On The Eagle's Wings

Learning how to fly!

2007/8/21

Another new book!

@ 02:06 PM (12 months, 4 days ago)
This one is available for the cost of shipping as well as downloadable on the website.  Excellent! 

www.hopebeyondhell.net

2007/3/17

Matthew 25:46

@ 07:57 AM (17 months, 12 days ago)

This passage merits some clear explanation on two points.

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2007/1/15

The 16th Century roots of the word "eternal" in scripture

@ 09:18 PM (19 months, 12 days ago)

It is more than just a little interesting that the word aion was never translated "eternal" or "unending" in any writings prior to the 16th Century.  In fact it is extemely rare for a word to have two meanings that are opposite, in this case, "limited duration" and "unending" as our modern dictionaries indicate concerning the word "aion".   Even English which is a much less precise language than Greek doesn't have that sort of thing going on unless you are talking slang with teenagers.  So why and when did aion take on this contradictory meaning?  Read on....

This is a short quote from a book entitled:

"The Greek Word Aion -- Aionios, etc..."  Written by: Rev. John Wesley Hanson in 1875.

The oldest lexicographer, Hesychius, (A. D. 400-600,) defines aion thus: "The life of man, the time of life."

At this early date no theologian had yet imported into the word the meaning of endless duration. It retained only the sense it had in the classics, and in the Bible. 

The meaning of which is clearly pointed out in various other posts on this blog...in a nutshell they all refer to a "period of time" or "age" as in the Old Covenant priesthood, Jonah's time in the whale, and numerous other examples from scripture as well as other writings, ie. Aristotle wrote about someone being in an "aion" of drunkeness. 

Theodoret (A. D. 300-4--) "Aion is not any existing thing, but an interval denoting time, sometimes infinite when spoken of God, sometimes proportioned to the duration of the creation, and sometimes to the life of man."

John of Damascus (A. D. 750,) says, "1, The life of every man is called aion. 3, The whole duration or life of this world is called aion. 4, The life after the resurrection is called 'the aion to come.'"

But in the sixteenth century Phavorinus was compelled to notice an addition, which subsequently to the time of the famous Council of 544 had been grafted on the word. He says: "Aion, time, also life, also habit, or way of life. Aion is also the eternal and endless AS IT SEEMS TO THE THEOLOGIAN." Theologians had succeeded in using the word in the sense of endless, and Phavorinus was forced to recognize their usage of it and his phraseology shows conclusively enough that he attributed to theologians the authorship of that use of the word.

Alluding to this definition, Rev. Ezra S. Goodwin, one of the ripest scholars and profoundest critics, said, "Here I strongly suspect is the true secret brought to light of the origin of the sense of eternity in aion. The theologian first thought he perceived it, or else he placed it there. The theologian keeps it there, now. And the theologian will probably retain it there longer than any one else. Hence it is that those lexicographers who assign eternity as one of the meanings of aion uniformly appeal for proofs to either theological, Hebrew, or Rabbinical Greek, or some species of Greek subsequent to the age of the Seventy, if not subsequent to the age of the Apostles, so far as I can ascertain."

From the sixteenth century onward, the word has been defined as used to denote all lengths of duration from brief to endless.

Scripture is pretty clear on the concept of punishment for the wicked but the concept of endlessness was never attached to it. Before the 16th Century, no one would have heard "endless" with the use of the word "aion". The idea of endless torment was borrowed from pagans who used the concept as a form of coercing the masses into obedience.  The following is a quote from Chapter 3 of "Universalism the Prevailing Doctrine of Christian Church during the first 500 years of Christianity" by J.W. Hanson D.D.. 

