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Because it makes specific reference to Genesis and gives an explanation of it.All over the place, you say? Why would you quote this particular verse of the which there are centuries of debates over?
I'm aware that the church-at-large doesn't agree on the meaning of Ezekiel 28. I haven't gone out of my way to explore every church's interpretation, instead preferring to rely on the oldest sources to the exclusion of the authority of a church.You are aware of this, aren't you?
Ezekiel makes several prophecies against kings, and in all cases his words tend to be directed to the whole nation, rather than some certain individual who is king-of-the-moment. When Ezekiel prophecies against the King of Tyre, he prophecies against every future king of Tyre (but especially the one who would oppose the Israelites return from captivity during the days of Cyrus).Context of Ezekiel 28:
Ezekiel 28 is part of a prophetic oracle directed at the king of Tyre, but it transitions into a description that far exceeds a mere human figure. The initial verses speak of the king's pride, claiming to be a "god" (Ezekiel 28:2), while verses 13-14 suddenly take on a cosmic or supernatural tone. This shift makes the passage difficult to interpret as it seems to speak beyond the historical context of Tyre.
Theological and Symbolic Layers:
While the immediate historical context is a judgment against the king of Tyre, the language used (being in Eden, an anointed cherub, covered in precious stones) suggests that the prophetic words go beyond the human king to describe something grander—perhaps a spiritual or celestial figure. This has led some to associate the text with Satan's fall, based on later Christian readings, especially in connection with Isaiah 14, which describes the fall of "Lucifer" (often also linked to Satan). However, the Hebrew text itself does not directly say "Satan" or "Lucifer".
Disagree - Lebanon is strongly associated with Eden. Ezekiel (again) specifically links the two:The figure is placed in Eden, but it's important to remember that the king of Tyre (a Phoenician city) would not historically be associated with Eden. This pushes us to think beyond a literal interpretation of the king and to consider symbolic meaning. Eden here likely represents a state of original glory or a primordial paradise.
"Kings" during this era were typically rulers over only a single city, and were vassals answering to an emperor, who could establish (consecrate) or depose them at will. This isn't special for the time and place it was written.Cherubs (כְּרוּב) in biblical literature are frequently described as guardians of sacred spaces, such as those positioned at the entrance of Eden after Adam and Eve were expelled (Genesis 3:24), and in the Holy of Holies of the temple (Exodus 25:18-22). The word מִמְשַׁח (mimshach) suggests consecration for a special task, which implies an exalted status, further distancing this figure from an ordinary human king.
I can tell you how I understand it.Maybe you know something @Wick Stick?
I see... lacking any actual response to what was said, you're just going to repeat yourself ad nauseum.Let's try again.
Revelation 12:9
9 So the great dragon was cast out, that serpent of old, called the Devil and Satan, who deceives the whole world; he was cast to the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
I think you're defending the serpent of old!
Yeah, I love repeating what God said!!!I see... lacking any actual response to what was said, you're just going to repeat yourself ad nauseum.
In my view Johann, you have missed the objective. I asked to tell me your understanding of God's Wrath.Sounds like someone looking for a quick conclusion, but that's not how it works, brother. If you're not willing to read, others will.
Here are key scriptures that address God and Jesus sending unbelievers to hell-diametrically opposed to what you told @Jack
Matthew 10:28 (Lexham Bible Translation)
"And do not be afraid of those who kill the body but are not able to kill the soul. But instead, fear the one who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell."
Greek Key Words:
"Destroy" = ἀπολέσαι (apolesai): from ἀπόλλυμι (apollymi), meaning to utterly destroy or perish. This destruction refers to total loss, not just physical death.
"Hell" = γέεννα (Gehenna): originally referring to the Valley of Hinnom, a place of burning refuse, it became a metaphor for eternal punishment and torment.
2. Matthew 25:41 (Lexham Bible Translation)
"Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire that has been prepared for the devil and his angels!’"
Greek Key Words:
"Depart" = πορεύεσθε (poreuesthe): imperative of πορεύομαι (poreuomai), meaning to go or depart.
"Eternal fire" = πῦρ τὸ αἰώνιον (pyr to aiōnion): indicating everlasting punishment.
"Prepared" = ἡτοιμασμένον (hetoimasmenon): from ἑτοιμάζω (hetoimazō), meaning to prepare or make ready.
3. Revelation 20:15 (Lexham Bible Translation)
"And if anyone was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire."
