The Conditionalist Faith of Our Fathers, vol. 1
PART IV (Chapters 44-64)
The Theological Trilemma
44. Subapostolic Writers Consistently Conditionalist | 757 |
I. Significance of Testimony of Apostolic Fathers | 757 |
II. Clement of Rome—Neither Innate Immortality Nor Eternal Torment | 762 |
1. Clement on the Nature and Destiny of Man | 763 |
2. Second Advent and Resurrection Hope Dominant | 763 |
3. Theme Persists Throughout Genuine Epistle | 764 |
4. Advent Note Even in Spurious Second Epistle | 764 |
5. Significant Silences in Clement’s Witness | 765 |
6. Immortality a “Gift” of God, to Be Sought For | 765 |
7. Death Is Cessation of All Life | 766 |
8. Wicked to Perish, Be Destroyed, Cease to Exist | 766 |
9. Constable’s Summary of Clement’s Views | 767 |
III. Ignatius of Antioch—Immortality Solely for Saints; Sinners to Perish | 767 |
1. To the Ephesians: Immortality Is “Gift” of Christ | 768 |
2. To the Magnesians: Death Is Ceasing to Be | 771 |
3. To the Trallians: Life Through Christ’s Death | 771 |
4. To the Romans: Resurrection Follows Sleep of Death | 772 |
5. Epistle to Polycarp: Sleep, Resurrection, Immortality | 772 |
6. Gift of God Versus Wages of Sin | 773 |
45. Immortality Bestowed at Advent; Wicked Destroyed | 774 |
I. “Didache”—Follows Standard Pattern on the Two Ways | 774 |
II. Eschatological Concept of Early Church in Outline | 775 |
1. The Common Theme of Subapostolic Age | 775 |
2. Involvements of the “Way of Life” | 776 |
3. “Way of Death” Contrasted With “Eternal Life” Provision | 776 |
4. Perils of Coming Apostasy Portrayed | 777 |
5. Eschatological Outline of Last Things | 777 |
III. Barnabas—Contrasts Eternal Life With Eternal Death | 778 |
IV. Coming Destruction of Satan, Sinners, and All Evil | 779 |
1. Basic Contrast Between Life and Death | 779 |
2. Life Through Christ; Death Through Sin | 780 |
3. Death From Sin Involves Destruction | 781 |
4. Two Ways: of “Darkness” and of “Light” | 781 |
5. “Eternal Death“: Synonym for Second Death | 782 |
6. To “Perish” Is to Exist No More | 783 |
V. Eight Logical and Inescapable Conclusions to Be Deduced | 783 |
46. Immortality a Gift; Death Is Utter Destruction | 785 |
I. Two Destinations Portrayed in Multiple Forms | 786 |
1. Eternal Life and Eternal Destruction | 786 |
2. Past Saints Have “Fallen Asleep” | 786 |
3. Persecution and Triumph of Church Symbolized | 787 |
4. Righteous Have Life; Wicked No Life | 788 |
5. Wicked Are to Perish at Last | 788 |
6. Righteous in Life to Come; Wicked Consumed | 789 |
7. Wicked Destined to Everlasting Ruin | 789 |
8. Punishment Is Proportionate to Sin | 790 |
9. Incorrigibly Wicked “Die for Ever” | 790 |
10. Conclusions From Notable Silences in Hermas | 791 |
II. Polycarp—Resurrection Is Immortality’s Sole Gateway | 791 |
III. Conditional Resurrection the Determining Factor | 792 |
1. Ignatius’ Admonitions Regarding Immortality | 793 |
2. Resurrection Pivotal in Man’s Future | 793 |
3. Sole Basis of Hope for “Future World” | 794 |
4. Strictures on Deniers of the Resurrection | 794 |
5. Resurrection “Both of Soul and Body” | 794 |
6. No Allusion to Eternal Torment | 795 |
IV. “Epistle of Mathetes to Diognetus”—“Immortal Soul” and “Eternal Fire” Problems | 796 |
1. Put to Death; Restored Through Resurrection | 797 |
2. The Relationship of Soul and Body | 797 |
3. First Use of “Immortal Soul” in Christian Writings | 798 |
4. Christ Sent as “God” and “Saviour”; Comes Later as Judge | 798 |
5. Every Blessing Conferred Through Christ | 798 |
6. Christ, Incorruptible and Immortal; Man, Corruptible and Mortal | 799 |
7. Eternal Fire; Both a Process and a Termination | 800 |
V. Summarizing Conclusion Concerning the Apostolic Fathers | 801 |
47. Justin Martyr Augments Subapostolic Conditionalism | 803 |
I. Ante-Nicene Period Infiltrated by Platonic Immortal-Soulism | 803 |
1. Frontal and Flanking Attacks Develop | 803 |
