The Annihilation View of Hell

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • In the previous episode, I talked about the 3 different views of hell that have been taught throughout church history. In this episode, I briefly discuss why I used to hold to the eternal conscious torment view of hell but have come to believe that the annihilation view of hell is the most biblical. You don’t need to agree with me! But, if you claim to be a Christian, you do need to make sure your view of hell is based on Scripture and not just your church’s doctrinal statement or your tradition.
    #hell #annihlation #conditionalimmortality #prestonsprinkle #erasinghell #francischan
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Комментарии • 461

  • @michaelnewzealand1888
    @michaelnewzealand1888 3 года назад +69

    Four things I really love about Preston and his approach. 1) his humility to look at a topic with a teachable spirit 2) his approach in evaluating each view against scripture regardless of his own personal preference/view 3) his conclusion that conditional immortality best fits scripture. 4) his graciousness to those who don't hold to the view that he has landed on. I commend you my brother for all of these things.

    • @jleor5068
      @jleor5068 Месяц назад +1

      Truly exemplary of the fruit of the Spirit! Praise the Lord!

  • @cgandy2
    @cgandy2 6 месяцев назад +9

    This is an excellent exposition of conditional immortality. I used to accept ECT but never really studied WHY I accepted that doctrine. When I did study it, the scriptures revealed to me an annihilation view and now I can confidently support the doctrine of annihilationism. It is so clear to me now. Thank you for the additional scripture verses presented here since I missed some of them in my own study but they all lead to the same conclusion.

  • @rosemerrynmcmillan1611
    @rosemerrynmcmillan1611 11 месяцев назад +10

    Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Fantastic to see EVANGELICAL pastors looking HONESTLY AT THE BIBLICAL EVIDENCE FOR ANNIHILATION! Came to this view 30 years ago after it was brought to our attention by our pastor. It made immediate sense when we saw the overwhelming evidence in the scriptures. It also makes sense historically when we see the Roman Catholic Church using the concept of an eternal burning hell to keep their adherents in fear and bondage to their church. It is just so obvious once you see the truth!

    • @ericroessing3517
      @ericroessing3517 2 месяца назад

      That is exactly right! I was raised in the Roman Catholic Church, including 8 years of parochial school (they did use it as rosemerry said); I came to faith at 20; and in my thirties came to see this view, because I studied Paul and also read Fudge's "The Fire that Consumes." See also Chapter 20 of my book "The Grace of Christ, Third Edition" (Wipf and Stock).

  • @ScottBayles
    @ScottBayles 3 года назад +63

    Good review. I know you're limited by time, but I would also add that contidtional immortality makes better sense of the cross. If, as ECT affirms, the wages of sin is being eternally tormented, then Jesus did not pay the penalty for our sins on the cross because he was not tormented forever. If the wages of sin is death, as the Bible clearly states, then Jesus did in fact pay the penalty for our sins on the cross. Additionally, I believe that even Revelation 20:10 and John's vision of the Lake of Fire actually affirm annihilation when we properly interpret the symbolizism. After all, John specifically tells us that "the lake of fire is the seond death."

    • @davidmccolgan6972
      @davidmccolgan6972 3 года назад +17

      this has been the clincher for me for quite some time. If Jesus paid the penalty for my sin (which He absolutely did) then the penalty for sin cannot be eternal conscious punishment

    • @JoeySehn
      @JoeySehn 3 года назад +6

      @@davidmccolgan6972 calvanists would say that Jesus’s torture was Gods way of practically scaring believers into what his wrath might do to them. The cross was an image of what hell will be like for those who don’t accept Christ; only the pain experienced on the cross will be experienced forever.
      Clearly not in line with a Christ centered view of scripture, nor is it in line with the God described in 1 Corinthians and the sermon on the mound

    • @ttownsupreme2183
      @ttownsupreme2183 2 года назад +2

      @@davidmccolgan6972 Precisely he paid the death penalty....not the eternally separated from God forever penalty....Jesus finished the transgression of his people on Matthew 9:24 making an everlasting atonement for it....its why the holy of holies was rent in 2.

    • @fireandworms
      @fireandworms 2 года назад

      Scott keep in mind that it says, in Rev 20:10 "age of the ages." Not "eternal" or "forever and ever." This refers to the most preeminent age, just like "king of kings" and "lord of lords" means the most preeminent king and the most preeminent lord.

    • @zacdredge3859
      @zacdredge3859 2 года назад +1

      Huh, I actually think the opposite is true; I'm hesitant to accept this view because it diminishes the Cross. If your argument is based on a weak idea of the death and Resurrection I think that's more of a bug than a feature. I mean we tacitly accept that Christ died for everyone who will ever believe in Him and follow his Lordship so why would it paying for eternal damnation be a problem?
      Are you arguing that the sacrifice of Jesus is able to surely save an indefinite number of saints but is limited to preventing one-time death?

  • @cameronv8943
    @cameronv8943 11 месяцев назад +14

    So many have read John 3:16 but refuse to interpret it literally.

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 10 месяцев назад +6

      You are so right, Cameron. People accept half of John 3: 16 but refuse to accept the other half. Go figure. ✴ _For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not_ PERISH PERISH PERISH PERISH PERISH *[ be utterly destroyed ]* .... (John 3: 16, KJV)

    • @MP-sy4zc
      @MP-sy4zc 5 месяцев назад

      It is important to consider how an author uses each word elsewhere and consider the particular context, rather than just interpreting it "literally." I don't think perishing in John 3:16 would have to be annihilation, particularly if we consider how John immediately contrasts it with eternal life (which isn't just literal everlasting life according to John 17). Eternal life in John is relational, and this word for perishing is also used to describe people being lost (or, rather, that Jesus did NOT LOSE any whom the Father gave him). I think one could make a case that the destruction/perishing in John 3:16 is also understood in terms of the loss of relationship with God, not as the annihilation of their soul.
      Also, consider how the beast in Revelation 17:8 was going to destruction (same word), which in Revelation 20:10 is described as being tormented day and night forever and ever. Destruction/Death doesn't have to mean the literal ending of their existence.

    • @alwaysadawg6488
      @alwaysadawg6488 4 месяца назад

      Question: if the penalty for sin is eternal death, and Christ paid the price for our sin, was Christ eternally destroyed? A similar question could be asked regarding eternal torment.

    • @MrHwaynefair
      @MrHwaynefair 4 месяца назад +1

      @@IsaacNussbaum But keep this in mind: the word translated "lost" in Luke 15 is from the same word, "apollumi" - there the lost sheep, the lost coin and the lost (prodigal) son are not beyond recovery. "Who then can be saved?! With God all things are possible!"
      Jesus said, "Destroy this temple - and in three days I will raise it again..."
      Jesus is the last "Word" on everything ❤‍🩹

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 4 месяца назад

      ​@@MrHwaynefair *"Jesus is the last "Word" on everything"* I agree. And here is an example of His words. ✴ _Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever does not obey the Son shall not see_ [eternal] _life,_ (John 3: 36a; ESV)

  • @robbchristopher158
    @robbchristopher158 2 года назад +16

    Thank you for being a humble man. We need more humble men like you in the Christian community that don't accuse each other of being heretics.

  • @ButterflyBasshead
    @ButterflyBasshead 29 дней назад +2

    Just recently did a study on these different doctrines for the first time as an adult. This video does well at high-lighting and covering all of the great points and evidence for the Annialationist stand point, while also giving credence to the other viewpoints. So refreshing to see another within the body, who does well at putting away their presuppositions and preconceived ideas, when interpreting scripture through God's lens, and not our own skewed lens. The only thing I would humbly add to this study, is to also approach scripture with your best understanding of not just the Word, but also of our Creator's character and personality, as shown by His Word. This has helped me to find clarity in areas, where just approaching it from a scripture study, shed light on some questions or inquiries I may have. Obviously discernment is key in our entirety of knowing Him and His ways, but thought I would share.

  • @andyscheurer6336
    @andyscheurer6336 2 месяца назад +3

    Great study! I’ve been researching this and so many people just give 99% opinion and 1 % scripture. I wrote down all the scripture and will be studying. Thank you .

