Hope as a legitimate reason to believe UR

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_Christopher
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Post by _Christopher » Wed Jan 02, 2008 3:09 am

Hi Homer,

I love the fact that you’re a “friendly contrarian” brother. You truly live up to your signature…A Berean. :wink: The body of Christ definitely needs that.

Like I said at the start of the essay, I’m not setting forth arguments to prove universalism, only to suggest that hope is a legitimate part of the whole package in formulating our opinions.
How do we guard against believing an illusion if our emotions, feelings, and imagination play a significant part in what we believe to be true?
By the very thing your doing...challenging it! I believe that I said that if something is true, it will withstand the scrutiny, if not, it’s not worth holding on to anyway. The example you gave about the Mormons only serves to prove that point. They “feel” something is true, yet it’s fairly simple to demonstrate factually (to any honest seeker of the truth) that their belief system is false and that its founder was a charlatan. Thus their “feelings” about it are not validated by the facts.

But it’s really not a fair comparison. Feelings and imagination must be informed by logic and revelation. But that doesn’t invalidate the former in my opinion. They go together. I’m sorry if I didn’t make that point clear in the essay.

I’m not going to get into a discussion about Hebrews 6, nor about the meaning of "eternal", etc.. I think that topic has been fully covered already and I’m sure it has been suggested many times that eternal judgment can simply have the same meaning of “divine judgment” without the necessity of duration implied. I haven’t yet seen any of the universalists on this board deny the elementary doctrine of God’s judgment. It’s only the nature and duration of that judgment that is in dispute.

Talbott makes the suggestion in his book that every Christian has already been eternally destroyed in the same sense that Paul talks about having “died with Christ” or “died to sin” in passages like Romans 6, Galatians 2, Colossians 2, etc. In other words, if we are a new creation that is eternally alive, then it follows that our old self that died is eternally destroyed (dead…forever). So he suggests that everyone goes through some sort of eternal destruction of the “false self”, either through submission to Christ bringing forgiveness and mercy, or through fiery judgment and purification ultimately producing that same submission freely, willingly, and gladly. I’m not saying he’s right or wrong on that, but I find the argument coherent enough to allow room for hope.

You wrote:
Perhaps I misunderstand your point here. Are you saying our promised future "resurrection to eternal life, being present with Jesus" has the same "possibility of being true" as universal reconciliation, the truth of which you say can not be known?

Your criteria for determining what is true seems almost post-modern, i.e. each person comes up with their own truth; there is little objective truth that is knowable.
Actually, I don’t think your caricature of post-modernism is entirely accurate. Post-modern thought does not necessitate absurdities like relativistic pluralism.

But that’s not the point. What I think I said was that scripture points to all those things as things we still “hope” for because they are not yet realized truths. We have faith in things we hope for, which means we don’t yet know them as fact. Therefore, it is not valid to categorically cast hope aside as irrelevant in this, or any other, discussion unless it can be empirically proven false (like in the case of the Mormons).

As far as settling on “objective truth”, of course it’s ideal to find that where we can. But I’m not convinced that the truth of this is something we’re supposed to know, or even can know, given the data we have available. If it was, I would think we’d have a clearer revelation of it? Again, this leaves room for hope.

In my mind, all the basic elements of the gospel remain present in all three views hell and the same commission of the King still applies to all three views as well. It doesn't mean we can make up our own truth, it simply means we are free to formulate our own honest opinions about it based on the available information and cognitive reasoning abilities (including imagination and emotion) we have been graciously given by our Creator.

And by the way, I don’t at all think we’re wasting our time on these discussions. I think they are producing some great fruit believe it or not…the fruit of “endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.” (Eph 4:3). It’s tough sometimes, but well worth it. I wouldn’t have even understood the other views if it weren’t for these debates and I would have remained captive to my own prejudices. I’m very grateful that I better understand the viewpoints of others and that I’m not bound to judge them too harshly for it.

Lord bless you Homer, and keep on setting forth the challenges. It’s good for us. :D
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Post by _Christopher » Wed Jan 02, 2008 3:15 am

"Feeling" or feelings have been a -- if not the -- trademark or identifying factor of theological liberalism since its beginnings.
That's funny, I don't feel liberal. :lol:

Rick, let me ask you one question. Do you hope for the resurrection of all believers, or do you know it as historical fact?
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Post by _Steve » Wed Jan 02, 2008 3:27 am

Hi Homer,

There are some things about which the scriptures are not as clear to us as they probably were to the original readers. I think we have to live with this reality. The Corinthians, presumably, understood better than we do what Paul was talking about when he discussed the practice of women covering their heads and the practice of baptizing for the dead.

"Eternal judgment" is one of the foundational doctrines of the primitive faith, and its precise nature was probably pretty clear to those who heard the apostles teach it. They probably also had a better idea (than did later generations) of exactly what the apostles believed about the Trinity and other difficult doctrines.

