That is rich Steve. Profound application of the Mosaic law about rape.
I am not sure what you find to mock in my application of Deut.22 to the principle of "silence gives consent." If you read the passage, you will see that, if the adulterous deed occurred in an unpopulated area where the woman's screams could not have been heard, she is to be given the benefit of the doubt about her lack of consent. However, if it occurred in the city, it is assumed that any such screams could have been heard, and she might thus have been rescued. Her silence, in a setting where cries for help could have been heard, implies her consent to the sexual encounter. It is therefore assumed not to be a case of rape, and she justly suffers the same penalty for adultery as does the man. Your mockery implies that you see the principle underlying this law differently. Can you explain the difference in meaning that you are seeing? Can you find a more precise biblical example of the principle to which I referred? How are you seeing this?
Now we see that we need to give the Mormans, Muslims, etc. some slack regarding all that stuff the scriptures are silent about.
Absolutely! I should think we ought to give these people a pass about things on which the scriptures are silent. The only serious contention I would have with Mormons and Muslims is on matters about which the scriptures are not the least bit silent.
One of the universalists arguments is that since all will confess Jesus as Lord, all will be saved, in spite of Jesus' warning "not all who say unto me Lord, Lord.....". You claim you are not a universalist, just correcting "poor exegesis", but I have never heard you rebut that argument**
**You claim you are not persuaded by any view about hell. How is it you never, at least as far as I can recall,
make an argument for any view other than universalism? What's up with that?.
Have you read my book? If not, is it because you cannot afford it, or is it because you don't want to hear the full battery of arguments presented and critiqued for each view? If the former, I can send you a free one, if you will promise to read it. If the latter, why should I waste my keystrokes telling you here what I have presented at length there, if you don't really want to hear?
At this forum, I am found defending universalism more than I defend annihilation for three very good reasons:
1) Universalism is attacked here; annihilation is not, and thus requires no defense;
2) The arguments against universalism that are presented here are almost universally flawed arguments—either because they misrepresent the view, or they misrepresent scripture.
3) Restorationism is attacked as if it is inconsistent with the teaching of scripture. I do not find this to be the case.
But suppose it is as claimed that this confession of Jesus as Lord is indeed the "ticket out of hell" you decry. According to your "silence" principle we can say that when confronted by Jesus on judgment day the condemned can say "Jesus is Lord" and go straight to heaven. And who can say they can't? Scripture says nothing about it so according to you we can advocate and teach it.
What is the "silence principle" that applies to this case? The scripture is not silent about the means of salvation. Why do you speak as if it is? That sincerity of repentance is required is a matter upon which scripture is far from silent.
But you say they haven't repented? How would you know they didn't when confronted with the risen Jesus? They all might repent en masse. Never to late they say, so how can they claim it to be too early?
Are you suggesting that, if their repentance is not sincere, God will be fooled by it? And if their repentance is sincere, do you begrudge them the same salvation that you received in precisely the same manner?
Just making up stuff like a good universalist.
I find nothing in the quality of your arguments that resembles those of a "good universalist." The fact that you do means either that you have paid no objective attention to the arguments of good universalists, or that you and I have very different assessments of what constitutes good argumentation.