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Indlæser... Two Views of Hell: A Biblical and Theological Dialogue202 | 1 | 135,376 |
(3.5) | Ingen | Hell is real and terrible. It is the fate of those who reject God. Evangelicals agree about this unhappy truth. Yet on some questions about hell disagreements arise.Some evangelicals believe the wicked will experience perpetual, conscious torment after death. Others argue that the wicked will experience a limited period of conscious punishment and then they will cease to exist.In this book you will find an irenic yet frank debate between two evangelical theologians who present strong scriptural and theological evidence for and against each view. Both make a case that their view is more consistent with Scripture and with the holy and just nature of a loving God.Robert Peterson defends the traditional view that those who do not have faith in Christ will suffer eternally in hell. Edward Fudge advocates the conditionalist perspective that after a period of suffering, the unfaithful will experience a complete extinguishing, or annihilation, of existence. In addition, each author presents a rebuttal to the viewpoint of the other.Here is a dialogue that will inform and challenge those on both sides, while impressing on all the need for faithful proclamation of the gospel of deliverance from sin and death.… (mere) |
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Beslægtede film |
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Oplysninger fra den engelske Almen Viden Redigér teksten, så den bliver dansk. To Robby, Matt, Curtis and David, with prayers that you would grow to be men of God whose lives bring glory to him.
ROBERT A. PETERSON Dedicated to the Christian teachers in every century who have courageously proclaimed the biblical message of eternal life only in Jesus Christ, despite the denunciations, ridicule, scorn and sometimes the persecution of the majority. This book represents the beginning of God's public vindication of their faithful witness.
EDWARD WILLIAM FUDGE | |
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Oplysninger fra den engelske Almen Viden Redigér teksten, så den bliver dansk. [Introduction] That famous theologian Ann anders writes in a January 10, 1993, column in the "St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
During a heated argument in the U.S. Senate back in the 1920s, one man told a colleague to go to hell. . . . The Bible clearly teaches that those who persistently reject God's mercy throughout this life will one day face him in judgment and finally be cast into hell. | |
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▾Referencer Henvisninger til dette værk andre steder. Wikipedia på engelsk (1)▾Bogbeskrivelser Hell is real and terrible. It is the fate of those who reject God. Evangelicals agree about this unhappy truth. Yet on some questions about hell disagreements arise.Some evangelicals believe the wicked will experience perpetual, conscious torment after death. Others argue that the wicked will experience a limited period of conscious punishment and then they will cease to exist.In this book you will find an irenic yet frank debate between two evangelical theologians who present strong scriptural and theological evidence for and against each view. Both make a case that their view is more consistent with Scripture and with the holy and just nature of a loving God.Robert Peterson defends the traditional view that those who do not have faith in Christ will suffer eternally in hell. Edward Fudge advocates the conditionalist perspective that after a period of suffering, the unfaithful will experience a complete extinguishing, or annihilation, of existence. In addition, each author presents a rebuttal to the viewpoint of the other.Here is a dialogue that will inform and challenge those on both sides, while impressing on all the need for faithful proclamation of the gospel of deliverance from sin and death. ▾Biblioteksbeskrivelser af bogens indhold Ingen biblioteksbeskrivelser fundet. ▾LibraryThingmedlemmers beskrivelse af bogens indhold
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