Hell, Sheol, Hades...

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Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
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As far I am concerned the narrative/doctrine of annihilation, which holds as its central tenet that God annihilates the unsaved in the Lake of Fire is so completely without scriptural evidence.

"Son of Man came to seek and to save that which is lost (destroyed)" (Luke 19:10) is the key to the meaning of apollumi.

This Bible passage refers specifically to Zacchaeus, who was lost (destroyed).

Because he was lost (destroyed), he was ready to be found and saved.

Why would God seek to save that which was annihilated?
A nice demonstration of how one uses a bait and switch teaching to change the meanings of words to arrive at a preferred conclusion.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
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I know what the answer is not, and that is the one you pose as if it were.
The point is the other options have more validity than annihilate (de-create), which has zero validity.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,123
2,152
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The point is the other options have more validity than annihilate (de-create), which has zero validity.
You will always be afforded your own opinion.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
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A nice demonstration of how one uses a bait and switch teaching to change the meanings of words to arrive at a preferred conclusion.
Context determines the meaning in all writing not just scripture.

This is basic high school English, maybe elementary school on second thought.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
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You will always be afforded your own opinion.
The evidence in not in support of the annihilation doctrine. So my opinion has the weight of evidence behind it.

That is how opinions work.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,123
2,152
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Context determines the meaning in all writing not just scripture.

This is basic high school English, maybe elementary school on second thought.
I graduated magna cum laude. I missed summa by a thousandth of a point. That must've been the point right there, thanks. Oh wait, did you mean that in sarcasm?
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,123
2,152
113
The evidence in not in support of the annihilation doctrine. So my opinion has the weight of evidence behind it.

That is how opinions work.
You are also at liberty to dream as much as you like.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
5,803
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I graduated magna cum laude. I missed summa by a thousandth of a point. That must've been the point right there, thanks. Oh wait, did you mean that in sarcasm?
Nope, just another fact.
 

HeIsHere

Well-known member
May 21, 2022
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You are also at liberty to dream as much as you like.
You know so far you have not offered a really good argument for your position, at least @Magenta had me thinking and analyzing and reconsidering.

Which I did, and the doctrine still came up short. simply based on the meaning of "destroy" in context throughout scripture.

No where is it used to mean "de-create."

Done.
 

Webers.Home

Well-known member
May 28, 2018
5,785
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Oregon
cfbac.org
.
What happens to the vegetables when you throw them into a lake of fire?
Oh, wait. I'll tell you. They're destroyed!

Fire is interesting. It has the ability to cause chemical reactions to change
the basic nature of combustible materials, but it cannot annihilate their
components. For example; fire destroys coal's original form and converts it
into pollution, e.g. CO2, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter,
and heavy metals.

Now, we know from Matt 10:28 that the human soul is able to survive the
death of one's body. But we also know from that same verse that there is a
place whose fire is such that it's able to destroy the human soul.

Is it possible the human soul is similar to most other combustible materials
in that it's constructed with a variety of components; and if so, what happens
to those components when the soul is destroyed in that weird fire? Do they
become pollutants? Can they be collected and recombined to form something
other than a human soul?

The soul of a demon seems reasonable to me because according to Matt 25:41
there is a fire prepared for the Devil and his minions. If the souls of the lost are
converted into demonic beings, they'll fit right in.
_
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,123
2,152
113
.



Fire is interesting. It has the ability to cause chemical reactions to change
the basic nature of combustible materials, but it cannot annihilate their
components. For example; fire destroys coal's original form and converts it
into pollution, e.g. CO2, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter,
and heavy metals.


Now, we know from Matt 10:28 that the human soul is able to survive the
death of one's body. But we also know from that same verse that there is a
place whose fire is such that it's able to destroy the human soul.


Is it possible the human soul is similar to most other combustible materials
in that it's constructed with a variety of components; and if so, what happens
to those components when the soul is destroyed in that weird fire? Do they
become pollutants? Can they be collected and recombined to form something
other than a human soul?


The soul of a demon seems reasonable to me because according to Matt 25:41
there is a fire prepared for the Devil and his minions. If the souls of the lost are
converted into demonic beings, they'll fit right in.
_
God describes Himself as a consuming fire. If fire were adequate to describe Him, He would not have added the descriptive term.
 

Webers.Home

Well-known member
May 28, 2018
5,785
1,068
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Oregon
cfbac.org
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God describes Himself as a consuming fire. If fire were adequate to describe
Him, He would not have added the descriptive term.

The Greek words translated "consuming fire" refer to a conflagration, i.e. a
fire so fierce that it's very difficult to extinguish once it gets going, e.g.
Oregon's Tillamook Burn.

But is God a fire? No, according to John 4:24 God is spirit rather than flame.
So we really ought to keep Heb 12:29 in context and apply it as a figure of
speech instead of a physical reality. (cf. Deut 4:23-24)
_
 

oyster67

Senior Member
May 24, 2014
11,887
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perhaps you will give a sound and reasonable rebuttal to my points by drilling down
We have drilled down several hundred feet into your "points" and come up with nothing.
down into the original meaning of the words Sheol, Hades, Hell, Gehenna
Interesting how you never mention the Lake of Fire. That might be problematic for your drilling operation.
Revelation contains much in the way of symbolic language.
It also contains much in the way of future events that don't match up with your pipedreams. That is probably why you are trying to relegate it to a book of symbolic fables.
I shall look forward to your response
You got it.
IN YOUR VERY OWN WORDS
Strait from the Oyst. :geek::coffee:
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,123
2,152
113
.



The Greek words translated "consuming fire" refer to a conflagration, i.e. a
fire so fierce that it's very difficult to extinguish once it gets going, e.g.
Oregon's Tillamook Burn.


But is God a fire? No, according to John 4:24 God is spirit rather than flame.
So we really ought to keep Heb 12:29 in context and apply it as a figure of
speech instead of a physical reality. (cf. Deut 4:23-24)
_
I was speaking in keeping to your thought in regard to the comparison of ordinary and extraordinary fire.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,123
2,152
113
This could be the beginning of something wonderful! :love:
Lol. I can't recall exactly what verse but I've kept the spirit anyway since I read it. Something about measuring something-something (virtue related) by (not so much all those that I love but) all those that love me ;)
 

oyster67

Senior Member
May 24, 2014
11,887
8,705
113
Lol. I can't recall exactly what verse but I've kept the spirit anyway since I read it. Something about measuring something-something (virtue related) by (not so much all those that I love but) all those that love me ;)
You must be a lot of "something-something" then, my dear. :giggle: