CoreyD
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There is no scriptural reason for believing that is literal.Revelation 20 10 and the devil who had deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet were, and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.
This is literal
It's merely believing it, because of one's point of view.
You don't believe the beast, the heads of the beast, and the horns of the beast are literal.
All of which the angel explains their symbolic meaning... along with the symbolic meaning of the lake of fire.
So to believe the lake of fire is literal, despite it being right there in the Bible what the angel said, is like waving one's hand at Jesus angel and saying, "My intelligence is all I need. I don't need an angel to explain anything."
So it's like viewing a conversation that goes like this:
The angel says "the ten horns, they are ten kings". Revelation 17:12
"Okay. Cool. Thank you".
The angel says "the seven heads, they are seven mountains... also seven kings". Revelation 17:10
"Alright, angel of my lord. Yes. I accept that".
The angel says "the lake of fire, it is the second death". Revelation 20:14
Death and Hades aren't material things.And so is 14 Then Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the lake of fire. 15 And if anyone's name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire.
What then is the significance of them being thrown in to the lake of fire, if it is literal?
It would be like saying hatred, and envy are thrown into a fireplace. There is no sense or logic, to that.
Only if the fire is used figuratively, would it make sense to cast hatred and envy there, because we would understand the meaning - hatred and envy are destroyed - gone.
So it is with the lake of fire.
How do you read this, and still say the lake of fire is literal?
How does it make sense to burn up death and Hades in fire?
That is true.Just because some things are symbolic in the book of revelation, does not mean all are.
However, that doesn't now give us the liberty of deciding whatever we want about the book of Revelation.
There are criterion to follow.
I provided you with one.
All the places where the angel explains the sign, the Greek word ἐστιν is used.
So, the reader would see that the angel is giving the explanation for what each sign is a representation of.
- Revelation 1:20 The seven stars symbolize the seven angels, and the seven lampstands symbolize the seven churches.
- Revelation 4:5 The torches of fire symbolizes the seven spirits of God.
- Revelation 6:5 The seven horns and seven eyes symbolize the seven spirits of God.
- Revelation 6:8 The seven heads symbolize seven mountains, symbolic of seven kings.
- Revelation 17:12 The ten horns symbolize ten kings.
- Revelation 17:15 The waters symbolize peoples and multitudes and nations and tongues.
- Revelation 20:14 The lake of fire symbolizes the second death.
The choice is theirs. The consequences also.
Do you accept them?The Greek word gehenna, translated "hell" in the KJV, is found twelve times in the scriptures, eleven of them from the lips of Jesus, with ten of those as threats of being "cast into", "destroyed", or "damned". This is not a symboliv language.
You quoted the word "destroyed". Why then do you disagree that all that are cast into the lake of fire are destroyed?
That does not have to refer to a literal place and literal torment, does it.The word “hell,” coming from the Greek word Ge’enna speaks of what the book of revelation calls this “lake of fire” where people are punished and tormented forever.
Reality isn;t church doctrine that has been debunked over and over by scriptures, that people do not want to let go of.I think we sort of comfortably distance ourselves from that reality. Certainly in general, in the church, it is looked over, passed by, ignored. There are those who claim to be preachers who don’t ever talk about hell, wouldn’t talk about hell, avoid it at all costs, when the truth of the matter is it ought to be the first thing that we talk about when we talk about the gospel. This is about salvation from hell.
Can a person use a place as a figurative representation of something?The Greek word Ge’enna which is a word that comes from the Valley of Hinnom. The Valley of Hinnom, just east of Jerusalem and a little bit south – is the place in ancient times where the city dump was, and it was a never-extinguished burning fire. And it became the metaphor for the lake of fire, for hell. You threw whatever was useless into the trash, into the fire.
Sure they can. You know this.
So what is wrong with Jesus doing that?
No, it's not.Soul forever ruined for usefulness to God, having a spoiled, marred image is thrown into the everlasting trash heap, the burning fires of Ge’enna or hell. That’s what those words are talking about, not annihilation.
Yes we have.You cannot make that case from Scripture.
There is that word again - destruction.In Matthew chapter 26 Jesus is talking about Judas, and He says, “The Son of Man is to go, just as it is written of Him” – He says this at the upper room communion with his disciples – “The Son of Man is to go, just as it is written of Him; but woe to the man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been good for that man if he had not been born.” Why would He say that? “It would have been good for that man if he had not been born.” Why? Because of the consequences that are about to come to him. It wouldn’t matter if he was going to be annihilated, if he was going to be exterminated. Hell is eternal, conscious punishment. There is no way around this.
Why are you not accepting it. Don't you see it? Destroyed; Destruction
What does destroy mean?
- To break apart the structure of, render physically unusable, or cause to cease to exist as a distinguishable physical entity:
The fire destroyed the library. The tumor was destroyed with a laser. - To put an end to; eliminate.
- To render useless or ruin.
Eternal torment and eternal punishment are the same thing, yes.Matthew 25:45
“These, will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.” Both words “eternal” are identical. They are the same in the original language.
See this post.
The lake of fire is eternal.So, if hell isn’t eternal, then guess what? Neither is heaven. Those will go away into eternal punishment. The righteous will go into eternal life. If there is eternal life, then there is eternal punishment. Get rid of hell and you have to get rid of heaven as being forever. Was our Lord wrong about this? Are the critics right? Are the deniers of hell right, and the Lord is wrong?
That does not make it literal. No one is arguing against eternal destruction... At least not that I know of.
Jesus did not teach the opposite.Did Jesus mean to teach annihilation and somehow goof it up and teach the opposite?
That's what church sermons do. We heard that since we were toddlers... in church. Not from Jesus.
I agree. That is nonsense.Is that what was going on here? He meant to teach annihilation and He just messed it up? Nonsense.
No one is saying that, but you. Isn't that so.
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