  • @Boogachomper
    @Boogachomper Год назад +8

    Thank you so much, Preston. I’m not certain what I believe quite yet. But I love your heart and earnest study. Grace and truth, like Jesus. God bless you.

  • @JoshWashington
    @JoshWashington Месяц назад +3

    5:50 Preston just confessed the level of actual knowledge of most Seminary teachers (and arguably all who have typically a smaller amount of theological study). They haven't done their own deep dive into some core topics, rather they simply assume their tradition is right.

  • @jessicaerb7950
    @jessicaerb7950 3 года назад +8

    Thank you for this. I’ve been reading and considering these viewpoints and this was very timely.

  • @WhiteStoneName
    @WhiteStoneName 3 года назад +8

    This is really good, Preston. I'm glad that you're putting this out. All the specifics and substance vs. strawmen is really helpful to people who want to legitimately engage this topic and what the Bible and/or Tradition (depending on your view of that distinction :)) say.
    "Seek to understand before you seek to refute." Amen

  • @ambassador_in_training
    @ambassador_in_training 3 года назад +5

    Thanks a lot brother Preston for putting forth a great Bible-based argument for conditional immortality!!! I find immensely helpful to know this position isn't some kind of outlier, having no basis in Scripture. On the contrary, it is heavily rooted and grounded in the Word. In my opinion, it best describes the character of Jesus Christ: his goodness and severity!
    Your love & reverence for the Word & your respectful attitude for the position you disagree with is such a good way to communicate your thoughts!!!
    God bless you richly!!!

  • @user-rh5uu1td7f
    @user-rh5uu1td7f 3 года назад +7

    nice work I'm truly on the fence leaning towards annilation aswell. love videos like these to make us dig deeper in scripture. I must admit Chris Dates arguement on annilation inspired me to dig deeper now this video set it over the top... Praise God well done brother

  • @ruthhill2010
    @ruthhill2010 3 года назад +20

    Thanks Preston, really thought provoking. Rev 20:14 I think also supports the annihilation view if I’m not mistaken? Hell itself is burned up!

    • @casualgamer542
      @casualgamer542 3 года назад +5

      Another interesting thought on Rev 20:14 is that the Greek word used there is "Hades" which is synonymous with "Sheol" in the Old Testament. Sheol and Hades are never associated with the final punishment in the Bible.

    • @rosemerrynmcmillan1611
      @rosemerrynmcmillan1611 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@casualgamer542Means the grave or death is abolished in the eternal Kingdom.

    • @maceawilder
      @maceawilder 9 месяцев назад

      @@rosemerrynmcmillan1611 No. That is one interpretation of Sheol/Hades. Sheol and Hades makes no sense to refer to the grave considering ancient thought concerning the two. Hades/Sheol is the holding place of the dead. It is not a place solely for the wicked but has a place of paradise and a place of suffering. You can see Jesus even speak of this in Luke 16 with the rich man and Lazarus.

  • @to6955
    @to6955 Год назад +7

    Wow great take on all these verses. I used to be ECT but am now more convinced that conditional immortality has more evidence from scripture. It’s been a few years journey and I’ve landed here.

    • @MasterporkyMinch
      @MasterporkyMinch 8 месяцев назад

      Conditional immortality turned me into a miso theist

    • @to6955
      @to6955 8 месяцев назад

      @@MasterporkyMinch? Explain. How? It made me feel more comforted compared to ECT

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 6 месяцев назад

      @@MasterporkyMinch For readers unfamiliar with the term "miso theist" (sic): _Misotheism is the "hatred of God " or "hatred of the gods."_ (Wikipedia)

  • @jordanquinley2471
    @jordanquinley2471 Год назад +4

    Great talk, thank you, Preston. Over the last two years or so, I have also changed my view from ECT to annihilationism. I totally agree with the four assumptions you stated around the 10 minute mark. We've always got to go back to the Word. It's funny, because I started listening to Chris Date's stuff and the first interview I heard with you was at a time when you were still undecided about this. Afterwards, I read Erasing Hell. Eventually, I got to the interview where you had landed on annihilationism, and I was nearly there myself.

  • @tomvondra2632
    @tomvondra2632 Год назад +7

    it is important to acknowledge the contriburion of Edward Fudge on this questiun

  • @jdlyonsky
    @jdlyonsky 3 года назад +8

    Mathew 10:28
    And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.

    • @jdlyonsky
      @jdlyonsky 3 года назад +4

      Revelation 20:14 And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death.

    • @jdlyonsky
      @jdlyonsky 3 года назад +1

      2 Peter 3:10 But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up.

    • @jdlyonsky
      @jdlyonsky 3 года назад +1

      There is to be a new creation. A new heaven and earth. Basically a new universe. So if all that currently exists is going to pass away how can there be eternal judgement?

    • @MP-sy4zc
      @MP-sy4zc 5 месяцев назад

      @@jdlyonsky Hell is a misleading translation for Hades. I suppose people can consider this verse as an indication that the lake of fire eliminates (annihilates) the things/people put in it. I wonder, though, if such a view reckons adequately enough with the way that Hades/Death are personified and treated as a cosmic power/force in Scripture. It isn't merely a matter of death and the place of dead ceasing to exist but that they, like the devil and beast, can no longer afflict the people of God.

    • @MP-sy4zc
      @MP-sy4zc 5 месяцев назад

      @@jdlyonsky How would new creation preclude eternal judgment any more than it would preclude eternal life? If I'm going to continue to exist despite the dissolution of the current creation, why couldn't those who would experience torment?

  • @forwardsdrawkcab
    @forwardsdrawkcab 2 года назад +12

    It's not that complicated.
    If you gather all Bible passages regarding the ultimate fate of the wicked, and make sure you understand them in their contexts, you will end up with a very very short list in support of eternal life in 'hell' (Gehenna / lake of fire) and a very long list of passages in support of death (unconscious) as the wages of sin, even reduction to smoke and ashes (annihilation)

    • @forwardsdrawkcab
      @forwardsdrawkcab 2 года назад

      Read what Jesus taught in Matt 10:28.

    • @JuanDiaz-uf5ji
      @JuanDiaz-uf5ji Год назад +2

      Mabye the Bible is contradicts itself cause humans made it all up and we all make mistakes. Mabye it’s not a god who wrote the stupid book

    • @jaredcleevy6667
      @jaredcleevy6667 Год назад

      You do realize the new testament was written 60 to 70 years after Christ's death? Do you really think they wrote Jesus's words 100% correct?

    • @shaunigothictv1003
      @shaunigothictv1003 Год назад +1

      @@JuanDiaz-uf5ji Excellent point

    • @chadpugh443
      @chadpugh443 Год назад +2

      If u could repent after death then life would have no meaning.

  • @judethree4405
    @judethree4405 2 года назад +7

    I think the roots of ECT may have come from trying to get as many converts as possible into the seats, combining that with tithing = lots of extra money. The people who love God will be there and stay there (church), as it’s where they want to be out of love anyway, but fear is a strong motivator for more people. I’m not saying there is no fear of the Lord which is appropriate, or even that annhilation isn’t fear inducing, just not as much. More fear = more money. Simple formula.

    • @Malachi4-1McCoy
      @Malachi4-1McCoy Год назад +2

      Eternal torment actually begin with the greek philosophers, primarily Plato, they argued we all have an immortal soul, therefore the wicked burn forever, scripture tells us that we are mortals not inherently immortal, we get immortality through Jesus. I believe as time went on the belief of eternal torment slipped into Christianity and eventually when the Catholics had major power and control they used it as a fear tactic, the Catholics actually claimed it was a heresy to claim that the punishment of the wicked was anything other than eternal torment. So not only were people thinking about being eternally tormented if they don't tithe enough, they also believed they might fall under that eternal torment if they claimed it was actually annihilation. To be honest when people claim we have an immortal soul I almost consider that heresy because it equates man on the level of God, now one could argue, although not Biblically, that God allows man to be immortal, he decides not to destroy, but God most certainlly could annihilate.

