I learned most of what I now believe about Catholicism right here on the Baptist Board while I was still Baptist. This was back in the day before 'The Great Purge'.
Thank you, but I want to know where BS learned what he believes.
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I learned most of what I now believe about Catholicism right here on the Baptist Board while I was still Baptist. This was back in the day before 'The Great Purge'.
Where did he say that? Let's look at the scripture.
:tear: :saint:the body of this death
:tear::tear: :saint:
The wages of sin is death. The body will die because it is sinful flesh. It is dying now. When it goes to the grave, you will be set free from the fleshly temptations that cause you to sin. It's a good thing.:thumbs:
Your view is not based on scripture. That is why it is fallible.
I did. Post #60.
I can't be both. You said purgatory purification takes place before heaven, then you said it takes place in heaven. Total contradiction.
Glad you agree. Now please start supplying the scripture to support your beliefs. I still would like to see where the Bible speaks about a "compartment" in heaven that purifies people. How about an outside source? Do you even have that?
If sin still clings to Christians (Heb 12:1), but there is no sin in heaven (Rev. 21:27), there must be a purification that takes place after one’s death and before one enters heaven. Even if it were "in the blink of an eye," this final stage of sanctification must take place, so those who die in God’s favor may be cleansed if any affection for sin remains in them.
Paul mentions this in 1 Cor. 3:13–15: "Each man’s work will become manifest; for the Day will disclose it, because it will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test what sort of work each one has done. If the work which any man has built on the foundation survives, he will receive a reward. If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire."
Paul’s thought calls to mind the image of God as the refiner’s fire and fuller’s soap mentioned in Malachi 3:2. The fuller’s soap was lye or alkaline salt that removed stains from clothing. A refiner’s fire was an oven of intense heat where precious metals were placed in order to purify them of their corrosion and dross. In the same way, purgatory is when a soul is immersed into the fire of God’s love and lifted out of the residue of its imperfections.
There is NO mention anywhere in scripture of a 3rd place men go when they die. There is either heaven or hell.
In the passage you quote, Paul is speaking of saved people and their works. It is the works that are either accepted or burned, not the people. Paul says nothing of a 3rd place a person is sent 'til they work off their sin.
For those in Christ there is NO condemnation.
What - do you actually believe that heaven is one huge place with no divisions? Are you saying that God cannot do this if he wants?
The only place where sinful people will be allowed is at the throne of judgment. There's no "cleansing" before that after death. We either are counted righteous because we're clothed in Christ's righteousness or we're not. Period. End of story. Amen.
R E A D :null: P O S T :null: # 5 9.
Peace!
Post #59:
BillySunday1935 said:If sin still clings to Christians (Heb 12:1), but there is no sin in heaven (Rev. 21:27), there must be a purification that takes place after one’s death and before one enters heaven. Even if it were "in the blink of an eye," this final stage of sanctification must take place, so those who die in God’s favor may be cleansed if any affection for sin remains in them.
Paul mentions this in 1 Cor. 3:13–15: "Each man’s work will become manifest; for the Day will disclose it, because it will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test what sort of work each one has done. If the work which any man has built on the foundation survives, he will receive a reward. If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire."
Paul’s thought calls to mind the image of God as the refiner’s fire and fuller’s soap mentioned in Malachi 3:2. The fuller’s soap was lye or alkaline salt that removed stains from clothing. A refiner’s fire was an oven of intense heat where precious metals were placed in order to purify them of their corrosion and dross. In the same way, purgatory is when a soul is immersed into the fire of God’s love and lifted out of the residue of its imperfections.
What about it? I don't see where it's saying that we are purified in purgatory for our sins. We're either righteous or not. There's no purification after death. Now if you'd like to address the "rewards", that's a different story than salvation and righeousness.
So what you are basically saying is that heaven has a purification Chamber where we are tossed into, get burned, then scrubbed, and then washed off by Saints in air tight radiation anti sin suites carrying hoses until our skin is rubbed raw. Then we are led into an air chamber where we have to wait until the preasure matches that in heaven. Once thats accomplished the air tight seal is then open while we adjust to the new heaven air and are finally let in throught a 10 inch blast proof door? is that where you're going with it? Just curious.
This brings us back to the OP. What do we really know about heaven and hell??
Do you think that the image or idea that most people have of heaven and hell is in error? Spong states this and then concludes that because of this we need to get rid of heaven and hell.
According to scripture, Hell is a place where the fire is never extinguished and the worm won't die. We learn that it is a place of torment for Satan and any who follow him. We also know that it is a place for those not redeemed by the blood of Jesus. What do we know about heaven?
What - do you actually believe that heaven is one huge place with no divisions? Are you saying that God cannot do this if he wants?
The only place where sinful people will be allowed is at the throne of judgment. There's no "cleansing" before that after death. We either are counted righteous because we're clothed in Christ's righteousness or we're not. Period. End of story. Amen.
Post #59:
What about it? I don't see where it's saying that we are purified in purgatory for our sins. We're either righteous or not. There's no purification after death. Now if you'd like to address the "rewards", that's a different story than salvation and righeousness.
