yesha said:
Free said:
But that's just it, annihilation isn't punishment at all, it's just non-existence.
That's like saying the death penalty isn't a punishment at all, it's just loss of life.
Also, I believe that the soul is mortal. Mt 10:28, for example, as proof.
Punishment is something done to someone that implies pain, suffering, or a sense of loss. Punishment is given not only to satisfy justice, but to bring the punished to a place of realization that what they've done is wrong. From our physical perspective the death penalty doesn't do this and in that sense it isn't punishment, it is only justice served.
You're looking at this from a human perspective. Even so, the punishment as metered out today by civilized societies is, as you say, a sense of loss or incarceration. It's the loss of one's freedom, the freedom to make decisions and choices for oneself, helplessness ...actually the most devastating punishment of all is this one. I'm sure that any 'lifer' would settle for 50 lashes every day of their lives if they could only have their freedom returned to them.
But it is punishment in a far greater sense because there is a life after this in which it is too late to choose to do good and the punished meets face to face with the Perfect Judge. There is still punishment
after the dealth penalty.
I don't believe the Bible teaches this. The loss of promised continued life IS the punishment. Life is the most precious thing we have. All of us healthy functioning individuals would give all we have if we could live forever ...even survive an extra day! Death is the enemy ...even for nonChristians. We fear it, it's unnatural to us, and surviving is the natural instinct in all of us. Death and nothingness is the most fearful thing any of us could imagine. We cling to life as a drowning man would clutch at a straw.
Anyway, I'm having some difficulty getting out my thoughts.
You're not alone there!
Suffice it to to say that logically speaking, ceasing to exist is not punishment at all since there is no conscious awareness of punishment. You are trying to equate an event with nothingness.
The difference is that you're looking at this issue through 'human' spectacles. Most of us DESIRE that the guilty suffer a certain amount of torment. Most of us have some vindictive streak in us, some more so than others. Read some of the threads on this forum if you have a problem believing this ...whoo boy! We therefore apply that thinking to God. It's almost annoying to some that God would allow someone to escape the suffering of 'their just deserts'. Just as long as that 'someone' isn't them, that is!
I do believe, however, that we can apply some form of logic to an issue that has two alternatives. The 'logic' to this issue does NOT support 'eternal torment' for all of the reasons so far presented.
As for Matthew 10:28, I fail to see why it is continually pointed to as proof of the mortality of the soul, since it does proves quite the opposite:
Mat 10:28 And do not fear
those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell. (ESV)
Notice that man can kill the body but that
only God can kill the soul. This means that death of the body does not result in the death of the soul. Also notice that it does not say that God
will destroy the soul, only that He
can, that He is able to.
But you're assuming (by virtue of the commonly held belief of hell) that God will NOT destroy the soul simply in order to make the individual suffer. No disrespect intended but, if this is God, then you can have Him! I'll take my chances on having made that remark based on my understanding that this is NOT God.