Hello! How about opening your Bible first?
There's so much error here, like the mosquito at the nudist colony, I'm not sure where to begin ;)
Jesus said in Luke 16:19-31
If we make this passage literal, that introduces many Bible contradictions.
The just are clearly “comforted” here. The lost are clearly “tormented” here.
The "comforted" are the church who have the Comforter. The "tormented" are the Jews upon whom "wrath has come upon upon them to the uttermost".
But it talking about the man in hell sending someone to his brothers who were still physically alive and warning them about the flames. This can't be after the coming of Christ.
Correct, which proves it's not a literal passage, but a parable: The only two kinds of bodies the Bible knows about are the mortal "earthly house" and the resurrection "building of God".
These dead guys are clearly post mortem but are not yet resurrected, yet they have eyes, tongues, fingers, bosoms, legs to carry a warning, etc., which only makes sense if it's a parable, in which things happen that cannot and do not happen in real experience.
Jesus said to the dying thief, in Luke 23:43, "Verily I say unto thee, To day shalt thou be with me in paradise."
Ancient texts had zero punctuation. The comma can go
before or
after "today". Now, the Septuagint has "today" modified by the verb it precedes only 50 times, but by the verb it follows 170 times! So, the majority use of the word suggests the comma should go after "today":
"I say unto you today, shalt thou be with Me..."
The Immortal Soul crowd shouldn't point to neutral texts as "proof" for their ideas that simply isn't there.
Stephen’s spirit was separating from his body and went to be with God. However, his body was going to the grave.
Yes, the Spirit returned to God, the Body to dust, and the soul "Stephen" went to "sleep" aka "passed out of existence" until the resurrection where he'll come back into existence.
In verses 2-4, Paul says Christians groan for relief from life's burdens, but "not for that we would be unclothed". So, the relief they want isn't by becoming "naked" and "unclothed" but "clothed upon".
What does this mean?
True Christian scholars who don't cowardly run past inconvenient texts will unavoidably conclude that "naked" and "unclothed" can mean only one thing:
resting in peace naked and unclothed without a body in the grave awaiting the resurrection.
Verse 8 is simply Paul saying he prefers to be absent from the burdens of this mortal body - skip lying in the grave RIP without a body - and just going on to be with the Lord - not naked - but in his resurrection body, which he knew didn't happen at death, but at "the last trump".
having a desire to depart, and to be with Christ
Again, Paul knew "be with Christ" happens not at death, but "at the last trump" and since "the dead lie there accounting neither days nor years, but when they have awaked, they shall have seemed to have slept scarce one minute" (Martin Luther) - then yes, it will seem to anyone who wakes up to be with Christ coming in the clouds that they departed only moments before.
Christ, who died for us, that, whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with him.
Paul's not saying "we live together with Jesus while we're dead".
He's saying: Jesus died, so that, whether we're alive and remain or sleeping in the grave at His coming, we should have the opportunity to live with Him as resurrected saints.
that they may rest from their labours
They're "naked" and "unclothed" without a body RIP in the grave awaiting resurrection, which Paul knew would happen to him despite his desire to be absent from the body, skip that, and be present with Jesus.
we see 24 Elders around the throne in heaven. Who are they?
Some say they're among "many of the bodies of the saints which slept" while variant readings suggest beings from unfallen worlds, but they're definitely not "disembodied souls" of dead saints.
Also, in Revelation 7 we see several references to 144,000 in heaven that have been redeemed from off the earth.
These are saints Jesus came and resurrected at the Second Coming.
Revelation 20:4 says, “And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them.”
These, again, are the saints that Jesus resurrected at the Second Coming.
Revelation 6:9-10 similarly says, “I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge
This symbolic passage in the most symbolic book is symbolic for the divine justice crying out to be done on behalf of martyred saints.
Look, if you guys refuse to believe the truth that souls cease to exist at death, then at least acknowledge "disembodied souls" can't cry out because - being "disembodied" - they don't have vocal cords.
“And white robes were given unto every one of them
Since "judgment must being at the house of God" which is the church, the
Pre-Advent Judgment deals first with those who were deemed "heretics" and put to death to determine if they were indeed guilty, and "white robes" is symbolic of these "heretics" being found sincere followers of Jesus.
and it was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little season, until their fellowservants also and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.”
Also Pre-Advent.
Revelation 15:1-3 says, “I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvellous, seven angels having the seven last plagues; for in them is filled up the wrath of God. I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire: and them that had gotten the victory over the beast
Everyone knows Revelation isn't in chronological order because - unlike here in the West - the Hebrew mindset puts a story's climax in the middle, then continues, often with subsequent details rhymed thematically with preceding details in a "chiasmus" or "X" literary device style. So, verse 1 starts the revelation about the plagues, verses 2-4 are the climax, and verse 5 picks up the story and continues with subsequent details.
Again, this relates to the intra-Advent period.
There is no "intra-Advent". Jesus comes, takes the saints home to New Jerusalem for 1,000 years to judge wicked men and angels and leaves behind a destroyed, desolate Earth, then New Jerusalem comes down as the wicked resurrect to judgment and are found guilty and cast into the LOF, after which Jesus remakes the heaven and Earth.
This is after the Second Coming/First Resurrection.