ATP said:
Ok then, what are they teaching. Please break it down for us. I'm all ears. Dan 12:2, Matt 25:46, Mark 9:42-48, Rev 20:10 and Rev 20:12-15.
Though your request is dripping with unecessary sarcasm, I will oblige...perhaps there is a reader who may benefit...hope springs eternal. (pun intended.)
Daniel 12:2. This verse is saying that some shall be raised to everlasting contempt. Elsewhere the scriptures say that those sinners who are raised are destined also to die the second death. Nowhere is it intimated or suggested that they are either immortal or that they can in death 'be alive' sufficiently to feel pain, shame, or contempt. The contempt that is everlasting is our contempt for them. The shame is not something they feel...far too late for that. Nothing in this verse speaks of eternal conscious torment.
Matt. 25:46 Please note carefully what it is actually saying....everlasting punish
ment...it is not saying everlasting punish
ing. The death we experience on earth is not everlasting for we have hope of the resurrection. The second death however
must be everlasting, because the scripture noweher suggests a second resurrection. that is the everlasting aspect of the punishent. Death without hope. Death without life. Death without a resurrection. Eternal death. Precisely the exact opposite to eternal life.
Mark 9:42-48 Unquenchable fire ...can you put out unquenchable fire? Obviously not. Can the fire go out of its own accord when there is nothing left to serve as fuel? Malachi 4:1,3 may answer this for you. How can we walk the new earth if the fire is still raging? Oh, yes, hell is on the earth...not under it or elsewhere...see Revelation 20:9;2 Peter 3:7
As for the worm that dies not...are you suggesting that along with immortal souls the wicked are eaten by immortal worms? In this instance Jesus used the word gehenna...translated 'hell'...gehenna being the name of the local recycling depot...no, sorry...no recycling here, everything was destroyed. What the worms and bugs and maggots couldn't eat, the fire finished. Point being that Jesus was using the local tip as a metaphr for the final punishment of the wicked. In neither place did anything survive.
Revelation 20:10 Okay, this has been answered before, but for your benefit will say it again. Maybe this time it will get through. You cannot make any Biblical expression or word or passage understandable without reference to its ancient contextual usage. I suggest you read Jude 7 and 2 Peter 2:6.
Point 1. Clearly the 'eternal fire' that destroyed Sodom is not now still burning.
Point 2. Peter used that 'eternal fire' as an example of what would happen to the wicked. Which was????
Revelation 20:12-15 I am not sure what your point is here with these verses. No-one is arguing about the reality of a final punishment. Nor is anyone arguing over its duration. The punishment is final, and the duration is eternal. The question is reagrding the nature of the punishment. God calls it death. For the life of me I cannot understand why Christians are so determined to claim that the word 'death' in the Bible means something totally different to every other book on the planet. And for that matter every dictionary as well. Likewise words which are among the most powerful and succinct, each with a distinct and clear meaning, such as "Destroy," "consume," "burn up," "devour," are given meanings the exact opposite to what every writer would intend by their usage.
One more point. The unsaved do not go to any place of punishment as soon as they die, but are reserved in the grave until the day of judgment to be punished. 2 Peter 3:7. Christ explicitly taught this truth in the well-known parable of the wheat and the tares. After the householder had sown the wheat in the field, his servant came to report that tares were growing among the grain. His question was whether he should pull up the weeds while they were still very small. The householder's answer was, "Nay; lest while ye gather up the tares, ye root up also the wheat with them. Let both grow together until the harvest: and in the time of the harvest I will say to the reapers, Gather ye together first the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn them; but gather the wheat into my barn."
The question I would ask is this.
When is the harvest??? Your answer will be identical to the time when sinners are thrown into fire to be burnt.