2. Gnosticism Undermines Teaching of Resurrection | 804 |
3. Neoplatonic Mysticism Supplants Literalism | 805 |
4. Release of the Soul From the Body | 805 |
5. Immortal-Soulism Well-nigh Extinguishes Blessed Hope | 806 |
6. Writers Segregate Themselves Into Three-Way Split | 806 |
II. Justin Martyr—Champions and Amplifies Apostolic Conditionalism | 807 |
1. Dawn of a New Era in Christian History | 808 |
2. Champions the Only True Philosophy | 809 |
3. Prophetic Outline, Second Advent, and Resurrection | 810 |
III. Justin’s Primary Definitions and Usage of Basic Terms | 811 |
1. “Immortal Existence” and “Ceasing to Exist” | 811 |
2. “Destruction” Is Cessation of Existence | 812 |
3. “Immortality” Means “Not Subject to Death” | 813 |
IV. Justin’s Definitive Positions on Nature and Destiny of Man | 813 |
1. Contended for Literal Resurrection of Dead | 813 |
2. Souls Not Taken to Heaven at Death | 814 |
3. “Man” Composed of Both “Body and Soul” | 814 |
4. Denies Separate Immortality of the Soul | 814 |
5. Teaches Utter Extinction of the Wicked | 815 |
48. Justin on Final Annihilation of the Wicked | 816 |
I. Apologies Amplify Intent of Everlasting Punishment | 816 |
1. Christ’s Judgment Precedes Punishment of Wicked | 818 |
2. “Eternal Punishment” Not Eternally Conscious Suffering | 818 |
3. Righteous Deemed Worthy of Incorruption | 819 |
4. Each Goes to “Punishment or Salvation” | 820 |
5. Prays for “Existing Again in Incorruption” | 820 |
6. Punishment Is Proportionate to Sin | 821 |
7. Question of “Sensation After Death” | 821 |
II. Intent of “Aionion” Fire, for Sinners | 823 |
1. Godly Immortalized; Sinners Punished in “Aionion” | 823 |
2. Extent Not Known to Man; Determined by God | 824 |
3. Immortality Is Promised; Not Yet Possessed | 825 |
4. “Aionion” Punishment Is by Fire | 825 |
5. Final Disposition at Second Advent | 825 |
III. Scholars Recognize Justin’s Position on Destruction of Wicked | 826 |
IV. Dialogue—Righteous to Be Immortalized, Wicked Destroyed | 827 |
1. Categorically Denies Innate Immortality and Transmigration | 827 |
2. Some “Never Die”; Others Suffer Determinate Punishment | 828 |
3. Created Beings May Be “Blotted Out and Cease to Exist” | 828 |
4. Separated From Body, Soul Ceases to Exist | 829 |
5. Christ Coming Again to Destroy the Wicked | 829 |
V. Disposition of Righteous and Wicked | 830 |
1. “Some” Punished With Fire; “Others” Receive Immortality | 830 |
2. Saints Raised Incorruptible and Immortal | 830 |
3. Soul Not “Taken to Heaven” at Death | 831 |
4. Wicked Punished as God Deems Proper | 831 |
5. “Destruction” Is Equated With “Death” | 832 |
6. “Torment” Not Identical With “Destruction” | 832 |
7. The Resurrected Face Contrasting Destinies | 832 |
49. Tatian, Theophilus, and Melito—Continue Conditionalist Witness | 834 |
I. Tatian—The Soul Is “Not Immortal” but “Mortal” | 834 |
II. Tatian’s Confession of Faith on Soul, Here, and Hereafter | 835 |
1. Nonexistent in Death. Existent Again Through Resurrection | 836 |
2. Sin and Death Come Through Free Choice | 836 |
3. Soul “Not Itself Immortal,” but “Mortal” | 837 |
4. Punishment of Demons Versus Punishment of Men | 838 |
5. Pagan Confusion Versus Christian Consistency and Truth | 838 |
6. Place Trust in Scripture; Follow “Father of Immortality” | 839 |
III. Theophilus of Antioch—Man Created a Candidate for Immortality | 840 |
IV. Immortality Conferred on Righteous; Destruction Is Fate of Wicked | 842 |
1. Mortality “Put Off”; Immortality “Put On” | 842 |
2. “Seek” Immortality; Escape “Eternal Punishments” | 843 |
3. Presents Foundational Bases for Faith | 844 |
4. Nature and Peril of Unfallen Man in Eden | 844 |
5. Expelled From Eden Lest He Remain in Sin Forever | 845 |
6. Returns to Paradise After Resurrection and Immortalization | 845 |
7. Immortality a Reward, Not an Original Possession | 846 |
8. Man Chooses Either Everlasting Life, or Death | 847 |
