:
    0
    [/QUOTE]Actually, it was the tree of knowledge of good and evil. :rolleyes:

    "And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil." Genesis 2:9, KJV

    Neal [/QB][/QUOTE]

    Good and evil must have existed to have knowledge of them. Get my drift? [​IMG]
     
  10. GH

    GH New Member

    Joined:
    Jul 6, 2002
    Messages:
    478
    Likes Received:
    0
    First off, notice the contrast the Lord is giving. What is the opposite of peace? Confusion and calamity. I feel that the context in this passage has to dictate that it is not evil in the sense of sin, but confusion. I am taking Hebrew now and many Hebrew words have more than one meaning depending on context. We also remember we are mere humans trying to describe God with words.

    And for your consideration:

    "Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man: but every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed. Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth for death." James 1:13-15, KJV

    God is not the source of evil in the sense of sin. It is clear from here. Yet, are you willing to attribute sin to God? Is He the source of it? I submit to you, that if you say yes, the God you believe in is no longer the God revealed in Scripture. Also, for God to be the source of sin, He would no longer be God, because how can God punish anyone for sin if He is the source of it? Your theology seems to make God a liar and a joke who is cruel and mean spirited. How can God possibly be holy and yet be the source of sin? How could He ever tell us to be holy if He truly is not? Plus, this would make Him a liar if He is not holy as He claims He is (Lev. 11:44-45; 1 Peter 1:16).

    Neal
    </font>[/QUOTE]You're putting words in my "mouth."

    Don't get mad at me because God said He created evil.

    And.......there isn't a mean spirited bone in my body.

    Love you, GH
     
  11. GH

    GH New Member

    Joined:
    Jul 6, 2002
    Messages:
    478
    Likes Received:
    0
    For further consideration:

    "For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of Him who subjected the same in hope."

    http://ragingbull.lycos.com/mboard/boards.cgi?board=BIBLE&read=36322

    "Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God." Romans 8:21

    Our Father takes full responsibility for the condition in which we find ourselves.

    "The creature was made subject to bondage"
    The word "made subject" or "subjected" is the same word that is used in the Koine Greek for subduing all things unto Himself.....Hupotasso. So, our Father has arranged in vanity/depravity/perverseness and devoid of truth the children of Adam #1. This subjection is "not willingly!"

    "Not by choice." NOT WILLINGLY
    "Not by any choice of its own"
    "Not for some deliberate fault of its own."
    "Not by its own will/choice, but by reason of Him who subjected it in hope."
    "Because in God's purpose it has been so limited."
    "It was made the victim of frustration, not by its own choice, but because of Him who made it so."
    "For the creation was subjected to frustration, not from some choice, but through Him who effected that bondage..."
    "For creation was not rendered futile by its own choice, but by the will of Him who thus made it subject."
    "Not of its own will, but by the WILL OF HIM who subjected it in HOPE."
     
  12. GH

    GH New Member

    Joined:
    Jul 6, 2002
    Messages:
    478
    Likes Received:
    0
    Speaking of annihilism and universalism, here's some great links for those interested in considering another view:

    http://www.tentmaker.org/books/BibleThreateningsExplained.html

    http://www.tentmaker.org/books/EternalDeath.html - about eternal death (annihilation)

    http://www.tentmaker.org/books/Prevailing.html - the first 500 years of Christianity

    http://www.tentmaker.org/books/ScripturalProofs.html - 100 scriptural proofs of universal salvation

    http://www.tentmaker.org/books/DoctrineOfRetribution.html

    Blessings in Him, GH
     
  13. neal4christ

    neal4christ New Member

    Joined:
    Nov 1, 2002
    Messages:
    1,815
    Likes Received:
    0
    Isn't evil the opposite of God? So wouldn't a knowledge have to come first before you could commit evil? Anyway, I don't agree with your idea, but if you want to assign sin to God, you can blaspheme His name and character, I will not.

    You guys need to get your stories straight. Ken H does not seem to hold that God is the source of evil, just that He allows it. Which is it, is He the source or does He just allow it?

    Neal
     
  14. 3AngelsMom

    3AngelsMom <img src =/3mom.jpg>

    Joined:
    Jan 12, 2003
    Messages:
    1,594
    Likes Received:
    0
    I have a question.

    What is the point of spreading the Gospel message to all the world if in the end ALL men will be saved?

    If all I have to do is live and die, and then at some point God is going to save me anyway, what is the point of trying to maintain a relationship with God, so that I recieve Salvation?

    It doesn't make sense to say that ALL will be redeemed at some point.

    We should all live the way that pleases us, and not worry about what God thinks, or how He says we should live. If all that He is going to do in the end is reward EVERYONE with Eternal Life.

    Why should I waste my life, living the narrow path, and depriving myself of the fun and pleasure of the world, in exchange for a life of separation from the world, and keeping God's Commandments?

    Why bother, if we all end up getting redeemed in the end?

    I mean, how hard would it be to suffer through a little season of punishing, if we know that in the end we will be redeemed?

    It doesn't make sense.

