TC you have equated life in the correct manner. This same "life" is what John was talking about. It is eternal life, but your 21st-century definition of eternal is flawed. And that conversation we have had.
Aionios doesn't mean without beginning and without end anymore than it means without end. Aionios is a set amount of time although the length may vary.
This "life" talked about is in relation to Christ's coming kingdom. That coming kingdom is going to last 1,000 years. It is impossible to get without end from something that has a beginning and an end. Christ will start ruling the world one of these days and then His rule will end when He gives the kingdom back to the Father. That is not 21st century eternal or everlasting. That is Scriptural aionios.
Life being discussed is life for the kingdom age. Again please show me in Scripture where the folks in the gospels were spiritually dead. That means they don't have everlasting life. If you can't show me that, and I don't believe you can, then we have to understand that these folks already possessed everlasting life and this "life" that is being discussed is NOT everlasting life.
So again I will await your Scriptural evidence that says folks in the NT were spiritually dead when Jesus encountered them. Without that CRITICAL piece of evidence your ENTIRE theology crumbles.
Aionios doesn't mean without beginning and without end anymore than it means without end. Aionios is a set amount of time although the length may vary.
This "life" talked about is in relation to Christ's coming kingdom. That coming kingdom is going to last 1,000 years. It is impossible to get without end from something that has a beginning and an end. Christ will start ruling the world one of these days and then His rule will end when He gives the kingdom back to the Father. That is not 21st century eternal or everlasting. That is Scriptural aionios.
Life being discussed is life for the kingdom age. Again please show me in Scripture where the folks in the gospels were spiritually dead. That means they don't have everlasting life. If you can't show me that, and I don't believe you can, then we have to understand that these folks already possessed everlasting life and this "life" that is being discussed is NOT everlasting life.
So again I will await your Scriptural evidence that says folks in the NT were spiritually dead when Jesus encountered them. Without that CRITICAL piece of evidence your ENTIRE theology crumbles.