9. Righteous to Escape Eternal Punishments | 847 |
10. Wicked Consumed in Final Conflagration | 847 |
11. God’s Care for the Dead | 848 |
V. Melito of Sardis—Death a Long Sleep; Immortality Regained Through Christ | 848 |
1. Eternal Christ Was Creator of Man | 849 |
2. Coming Flood of Fire to Destroy Earth | 849 |
3. Christ Died That We Might Be Raised | 849 |
4. Sleep of Death a Long Silence | 850 |
5. Death and Dissolution From Disobedience | 851 |
6. Corruption and Destruction From Disobedience | 851 |
7. Ransoms and Restores From Grave | 852 |
50. Gnostic-Manichaean Perversions Compel Restatement of Truth | 853 |
I. Scope of Gnosticism’s Sinister Heresies | 854 |
1. Blighting Characteristics of Gnosticism | 854 |
2. Strange Medley of Borrowed Elements | 855 |
3. “Demiurge,” “Emanations,” and “Aeons” | 857 |
4. Mankind Cast Into Three Basic Categories | 858 |
5. Redemption Conceived of as Liberation From Matter | 859 |
6. Gnostic Dualism Versus Apostolic Monism | 859 |
7. Dualism Involves Endless Duration of Wicked | 860 |
8. Blasphemously Denied Deity of Christ | 860 |
9. Rejected Old Testament and Maligned “Jehovah” | 861 |
10. Like Termites Eroding Basic Structure | 861 |
II. Underlying Unity Despite Wide Diversity | 862 |
1. Valentinus Injects “Intermediate” Waiting Place | 863 |
2. Fantastic Degrading Notions of Saturninus | 863 |
3. Basilides’ “Transit of Soul” From Mithraism | 864 |
4. Marcion Rejects Heart of Christian Faith | 865 |
5. Carpocrates Taught a Licentious Ethic | 865 |
6. Gnostic Heresies Force Church to Define Faith | 865 |
III. Recapitulation of Principal Errors of Gnosticism | 866 |
IV. Menace of Manichaeism Imperils Post-Nicene Church | 867 |
1. Origin, Characteristics, and Amazing Spread | 867 |
2. Essence, of the Manichaean Movement | 869 |
3. Christian Aspect Emasculated and Nullified | 870 |
4. Fantastic Concepts of Body, Soul, Redemption, Resurrection | 870 |
5. Based on an Absolute Dualism | 871 |
6. Church Rites, Polity, and Ceremonies | 871 |
51. Irenaeus of Gaul—Conditionalist Champion on Western Outpost | 873 |
I. Unique Position as Contender for Orthodoxy | 873 |
1. Pupil of Conditionalist Polycarp, of Smyrna | 873 |
2. Lifelong Foe of Contemporary Heresies | 875 |
3. General Survey of Irenaeus’ Definitive Treatise | 875 |
4. Stands as Bulwark Against Universal Innate Immortality | 876 |
5. Wicked Destined to Cessation of Being | 876 |
6. Eschatological Outline Portrays Last Events | 877 |
7. Christ Came to Undo Ruin Wrought by Adam | 878 |
II. Irenaeus’ Basic Doctrinal Positions and Definitions | 879 |
1. Mortal Man Must Be, Immortalized at Resurrection | 879 |
2. To Live Is to “Exist”; to Die, to “Cease to Exist” | 880 |
3. Eternal Life Is “Bestowed” Eternal Existence | 880 |
4. Immortality Restricted to the Righteous | 880 |
5. Disobedience Caused Loss of Man’s Immortality | 881 |
6. Union With Christ Results in Immortality | 881 |
7. Future Destinies Determined by Contrasting Resurrections | 882 |
8. Incorruption Means “Incapable of Decay” | 882 |
9. Incorruption Now “in Promise.” Not Yet in Possession | 882 |
10. Resurrection Bodies Are Totally Distinct | 883 |
11. To “Perish” Means Ultimate Nonexistence | 883 |
12. Punishment Is “Punitive,” Not “Purgative” | 883 |
13. Eternal Punishment Is Eternal Loss of Life | 884 |
14. Life Dependent on Gratuity of God | 884 |
52. Irenaeus Voices Preponderant Belief of Church | 886 |
I. Foremost Second-Century Contender for Conditionalism | 886 |
1. Grapples With Basic Issues of Controversy | 887 |
2. Remarkable Scope of Analysis of Error | 887 |
II. Devastating Exposure of Gnostic Errors and Countering Truth | 888 |
III. Irenaeus’ Personal Creed Then Preponderant Belief of Church | 889 |
1. Irenaeus’ “Creed,” and “Conferred” Immortality | 889 |
2. Irenaeus’ Statement Never Again True | 891 |
3. Gnosticism Is But Camouflaged Paganism | 891 |
