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And you base that very personal opinion on what?
At the time of Saul and Samuel, the concepts of the resurrection and eternal life had not yet been revealed.
Eternal life was trotted out in Gen. 2:9
Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
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https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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And you base that very personal opinion on what?
At the time of Saul and Samuel, the concepts of the resurrection and eternal life had not yet been revealed.
The real question is WHY would any prophet of God emphasize placement of the body when they KNOW where their soul will be after death? Please answer that.And you base that very personal opinion on what?
I've already refuted that from Heb 11:26, and v.27 doesn't refute what v.26 says.At the time of Saul and Samuel, the concepts of the resurrection and eternal life had not yet been revealed.
Such a view then removes any sense of needing salvation in the life after death. So please how one of those early OT people got saved if they knew nothing of the soul and and afterlife.There was a universal, extra-Biblical, belief that the spirit continued after the death of the body. That belief is not the equivalent of the Biblical teaching of eternal life.
Please consider: John 5:39-40(1) He didn't refer to Moses and the prophets when speaking to the pharisees about eternal life. There is no such scripture.
Then explain what Heb 11:26 means.(3) There is absolutely no evidence in scripture that Moses had any conception of eternal life.
Without life after death, there would be no need for salvation. Which doesn't make any sense to me, or a whole lot of others.The promise to Israel for keeping the Law was that they would "live long and prosper" in the land which God gave them. (Deu 5:33; 11:8-9) But there was absolutely no suggestion of eternal life.
This kind of cop-out response to a question about actual evidence only shows the fact that there isn't any evidence.Pick practically anything you have posted.
Until Jesus went to Sheol and personally took all believers with Him to the Father (in heaven), no OT believer was "with Jesus". So the comment about "direction" is irrelevant.And which direction would Saul go to be with Samuel?
And which direction would one go to be with Jesus?
The real question is WHY would any prophet of God emphasize placement of the body when they KNOW where their soul will be after death? Please answer that.
Until Jesus went to Sheol and personally took all believers with Him to the Father (in heaven), no OT believer was "with Jesus". So the comment about "direction" is irrelevant.
The only point was that Saul went to be with Samuel, where he was after physical death.
OOOPS!ANd exactly were was Samuel?
I asked you if English was a second language for you and you dodged it by demanding an answer to another question before you would answer.You've dodged my challenge. So why should I respond to your condescension?
Are you familiar with how many "compartments" there are in Sheol? And which compartment Samuel went to? And which compartment Saul went to?Nobody is talking about placement of the body. 'The Grave' is synonymous with Sheol. 'In Death' is synonymous with Sheol. We know from 1Samuel 31 what happened to Saul's body, and it wasn't with Samuel's.
I've always known that.So now you know that Sheol is not Heaven.
Again, are you familiar with the various compartments in Sheol?Sheol is where disembodied souls are kept: no corpses.
What I do know is that Saul was WITH SAMUEL.What you don't know is if Jesus has since taken both Samuel and Saul to Heaven. So this particular argument doesn't support OSAS.
It is your responses that are quite childish.I asked you if English was a second language for you and you dodged it by demanding an answer to another question before you would answer.
Go to the playground if you want to play games.
OK...Are you familiar with how many "compartments" there are in Sheol? And which compartment Samuel went to? And which compartment Saul went to?
I've always known that.
Again, are you familiar with the various compartments in Sheol?
What I do know is that Saul was WITH SAMUEL.
Let me ask this simple and straightforward question.
In the account of a rich man and a poor man named Lazarus, in which Lazarus died first, would it be said that the rich man was WITH Lazarus when he died afterward?
I look forward to your answer.
I'm always glad to clarify. I never consider mythology when discussing Scripture. I see no point in it.OK...
Just to clarify...
Are you now claiming that there was a Mythology about Sheol?
OK but it's really necessary.I'm always glad to clarify. I never consider mythology when discussing Scripture. I see no point in it.
I hope Sinthesis explains his understanding of Sheol.
OK but it's really necessary.
The Bible was written in a time in world history when paper, pen, and ink were very expensive. No one sent letters but instead sent messengers to relate information.
So when the Bible was written a lot of "known" information was left out of the writing. Mostly "commonly known" information such as anthropology and customs as well as geography. All the "of course" stuff usually included today that we don't give a second thought about writing down was left out then.
It makes the stories in the Bible seem rather flat and without depth that is required to make a riveting story today.
But if you actually know the anthropology and sociology and geography the stories become rich and colorful and fantastic.
Which is why hermeneutics is a blend of art and science and not just linguistics to determine what the Bible says and why it says what it says in the manner it says it in.
Which is why the discussion keeps centering (for several of us who have looked at this discussion) around the mythology of Sheol.
My view is that the Holy Spirit knew exactly what to write to communicate just what God wanted all generations to understand.OK but it's really necessary.
The Bible was written in a time in world history when paper, pen, and ink were very expensive. No one sent letters but instead sent messengers to relate information.
So when the Bible was written a lot of "known" information was left out of the writing. Mostly "commonly known" information such as anthropology and customs as well as geography. All the "of course" stuff usually included today that we don't give a second thought about writing down was left out then.
It makes the stories in the Bible seem rather flat and without depth that is required to make a riveting story today.
But if you actually know the anthropology and sociology and geography the stories become rich and colorful and fantastic.
If mythology were true, where did that truth come from? God Himself. The claim has been made that people before Christ had no concept of life after death until the writings of Daniel, which was around 400 BC.Which is why the discussion keeps centering (for several of us who have looked at this discussion) around the mythology of Sheol.
2Peter 1:5-9 would seem to disagree with you on this.I detest the methods you propose above. They are championed by many, but a certain guy, N.T. Wright, because he has umpteen degrees in history, makes the same claims above, forcing the scriptures to be run through anthropology and history filters.
I find such postures generally worthless and limited by man, sifting. When anyone says we really can't understand the Bible unless we have a properly degreed historian tell us what it really means, PASS.
Anyone who knows anything about history knows that any analysis of same is entirely subjective according to the academics applying their forms of sifters.
There is worldly wisdom and there is spiritual wisdom. They are not the same genre, nor do they mix well, if at all.2Peter 1:5-9 would seem to disagree with you on this.
My view is that the Holy Spirit knew exactly what to write to communicate just what God wanted all generations to understand.
I cannot imagine that mythology was involved in any way in the writing of Scripture.
If mythology were true, where did that truth come from? God Himself. The claim has been made that people before Christ had no concept of life after death until the writings of Daniel, which was around 400 BC.
But that can't make sense. The whole issue of salvation is BASED on the after life. That would mean that God made no provision for salvation or how to obtain it before Daniel's writings. That would lead to the conclusion that no one could have had eternal life until Daniel's writing.
But since the author of Hebrews wrote 11:26 and what Moses was looking ahead to, we know that view cannot be right.
Are you familiar with how many "compartments" there are in Sheol? And which compartment Samuel went to? And which compartment Saul went to?
Again, are you familiar with the various compartments in Sheol?
In the account of a rich man and a poor man named Lazarus, in which Lazarus died first, would it be said that the rich man was WITH Lazarus when he died afterward?
OK.I said this:
"You've dodged my challenge. So why should I respond to your condescension?"
It is your responses that are quite childish.
I like the music department.Are you familiar with how many "compartments" there are in Sheol?