If BillySunday were Catholic, he would differentiate between Mortal and Venial sin. Mortal sin is that which is purposeful disobedience to God and cause eternal death from which only repentance and Christ attonement can heal. Venial sin is that which causes an attachement to this world but is not out right disobedience to God. Like we hold to idea's that are in conformity to this world but not necissarily to Christ. Like we would rather have illegal hispanics thrown out of the country rather than feeding them and taking care of them despite the fact they are illegal. Its not a sin that will cost you eternity but its not conformity to Jesus Christ either. When you die mortal sin is no more but what sends you to pergatory is the venial sin or the brainwashing you die with. The fire of Purgatory is the re-expression of the covenant in which God is present as an all consuming fire. As God was when he walked through the 2 halfs of the calf in front of Abraham, as God was when we was the burning bush to moses, as God was as the pillar of fire before the fleeing hebrews, As God was a burning coal on Ezekiel's tongue, As God was flames of tongues in the upper room. Where the venialness of our lives are burned away in God's consuming fire and we are now completly in the image of Christ. That is how a Catholic who actually knows what they are talking about would see it. However, most catholics don't even know this much. And the only reason I know about is because My father keeps cramming this stuff down my throat giving me CD's to listen to by Hahn and Staples. Though he rarely listens to my stuff. He keeps quoting Hagee and Copeland and say I'm in agreement with them. I laugh at him he's being just as general about us as he claims we are with catholics. Which in my time with other catholics they are distrustful of evangelicals converting because they feel they are changing the church. Doctrine. Well if it gets them into the bible and understanding what encompases being born again. I'm for it. Its funny but I think putting both groups into a room to sort it out would be interesting.
Heaven and hell are described in the bible. Images which people understand and can relate. Hell is described consistently at a "lake of fire" Jesus story about the rich man an Lazereth indicates that there is a "fire" aspect to hell since the guys ask for water just to sooth his tongue. Heaven has been described as a thone, a large city, a river, light comming directly from God, multitude of angles in flight and praise, saints praying and bowing, tears are wiped away, pain is no more, etc... I don't see anywhere where it talks about a purification chamber.
I think that Purgatory is a state a being, not a place. The Fathers of the Church taught there was a Purgatory: Tertullian , Origen , Cyprian, Ambrose, and a whole lot more.
2 Corinthians 5:8 We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from the body, and to be present with the Lord.
The teaching:
To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. Every believer knows this. It is a foundational truth of Christianity. There is no intermediate state.
Philippians 1:23-24 For I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ; which is far better: Nevertheless to abide in the flesh is more needful for you.
The teaching:
Paul had mixed feelings, but one thing he knew for sure--If he should depart from this earth he would be with Christ. There was no intermediate state. There was no place where he needed to be purified.
If I died right now I would stand before a holy God: I being perfectly holy, purified, justified, sanctified, and able to enter into the presence of an Almighty God. Why? Because God made me holy, and purified me in the clothing of his righteousness when he justified me on the day that I trusted him as my Savior many, many years ago. On that day he forgave all my sins: past, present, and future, and gave me the gift of eternal life--a gift which can never be taken away. My name is written in the Lamb's Book of Life and will never be blotted out according to the promises of God.
2 Corinthians 5:8 We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from the body, and to be present with the Lord.
The teaching:
To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. Every believer knows this. It is a foundational truth of Christianity. There is no intermediate state.
Philippians 1:23-24 For I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ; which is far better: Nevertheless to abide in the flesh is more needful for you.
The teaching:
Paul had mixed feelings, but one thing he knew for sure--If he should depart from this earth he would be with Christ. There was no intermediate state. There was no place where he needed to be purified.
If I died right now I would stand before a holy God: I being perfectly holy, purified, justified, sanctified, and able to enter into the presence of an Almighty God. Why? Because God made me holy, and purified me in the clothing of his righteousness when he justified me on the day that I trusted him as my Savior many, many years ago. On that day he forgave all my sins: past, present, and future, and gave me the gift of eternal life--a gift which can never be taken away. My name is written in the Lamb's Book of Life and will never be blotted out according to the promises of God.
The better translation is "confidence," as the KJV puts it. It also has the sense of boldness. I have complete confidence in the promises of the Word of God that what God has said is true.“So we are always of good courage; we know that while we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord, for we walk by faith, not by sight. We are of good courage, and we would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord” (2 Cor 5:6-8).
Is this what you are saying excludes Purgatory?
Please exegete the entire passage (1Cor.3:11-15). Show me one verse, even just vs. 15, just one verse, where it indicates that any person will suffer in fire. Is there one? No, not one."On the day if any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire.” 1 Corinthians 3:15
I'll stick with the Bible, Early Church's Fathers, and what the Church has consistently taught for 2,000+ years.
"On the day if any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire.” 1 Corinthians 3:15
I'll stick with the Bible, Early Church's Fathers, and what the Church has consistently taught for 2,000+ years.