bobo0100 wrote:I personally enjoy reading your posts, even as an atheist. however reading some of your posts (including on this topic) I have noticed you fail to reference most if not all of your information. I'm sure you know as well as I that I can find bible quotes that contradict your claims, and will bring them us towards the end of this post. show me the verses you where referring to in the post, and possibly how you used them to come to your conclusions?
Thanks, Bobo, I have to make a call on whether or not to leave references on an atheist forum, especially when a new participant. A lot of the times I don't because it just bugs some, and others don't care. I used to include a signature at the end of every post saying "Scriptural references upon request." I can back it all up, but it can be very time consuming, so sometimes I leave it up to the reader to call me out. Which you have now done, and I appreciate your attentiveness.
bobo0100 wrote:DLH wrote:The Bible says that Heaven was created for the spirit creatures and Jehovah himself, not for us.
Mathew 5:19 "Anyone who breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practises and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven."
this quote seems to be suggesting that the "kingdom of heaven" was indeed created for "our" after life. i am very interested to hear how you came to this view on heaven. this quote also seems to be contradictory to one of your later claims, that christianity is not a golden ticket. this verse seems to be suggesting that even sinners "one who breaks the least of these commandments" will still go to heaven. it seems to be drawing a line between people who believe in this religion and those who don't, and then allowing the Christian side of that line go to heaven while not allowing those who do not believe in that particular religion.
First let me point out a really simple method of testing an interpretation, your own or that of someone else. You apply the Mosaic law of two witnesses. In that law someone accused of an offense can't be punished unless there are at least two witnesses who agree the alleged is guilty. (Deuteronomy 17:6; 19:15 / John 8:17 / 1 Timothy 5:19) So in order to establish a correct interpretation you have to have at least two scriptural references. Of course, you also have to have no contradictory references.
So, my statement that heaven was made exclusively for spirit beings (Jehovah, angels etc.) is supported by Psalm 115:15, 16 / 1 Corinthians 15:50. Now one has to dig a little deeper, because the terms heaven and earth are used in quite a few different contexts, both literal and figurative, and both of them are also applied in different manners to different things, much like they are today, in fact. For example Earth can mean the planet or it can mean soil, dirt. Heaven can mean the sky, space - the physical heavens (Proverbs 30:19 / Matthew 6:26 / Isaiah 13:10 / Luke 17:24), and the spiritual heavens where the angels and God reside. (Jude 6 / Revelation 12:12) Notice I didn't give reference to the planet and soil being called Earth? The reason being I would have the additional burden of demonstrating the original language being used as I have suggested. Like this:
Genesis 1:2a "Now the earth (Hebrew erets) was formless and desolate,"
Genesis 10:10 "The beginning of his kingdom was Babel, Erech, Accad, and Calneh, in the land (Hebrew erets) of Shinar."
Matthew 13:5 "Others fell on rocky ground (Greek ge) where there was not much soil (Greek ge), and they immediately sprang up because the soil (Greek ge) was not deep."
1 Corinthians 15:47 "The first man is from the earth (Greek ge) and made of dust; the second man is from heaven." There are also other Hebrew words used for both purposes.
The verse you gave (Matthew 5:19) doesn't specify Christians as being the least or the greatest in the Kingdom of heaven, it specifies people who either practice or break the commandments they teach. At this point Jesus is talking to the Jews. It isn't a question of believing in a religion its a question of those who teach "Do as I say not as I do" vs. those who lead by example.
This is complicated further by the Bible's reference to the Kingdom of Heaven as being, not only the spiritual and physical heavens, but Earth as a part of that kingdom. (Isaiah 9:7 / Daniel 7:14 / Luke 1:33 / 2 Peter 1:11/ Revelation 11:15)
bobo0100 wrote:Luke 12:5 "But I will show you whom you should fear: Fear him who, after the killing of the body, has power to throw you into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him."
DLH wrote:The Bible don't teach that the good go to heaven or that there is a hell.
in Luke it is clearly teaching that hell does exist, and you should fear god because of it. this is contradictory to your claim.
The word hell is, in this case, translated from the Greek word Gehenna. It was a literal place that in the time of Jesus was well known as a refuse pit where the dead bodies of criminals who were thought not to be worthy of resurrection were thrown and burned. (See my post here on
Hell: Not A Bible Teaching)
bobo0100 wrote:DLH wrote:Oh, and, a very few of us will go directly to Heaven to judge with Christ. 144, 000, to be specific.
Revelation 14:1 "Then I looked, and there before me was the Lamb, standing on Mount Zion, and with him 144,000 who had his name and his Father's name written on their foreheads."
this was the only mention of the number 144,000 i could find in the bible.
If this is the verse you are referring to reading it in context does not give me the message that they will stand and judge at all. how did you come to this conclusion.
The other scripture is Revelation 7:4, and to come to this conclusion would require an in-depth study rather than a few verses which directly connect the two. 1 Corinthians 6:3 and Revelation 20:4 compared to a contextual examination of the 144,000 mentioned would be a good start.