  • @danallison8745
    @danallison8745 Год назад +5

    This makes so much sense. I never knew about the annihilation interpretation before and always struggled how people could be left to suffer for eternity. Both are terrible, but annihilation seems more compassionate. Who am I to even have a clue about such things?

    • @weezy894
      @weezy894 11 месяцев назад +4

      The future of debate in regards to the nature of the afterlife is definitely between annihilation and universal reconciliation. I am personally a universalist but I do see where annihilationists are coming from.

    • @CaseyOliver-gq9zz
      @CaseyOliver-gq9zz 9 месяцев назад

      ​@weezy894, well, you know what? Universalism is definitely No good at all and you said you are a Universalist and you think 🤔 that there's Annihilation? And what does the Bible say about that? And where in the Bible does it say anything about annihilation? And u believe it doesn't teach that because There is no such thing as annihilation. And being a Universalist will send you to eternal Lake of Fire of hell and it is eternal and yes it is forever according to the book of Revelations so if you want to believe in a lie then go right ahead and you will regret it and believe in universalism is a one way ticket to send you to hell so you might want to rethink that and read Revelations because you going by your own beliefs but you are not going by what the Bible says.

  • @marylamb6063
    @marylamb6063 10 месяцев назад +5

    Eternal conscious torment, a fiery funace, darkness, screams of pain, souls divided by chasms in the underworld--they are not found in the OT, but they are found in the intertestament books like 1 Enoch and Judith, up to 100 years before Christ. When Christ spoke of Gehenna/Hades (translated poorly as "hell"). he was speaking to Jews who could relate to that symbolic language. Revelation was written to Jews using the same symbolic language. Paul , writing to mostly non-Jews never mentioned Hades/Gehenna. He said the wages of sin is death.

    • @Charles-tv6oi
      @Charles-tv6oi 5 месяцев назад

      Enoch was wrote after Christ most scholars agree. It's psudopigripha. Enoch also died book of Hebrews shows . He latter died. He didn't see death when opposers sought his life because of his preaching..

    • @MP-sy4zc
      @MP-sy4zc 5 месяцев назад +1

      I'd dispute the statement that Revelation was written to Jews. Sure, there were doubtlessly Jews in the churches that John wrote to, but there were also plenty of Gentiles. Paul's letter to the Ephesians testifies to the mixed community present even decades before Revelation. Moreover, the frequent mentions of sexual immorality and food sacrificed to idols in Revelation 2-3 are more likely to issues with Gentile Christians than for Jewish Christians.

    • @Charles-tv6oi
      @Charles-tv6oi 5 месяцев назад

      @@MP-sy4zc apostle called church saints n revelation says he shall make war with the saints

    • @BobThebuilder-o1e
      @BobThebuilder-o1e 3 месяца назад

      The Bible also says that the eternal fire was prepared for the devil and his angels. Angels are eternal beings not of flesh and blood, they cannot die. Humans were not eternal until Jesus gave us the gift of eternal life through him. So those thrown into the lake of fire didn’t receive this precious gift and were destroyed which was the second death…
      Paul even says the wages of sin is death not eternal hell fire.

  • @roderickcruz5234
    @roderickcruz5234 3 года назад +13

    I am a filipino. I understand simple english.
    Death means no more life, ceased from living
    Destroy means annihilated, permanently broken, of no use and can not be fixed anymore.

  • @noah8699
    @noah8699 3 года назад +3

    Thank you! I’ve been really thinking about this a lot lately, especially since I want to pursue what Scripture points to.

  • @RobertP_1960
    @RobertP_1960 26 дней назад +1

    I don't adhere to everything the SDA teach, but Annihilation has been taught for over 150 years. It brings peace to many knowing even those we love who never come to Jesus or refuse to, God's mercy in Judgment consumes them with fire, and there is, by their choice an Eternal separation from God. God's Love and Mercy is present in His Judgment.

  • @Hulkmosher
    @Hulkmosher 2 года назад +5

    Yes Sodom and Gommorrah are not burning today and those cities are given as an example of what eternal fire is,it's sad but when you ask a Christian are those cities burning today every single time I've asked they completely avoid giving an answer,and they try to bring up other scriptures ,they avoid the question entirely from my experience

    • @Mynameisjoof
      @Mynameisjoof 2 года назад

      Of course the city is gone, as are the bodies of the billions of people that have died are gone. But their souls are not gone. The body is separate from the soul, and Matthew 10:28 tells us, “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.”

    • @Hulkmosher
      @Hulkmosher 2 года назад +1

      @@Mynameisjoof a soul doesn't exist without a body.Genesis says that man became a living soul. Whenever the Bible makes reference to a soul it's talking about a living breathing creature a nephesh, not some disembodied entity. And you're wrong souls die according to the Bible

    • @Hulkmosher
      @Hulkmosher 2 года назад

      @@Mynameisjoof no reply? Ok

    • @Hulkmosher
      @Hulkmosher 2 года назад

      @@Mynameisjoof it's been over a week I'm still waiting for a reply do you have one?

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 Год назад

      Jude 7 references Sodom and Gomorrah as examples of those what suffer the punishment of eternal fire. Seems like they are an example of instant destruction. If people suggest it's what is happening to them after death, it's the same for them as anyone else in the torment framework, so they don't serve as a particular example of anything.

  • @robd2650
    @robd2650 3 года назад +19

    I've been back & forth with this for years now as well, & found myself in the middle between ETC, & annihilationism. We were doing bible study recently, & read Mark 9, & off I go again. I agree with you that Rev 14; is the hardest, but I noticed that it was the only place in scripture that talks about people in that sense, and even there, it's only the people that take the mark of beast, which really further limits that. I know it's the waiting period, but I also have a tough time with Luke 16, simply because it shows Jesus himself talking about someone, dead, who's in a lot of suffering, for although not eternity, seemingly quite along time & that in the torment of flames. On the other hand I also struggle with the idea, that when dead, we're not immediately in the presence of the Lord, which some conditional mortality individuals, support. Each time I seem to get closer to just believing the annihilationism view, & it's amazing the peace it gives. I think that perhaps the ETC, brought a lot of us to Christ, in the beginning, but think perhaps, it's chased as many away, because it just seems so insensible, harsh, & inappropriate. After all as Abraham said, shall not the judge of all the earth do right. It just seems to makes so much more sense for the wages of sin to be death, & worms to eat corpses, & God to destroy the wicked with dreadful capital punishment, then for Him to torcher people for trillions of years, & still not destroy them.

    • @JasonJohnSwartz
      @JasonJohnSwartz 3 года назад +1

      Amen 👍🙏💙

    • @SixStringSlinger1
      @SixStringSlinger1 2 года назад +5

      Any god that has to scare people into worship isn't worthy of worship. ECT isn't backed by Scripture at all. Literally every verse supports Conditional Immortality and the few verses ppl think supports Eternal Conscious Torment actually do not.

  • @pjdelucala
    @pjdelucala 8 месяцев назад +3

    Look at the story of the Prodigal Son. That tells it all. A person will suffer from consequences if they are negative. When a person changes their beliefs and behavior that is more loving, then they have come home to the father. That is all you need to know.

    • @MP-sy4zc
      @MP-sy4zc 5 месяцев назад

      There is no indication in that passage or anywhere else in Scripture that a person can convert after death

    • @MrHwaynefair
      @MrHwaynefair 4 месяца назад

      @@MP-sy4zc Consider Jonah - it can be argued he died and repented *after* dying - then returned to life. If God IS Love - and the One for whom NOTHING is impossible - then this seems to be an open possibility - for, "all things are possible with God" ❤

  • @Bioboy590
    @Bioboy590 2 года назад +3

    I loved this talk and how it has made me start questioning the ECT theory, which is the only one I was ever taught growing up. I would say though that I think it would be beneficial to acknowledge the different types of death in the Bible, which proves the word "death" means separation. For instance, Adam and Eve's bodies or souls did not cease to exist the day of their fall, but they did die in the sense of separation from God. Eternal death could therefore be defined as eternal separation from God, which could occur in the lake of fire or through annihilation and neither would create a logical conflict.

