godrulz said:
You need to do a word study on destruction and its use in various contexts. Words have a semantical range of meaning. You are hung up on one use.
No, a word's meaning depends on the context. You are asking me to accept the meaning of a word in one context and apply that same meaning in a completely different context. D.A. Carson calls this the illegitament totality transfer fallacy. Also my case does not just depend on the meaning of the words destroy and perish. The wicked are said to be no more, they are said to be consumed by fire, burned up, they are wiped out like Sodom and Gemorrah. No, I am not "hung up" on one use. The full witness of scripture supports the case that the wages of sin really is death.
We need to formulate a doctrine based on all relevant verses.
Which is what I've done. You want to take one passage out of Revelation and one parable and build a doctrine out of these two passages, neither of which actually supports your doctrine. Then you want to rewrite the rest of scripture to agree with your beloved doctrine.
This supports ECT and is consistent with other legit uses of word destruction, punishment, torment, everlasting, etc.
The only way you can supprt ECT is by denying that destruction ever really means destruction.
I honestly believe your arguments have been refuted over and over and do not stand up to scrutiny. Your view is not new, but I believe it can be refuted.
It's okay of your believe that, but you haven't refuted my argument at all. Am I supposed to look at the :hammer: smiley and say to myself "Oh, Godrulz thinks I've hit my head with a hammer, there must be eternal conscious torment!"
We recognize figurative language when the context demands it. The reality is better/worse than the symbol. Revelation should be interpreted with a normative, literal approach, but we recognize more symbolism, etc. You cannot dismiss its face value teachings when they disagree with by dismissing the whole genre. Much of Revelation can and should be interpreted literally. We also see limited allegory, etc. elsewhere, but we do not dismiss historical narrative in the majority of books just because there is isolated figurative language.
You are taking symbolic passages out of context in order to justify the doctrine that you like.
Begging the question....you are assuming a definition and assuming it has only one meaning. You are arguing like God is not trinity since the Bible says God, not trinity? We can establish trinity from the cumulative evidence without the literal word just as we can establish ECT without the exact phrase (perish/destruction can fit either view, as you have been shown; you are selective in what evidence you keep vs throw out).
No, you haven't shown any verses that say "People go to hell when they die where they are tormented alive forever while they are dead." You just admitted that there is no such verse in the Bible. This discussion is not about the trinity. There is solid biblical evidence for the trinity. There is no solid biblical evidence for ECT. That's the difference.
Death is separation, not cessation. You again assume a flawed understanding of death and beg the question.
You have not shown me any Bible passage that says "death is separation" even though I've asked you to many times. Assuming your definition of death is correct and saying I have a flawed understanding of death because I don't agree that death is separation is the definition of begging the question.
D.A Carson would not be pleased with you for misapplying his good understanding of fallacies.
I haven't misapplied D.A. Carson's rule.
M.O.
each:
I am allowed to report bad behavior and I will continue to report bad behavior. If you don't like it, learn to control yourself.
Lk. 16 is not a parable. Even if it is, it would still not teach false doctrine. It supports our view, not yours. Your exegesis is flawed as is your theology on this point.
It is a parable, and even if it were not, it doesn't support the doctrine of eternal conscious torment since it is not describing the final punishment and it is not eternal.
I think we should report you :baby:
If I act as bad as you do, you should.