    God Bless
     
  15. neal4christ

    neal4christ New Member

    Joined:
    Nov 1, 2002
    Messages:
    1,815
    Likes Received:
    0
    3AM,

    Though we do not see eye to eye on some things, I would have to agree with you here. My sentiments exactly. [​IMG]

    Neal
     
  16. 3AngelsMom

    3AngelsMom <img src =/3mom.jpg>

    Joined:
    Jan 12, 2003
    Messages:
    1,594
    Likes Received:
    0
    Who ever posted that Annihilationists don't believe that the wicked get resurrected needs to clarify something.

    The Bible says that the Righteous are Resurrected and THEN 1000 years go by. THEN the wicked are resurrected.

    I have always thought that I was an Annihilationist. If that is one of the qualities (that they don't believe in a total resurection) I need to find a new category!!!

    Clarify please.

    God Bless
     
  17. BobRyan

    BobRyan Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Aug 27, 2002
    Messages:
    32,913
    Likes Received:
    71
    Faith:
    Non Baptist Christian
    Neal asks Yes, and I wonder how many people torment their children so that they will love them. Do you really think God will just force people to accept and love Him by sticking them in hell until they say uncle?

    There is in fact "not text" describing a "redemptive quality" of the "Lake of Fire" or of "hell fire" OR of "eternal fire" for those being "destroyed" (Matt 10) by it.

    Further - it is "BOTH Body AND soul" that are "Destroyed" in the fires of Hell according to Matt 10.

    When Christ said "God so Loved the World" He speaks to the Love of God - NOT to the result that ALL the World accepts Christ as their Savior - ALL the World become "Children of God".

    Instead When addressing the RESULT - in Matt 7 it is the "MANY" that go to hell with God saying "I never Knew you - Depart from Me".

    BOTH must be accepted. God Loved them ALL- but ALL of them DID NOT choose God. As scripture teaches EVEN among God's chosen people in John 1 "He Came to HIS OWN but HIS OWN received Him NOT".

    Coming to His Own did not ensure that ALL Jews would accept Christ in the first century AD. The record is already clear on that point. You can not argue one half of the story and use it to describe the other half.

    In Christ,

    Bob
     
  18. KenH

    KenH Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2002
    Messages:
    43,035
    Likes Received:
    1,641
    Faith:
    Baptist
    You believe you are saved, correct? Do you gain any benefit in your walk with God by sinning currently? Remember, just because a person's time in hell is remedial doesn't mean it's a walk in the park. My trials on earth are tough enough. I do not desire to go through ones that are many times more tough.

    Also, remember the story that Jesus told about the workers in the vineyard that were hired at different points in the day? And how at the end when all of them were paid the same wages that those who had worked all day grumbled because those that worked only an hour received the same amount? I don't believe that we have a right to grumble because one person might have served Christ from the age of 5 and lived to be 90 and another person may have lived a life of debauchery for 90 years and then came to Christ and served Him for only a day before he died. They both receive eternal life from God. So why would it bother you if someone does not come to Christ until the next age?
     
  19. Smoky

    Smoky Member

    Joined:
    May 19, 2002
    Messages:
    205
    Likes Received:
    0
    Hi Brother Ed,

    Why should this be so with a God of love. If He can see into the future and determine which of His creatures will finally accept His love and those who never will, then why does He even create those who never will? Doesn't He know how He has created us and what the potential for each one of us is? And why should it be so with a God of love, that He puts limits on His grace that only apply to this world and not to the world to come? Also, if what we become in this life determines what we will be forever then I think we are all in a dire predicament because, after all, who ever does this in a life so short?

    Love and Peace
     
  20. CatholicConvert

    CatholicConvert New Member

    Joined:
    Jun 15, 2001
    Messages:
    1,958
    Likes Received:
    0
    Hello Brother Leon --

    Your question is one that many people have struggled with for centuries. But the WHY of it is really this simple to me:

    In order for us to be in the image of God, we MUST have free will and the ability to not only choose, but to recieve and live out the consequences of our choices.

    One of the things which I ponder over is this: is there a final chance when we meet Christ? The Protestant teaching has always been that once you die, if you are not "saved", you are toast and dat's dat. Yet there are other teachings in both Holy Orthodoxy and Catholicism which lend themselves to the idea that our Lord will appear to the soul and give that soul a chance to repent, even after death.

    I forget which saint it was who said that she had recieved a vision in which the Lord Himself told her that after death He would call to the soul three times to see if the soul would respond positively to Him.

    At the same time, this mornings reading in the Orthodox Church is from Matthew 25. It is the Sunday of Meatfare (our last eating of meat before the Lenten Fast begins) and in this reading, we were reminded of the Last Judgment and HOW Christ will judge all mankind. Note this sobering text:

    Mt 25:41 Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels:

    Now perhaps there is a parabolic understanding to this. If so, I am open to hear of it and consider it, but the words themselves are a considerable warning to all who have "ears to hear". Prior to that, our Lord talks about the "wicked and unprofitable servant" being cast into darkness. I think we ought not take these things too lightly.

    I look forward to your response.

    Brother Ed
     
Loading...