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 Год назад +1

      That's a good point, but I would point out that the Hebrew of the verse mentions the Hebrew word for die twice, so would be better rendered "in dying you shall die". Although that reads strange in English. The idea being, the day he ate from the tree, he became mortal and eventually would die. So whilst, that did create a relational separation, I don't think that is the primary emphasis of what God was saying there, although I can see why many do think that. It's like saying once he commited the crime, his fate (death) was sealed.

  • @lifestationexpresslinda9425
    @lifestationexpresslinda9425 2 месяца назад +1

    It's about life or death. Life with Jesus, eternity or dead in sin, annihilation. I agree with your summation.

  • @Malachi4-1McCoy
    @Malachi4-1McCoy Год назад +3

    I honestly hope Revelation 14 is talking about the final judgement because it proves annihilation in my opinion, I think no rest is just imagery used in a book full of imagery connected to already a passage using imagery. The main reason you could believe that this verse in Rev 14 is talking about final judgement is because it says in the presence of the lamb and the angels, but even then it could just be talking about when Jesus returns before the millennial reign and judgement of the wicked.
    Rev 14:11 “And the smoke of their torment goes up forever and ever; they have no rest day and night, those who worship the beast and his image, and whoever receives the mark of his name.”
    as you showed
    Isaiah 34:9-10 “Its streams will be turned into pitch, And its loose earth into brimstone, And its land will become burning pitch. It will not be quenched night or day;Its smoke will go up forever. From generation to generation it will be desolate; None will pass through it forever and ever.”
    Isaiah 34 gives a clear picture of utter annihilation, it even talks about unquenchable fire, the smoke that rises forever can't possibly be literal because today there is no smoke rising. Revelation 14 is using imagery found in the OT that gives an image of annihilation, this is almost exactly the same as the way Jesus uses worms that will not die.

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 Год назад +1

      Well said about the usage of those terms and imagery. Even unquencable fire, people think that means it goes on torturing forever, when in fact it just means that it can't be quenched or put out.

  • @camgalloway691
    @camgalloway691 2 года назад +2

    Another note to add to the three big passages is that there evidence to support that in Matthew 25 the Greek for our English word “eternal/everlasting” is “age-enduring”. And for the revelation passages, the Greek may be saying “the age of ages, or age to age”. Translations like YLT, Literal Standard Version, and Weymouth translate these passages in these ways.

  • @enate14
    @enate14 4 месяца назад +1

    Its very simple when you understand it, the opposite of eternal life is eternal death not eternal life in hell.

  • @jaredcleevy6667
    @jaredcleevy6667 Год назад +3

    With how long we have been reading the book of Revelation, were still scratching our heads over it. The symbolism is unreal. We might not fully understand it until it all comes to pass. Then we will say, oh! That's what the book of Revelation was talking about.

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 Год назад

      That's an honest assessment. As someone who has read it maybe 30-50 times and still aren't sure, it amazes me how those who haven't read it even once seem to "know" what it is talking about. You are real brother.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      Revelation requires a working knowledge of the entire Bible and anyone who tells me they have a working knowledge of the entire Bible I instantly question.
      Test all things and holdfast to that which is good.
      That's why prophesy came from person to person because not one human could hold all the truths.
      I can give you some of the Bibles explanation on some symbols in Revelation I can, by no means, claim I know what every symbol means.
      So when it comes to things I am unsure of I make sure to make that known. I'll say things like the symbols to me seem to be expressing this, but your interpretation (as long as it falls in line of what is presented) can be just as valid.
      I will always have questions.

  • @Landis_Grant
    @Landis_Grant Год назад +3

    Why do some people believe annihilation is more scary than eternal conscious torment?

    • @chadpugh443
      @chadpugh443 Год назад

      Would you want to be tortured forever and ever or simply cease to exist?

    • @chadpugh443
      @chadpugh443 Год назад

      I believe theres no way to completely destroy a soul maybe it doesnt exist in heaven or in gods eyes but it exists in hell its just it ceases to exist to believers.

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@chadpugh443 *"I believe theres (sic) no way to completely destroy a soul"* It appears that God knows a way, Chad.
      ✴ _'And be not afraid of those killing the body, and are not able to kill the soul, but fear rather Him who is able both soul and body to destroy in gehenna._ (Matthew 10: 28; YLT)
      (Gehenna is a valley south and west of Jerusalem.)

  • @Manofwar7
    @Manofwar7 Год назад +2

    Some say eternal hell is complicated. I wonder if eternal heaven is as complicated 🤔

  • @acb9318
    @acb9318 5 месяцев назад +1

    So we can try and interpret Revelations/dreams/visions, or we can look at what God actually said (Ezekiel 18:32, 18:23, 33:11). Some other good verses for annihilation are James 5:20, Romans 6:23, and John 3:16.

  • @MichaelBump
    @MichaelBump 3 года назад +6

    Good teaching

  • @chadwardlaw2613
    @chadwardlaw2613 Год назад +3

    Good list supporting annihilation. I agree. But the wicked shall perish, And the enemies of the LORD shall be as the fat of lambs: They shall consume; into smoke shall they consume away. (Psalm 37:20) Also check out the seventh day Adventist church doctrine regarding the state of the dead, conditional immortality, judgement(annihilation) for the wicked. Just because the eternal torment view is widely accepted, doesn't make it the correct interpretation. Does that sound compatible with the merciful loving God of the Bible?

    • @cherylwilliams4738
      @cherylwilliams4738 Год назад +1

      Who are the wicked exactly?
      I can't see that the young woman {in the remote jungles somewhere} that dies in childbirth, and didn't say "the magic prayer", would count as evil. ??
      {Just thinking out loud}
      Any thoughts?
      And what about people being saved post mortem? Is that a possibility?

    • @shaunigothictv1003
      @shaunigothictv1003 Год назад +2

      @@cherylwilliams4738
      And what about the ancient aborigines of Australia -
      or the ancient pygmies of Papua New Guinea - or the ancient blacks of Central Africa -
      or the ancient red Indians of North America -
      ALL OF WHOM lived thousands of years before Jesus and never even heard the name of Jesus?

  • @762ammo
    @762ammo 3 года назад +5

    Preston what about Daniel 12:2?
    Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt

    • @linncountycampuslife782
      @linncountycampuslife782 3 года назад

      Never really connected this vs out of Daniel with this conversation. Thanks, this is a really interesting topic. Definitely a topic we need to get right if we are telling people what judgment might look like.

    • @Mrm1985100
      @Mrm1985100 3 года назад +5

      It's shame in the eyes of the living...

    • @linncountycampuslife782
      @linncountycampuslife782 3 года назад +1

      @@Mrm1985100 maybe but I think that's doubtful.
      Daniel 12:2 (NLT): Many of those whose bodies lie dead and buried will rise up, some to everlasting life and some to shame and everlasting disgrace.
      Doesn't seem to be written that way.

    • @davidmccolgan6972
      @davidmccolgan6972 3 года назад +4

      I think he covered this: the contempt can be everlasting without the need for the object of contempt to still exist. Someone who is currently alive can continue to hold their contempt for someone who is now dead.

    • @linncountycampuslife782
      @linncountycampuslife782 3 года назад +2

      @@davidmccolgan6972 I agree that is possible, however in context both awaken.
      The reason I even responded to the original comment was that it does seem to be a vs. which defends E.C.T. from the Old Testament.

  • @richtidwell
    @richtidwell 2 года назад +2

    Excellent, intellectually honest, humble presentation! I too have arrived at annihilation and now affirm it.
    Question, since man is a spirit, soul, and body (Rom 8:6). Do you believe the unconscious raw life force (spirit) of a person returns to God and only their body and mind are destroyed?
    Examples:
    Matthew 10:28
    Do not fear those who kill the body but are unable to kill the soul; but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.