Greek Key Words:
"Thrown" = ἐβλήθη (eblēthē): aorist passive of βάλλω (ballō), meaning to be cast or thrown.
"Lake of fire" = λίμνη τοῦ πυρός (limnē tou pyros): symbolizing the place of final eternal judgment.
4. 2 Thessalonians 1:8-9 (Lexham Bible Translation)
"In flaming fire, inflicting vengeance on those who do not know God and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might."
Greek Key Words:
"Vengeance" = ἐκδίκησιν (ekdikēsin): meaning retribution or punishment.
"Destruction" = ὄλεθρον (olethron): meaning ruin or perdition.
"Eternal" = αἰώνιον (aiōnion): meaning everlasting or without end.
5. Mark 9:43 (Lexham Bible Translation)
"And if your hand causes you to sin, cut it off. It is better for you to enter life crippled than with two hands to go to hell, to the unquenchable fire."
Greek Key Words:
"Hell" = γέεννα (Gehenna): referring to the place of final judgment.
"Unquenchable fire" = πῦρ τὸ ἄσβεστον (pyr to asbestos): meaning a fire that cannot be extinguished.
Succinct enough?
J.
In my view Johann, you have missed the objective. I asked to tell me your understanding of God's Wrath.
Hebrew Words for God’s WrathIn my view Johann, you have missed the objective. I asked to tell me your understanding of God's Wrath.
Johann, please excuse my forwardness in this little blurb. I am trying to be objective while following this discussion however I conclude you are adept at not answering the questions put to you. My guess is you are snowed in preconceptions and a multitude of words coupled with your academic prowess. These have disabled your hearing and subsequently hamstrung your ability to answer cogently and succinctly.Can tell you have not read your Bible-one eye on politics and the other on the inevitable TV.
You are a poor debater @St. SteVen-I can tell.
J.
What does this say about God's character?Wrath in Context
God’s wrath is described in Scripture as His righteous and just response to sin, rebellion, and injustice. It is not an uncontrollable outburst but a measured and divine action against what is morally wrong. Both the Hebrew and Greek words highlight the seriousness and intensity of God's anger against evil, but always in alignment with His holiness and justice.
What does this say about the character of God?A Study of Eternal Punishment
Unfortunately your original statement revealed that truth...not a liar but most certainly a crackpot!TRUTH. Slap to you, ignorant fool. I am no liar or crackpot
Nowhere in Scripture do we find such a scenario. Why would God “pre-select a few” as worthy of life, whilst he created the majority to suffer a punishment for which they carry no blame? Where is there justice in that idea? It makes God into a tyrannical despot who creates for the purpose of punishing people who are created to sin…..what utter nonsense! A complete lie.The two views of God's plan for humankind stand in stark contrast.
View #1)
God created humankind to glorify himself in punishing them for their unworthiness.
He hand-selected a few as an Elect, predestined to avoid the destruction he would bring on the vast majority.
And it is not clear why he selected those he did, and bypassed the rest. Random selection?
This scenario is much more in keeping with the personality of God, and yet the death penalty was part of God’s law right from the start. Disobedience meant death…..so what is death? It is the opposite of life, as God told Adam…given the “breath (spirit) of life”, the lifeless body that God created “became” a “soul”. He was not “given” one. So right away we see where the problem lies…..it is belief in the devil’s first lie….”you surely will not die”….when God never negated the meaning of the death penalty…it was a removal from life…period.View #2)
God created humankind in his own image. In the same way human children bear the image of their parents.
Even the terminology informs his relationship with us. God the Father. As the model for human fatherhood.
This parental love informs his plan and good intentions for all of humankind. This longing for family and
togetherness is woven into the human heart. We long for nothing as much as to be safe at home.
What is the source of both views? The thief has stolen the truth from both camps…one portraying God as a fiend….and the other as a weak and watery God who does not hold his free willed children accountable.Question: What is the source of View #1 ?
John 10:10 NIV
The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.
So few in the forum understand the truth of these words. Most have allowed themselves to be deceived with many ungodly notions of everlasting ethereal soul torment and all the garb that goes with that falsehood.The lake of fire (not a literal place) is a symbol of completely irreversible death. It is an “eternal punishment” because no one ever comes out of Gehenna…..pictured by the garbage dump outside of Jerusalem where the city’s refuse was consumed by a fire that never went out, and what the flames missed, the maggots finished off…..it was a place where the bodies of executed criminals were sometimes cast because they were not considered worthy of a decent burial. Having no grave, it was assumed that God would not remember them in the resurrection to come. It was a symbol of everlasting death..
