... if He does not actually promise endless uninterrupted bliss for all those who start to do so?
I had written in a post -
"Or maybe the effect of eating the tree of life is temporary and requires one to keep on coming back to it every 100 years or 1000 years. So grabbing quick fix before being barred would have had only a temporary effect. And eating frm the tree probably did not make one immune from a knife in the heart or a club to the head.."
Yesterday a poster responded to me like this -
"where would one get that idea?
temporary, impermanent salvation?
whats 'good' about having only the deceptive illusion of life?"
There seems to be a large number of "Christians" who have an attitude that "The crucial reason I have for following Jesus is that I believ His word promises me endless existence in perfect bliss after physical death. If God were not promising me an endless existence in perfect bliss ,why would I give up my own agendas and follow Jesus Christ as Lord. The gains for doing so would not be enough, in my opinion, to justify me doing so."
Somehow, experiencing the receiving and giving of God's love in this life, and knowing that God loves me with an endless love and always wants the best for me, is seen as "having only the deceptive illusion of life", unless I also have a water-tight guarantee that, no matter how badly I behave and treat God in the future, I will still inherit endless existence in perfect bliss. The idea that God would remove that experience of perfect bliss for any reason at all, seems anathema to such "Christians".
What if, because I insist on including having endless existence irremovably added to the terms of my contract, when I sell my soul to God, God grants me that demand. He gives me endless existence, but He blue lines my demand for continuous bliss. Am I better off, or worse off than the person who makes no contract with God, makes no demands on God, and after judgment is eventually annihilated?
Personally, I am willing to trust in the judgment of the loving and merciful God revealed in Jesus' incarnation, life, death and resurrection, and to trust such a Creator to always do what he knows is best for me in any situation, whether I live endlessly or not. I take the Meshach, Shadrach and Abednego position.
Dan 3:17 - 37
If it so be that you throw us in the furnace, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and we are trusting he will deliver us out of thine hand, O king.
But if it not so be that you throw us in the furnace, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.
Whatever the present or future holds, I will trust in the goodness of God.
"To whom else shall we go. You have the words that give us access to the way of life that is characteristic of the age to come. " John 6:68
I had written in a post -
"Or maybe the effect of eating the tree of life is temporary and requires one to keep on coming back to it every 100 years or 1000 years. So grabbing quick fix before being barred would have had only a temporary effect. And eating frm the tree probably did not make one immune from a knife in the heart or a club to the head.."
Yesterday a poster responded to me like this -
"where would one get that idea?
temporary, impermanent salvation?
whats 'good' about having only the deceptive illusion of life?"
There seems to be a large number of "Christians" who have an attitude that "The crucial reason I have for following Jesus is that I believ His word promises me endless existence in perfect bliss after physical death. If God were not promising me an endless existence in perfect bliss ,why would I give up my own agendas and follow Jesus Christ as Lord. The gains for doing so would not be enough, in my opinion, to justify me doing so."
Somehow, experiencing the receiving and giving of God's love in this life, and knowing that God loves me with an endless love and always wants the best for me, is seen as "having only the deceptive illusion of life", unless I also have a water-tight guarantee that, no matter how badly I behave and treat God in the future, I will still inherit endless existence in perfect bliss. The idea that God would remove that experience of perfect bliss for any reason at all, seems anathema to such "Christians".
What if, because I insist on including having endless existence irremovably added to the terms of my contract, when I sell my soul to God, God grants me that demand. He gives me endless existence, but He blue lines my demand for continuous bliss. Am I better off, or worse off than the person who makes no contract with God, makes no demands on God, and after judgment is eventually annihilated?
Personally, I am willing to trust in the judgment of the loving and merciful God revealed in Jesus' incarnation, life, death and resurrection, and to trust such a Creator to always do what he knows is best for me in any situation, whether I live endlessly or not. I take the Meshach, Shadrach and Abednego position.
Dan 3:17 - 37
If it so be that you throw us in the furnace, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and we are trusting he will deliver us out of thine hand, O king.
But if it not so be that you throw us in the furnace, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.
Whatever the present or future holds, I will trust in the goodness of God.
"To whom else shall we go. You have the words that give us access to the way of life that is characteristic of the age to come. " John 6:68
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