    • @zacdredge3859
      @zacdredge3859 2 года назад

      Just to clarify, Romans 8 is referring to how we orient the mind, whether by the flesh(in the sense Paul uses it to describe worldly living and sinfulness) or by the Spirit. So Paul's not really teaching a trifold metaphysics of humanity in the first place, at least not in Romans 8.
      So in Matthew 10 the body and soul are designating the fullness of a person; in other words the destruction of one bot not the other is partial, but the destruction of both(whether allegorical or literal) is the much greater concern. This doesn't really leave room for any 'return to God.' Honestly that sounds more like the notion of Samsara found in Eastern religions but I don't believe it's compatible with the Bible or Christian theism.
      Whether or not there is a 3 fold nature to humanity as opposed to strict dualism is still up for discussion; I'd say Jesus is justified in making a polemic statement about Body vs Spirit without precluding a metaphysical concept that doesn't relate to what he is teaching. Personally I'd say the mind is the realm of personal existence whereby the spirit and the body intersect but it doesn't have a distinct substance from the other two.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      I would argue that romans 8:6 is a weak way of declaring mankind is Spirit, Soul, and Body as this verse declares mind within both cases.
      To be carnally minded and spiritually minded arent used to hint at us being a Spirit.
      I believe we are body, and soul. The Spirit part isn't ours. For example the Spiritual aspect is something external within us.
      Having the Spirit of the Lord within us granting life.
      In Genesis 6 my Spirit shall not always strive with man showing that when the Spirit of GOD is not with man his life span is decreased.
      Though if one believes we are also spiritual beings I have no way to say they are wrong. I simply don't see a reason to believe we are spiritual beings..
      The extrapolation typically comes from being made in the image of GOD saying since GOD is a trinity so too are we, but that is also an assumption.
      Being created in the image of GOD, to me, doesn't speak directly being like GOD as much as it presents a uniqueness for mankind.
      I lean towards a soverign individual doctrine in that Who is like unto GOD?
      There is no GOD before GOD, and there is no GOD after GOD. This applies to us declaring a form of unique property. There will be no me before me, and there will be no me after me. I am a unique individual. The same is true of all of us.
      Though we are part of a body Paul makes it clear we are individual members as well.
      So while I don't believe we are spiritual beings I am not against those who do. I just believe it is more of an assumption than an actual fact is my point.
      (Edited because my auto correct did not capitalize GOD in two instances)

  • @samuelbarns118
    @samuelbarns118 Год назад +6

    Really appreciate this calm and thoughtful presentation of the conditionalist perspective.
    It's crazy how many people simply believe in ECT because its traditional, or because they think that's the only option.

  • @adzoh5229
    @adzoh5229 20 дней назад +2

    What bible, version, translation are you talking about that we must hold as totally without errors. When they all say different things all the way through. The fist English translation, the Wycliffe Translation, has 122 hells in it. The next oldest, the King James Version, has only 54 hells in it, less than half of the original. The 6 most popular versions today only contain 13 uses of hell as in the NIV and the ESV. Which one of them is the one we must believe in? Which one is without errors?

  • @branver1172
    @branver1172 2 месяца назад +1

    I was following until Revelations 20. How can the powers that be in Rome be tortured forever, if none of the individuals in power are tortured forever? WHO or what is being tortured? The devil behind it all? But he was already mentioned.
    And who is the false prophet?

  • @matthewwoodburn4708
    @matthewwoodburn4708 3 года назад +1

    Well articulated. I am not alone in some of my thoughts.

  • @ericmurray6591
    @ericmurray6591 Месяц назад +1

    Rev14:9-11 the smoke of their torment goes up forever. I think this smoke is best described by Isa 66:24 where their destruction of aabhorance to all people. Or the smoke of their torment in rev is remembered forever by all people.

  • @craigster1234
    @craigster1234 4 месяца назад +1

    Annihilation fits in perfectly with the character of God.

  • @jonnyhughes1689
    @jonnyhughes1689 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Preston and others who might see this, I'm pretty new to this idea and have found myself captivated by the idea and want to research it more in depth. Could you provide some Books or Essays in support and opposition to this view? I'm struggling to find a good set of resources to dive into besides my own attempts at interpreting the scripture you presented.

  • @coleyoung912
    @coleyoung912 3 года назад +5

    Great overview Preston! Thank you for the ‘thought-ful’ and ‘thought-provoking’ video!

  • @andrewwhite1318
    @andrewwhite1318 9 месяцев назад +1

    Exodus 3:2 And the angel of the LORD appeared unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush: and he looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.
    This verse is very interesting in the Greek Septuagint. For "burned" it uses the Greek word "kaio" meaning to burn. But for consumed it uses "katakaio" meaning to burn down or wholly consume. "Katakaio" comes from "kata" meaning down and "kaio" to burn. So the bush was burning but not burned down.
    2545. καιὼ̀ kaio kah’-yo; apparently a primary verb; to set on fire, i.e. kindle or (by implication) consume: - burn, light.
    2618. κατακαιὼ̀ katakaio kat-ak-ah’-ee-o; from 2596 and 2545; to burn down (to the ground), i.e. consume wholly: - burn (up, utterly).
    Thus if the wicked in hell are to burn forever they would be burned with fire but not consumed (kaio-ed but not katakaio-ed). So what does the Bible say?
    Matthew 3:12 Whose fan is in his hand, and he will throughly purge his floor, and gather his wheat into the garner; but he will burn up (Strong's G2618) the chaff with unquenchable fire.
    Matthew 13:30 Let both grow together until the harvest: and in the time of harvest I will say to the reapers, Gather ye together first the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn (Strong's G2618) them: but gather the wheat into my barn.
    Matthew 13:40 As therefore the tares are gathered and burned (Strong's G2618) in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world.
    So, unlike the burning bush, which was not burned up but was only on fire; only "kaio-ed", the unrepentant wicked will be wholly consumed by the fire when the world ends; they will be "katakaio-ed". This is what the Bible teaches. This is why is speaks of them, and even Satan, being turned to ashes. Ashes can't feel or think. There is no eternal torment: no wicked people will be like the bush and be on fire without being turned to ashes. However, there is a second death, which causes the cessation of existence forever.

  • @dcnfamilyify
    @dcnfamilyify 2 года назад +3

    If ETC is the correct view why don't we see it in the OT? It's so foundational if it's true and God should have presented it to Adam in the garden. But God told them they would die, not be eternally tormented for sinning.

    • @Hulkmosher
      @Hulkmosher 2 года назад +3

      And you're correct they did die according to the Bible, the idea of the immortality of the soul is not biblical comes from paganism and it's really sad that most religious leaders and churches are repeating the LIE of the devil"thou shalt not surely die"

    • @judethree4405
      @judethree4405 2 года назад

      @@Hulkmosher Boom. Mic drop!

  • @KevinGeneFeldman
    @KevinGeneFeldman 8 месяцев назад +1

    To hold to ECT you have to take the poetic apocalyptic language of revelation literal and the entire rest of the Bible describing the fate of the unsaved "death" "destruction" "you will look for them but will not find them" "burned up" as figurative. ECT is not reconcilable, morally, Biblically, logically, its actually below universal reconciliation in terms of possibility.

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yes I agree, it's the reverse of good biblical understanding. Romans is literal doctrine for example and Revelation is symbolic imagery. Which draws heavily upon the OT.

  • @oldennongpluh3788
    @oldennongpluh3788 3 года назад +3

    There are lots of biblical verses to support annihilation. But what if these verses refer to physical death or destruction of the physical body. Rev 20 refers to Lake of fire as second death. It looks to me like the second death is eternal.

    • @fireandworms
      @fireandworms 2 года назад +1

      That is what it means, the Bible doesn't postulate another kind of death. The second death occurs after you are physically raised for the judgment.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      You shall not SURELY DIE....