I agree. View #1 is a terrible view.Nowhere in Scripture do we find such a scenario. Why would God “pre-select a few” as worthy of life, whilst he created the majority to suffer a punishment for which they carry no blame? Where is there justice in that idea? It makes God into a tyrannical despot who creates for the purpose of punishing people who are created to sin…..what utter nonsense! A complete lie.
All of God’s children in both realms have free will, which is clearly embodied in the Genesis account of the fall. If they did not have free will, then the devil’s actions were programmed by God to take place as they did….and the human response was also programmed, despite the fact that God told them NOT to partake of the TKGE, under penalty of death. The actions of both parties were clearly a choice.
What kind of fiend would God be if he planned all this suffering and pain and death? He tried very hard to give the humans every opportunity to avoid that consequence. But once the ‘genie was out of the bottle’….there was no putting it back….they would now have to see where their choices took them….a first hand experience of what it meant to disobey their Sovereign. The ultimate life lesson.
Good, thanks.This scenario is much more in keeping with the personality of God, and yet the death penalty was part of God’s law right from the start. Disobedience meant death…..so what is death? It is the opposite of life, as God told Adam…given the “breath (spirit) of life”, the lifeless body that God created “became” a “soul”. He was not “given” one. So right away we see where the problem lies…..it is belief in the devil’s first lie….”you surely will not die”….when God never negated the meaning of the death penalty…it was a removal from life…period.
There is no mention of an “immortal soul” in any verse of the Bible, but this universal belief permeates both camps, but in different ways. Every form of false worship practiced in the world embraces this lie. All have invented places for immortal souls to go, when in actual fact they have never existed.
“Sheol/hades“ in Scripture is the grave…the common place where the dead are held in the earth (“back to the dust” eventually) just as Adam was told. (Gen 3:19) But there was always hope that the dead would live again. Even Job expressed such a belief.
Oh, the irony-Johann, please excuse my forwardness in this little blurb. I am trying to be objective while following this discussion however I conclude you are adept at not answering the questions put to you. My guess is you are snowed in preconceptions and a multitude of words coupled with your academic prowess. These have disabled your hearing and subsequently hamstrung your ability to answer cogently and succinctly.
AMEN Bro!Oh, the irony-
You, @St. SteVen, and F2F, steeped in deception, cannot see the wood from the trees, wanting to spread the damnable heresy of Universalism.
You think you’re something, but it’s just a facade-no Holy Spirit, void of what truly matters.
The unholy triplet, the three of you.
"Whoever transgresses and does not abide in the doctrine of Christ does not have God" (2 John 1:9, NKJV).
"Now the Spirit expressly says that in latter times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of demons" (1 Timothy 4:1, NKJV).
Stay with politics.
J.
You have me pegged as a Universalist Johann however the thing is, I don't peg myself as a Universalist.....Isn't that odd?Oh, the irony-
You, @St. SteVen, and F2F, steeped in deception, cannot see the wood from the trees, wanting to spread the damnable heresy of Universalism.
You think you’re something, but it’s just a facade-no Holy Spirit, void of what truly matters.
The unholy triplet, the three of you.
"Whoever transgresses and does not abide in the doctrine of Christ does not have God" (2 John 1:9, NKJV).
"Now the Spirit expressly says that in latter times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of demons" (1 Timothy 4:1, NKJV).
Stay with politics.
J.
Stay with politics @quietthinker.You have me pegged as a Universalist Johann however the thing is, I don't peg myself as a Universalist.....Isn't that odd?
Ahhhhh, these names/ titles that get bandied around and plastered on ourselves and lobbed onto others is just another trick to short circuit any need for further enquiry. I wonder what they labeled Jesus? any idea?....and who were those so keen on labelling? Could it have been the dead who bounced out of their stiff cold straight jackets after he called them? or the blind eyes who now were enraptured by seeing colours? maybe the paralytics or the lame he got to dance? What about the five thousand he spread a table for...and their wives....and kids, that's gotta be at least ten thousand hungry munchers....Now let me see, my guess it was the educated in theological matters, you know, scribes and the like, the ones who made lots of words, dotted all the I's, crossed all the T's who kept themselves untouched from the sweaty, dusty rabble.....all which amounted to, in Jesus' words, swallowing camels and straining at gnats. Ahhhh, I remember one, they aligned him with, Beelzebub...hmmmm.
I wish you peace Johann....the peace of knowing your Saviour!