Catholic Hell Copied from Heathen Sources

   Classic scholars know that the heathen hell was early copied by the Catholic church, and that almost its entire details afterwards entered into the creeds of Catholic and Protestant churches up to a century ago. Any reader may see this who will consult Pagan literature 16 and writers on the opinions of the ancients. And not only this, but the heathen writers declare that the doctrine was invented to awe and control the multitude. Polybius writes: "Since the multitude is ever fickle there is no other way to keep them in order but by fear of the invisible world; on which account our ancestors seem to me to have acted judiciously, when they contrived to bring into the popular belief these notions of the gods and of the infernal regions." Seneca says: "Those things which make the infernal regions terrible, the darkness, the prison, the river of flaming fire, the judgment seat, etc., are all a fable." Livy declares that Numa invented the doctrine, "a most effective means of governing an ignorant and barbarous populace." Strabo writes: "The multitude are restrained from vice by the punishments the gods are said to inflict upon offenders, for it is impossible to govern the crowd of women and all the common rabble by philosophical reasoning: these things the legislators used as scarecrows to terrify the childish multitude." Similar language is found in Dionysius Halicarnassus, Plato, and other writers. History records nothing more distinctly than that the Greek and Roman Pagans borrowed of the Egyptians, and that some of the early Christians unconsciously absorbed, or thoroughly appropriated, the doctrines of the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans concerning post-mortem punishment, and gradually corrupted the "simplicity that is in Christ" 17 by the inventions of antiquity, as from the same sources the Jews at the time of Christ had already corrupted their religion. 18 What more natural than that the small reservoir of Christian truth should be contaminated by the opinions that converts from all these sources brought with them into their new religion at first, and later that the Roman Catholic priests and Pagan legislators should seize them as engines of power by which to control the world?

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2006/6/30

New website....

@ 06:47 PM (26 months, 1 day ago)
...things have graduated into a 'real' website....many of these articles have been moved to www.LordofAll.net

2006/6/8

UNIVERSALISM--THE PREVAILING DOCTRINE OF THE FIRST 500 YEARS OF CHRISTIANITY

@ 04:46 PM (26 months, 23 days ago)

The following is the final summary from the book by J.W. Hansen in 1899.  You can read the entire book here.

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2006/5/31

Good news!

@ 10:22 PM (27 months, 1 day ago)
A guy using the pen name Gregory MacDonald, (kinda interesting) wrote a book called "The Evangelical Universalist".  Check it out! 

2006/1/18

Aidios (again)

@ 09:59 AM (31 months, 15 days ago)

J. W. Hanson does a great job of clarifying the difference between aion and aidios and explains the use of these words by classical writers.  Well worth the read if you are still wondering whether or not Jesus taught "eternal" punishment.  This idea was common among many pagan religions of that day but clearly was not taught by Christ or His apostles.  If "aionios" meant "eternal" or "everlasting" surely it would have been used in that way by the writers of that day.  If "aidios" was the word found to signify "everlasting" or "eternal" in the writings of scholars during Jesus lifetime on earth, why did he not use it if he truly meant "eternal" rather than using the words "aion" and "aionios", words which were consistently being used to mean "a period of limited duration" by other writers. 

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2006/1/11

More on Forever, Eternal, and Everlasting--Aidios, Aion, Olam

@ 10:51 AM (31 months, 22 days ago)
The following is quoted from Andrew Jukes' book "The Restoration of all Things" Chapter 8 in which he quotes also quotes J.W. Hanson who wrote "The Bible Hell".

Without a doubt, the single most important interpretive aspect of the doctrine of universal reconciliation is found in the understanding of the Hebrew word olam and the Greek word aion.

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2005/12/16

What is the Gospel?

@ 06:59 PM (32 months, 17 days ago)

Ephesians 1:

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Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!

@ 07:38 AM (32 months, 18 days ago)

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!” NKJV

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2005/12/14

He answered, "I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel."

@ 10:09 PM (32 months, 19 days ago)

Matt 15:

22 Leaving that place, Jesus withdrew to the region of Tyre and Sidon. 22A Canaanite woman from that vicinity came to him, crying out, "Lord, Son of David, have mercy on me! My daughter is suffering terribly from demon-possession."