  • @kevinrombouts3027
    @kevinrombouts3027 11 месяцев назад +1

    I like your humble attitude about this difficult topic. I personally rule out ECT because it has insufficient biblical evidence AND it brings in the issue of the character of God as a torturer. God tells us to live our enemies but he ultimately not only refuses to do so but He exacts the most horrific retribution to a degree we cannot begin to fathom. Conditional Immortality has much more going for it biblically but it also compromises God's character. In both views billions of people are either tortured or destroyed, probably more than n are saved. Does God annihilate those who ate made in His image? Don't we all have at least some vestige of God's image remaining despite sins marring in our lives? For me I believe in the gospel as GOOD NEWS not dreadful news or decidedly dodgy news. You didn't mention much about universal reconciliation, nor did you mention the views of hell in Eastern Chriistianity. What about " Every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father." The only way God can receive glory due is if we all WILLINGLY confess Jesus' Lordship not with our arms twisted behind our backs. The totality of scripture has reconciliation and restoration as it's principle. God's love does win and just as in the parable of the Lost Sheep brings it home to bring all into the shepherd's purview. For God, success is 100% nothing less. I am not saying the Lake of Fire is not real but that it is the Fire of God's love consuming the stubble of our false selves, purifying us in order to fully reconcile each one. Just like the Prodigal Son, we will all come home, I believe.

  • @JaySHess
    @JaySHess Год назад +2

    THANK YOU!!

  • @hawkeye790
    @hawkeye790 9 месяцев назад

    I came to the same conclusion. Thanks! Excellent teaching.

  • @labsquadmedia176
    @labsquadmedia176 3 года назад +5

    AT 33:59, it's also interesting that "punishment" is contra-posed with "life", not "reward". That seems to possibly strengthen the reading of "punishment" as a synonym for "death".

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 7 месяцев назад

      Good point and further to support that conclusion most verses in the Bible that contrast the life use the word death. So if this verse is not talking about death then it is contradicting a whole bunch of others

  • @markhenderson9069
    @markhenderson9069 Год назад +1

    Listen to the first 3 minutes of his message here.....Conditional immortality a.k.a. annihilationism doesn't mean lack of punishment for the lost. Surely, as God is Wrathful as well as loving, those rejecting Christ will indeed suffer a time of terrible punishment, and only then will they realize it. The true meaning of the words eternal/everlasting and forever are still fuzzy to me, however I will say that the whole idea of the literalist view of ETC doesn't make sense to me in light of a God who is all knowing, all loving, and all powerful. Why He would have designed it this way from the beginning? According to ETC doctrine (and Matt ch 7:13-14), most of the world's population will be burning in hell forever. This sure is a terrible terrible final outcome from a God that is all knowing, all loving and all powerful! What makes it worse is that God has allowed Satan free reign to deceive people. Many people can't see the truth and some of them even want to, they just don't get it. For God to allow such endless terrible suffering for good hearted people who are just merely deceived and lost is beyond cruel to me and not at all indicative of an all knowing, loving and powerful God. A God of wrath - Yes! A God of cruelty - I sure hope not! And yes this is based much on human logic, but didn't God give us brains to use sound logic as well as wisdom from scripture? Secondly, if the level of earthly suffering that Jesus endured for us on the cross was enough to pay for all of the sins of man for all earthly time, then why does God have to forever (with never an end) torture those that missed Jesus? I don't see how anyone with any compassion or reason could be ok with this ETC doctrine, or how God could even expect us to be ok with it! "Eventual" annihilation makes the most logical sense to me (after a fair time of suffering). As far as backing any view up completely with scripture, I am exhausted!! You can find scriptural proof to support any of these doctrines!! Which one best fits God and His omnicient, omnipotent, and omnipresent character??

  • @ilyakazantsev1133
    @ilyakazantsev1133 Год назад +2

    Instead of yelling “heretic!” at you my actual reaction was “yes, woo-hoa!” After heavily defending traditionalism for YEARS, I thoroughly investigated my heart by talking to the Lord and fellow- believers (including my spiritual leaders) AND by investigating the Scriptures, I’ve finally landed on Conditional immortality - though I don’t believe in total annihilation (in my view, people’s personality, all their good aspirations and hopes cease to exist and their self-consciousness as well, so what IS being tortured is what remains - the sinful nature abominable to God which only confirms a passage from Rev 14 where it says that people will be tortured before the Lamb forever and ever…) thank you for sharing that! 15:06

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 Год назад +1

      In regards to the verse in Rev 14 there is a very similar verse in Isaiah 34:9-10 where the smoke of their torment, kind of strangely to our ears, speaks about Edom's destruction. You could check out that reference if so inclined.

    • @abbysharp9059
      @abbysharp9059 Год назад +1

      The testimony of the destruction goes up (that is the smoke).
      When a person is destroyed it is eternal. Being kept somehow to experience an ongoing experience.......it is unnecessary. God will ultimately destroy the soul in Hell/Gehenna. Just like Jesus taught.
      Remember in Revelation that Hell and death will be destroyed in the Lake of Fire/Gehenna.

  • @3OBTPA
    @3OBTPA 9 месяцев назад +4

    Rev 21:4 ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.”
    I imagine the destruction of the soul being somewhat akin to that person having never existed.
    How can there be no more morning or crying if you know that loved ones are being forever tormented in hell?
    Either way, it's not a salvation issue, and no matter which one is true, I don't want to end up in hell.

  • @magictransistorradio4933
    @magictransistorradio4933 Год назад +5

    I first heard this view from Chris Date. Being raised on Eternal Consious Torment, I basically thought it was the only biblical view. But then I realized that only 1 chapter in the bible seems to indicate ECT. Revelation 20. A book full of symbolic language. Everywhere else says eternal life or death/perish.

  • @garycarriger290
    @garycarriger290 2 года назад +1

    God is love and love never faileth

  • @thans1UTube
    @thans1UTube Год назад

    Thank you very much Preston for this great overview of the 3 historical positions. And, especially thanks for all the research you put into it. Several years ago I was challenged to question the ECT position that I was brought up with. It was through a friend Gerry Beauchemin and his book 'Hope Beyond Hell', arguing for the Ultimate Reconciliation position. I was wondering if you read that book in your research? And if so, did you find any points of his that were non-Biblical?

  • @studyingthebiblewithsheri2371
    @studyingthebiblewithsheri2371 3 года назад +3

    I do believe your viewpoint is biblical, but so is mine.

  • @DarthTwilight
    @DarthTwilight 17 дней назад

    What if it's all three? I don't know if you've ever poked around the book of enoch, and I'm not sure how much stock I place in it because I've only briefly read through it, but I do remember it describing three categories of unsaved people that go to sheol, and describes all three positions of conscious torment, annihilationism, and universalism

  • @garycarriger290
    @garycarriger290 2 года назад +1

    God taught to love your enemies and that is what He does, love never faileth, love finds a way, Jesus is the way, and after the refiner's fire the wicked will be destroyed and nothing left in them but adoration and repentance and acceptance of the way .

    • @judethree4405
      @judethree4405 2 года назад

      How would punishing them make the evil be purged from them? It seems that that would cause more disdain for God, or just make them selfishly for self preservation reach out to God in an inauthentic way, just to get out of hell.

    • @shaunigothictv1003
      @shaunigothictv1003 Год назад

      @@judethree4405
      Excellent point

  • @KevinGeneFeldman
    @KevinGeneFeldman 8 месяцев назад

    What does it mean when all people on earth would PREFER that ultimate reconciliation is true? Does that mean we have conceived of an outcome more just and more moral than God? I think thats something important to think about, how could we hope for something other than what a perfect and just God has made?

  • @davidmccolgan6972
    @davidmccolgan6972 3 года назад +3

    I'd be really interested to know how the parable of the rich man and lazarus reconciles with this view of conditional immortality.

    • @lovedogs1999
      @lovedogs1999 3 года назад +5

      You said it in your comment, it's a parable. Is heaven literally a treasure in a field? no. parables aren't meant to be taken literally. You could say it isn't a parable since scripture doesn't specify, but the story was used by Jesus as a parable and the language is so literal it's very hard to say it isn't one. Additionally, the support otherwise is very compelling. Even if it is Jesus saying it, I'm not certain the takeaway from that story is what hell looks like.