I think the essence of what is "foundational" about the doctrine of eternal judgment is the fact that there is to be, in fact, a just reckoning for every deed, whether good or evil, which will be meted out by the righteous and eternal Judge. This truth is contained in all of the competing views of hell embraced by evangelicals. Even if we assume that the eternal retributionist view provides the best explanation of the term "eternal judgment," it is not possible from the scattered references in scripture alone, to fully reconstruct every detail of the apostles' teachings.

As for the value of the emotions in determining truth, I think Christopher made it clear that he does not look to emotion or imagination to determine matters about which the Bible speaks unambiguously. If there truly is a case that can be made biblically for annihilationism, for universalism and for eternal retributionism (as seems to be the case), then it may fall to our biblically-informed intuitions to choose between options that enjoy roughly equal biblical support.

If it is universal reconciliation that appears most to benefit from the inclusion of emotion as an arbiter of views, this may not be due to the influence of merely "human" sentiments. The Bible provides much data to inform us of God's sentiments. Where the choice of options seems ambiguous, it does not seem unwise to allow what we know of God's revealed sympathies to cast a deciding vote.
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Post by _Rick_C » Wed Jan 02, 2008 3:55 am

Wow, you guys are up late!
Christopher wrote:Rick, let me ask you one question. Do you hope for the resurrection of all believers, or do you know it as historical fact?
One reason I didn't comment with quote/reply was...how can I put this?
And let me see if I understand your question, hmmmm....

Yes, I hope for the things the Bible clearly teaches including the rez of all believers. I don't know the rez as an historical fact in that I haven't experienced it. However, I believe it remains true before-the-fact. I don't know if this answers you or not.

I'll add, what I don't hope for (from my 'more conservative' theology): I only hope for what the Bible teaches. I could, potentially, "hope to have my own planet and become a god" (ref. cit., Mormon doctrine). Not that I have ever hoped for it: And why not? Because it isn't in the Bible: And if it was I would!!!

The "hope" (or hopes) that the Bible tells us about is what I restrict my hopes to. My personal hopes, feelings, wishes, etc., don't enter into the equation...if this makes sense to you (?).

One other thing right quick.
Christians who believe in or are open to universalism are liberal, at least in this aspect of their theology (and yet could remain fundamentalist in other areas). And again, the "liberal tag" is seen as offensive to many. I know some very leftward leaning "evangelical" folks who call themselves exactly that...and are proud of it!

We could substitute "liberal" with "postmodernist" or "emerging"...but it all stems from Old School Liberalism and is accepted in varying degrees today. E.g., Brian McLaren is probably more liberal (PoMo, emergent, leftward leaning) than, say, Greg Boyd. Marcus Borg, several notches more to the left. John Spong, even more so...if you see what I'm saying (though these latter two don't call themselves "evangelical")....

Btw, I don't want to sidetrack your thread (to where you don't want it to go) and need to get busy on my blog! There are some merits (plusses and minuses) in liberal theology...which I'll probably post in a blog entry "this year" (likely the next post), :)
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Post by _STEVE7150 » Wed Jan 02, 2008 7:39 am

One other thing right quick.
Christians who believe in or are open to universalism are liberal, at least in this aspect of their theology (and yet could remain fundamentalist in other areas). And again, the "liberal tag" is seen as offensive to many. I know some very leftward leaning "evangelical" folks who call themselves exactly that...and are proud of it!




I think the quality of the above argument speaks for itself so i won't comment on it.
Ultimately God can bring about whatever it is He desires in His own good time. And the truth is that much as we want clarity on these issues it really is not there, probably by God's design. I suspect He reveals to us what we need to know therefore it simply may come down to what Steve G. said awhile ago which is how we view the character of God.
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Post by _Mort_Coyle » Wed Jan 02, 2008 1:53 pm

Liberal Christianity, Progressive Christianity or Liberalism is a movement of Christianity that is characterised by these points;

* diversity of opinion
* less emphasis on the literal interpretation of Scripture
* an intimate, personal, and sometimes ambiguous view of God
* wider scope in their views on salvation (including universalist beliefs)
* non-traditional views on heaven and hell
* an emphasis on inclusive fellowship and community
* an embracing of higher criticism of the Bible.

The tenets of Liberal theology

* Liberal theology is individualistic, and as such values personal and subjective religious experience above doctrines, Church authority or the literal word of scripture.
* It claims that a religion is a community of individuals united by common intuitions and experiences, and therefore the value of the Church is in providing a supportive framework in which new conceptions of God can be explored, not in issuing decrees, upholding rigid dogmas or in exercising power over the religious community.
* It maintains that, while God remains immutable, theists relationship with, and understanding of God change through history, and therefore that no religious truths are necessarily fixed, as each person's experience can reveal a novel aspect of God.
By reading these criteria and comparing them to the Gospels, I've come to the conclusion that Jesus was a Liberal (at least in the eyes of the Pharisees).
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Post by _Father_of_five » Wed Jan 02, 2008 4:45 pm

Christopher wrote:I’m not going to get into a discussion about Hebrews 6, nor about the meaning of "eternal", etc.. I think that topic has been fully covered already and I’m sure it has been suggested many times that eternal judgment can simply have the same meaning of “divine judgment” without the necessity of duration implied. I haven’t yet seen any of the universalists on this board deny the elementary doctrine of God’s judgment. It’s only the nature and duration of that judgment that is in dispute.
Christopher,

This paragraph just about sums it up. :D We have little, if any, detail about the nature and duration of the judgment. It seems we are left up to our own extrapolations from other areas. It is my hope (and belief) that God will eventually "gather together in one all things in Christ."

