dermdoc said:
Jabin said:
Quote:
He was talking to an audience of Jews. There was no concept of hell in the OT, only Sheol. I think it is a huge jump to go to ECT hell from Gehenna.
But Christ did not use the word Sheol, he used Gehenna. And that obviously meant something to his audience. What that meaning was, we're not completely sure, but his description of Gehenna as flames, eternal torment, etc. apparently didn't cause any reaction from his audience. So, by the time of Christ, the Jews were apparently familiar with Gehenna as a term for a post-death place of flames and eternal torment.
I'm not sure, though, that Christ necessarily meant a literal place. He may have or he may not have. But just because we're uncomfortable with Christ's teachings does not mean that we should reinterpret them to make them meaningless or non-literal. We have to take the hard with the easy.
And you say that you're going to bow out, but you bring this topic (and the topic of double-predestination) up constantly on these threads.
You are correct. Because those two topics are key to what the character of God is.
Do the Calvinists on here believe God loves everybody?
And do they believe God sends people to eternal conscious torment hell?
I'm sorry, Jabin. I think i am going to intercept this message. Feel free to add or take away or further qualify your own statements. We all are in this process. And if I break board pseudo-rules as church father's are often quoted and such; then I truly don't care. For there are folks on many topics who are much more eloquent than myself.
"Does God love everyone?"
"The Bible teaches that "God is love" (1 John 4:8).
{DR. DEREK THOMAS: Well, yes and no. There is a sense in which God loves all of His creatures. We can think of it in terms of John 3:16, "For God so loved the world." What does "world" mean? It doesn't mean that God loves every single individual in exactly the same way. In the Reformed faith, we talk about common grace, that blessing that was part of the covenant with Noah in Genesis 9 that relates to all of creation, that there is a beneficent love of God that provides food and shelter and a happy marriage to those who are not Christians. So, there is a sense in which God loves everyone.
But God doesn't love everyone in the same way. There are those whom He loves. We believe in the doctrine of election, that God chose from before the foundation of the world, that Christ died for particularly, that He shed His blood and provided atonement, that He rendered propitiation to appease and satisfy divine justice, that Christ died in the place of as a substitute and sin bearer for the elect.
Now, I don't know who the elect are. There's not a mark on their forehead that tells me who they are. As a preacher, I preach the saving love of Christ to everybody, that to whosoever will come to Christ and repent of their sins and believe on Him. If they do that, then in retrospect, you can look back and say, "Well, they were obviously elect." But as a preacher, I do want to proclaim the universal love of God for all of mankind in the sense of common grace. But that particular love of God for salvation is, in the end, only for the elect.}
https://www.ligonier.org/podcasts/ask-ligonier/does-god-love-everybodyEphesians 1:3-9 (ESV) a circulated letter to both Jew and Gentile believers
{3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, 4 even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him. In love 5 he predestined us for adoption to himself as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will, 6 to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed us in the Beloved. 7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace, 8 which he lavished upon us, in all wisdom and insight 9 making known to us the mystery of his will, according to his purpose, which he set forth in Christ}
If you will notice that the above text is all in one sentence.
It reaches back and forth to describe that in an unconditional love God has elected or chosen we believers in him before the foundations of the world. If you only see the bad news and not the good news of the Gospel here, then I will simply have to keep discussing and keep praying that a seed is planted for a future day.
If God loved his elect based upon his foreknowledge of a future choice, then what kind of unconditional love is that?
The views of prevenient grace or future foreknowledge of future works based love places God too far back from his interaction between space and time is in the Scripture.
In these two views just mentioned, God has his arms folded and is just waiting if one is lovable enough to lavish his conditional love upon. May it never be! Read Ephesians 1 again and again. For God's love never fails for those who trust in him by grace alone to the glory of God alone.
The other aspect that you can see that this often causes in our view of God, if it obtains the false presumption that God is obligated to love all creatures in the same way, is that Christ is biting his finger nails at the right hand of the Father just hoping that the devil doesn't win this war.