I'm interested in knowing your personal interpretation of the following scriptures. I'm addressing this post specifically to
you because I'd like to know your thoughts on them. I decided to address you directly because I'm already aware of how a couple of others in this discussion interpret the Bible, so I'm not interested in hearing from them. I won't name names, but I have never agreed with the scriptural interpretation or teachings of their church denomination. I don't now, nor did I when I was a devout Christian, a street preacher, and an evangelism team leader. I'd like for you to know that I'm speaking from the perspective of a spiritualist who has experienced paranormal phenomena (earthbound spirits and hauntings) since I was 6 years old (a total of 44 years).
Jesus mentioned the appearance of a ghost in
Luke 24:37–39 because his disciples thought he was a ghost.
1 Samuel 28:7–20 mentions the ghost of Samuel communicating with King Saul and warning him that God would deliver both him and Israel into the hands of the Philistines because of his disobedience. There is no mention in these verses that the spirit he spoke to was anything else but the ghost of Samuel.
Ecclesiastes 9:5 states that the dead know nothing, and even their names are forgotten. However, if the dead know nothing, then how would they know if they are either in heaven or hell? For example, in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (
Luke 16:19–31), the rich man knew that he was in torment in Hades ("
because I am in agony in this fire"). It is a parable of a dead rich man who was obviously conscious that he was being tormented in Hades, was able to recognize Lazarus and Abraham from afar, and also pleaded with Abraham to help him. It seemingly contradicts
Ecclesiastes 9:5, which claims that the dead know nothing.
Furthermore,
Ecclesiastes 9:5 states that there is no final reward for the dead and that even their names are forgotten. However, it conflicts with other scriptures that suggest there are final rewards given in heaven (such as these verses
here) and that people's names have been written in a "Book of Life" that God is said to have on hand (see the verses
here), as well as their names being recorded in heaven (
Luke 10:20). Upon extensive reading, study, and examination of the Bible, I've found that
Ecclesiastes 3:21 specifies that human spirits and the spirit of the animal rise upward from the earth.
Revelation 20:13 states that spirits rise up from the sea and Hades. Also,
Hebrews 9:27 states that people are destined to die once and, after that, face judgment, and
2 Corinthians 5:8 suggests that believers are in the presence of Jesus after death. However, according to
1 Thessalonians 4:13–17 and
Revelation 20:11–15, both believers and unbelievers' spirits are sleeping in their graves and awaiting God's judgment in the end times. Furthermore, there are other verses that describe "soul sleep" (
Daniel 12:2,
2 Chronicles 32:33,
2 Chronicles 33:20,
1 Kings 15:8,
1 Kings 16:28,
2 Kings 13:13,
2 Kings 14:29,
John 11:11–15) as well.
In conclusion, and for your reference, I'm including what I wrote in a previous post earlier in this thread (
post #59).
And perhaps a scriptural interpretation that all Christians might agree on rather than being divided by the Greek Orthodox Bible (with a 79-book canon), the Catholic Bible (with a 73-book canon), and multiple translations of the Protestant Bible (with a 66-book canon). If they could all agree on which Bible is correct, then perhaps they could agree on what it actually says about an afterlife rather than most of them repeatedly quoting
Hebrews 9:27 as if it were the sole verse in the Bible that mentions a hereafter. However, it isn't the only verse. For example,
Ecclesiastes 3:21 suggests that human spirits rise upward from the earth, and
Revelation 20:13 suggests that they also rise from the sea and Hades and then face God's judgment. Conversely,
1 Thessalonians 4:13–17 and
Revelation 20:11–15 suggest that all human spirits (both Christians and non-Christians alike) are sleeping in their graves until they are resurrected and judged by God in the alleged end times. Furthermore,
Daniel 12:2,
2 Chronicles 32:33,
2 Chronicles 33:20,
1 Kings 15:8,
1 Kings 16:28,
2 Kings 13:13,
2 Kings 14:29, and
John 11:11–15 all support the concept of "soul sleep." There is also
2 Corinthians 5:8, which suggests that Jesus' followers are instantly in his presence after death. Someone suggested earlier in this thread that people should read and study the Bible. I'd be more specific about which people.