Part 1 of 4
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Well, let's not jump to conclusions quite yet. We can agree at the point that they will share in the cup of Christ's sufferings.
I'm quite pleased I don't have to explain this idea to you.
(You'd be surprised how many people don't understand this basic idea.) It will be important. Note for now the word "fellowship" in your answer: koinonia. We'll use it later.
But first we have to uproot and utterly destroy -- root and branch -- this utterly blasphemous idea that Jesus became a sinner in the hands of an angry God so that whatever He was going to do to us, well I guess He's just all out of juice now.
Good, good. (Would you say that James and John "fully underwent" the "certain experience" that Jesus did, in your scheme?)
Agreed.
This is an unsupported assertion thus far. It also happens to be the question at hand (i.e. "Which cup is that?"), so unless you're just restating for review, you're begging the question.
However, for the sake of the discussion, I can pass over this unsubstantiated leap. For now. And (again) conditional on the rest of my viewpoint, of course.
But here's where it begins to unravel. This is the crux of the matter.
No one is arguing that the cup Jesus was given to drink didn't involve suffering and death. The question is whether the cup was
more than that, and whether God's anger against sin had to be
satisfied or
propitiated by fulfillment in action against someone ("someone has to pay!") or whether these terms, insofar as they might be found in Scripture, can be understood in some sense that doesn't end in disaster theologically, and, if I may say, spiritually and practically. (See and consider the spiritual state of those regions which embrace such things (by their fruits you shall know them).
Now here you bring in 2 Thessalonians 1:9 (I assume you meant 2nd, and not 1st, since bringing in 1 Thess. 1:9 makes no sense whatsoever that I can see) as support for this idea that the punishment of the End includes separation from God (the Father) as the condition of punishment. However, this verse does not support that concept directly. Rather, it only says that the destruction will come from the presence of the Lord, and from His glory. (Like destruction of skin
[i.e. sunburn] comes from the face of the sun, and its glory.)
You are reading it as, "Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction by being cast away from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power." But the words I've placed in italics there is are not in the text, and when read without them it gives the sense I said above. This is resonant with verses like Job 21:20, 30; Isaiah 2:10, 19, 21 cf. Rev. 6:12-17; Joel 1:15; Ps. 34:15 cf. 1 Pet. 3:12; Ps. 97:5; 114:7, 8; Jer. 4:19-26; all of Zephaniah [note particularly 1:7], in the same sense as Acts 3:19 (cf. 2 Pet. 310-13 for the full context of "refreshing"). Furthermore, there is no "being cast away from the presence of the Lord", since (as we Orthodox pray) He is everywhere present and filling all things, and at that time His eternal glory and power will be manifest in full to the entire universe. (This is why it's called "the revelation" -- or, "the unveiling" -- of Jesus Christ. Peter, James, and John got a glimpse of this at the Transfiguration, but only insofar as they could bear it.)
David, for this reason, observes:
So the punishment coming from the face of the Lord cannot be separation from the Father, for "every eye shall see Him, and they
also which pierced Him: and all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of Him", and "if you have seen me, you have seen the Father", and "then
cometh the end, when He shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when He shall have put down all rule and authority and power ... And when all things shall be subdued unto Him, then shall the Son also Himself be subject unto Him that put all things under Him, that God may be all in all."
So there will be no separation from the Father!
Therefore the cup that God will pour out on sinners at the End cannot have that in it. Therefore even if we grant that it's the same cup that Jesus drinks -- even if the bit is true about Jesus being the whipping boy for God's anger that has to have a target and all that -- separation from the Father is not part of it.
In fact, the opposite will be the case: the Father will be all in all in a perichoretic way, full of love. (Don't take this to mean that all will experience this as pleasant, btw. Love, to those who reject it, is a burning coal. For "if thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink: for thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head, and the LORD shall reward thee." And again, "love
is strong as death; jealousy
is cruel as the grave: the coals thereof
are coals of fire,
which hath a most vehement flame.")
Let's stick to what's written, shall we? We are fairly certain and mutually agreed that the drinking of the cup (contents currently under examination per above) is what caused the sweating as a response to impending trauma, but it is a completely unsupported (thus far) leap from that to "because he didn't want to be separated from the Father". That leap assumes the answer to the question at hand (the contents of the cup), and also goes way beyond what is in the text.
In fact, yet again the Scriptures say something else.
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[snip here because character count]