    • @davidmccolgan6972
      @davidmccolgan6972 3 года назад +1

      thanks for your reply, @@lovedogs1999 . I appreciate it :) Can you please share what you think the takeaway from that story is.
      I agree that it is a parable but I cannot fathom what Jesus wanted us to understand from it?

    • @stephenshutters
      @stephenshutters 3 года назад +4

      @@davidmccolgan6972 Arguably, the central message of that parable is that wealth won't save you in the end and that many may be surprised by who receives eternal life and who does not.

    • @joshuas1834
      @joshuas1834 3 года назад +7

      Even if it were literal, and not a parable, it would be talking about the intermediate state and not talking about the eternal state.

    • @lovedogs1999
      @lovedogs1999 3 года назад

      @@davidmccolgan6972 How the meek will inherit heaven

  • @johngraham1274
    @johngraham1274 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hell as eternal torment comes from Plato by way of Augustine, Jerome, Luther & Calvin... Col. 2:8

  • @mikeforfar9493
    @mikeforfar9493 3 года назад +3

    Matthew 25:41 “Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you accursed, into the eternal fire that has been prepared for the devil and his angels!... NET
    Matthew 25:46 “And these will depart into eternal [death] punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.” NET
    Notice that in the words of Jesus quoted here he compares eternal punishment with eternal life. But what does the bible mean by 'eternal punishment'? Eternal punishment is not eternal life burning in fire. Eternal punishment is eternal death,
    Romans 6:23 “For the payoff of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” NET
    Here the Apostle Paul, as Jesus did, compares eternal punishment with eternal life. The pay for sin is death, eternal death. The penalty for sin is not eternal life in the lake of fire.
    eternal punishment = eternal death
    God's own eternal fire being the method of execution. The eternal fire is prepared for the devil and his angels and it was originally only intended for them. No human being was meant to be destroyed there. But we find a large class of humanity side with Satan and his angels in rebellion against God therefore they must meet the same end. The devil does not live in hell as is commonly taught. It is future one off event where Satan and his followers are to be destroyed.

  • @1Kaneohe1
    @1Kaneohe1 Год назад

    Mark 9:42-48 Blows away any concept that denies the eternality of Hell. i.e. "where the fire is not quenched". That is a simple phrase repeated several times in scripture. It is REALLY doing an injustice to scripture to make those verses mean anything other than eternal. HUMAN REASONING twisting scripture to fit ones belief system is sad, untrue & damnable

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 10 месяцев назад

      *"Mark 9:42-48 Blows away any concept that denies the eternality of Hell."* You are wrong. Dead wrong. Woefully and completely wrong. A report of a house fire in my town said that the firemen could not put the fire out (they could not quench it). That fire stopped burning years ago.

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 6 месяцев назад

      It's a quote from Is 66 the last verses where worms and fire are consuming dead bodies... It really is an injustice not to cross reference. Jesus was quoting OT scripture. Check it out for yourself.

  • @Landis_Grant
    @Landis_Grant Год назад +1

    I don’t believe Luke 16 is a parable, but a true life story about a rich man and Lazarus. If annihilation is true, why was the rich man (an unbeliever) being tormented in the flame?

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      If he was being tormented in flames why would he ask for a fingertip dip of water for his tongue to cure the flaming torment?
      I wonder what water did he want to taste?
      Not really. It's the waters of LIFE.
      He isn't in literal flames of torment. He is in a torment of flames knowing he will not taste the waters of life and thus asks that he just gets a single taste. That's my take away anyway. Makes sense to me.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      It's like hey I'm burning from head to toe in open flames. Dont rescue me, don't put me out, but just give me a droplet of water on my tongue.
      I dont know of ANYONE who burst into flames screaming give me a droplet of water!!!

    • @Landis_Grant
      @Landis_Grant Год назад +1

      @@jondoe8014 Because God gave the deceased rich man immortality, he was able to be tormented (he felt the constant pain of being burned) forever and forever without end.
      The word “certain” in verse 19 below showed Luke 16 isn’t a parable but an actual on going event.
      Luke 16:19
      There was a “certain” rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared sumptuously every day: And there was a “certain” beggar named Lazarus…

    • @Landis_Grant
      @Landis_Grant Год назад +1

      @@jondoe8014 Because I don’t believe it’s a parable therefore it shouldn’t be allegorized but interpreted literally.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      @@Landis_Grant
      The word certain doesn't make it not a parable as certain nobleman is also used in luke 19 which matches the same terminology used in the parable of the talents.
      Just because you BELIEVE it isn't a parable doesn't make it so.

  • @leiapeison
    @leiapeison Месяц назад

    I can’t worship or follow a god that would allow eternal suffering. I have too much love in my heart. I am only willing to love and follow a god that is pure love. And an idea like eternal suffering cannot coexist with that.

  • @benjamin.misantone
    @benjamin.misantone 3 года назад +2

    The only thing I would say Preston that went unaddressed, is that whatever hell is (though more difficult to interpret than assumed) is awful & terrible.

    • @user-rh5uu1td7f
      @user-rh5uu1td7f 3 года назад

      I think all sides already know hell is a bad place.

    • @zacdredge3859
      @zacdredge3859 2 года назад

      I know. What the hell?! 😂

  • @marcusmuse4787
    @marcusmuse4787 Год назад

    I think it's interesting how the lake of fire is brimstone and fire just like in smelting gold and brimstone or sulfur dioxide is released making the gold pure. God does not cast people out forever. In Lamentations 3:31 it says “For the Lord does not cast off for all time”

  • @brokengirl8619
    @brokengirl8619 4 месяца назад

    Also, please look up scholar David In stone Brewer. He proves that the Greek words translated as eternal punisment/torment back in jesus day was connected to the qaumron idea of punishment followed by extinction, not eternal torment. This is what his audience would of understood.

  • @timclark2925
    @timclark2925 3 месяца назад

    "And be not afraid of them that kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell." Matthew 10:28. If hell is not forever and its just annihilation; why would anyone fear God any more than they fear man? Annihilation view is wishful thinking; its what people want to believe. Just like the Arminian view of salvation is wishful thinking......The bottom line is humans hate what the Bible clearly teaches about salvation and hell. Not surprising.

  • @maryludwig690
    @maryludwig690 Год назад

    revelation 14:9-11 To me sounds more like a warning for revelation 16:2 which happens on earth before the lake of fire.

  • @rosemerrynmcmillan1611
    @rosemerrynmcmillan1611 11 месяцев назад

    Once you understand Annihilation you are really moving in the Spirit of truth. The false teaching and false idol of Futurism will be the next to fall I predict in your understanding. Ammillenialism is the clear Biblical teaching. The SMOKE of the torment of the false prophet, antichrist, devil ect in the Lake of Fire will rise forever seems to suggest a MEMORIAL of GODS VICTORY TO BE THERE FOREVER.

  • @i.AmHymn
    @i.AmHymn 2 месяца назад

    1. It is my position that people of this ilk posture as if hell/ETERNAL damnation isn't so bad in order that, should they, loved ones, or others go there, it's now a place curated to be less uncomfortable. 💡
    2. To hold the core belief that "God" can do WHATEVER He wants, but not really, and ONLY so long as what He decides to do fits human ideological standards, IS NOT really believing "God" is at liberty to di WHATEVER He wants to do. 💡
    Hymn

  • @illyrian9976
    @illyrian9976 2 года назад +3

    Honestly it seems as if you have to go through more hoops to justify eternal concious torment than anhilitionism. I realy ask myself why most Christians came to believe ECT .

    • @Hulkmosher
      @Hulkmosher 2 года назад +1

      It's because they grew up in a tradition a church which taught them that, so therefore they accepted as truth even though it's not supported Biblically

    • @Hulkmosher
      @Hulkmosher 2 года назад

      Because they're all blind, they follow tradition more than they do the word of God

  • @austinisakson
    @austinisakson 5 месяцев назад

    I read Erasing Hell back in 2012 (right after reading Love Wins) mostly due to Francis Chan's name being on the book. It was excellent. I thought it was such a good response to Love Wins.

