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Eternal hell or annihillation make no sense

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
People who reject God have no place to go in Gods economy! The wages of sin is death.
I pictured you standing behind a lectern when you said this.

What does this have to do with the questions in the OP? Everybody dies. Seems like gratuitous preaching to me.
 

Regiomontanus

Eastern Orthodox
Why?

Because or actions and sins is finitive. Infinitive punishment for finitive sins is not just.

God is loving and just. So my conclusion is that eternal hell or annhilation of the soul do not exist. That is my belief

What is your thoughts about this?

I think I have plugged this book before, but


If you look at the writings of many of the Church Fathers, a strong case could be made for universal salvation (that is, not eternal punishment in Hell).
 

Colt

Well-Known Member
I pictured you standing behind a lectern when you said this.

What does this have to do with the questions in the OP? Everybody dies. Seems like gratuitous preaching to me.
This was the question in the OP that I was answering: "What is your thoughts about this?" I answered it.
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
This was the question in the OP that I was answering: "What is your thoughts about this?" I answered it.
From your answer, I have no idea what your thoughts are on whether or not punishment is infinitive, which is what the OP is asking.
 

muhammad_isa

Veteran Member
..You are right though God has no pity for sinners for they've made their choices. However God does have boundless mercy on repentant sinners. They've made different choices.
..and that's the key..
The question then becomes "will there be any souls that remain unrepentant?"

..and the answer is, unfortunately, yes.
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
As uncomfortable a thought as it is, even that is a finite action. How many mass murders have been forgotten by history and living memory, or were unknown entirely?
I have no horse in the race.

I was just wondering what the OP's thoughts were on this and if she was of the belief that whether punishments for such things are served per person concurrently or consecutively.
 

Colt

Well-Known Member
From your answer, I have no idea what your thoughts are on whether or not punishment is infinitive, which is what the OP is asking.
First, we need to consider what "sin" as I understand it actually means.

"Sin must be redefined as deliberate disloyalty to Deity. There are degrees of disloyalty: the partial loyalty of indecision; the divided loyalty of confliction; the dying loyalty of indifference; and the death of loyalty exhibited in devotion to godless ideals."

"Although conscious and wholehearted identification with evil (sin) is the equivalent of nonexistence (annihilation), there must always intervene between the time of such personal identification with sin and the execution of the penalty—the automatic result of such a willful embrace of evil—a period of time of sufficient length to allow for such an adjudication of such an individual’s universe status as will prove entirely satisfactory to all related universe personalities, and which will be so fair and just as to win the approval of the sinner himself.

But if this universe rebel against the reality of truth and goodness refuses to approve the verdict, and if the guilty one knows in his heart the justice of his condemnation but refuses to make such confession, then must the execution of sentence be delayed in accordance with the discretion of the Ancients of Days. And the Ancients of Days refuse to annihilate any being until all moral values and all spiritual realities are extinct, both in the evildoer and in all related supporters and possible sympathizers." UB 1988

So, by the individual's final decision, finitive sins eventually become infinitive in final judgment, hence "the wages of sins is death". NOT eternal hell torment but annihilation!
 

Unfettered

A striving disciple of Jesus Christ
Why?

Because or actions and sins is finitive. Infinitive punishment for finitive sins is not just.

God is loving and just. So my conclusion is that eternal hell or annhilation of the soul do not exist. That is my belief

What is your thoughts about this?
There is too much nuance to cover here in a couple sentences, but I'd offer that hell is certainly a real inheritance, but most who reside in that condition will be removed after a time because of the mercy of Jesus Christ. Relatively very few will reside in hell forever, and those who do will be there because they chose to be, in full view of what they were choosing. All will receive an inheritance suited to their condition, meaning what they are, which is the sum of their desires, actions, thoughts and words. It's both just and merciful. That's my understanding.
 

Unfettered

A striving disciple of Jesus Christ
Yes, it is sadly so, that many of us willfully choose to remain unrepentant.
Agreed. Even so, my understanding is that even the unrepentant will ultimately be removed from hell to inherit an existence in the light. It takes far more than even refusal to repent to make one conditioned for an eternal hell.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
I understand that God has said that he would ultimately remove unrepentant sinners from hell. That's what gives me confidence enough in the idea to post it. :)
Perchance do you have the Bible verses that say that? I haven't seen them, but I am not very familiar with the Bible. :)
 

Unfettered

A striving disciple of Jesus Christ
Perchance do you have the Bible verses that say that? I haven't seen them, but I am not very familiar with the Bible. :)
The scriptures I would most readily cite are not recorded in the Bible, but are found in scriptures that constitute modern revelation. I don't know that it is expounded as clearly in the Bible.

Note verse 85 here: Doctrine and Covenants 76

And here the Lord corrects man's misunderstanding of what "endless torment" and "eternal damnation" mean: Doctrine and Covenants 19

In short, if men don't repent, they must suffer the kind of suffering that God (God the Son, Jesus Christ) suffered, which is referred to as "endless" (as God is endless) and "eternal" (as God is eternal). But except for the sons of perdition, God ends all that suffering; he redeems sufferers from the endless suffering and eternal damnation they experience. So the vast majority of those who experience hell will see an end to that suffering, because of the mercy of Jesus Christ.

Hope that helps.
 
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