Eph 1:9-10
9 having made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself, 10 that in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth--in Him.

Thanks for your input.

Todd
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Post by _Christopher » Wed Jan 02, 2008 5:07 pm

Hi Rick,

Your cautious approach is indeed commendable. I think that greatly helps in not falling victim to erroneous and harmful doctrine. It too (being a doubting Thomas and a skeptic by nature) am slow to change my opinion about things. There’s nothing wrong with that. I think we all know what your feelings are about UR and nobody is asking you to believe anything that goes against your better judgment.

But we also have to remember that Jesus said “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed” (John 20:29) and many other things like that.

I think you would agree that the majority of Christians throughout history didn’t have the same access to the wealth of information we now enjoy…including their own bible. Most Christians get saved without being able to articulate what or why they believe. And I suspect that the many Christian groups that rose up outside the Roman Catholic Church in the Dark and Middle ages did so because they knew in their hearts that the RCC was not what God would have set up.

Almost all Christians (except maybe George Mueller) lose unsaved loved ones at some point in their lives, yet you never hear them say “Oh well, I guess they’re just burning in hell forever now”. Almost universally, people hold out hope that somehow God reached their loved ones at some point in their dying breaths and they will one day be reunited with them. Why is that? I would suggest it’s because they love them and love does not abandon to the grave, even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. I, for one, would never counsel such a one to abandon hope for their loved ones since all the evidence is stacked against it because the truth is, nobody but God truly knows. There is something wonderfully mysterious about God’s love that I believe is hardwired in each of us. Having an undying hope is an expression of that divine love, I believe. The scripture tells us that love “always hopes”, and “never fails”. For that reasons, those who have expressed hope to this end are heroic in my opinion…and again, I stand and applaud them…even if they turn out to be mistaken in the end.

The hope of the universalist is not one without scriptural support. If God is willing (“desires all men to be saved”) and able (“with God, all things are possible”), then why should we assert that hoping that God gets all that He wants is somehow unreasonable? Is it somehow dishonoring to God to hope that He gets the outcome He wants? If God is love, as John tells us in his epistle, then I think it’s very reasonable to hope that God will do everything He can to win those who were lost and will never abandon that hope.

Although I cannot honestly classify myself as a universalist, I can say that I’m a universalist sympathizer. If that makes me a “liberal” or somehow subversive to orthodoxy, so be it. I have to be honest with my heart on this given the information I have to work with at this point.

The whole point of this thread was not to try and convince the non-universalists to change their view, but to encourage us all to recognize hope as a virtue rather than a weakness.

Lord bless.
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"If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed;
And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." John 8:31-32

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Post by _Rick_C » Wed Jan 02, 2008 5:47 pm

Christopher,

Thanks for your thoughtful "article" (first post) and your irenic (peaceful) reply.

I think I understand why some believe universalism is "scriptural" or "possibly true" and how others are "universalist sympathizers" (such as yourself). I don't see things the same as 'any of the above'...but don't want to contest anything or begin debating again.

One note about a recent post on another forum: A theological conservative like myself posted "I wish universalism were true." This person believes it to be un-scriptural, like I do. Where I differ with this person is: Though I have feelings just like anyone else; I couldn't say I wanted or wished universalism were true till I thought God "said it". In this sense, I'm more conservative in my theology than the person who posted this.

It could be any doctrine (at all). My wants or wishes "don't count" imo!
This is how I go about things, anyway....

My being "conservative" in theology is my general approach. I can, and have, changed my views "fast" when the evidence to change required it. E.g., I converted from dispensationalism to amillennialism in just a few weeks. So it isn't a matter of being cautious, per se, and has nothing to do with being resistent to change! It's more at: Being as absolutely objective as possible: I MUST change when necessary! And I'm more critical of myself than anyone else as I "do" theology....

Anyways, Thanks again, Christopher :)
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Post by _STEVE7150 » Wed Jan 02, 2008 6:34 pm

I couldn't say I wanted or wished universalism were true till I thought God "said it". In this sense, I'm more conservative in my theology than the person who posted this.




Did'nt God say it Rick? He said He wants no one to perish.
Did'nt Jesus say it too? Jesus prayed that God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven. In heaven everyone is saved and a child of the Most High.
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