  • @Mrm1985100
    @Mrm1985100 3 года назад +1

    I'm surprised that Preston Sprinkle downplays conscience as a guide. I think it's actually biblical to give far more importance to it.

  • @TitusJudah
    @TitusJudah 11 месяцев назад

    Universal salvation/reconciliation is what makes the most sense in love with God’s character. If you and I as human beings will not torture our own kids forever and forever, it makes no sense that God (who is love) would do that to his own creation.

  • @mikhailyaremkiv
    @mikhailyaremkiv Год назад

    It can sometimes be difficult to know that I belive in conditional immorality while many of my heroes, like the theologians, pastors, teachers and scholars that God used to bring me closer to Truth still hold to ECT. Thing is, I have to part with my brain and ignore what the Bible says, in order to go along with what my "heroes" say on this topic.

  • @Hulkmosher
    @Hulkmosher 2 года назад +2

    People please pay attention to what this man is saying he's teaching from the Bible without traditional blinders that's the problem with most churches and religious leaders they don't take the Bible in context

  • @domedsky
    @domedsky Год назад +2

    So basically hell is for undying worms in the end lol. All these people branching off creating their own theology and books just to cope with the fact they might burn forever.

  • @appeal
    @appeal Год назад

    When you burn grass it does not pass out of existence. It changes from one state to another. It doesn't just disappear like magic.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      Metaphors are also not perfect examples. They always have a flaw somewhere in the example. The point of a metaphor is not every single possible detail, but the overall message.
      It's like people using metaphors to explain the Trinity none of them get it 100% right, but the gist of it is there.
      Kinda reminds me of when Jesus told them you strain at a gnat and swallow a whole camel.
      Many people will focus on the flaw of the imperfect metaphor instead of what it is trying to portray.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      Sodom is said to be an example of the upcoming judgement.
      And Jesus gives us a warning to Remember Lots wife.

  • @zacdredge3859
    @zacdredge3859 2 года назад

    I'm sincerely considering the annihilation view, or something like it, but I don't find this shotgun Scripture approach very helpful. If a few trolls say you're unbiblical without merit please just ignore them rather than let it affect the way you deal with God's Word in the first place. An in-depth study of a few key passages that support the central premise is more helpful than a lot of redundant verse.
    The cessation language in the OT may or may not be referring to Hell and may or may not be using destruction as an allegory for eternal suffering; which we have no analogue for in our temporal context or conventional use of language. They could all be referring to Hell(unlikely) yet all be using cessation terminology as the common means of describing eternal suffering.
    Even among the NT references it seems some of them are referencing the 'son of destruction' or the like where the term is describing the individual or group as being destructive in nature, not bound for destruction. These ones simply don't relate to the premise and the others echo OT language.
    There's also a way in which this approach neglects to acknowledge the relationship between the OT and the NT; things of the New Covenant often exceed the nature of things in the Old by orders of magnitude. Where the Levites offered sacrifices often and consistently but this never availed to cover sin Jesus offers Himself once for all time as a Priest in the order of Melchizadek and sits at the right hand of the Father. This is the central argument of Hebrews and if the 'lesser to greater' argument applies to Christology and means of our salvation then I don't think we can easily avoid it applying equally to damnation in contrast.
    Now to be clear, this isn't what I *want* to believe, I came here to see if the Annihilationist view is Biblically consistent and I don't think Preston has been successful at verifying it by that method. It's not to say there's no Biblical basis at all and I intend to keep studying deeper on this issue.

  • @robwagnon6578
    @robwagnon6578 Год назад

    There is support for each of those 3 scripture for the annihilationism side. The wages of sin is death', not eternal torture...

  • @DuncanWashburn-d8x
    @DuncanWashburn-d8x Год назад

    You have said CI cancels out UR but what if only some like the worst of the worst gets CIed and the rest get URed? Another question: does CI happen at physical death or is there some 'punishment' before CI?

  • @FBIUSDOJ
    @FBIUSDOJ 5 месяцев назад

    P.S. Hell is eternal conscious torment for the fact alone that God allows men to be their own "god" as they have desired and they would rather suffer consciously, eternally, rather than to submit to God whom they despise. God's gifts are without repentance and so it is with the gift of life (existence).

  • @davidboyer2290
    @davidboyer2290 4 месяца назад

    Rev 20:10 refutes annihilationism.
    Not complicated at all.

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 4 месяца назад

      You are almost right, David. Revelation 20: 10 says that the devil, the beast, and the false prophet (whatever those symbols might represent) will not be annihilated. All lost humans will suffer the "second death" in the Lake of Fire (whatever that symbol might represent). Death, as in 100%, all-the-way, dead. Not complicated at all.
      ✴ _And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever._ (Revelation 20: 10; KJV)

  • @austin5640
    @austin5640 10 месяцев назад

    i can just tell this guy was adamant about using a mask by the way he thinks. it's pretty simple, son, hell is forever. you diminish the cross by saying it isnt. christ absorbed our eternal torment. all the more reason to praise Him

    • @IsaacNussbaum
      @IsaacNussbaum 10 месяцев назад

      *"...hell is forever...."* Nonsense. Eternal conscious torment isn't even in the Bible. Not. A. Single. Place.

  • @jondoe8014
    @jondoe8014 Год назад

    I agree with the sentiment, but I dissent in the sense I do believe there are things GOD can not do such as go against his character/nature for example. The fact that GODS character is always the same is what makes him so reliable in my opinion.
    So while in sentiment I agree GOD can do whatever he wants I mean it in a strict sense when I say it.
    As for everything else I appreciate the effort you put into it.

  • @WDYD
    @WDYD Год назад

    If the Bible is God's word then why are there over two thousand versions and translations??? Why don't they all say the same thing and have the same meaning??/ Keep this in mind, the original Bible and all those that spawned off of it was written and put together by the Catholic Church!!! Let that sink in!!!

    • @michaelnewzealand1888
      @michaelnewzealand1888 6 месяцев назад

      copying errors overtime partly and translation enables people to read in their own languages. Translating from one language to another is not always precise. The catholic church nicely put the Bible together and then hid is from everyone except the abusive/exclusive clergy for 1000 years..... charming.

  • @marisademore468
    @marisademore468 2 года назад

    I haven't listened to this video, I really need to come back and listen when I have time. Suffice to say that if the annihilation view of hell were true, what on earth was the point in John the Baptist warning the hypocrites of the wrath of God to come? Jesus also said it was better to enter heaven with one eye than go to hell with 2 eyes. If annihilation were true, it wouldn't matter whether we went to hell with 1 or 2 or no eyes; it wouldn't matter about God's wrath coming down on us because we'd just cease to exist. The annihilation view of hell just doesn't make sense on any level.

    • @Afterword.
      @Afterword. 2 года назад +2

      Is eternal life such a small prize that eternal death is no penalty at all?

    • @judethree4405
      @judethree4405 2 года назад

      Getting annihilated is the wrath of God coming down, and what good would having two eyes do you if you are going to get annihilated? This is precisely why it is better to go to heaven minus one eye, because you can at least still see something.

    • @judethree4405
      @judethree4405 2 года назад

      @@Afterword. Mic drop!

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Год назад

      I haven't read your comment, I really need to read it when I have time. Suffice to say if ETC is true then I have questions that requires an answer.
      If eternal life is a gift from GOD and those who are in Christ Jesus recieve it then how are the unbelievers tormented for all eternity when they don't have everlasting life?
      If the human soul is naturally eternal then what is the point of GOD telling them they will die when it makes what Satan said true you shall not SURELY DIE.
      If the punishment for sin is ECT then why was the sacrifice on the cross which isn't eternal suffice to pay this penalty?

  • @MrMathjordan
    @MrMathjordan Год назад

    Sad that religious people can be so cavalier about people being lost forever or “annihilated.” Something is missing.

  • @orangeandslinky
    @orangeandslinky 2 года назад

    pass out of WHAT KIND of existence? Physical ? yes I see that. What happens to the souls that are not affected at all by fire to end them?