This sounds like you are saying: "If Gehenna is, as you suggest, only a reference to what happened to the apostate Jews in AD 70, then the words Jesus used are really uncalled for. That is, such severe language cannot be imagined to be appropriate unless Gehenna refers to post-mortem, eternal, conscious torment."I wonder why Jesus was so serious with his comments. He must have gone crazy! He didn't need to express himself with all of that hyperbole.
Is there some other reasonable way to understand the point you are making here?
Similar point as above. Doesn't this mean, essentially: "Why would Jesus get so angry at the Pharisees, if the only consequence of their bad influence was that people would reject Christ, deprive God of His glory and die in a hideous holocaust. Why should Jesus give these guys such a hard time over a piddly thing like that? Certainly, nothing short of the prospect of eternal torment could have made Jesus this upset!"He shouldn't have been so hard on those Pharisees.
The rhetorical questions throughout this diatribe are all asserting one thing: "If Gehenna does not refer to eternal torment after the judgment, then there is little to be concerned about. Why would Paul think it tragic for one who had followed Christ and been grafted into the olive tree to apostasize and be cut off? If such people will not be slow-cooked for eternity, there really isn't much at stake, is there?"Similarly with Paul. Why was he warning us that we could be cut right out after we'd just been grafted in?
Jerry, if your rhetoric isn't making these specific points (because rhetorical question are always used to make a point) what was the point of each of these questions?
I am not sure whose ideas are being mocked in this comment. Is there anyone here who has said the Lake of Fire is not a horrendous fate, worthy to be greatly feared? Or is your point that being thrown into fire would not really be unpleasant, so long as it doesn't go on forever? Is this your point? If not, what is? And if so, do you think it would be a tolerable experience to be burned up in the Twin Towers on 9/11? Most Americans talk as if that was a horrendous fate for those who experienced it. However, it wasn't eternal.There's no concern for fearing the second death. Lake of fire, nothing.
There hardly seems to be any way that you would deny what I took from these remarks:Since in the end we'll all be one big happy family, there's no need to get so intense about these things...John should have reminded us that we all get back together in the end! What was he thinking anyway? Silly guy. Happy thoughts, happy thoughts.
1. That, so long as God repairs everything in the end, it can't matter how mush damage we do in the meantime;
2. "One big, happy family" is never going to be realized in eternity (because God doesn't want it? or because, even though God wants it, He set up a universe that will inevitably deprive Him of it?);
3. It is a silly person who thinks God capable of bringing about the ends He chooses to bring about...and it is silly to think He will fulfill His stated purposes.
You completely lost me on this one. It seems like you must have switched topics without notifying the reader.Too bad he didn't have the self-help books we have available today.
So, Jerry, if you think I do not draw your meaning and sentiments correctly from your words, would you please explain these original statements of yours, one-by-one, so as to reveal the actual thoughts that produced them?