Jhn 19:30
When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said,
It is finished: and he bowed his head, and gave up the ghost.
So tell us....what exactly has been "finished" on the cross by Jesus. Finished dying by crucifixion in the flesh? Or finished suffering a limitless eternity of WRATH and PUNISHMENT poured out by a just God dispensing said justice upon Jesus? Is this the punishment that all of us deserve? A punishment that the Eternal God Jesus absorbed in a mere 3 hours?
Please render your invaluable opinion in this important matter....
BTW, wrath does not equal death....they are not equivalent terms as you believe. Death is merely ONE possible result of wrath. Wrath encompasses a potentially infinite degree and type of punishments. The 70 AD judgement, "wrath" and destruction of Jerusalem (Luke 21:23) certainly did NOT simply kill everyone. Luke 21:22 indicates that it is a time of "vengeance" G1557
ekdikēsis (a revenging, vengeance, punishment ).
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Please tell us...what exactly is this "wrath" that Jesus is speaking of. Do you say that is is an equivalent term for "death"?
Jhn 3:36
“He who believes in the Son has everlasting life; and he who does not believe the Son shall not see life, but the
wrath (G3709) of God abides on him.”
Rom 9:22
What if God, wanting to show
His wrath (G3709) and to make His power known, endured with much longsuffering the vessels of
wrath (G3709) prepared for
destruction (G684),
As you can see.....WRATH and DESTRUCTION are mutually exclusive here in Rom 9:22.
Destruction (
apōleia):
STRONGS NT 684: ἀπώλεια
ἀπώλεια, -ας, ἡ, (from ἀπόλλυμι, which see);
1. actively, a destroying, utter destruction: as, of vessels,
Romans 9:22; τοῦ μύρου, waste,
Mark 14:4 (in
Matthew 26:8 without a genitive) (in Polybius 6, 59, 5 consumption, opposed to τήρησις); the putting of a man to death,
Acts 25:16 Rec.; by metonymy, a destructive thing or opinion: in plural
2 Peter 2:2 Rec.; but the correct reading ἀσελγείαις was long ago adopted here.
2. passively, a perishing, ruin, destruction;
a. in general: τὸ ἀργύριόν σου σύν σοι εἴη εἰς ἀπ., let thy money perish with thee,
Acts 8:20; βυθίζειν τινὰ εἰς ὄλεθρον κ. ἀπώλειαν,
with the included idea of misery,
1 Timothy 6:9; αἱρέσεις ἀπωλείας destructive opinions,
2 Peter 2:1; ἐπάγειν ἑαυτοῖς ἀπώλειαν, ibid. cf.
2 Peter 2:3.
b.
in particular, the destruction which consists in the loss of eternal life, eternal misery, perdition, the lot of those excluded from the kingdom of God:
Revelation 17:8,
11, cf.
Revelation 19:20;
Philippians 3:19;
2 Peter 3:16; opposed to ἡ περιποίησις τῆς ψυχῆς,
Hebrews 10:39; to ἡ ζωή,
Matthew 7:13; to σωτηρία,
Philippians 1:28. ὁ υἱὸς τῆς ἀπωλείας,
a man doomed to eternal misery (a Hebraism, see υἱός, 2):
2 Thessalonians 2:3 (of Antichrist);
John 17:12 (of Judas, the traitor); ἡμέρα κρίσεως κ. ἀπωλείας τῶν ἀσεβῶν,
2 Peter 3:7. (In secular authors from Polybius as above [but see Aristotle, probl. 17, 3, 2, vol. ii., p. 916a, 26; 29, 14, 10 ibid. 952b, 26; Nicom. eth. 4, 1 ibid. 1120a, 2, etc.]; often in the Sept. and O. T. Apocrypha.)