23 Jesus did not answer a word. So his disciples came to him and urged him, "Send her away, for she keeps crying out after us."

24 He answered, "I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel."

25 The woman came and knelt before him. "Lord, help me!" she said.

26 He replied, "It is not right to take the children's bread and toss it to their dogs."

27 "Yes, Lord," she said, "but even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters' table."

28 Then Jesus answered, "Woman, you have great faith! Your request is granted." And her daughter was healed from that very hour.

Matt. 10:

5 These twelve Jesus sent out with the following instructions: "Do not go among the Gentiles or enter any town of the Samaritans. 6 Go rather to the lost sheep of Israel.

 

2005/12/11

Be Still

@ 07:43 PM (32 months, 22 days ago)

http://img100.imageshack.us/img100/3181/bestill8de.jpg

2005/12/5

Is the Head of the House at Home?

@ 06:31 PM (32 months, 28 days ago)

Excellent article by Joe Trull:

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2005/12/1

Bible Translations That Have Eliminated the Pagan Word "Hell"

@ 10:03 AM (33 months, 3 days ago)

The following is an updated list of translations that do NOT include the world 'hell':

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Temporarily Forever!

@ 09:27 AM (33 months, 3 days ago)

The following is a list of some of the many passages where "forever", "everlasting", "perpetual", etc. have been mistranslated in the KJV.  Most versions contain many mistranslations of this word.  Scripture itself verifies the error. 


"Forever" that lasts 10 generations:

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2005/11/30

Thoughts From Thinkers!

@ 04:18 PM (33 months, 3 days ago)

God says do what you wish, but make the wrong choice and you will be tortured for eternity in hell. That's not free will. It's like a man telling his girlfriend, do what you wish, but if you choose to leave me, I will track you down and blow your brains out. When a man says this we call him a psychopath. When god says the same we call him "loving" and build churches in his honor. - William C. Easttom II

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2005/11/29

History Lesson--Did the Early Church Believe in Eternal Punishment?

@ 09:27 PM (33 months, 4 days ago)

Even though scripture says it clearly enough this is just too good not to copy here.  Written by Andrew Jukes in 1867 this is a compilation of early church history.  This is chapter 15 of his book The Restitution of all things.

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2005/11/28

Aidios--The Greek Word that DOES Mean Eternal

@ 09:22 PM (33 months, 5 days ago)

Previously I have discussed the words "aion" and it's adjective "aionios" which have been translated in most of our bibles as "eternal", "forever", "everlasting" and other such words, sometimes in passages that just cannot support the meaning "eternal".  For example Jonah was NOT in the whale forever yet our Bibles say:

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2005/10/6

On Death and Destruction

@ 10:35 AM (34 months, 29 days ago)
To be honest I am getting tired of writing on foundational things...yet the foundation needs to be laid, so I have chosen to post this excellent article that explains the words death, destruction, and perishing.  A careful reading of this article should make the meaning of these words from scripture clear.
The Second Death And The Restitution Of All Things By Andrew Jukes [available in PDF Format] Appendix--Note A. Scripture use of the words "death" and "destruction."

The opinion of the annihilation of the wicked, which has at different times been held by some, as a refuge from the doctrine of never-ending punishment, is not only opposed to the whole analogy of our regeneration, which shews how death and judgment are the only way of life and deliverance for a fallen creature, but also so directly contradicts what is said of "death" in Scripture, that it is difficult to conceive how it could ever have been accepted by believers. Even before the reason of the Cross is seen, the very letter of Scripture, one might have thought, would have kept men from concluding that the "death," "destruction," and "perishing," of the wicked means their non-existence or annihilation. For what is "death"? What is "destruction"? How are these words invariably used in Holy Scripture?

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2005/9/27

Governing Principles

@ 10:31 AM (35 months, 8 days ago)

1. Consequences: A man reaps what he sows.

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