dermdoc said:
TheGreatEscape said:
dermdoc said:
TheGreatEscape said:
Doesn't matter. The counsel still stands just like Augustine accepted the baptism of unbelieving donatists.
And Justinian was an Orthodox believer. We are not even talking about heretics.
Moreover, that is what I was stating. You believe in hell being temporal like the apparently current changing EOC, but the EOC does not believe that the unregenerate go from hell to heaven. That's what you believe.
Thus you do not hold to the EOC view of hell. So please stop stating this as a support mechanism.
I am not sure you and I are defining "universalism" the same way.
It is not everybody just goes to Heaven. There is just punishment for correction but ultimately there is reconciliation.
I know the kind of universalism to which you affirm.
We went over this in the "Death, Hell, and the Grave" thread.
"Ultimate reconciliation" is not the EOC adherence on hell.
You don't hold to the EOC view of hell.
There position appears to be "we don't know what happens to them after the unregenerate are sent there."
Or it is an annihilationism believe.
Agree I do not adhere to the consensus EOC view of hell. But as I have posted, there are EOC saints and theologians who agree with ultimate reconciliation.They have not been excommunicated or had their sainthood removed.
And the EOC view of "hell" is nothing like the Western church. It is ontological, not judicial. "Hell" is not a place in EOC theology.
Yes. While the East inclines their focal point upon the corruption of sin, the West inclines their focal point upon the guilt of sin.
We Reformed hold to both. We also don't have this huge divide between sanctification and justification.
So people send themselves to hell because they are choosing what they are most inclined to choose as a result of sin.
Romans 1:18 (ESV)
"For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth."
Also states in line with considering the state of man previously above that:
R 1:21 (ESV)
"For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened."
It's not that unregenerate man do not have some relationship with the divine. It's that the wrath of God is upon their heads in their mad at Dad syndrome.
But I thought Christ propitiated or extinguished all sin?
Hahaha.
The next thing which relates is this.
Do you believe that our future obedience or lack thereof, which is covered, was credited to us by the work of Christ alone?