Great post I understand your view now. It makes sense to me, I had never really looked at it that way, just one questions remains in my mind: These who forfeit the kingdom on earth, where are they? They will be resurected as well, so where are they? What happens to them? Please answer this question too.
1st Corinthians 15:23 says that
"those who are Christ's" will be resurrected
"when He comes". Since OWNERSHIP is not touched, every Christian and every Israelite (for they are His too) will be resurrected at His second coming (1st Thess.4:16; Dan.12:2). And so it is in the Parables. The Ten Virgins RISE together - the wise and the foolish (Matt.25:7). In Matthew 25:19 the unfaithful servant is "reckoned with" at the same time as the faithful.
Now to place the slovenly servants/Virgins on earth after judgement is not so easy. The diligent will be ruling Cities of the Gentiles (Lk.19:17-19). The Israelites will be restored to their Land and be ruled by David (Jer.30:9) and the Twelve Apostles (Matt.19:28; Lk.22:30). So where on earth will the unworthy Christians be. Here's the evidence - and you decide
- In Luke 12:58-59 a jail is threatened after judgment. See also Matthew 5:25-26
- In Matthew 18:34 some sort of jail is alluded to; "And his lord was wroth, and delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that was due unto him."
- In Matthew 24:51 the brutal servant will be with other living men - with hypocrites
- In Matthew 25:9 the foolish Virgins must go through a process that the wise ones did in their lifetimes - buying oil. "Those who sell" are obviously people who cause suffering
- In Matthew 25:30 it seems to be a banning from the presence of Christ. Zechariah 14:16 says that everyone must go up to Jerusalem annually to have audience with Jesus in the time after Armageddon. Could it be that they are banned from this?
- In Revelation 2.11 and 20:4 we have Christians (Church members) "hurt of the second death". The "Second Death" is used interchangeably with "perdition", and the Greek scholars tell us that "perdition" means "lack of well-being". That is, intense suffering of the body and soul (Matt.10:28). The word "hurt" indicates that the suffering is neither deadly nor permanent. It is not like the beast whose torment is forever. And Isaiah 66:24, although it talks of the New Earth, gives us some good information about the Second Death. It say that "we will LOOK UPON those in the second death". That means the men suffering are on earth.
- The last and probably most telling scriptures are found in Ezekiel 41 and 42. They concern the Temple that Christ will live in in Jerusalem after His return to Jerusalem. Now, this Temple reflects, in its construction, the finished work of Christ. There are some differences in layout and size to the Temples of Solomon and Zerubbabel. But there is one very scary addition to it. Attached to it is a Room called a "Gizrah". It is a room with no windows (always dark) in which all the Temple utensils that have become useless or marred are stored. Could this be a picture of those Christians who became "useless" for God's House and Kingdom? The significance is telling. They are right next to the House of God but may not partake of it, its prestige and its joys. They are right next to the source of "light" (Christ), but dwell in darkness.
Now, I don't know what you think, seeing as you might be hearing some of these things for the first time, but if I was a detective and gathering evidence, I would say that the slothful Christian is resurrected just like the diligent one, and lives on earth together with the living, but is essentially in disgrace, in some sort of restrictive existence and even under serious ongoing punishment that is as painful as the Lake of Fire, but not as permanent.
Take some time to consider this.
God bless.