4. Made Incorruptible and Immortal at Resurrection | 892 |
5. Eternal Continuance Is “Bestowed” and “Imparted” | 892 |
6. “Perpetual Duration” Is Unending “Existence” | 893 |
IV. Multiple Arguments for Conditional Immortality | 893 |
1. Union With God Prerequisite to Immortality | 893 |
2. Must Sense Dependence Upon the Life-giver | 894 |
3. Adam Separated From Tree Lest He Be “Immortal Sinner” | 895 |
4. Believing and Obedient “Honoured With Immortality” | 896 |
5. Gift of Immortality Restricted to Believers | 896 |
6. Eternal Fire for Satan and His Followers | 897 |
7. Immortality Received Only Through Christ | 897 |
8. God Who Gives “Earthly” Life, Can Bestow Immortality | 898 |
V. Fate of Wicked Is Final Annihilation | 899 |
1. Distinguishes Between Body and Soul | 899 |
2. Irenaeus’ Definition of Death | 900 |
3. Second Death—Hell, Lake of Fire, Eternal Fire | 900 |
4. Final Annihilation of the Wicked | 900 |
5. Fruition of All Hopes and Provisions | 901 |
53. Novatian of Rome—Conditionalist Opponent of Cornelius | 902 |
I. Novatian—Immortality of God and Mortality of Man | 902 |
II. Arguments Based on Natures of Creator and Creature | 904 |
1. Man’s Disobedience Brought “Mortality” | 904 |
2. Expelled From Eden to Forestall “Immortality of Guilt” | 905 |
3. God, Without Beginning or End, Is Consequently “Immortal” | 905 |
4. God “Incorruptible” and Therefore “Immortal” | 906 |
5. Man Made With “Materials of Mortality” | 906 |
6. Word of Christ “Affords Immortality” for Man | 907 |
7. Man “Destined” for “Attainment” of Everlasting Life | 907 |
8. Humanity Died, Not Deity, on the Cross | 908 |
III. Arabian Believers in Soul’s Death and Resurrection | 909 |
1. Conditional Immortality “No New Doctrine” | 910 |
2. Origen Established “Immortal-Soulism” in Alexandria | 910 |
IV. “Clementine Homilies”—Fictional Views by “Clement’s” Fabricated Characters | 911 |
1. Clashing Views and Uncertain Dating | 912 |
2. Ranges Over Creation, Life, Death, Punishment | 913 |
3. Wicked Consumed and Destroyed by Fire | 913 |
4. Clement Sets Forth “Peter” as Immortal-Soulist | 914 |
5. Free Will Explains Presence of Sin and Death | 914 |
6. Immortalized Through Christ’s Reign | 915 |
7. Subsequent “Recognitions” Sustain “Homilies” Portrayal | 915 |
54. Arnobius of Africa—Last Ante-Nicene Conditionalist Spokesman | 917 |
I. Final Extinction of Incorrigibly Wicked | 917 |
1. Meets Paganism on Its Own Ground | 918 |
2. Immortality for Righteous; Extinction for Wicked | 919 |
3. Man Created Capable of Either Destiny | 919 |
II. Comprehensive Survey of Arnobius’ Arguments and Evidences | 920 |
1. Arnobius Presents the Case for Christ | 920 |
2. Christ Opened the Gate of Immortality | 921 |
3. Searching Questions on Life, Death, and Hereafter | 921 |
4. A Destruction That Leaves Nothing Behind | 922 |
5. Ultimate. “Annihilation” Is Man’s “Real Death” | 922 |
6. Man Not “Immortal” Like God; Only “Creatures” | 923 |
7. Sweeping Survey of Paganism’s Inadequacy | 923 |
8. Claims and Assumptions of Immortal-Soulists | 924 |
9. “Enriched With Eternal Life” Through Christ | 924 |
III. Boon of Immortality Is God’s Gift | 925 |
1. Assured Immortality Versus Blotting Out of Existence | 925 |
2. “Gift” of Immortality Is the “Grant”of God | 925 |
3. Either Salvation or Destruction Awaits All | 925 |
4. God Alone Is Immortal and Everlasting .... | 926 |
5. The Great Alternatives Are Placed Before All | 926 |
6. “Prize of Immortality” Is Before Us | 926 |
55. Athenagoras—First Ecclesiastic to Assert Innate Immortality | 928 |
I. Athenagoras—Pathfinder on Revolutionary Road | 930 |
1. Bases Contention on Philosophy, Not Scripture | 931 |
2. Repeatedly Uses Plato’s “Immortal Soul” Phrasing | 932 |
3. Battery of Supporting Equivalents Employed | 932 |
II. Earlier “Plea”—Devoid of “Innate Immortality” Concept | 933 |
1. Angels Are Created Beings; Some “Fell” | 934 |
2. Dubious Setting of Term “Immortal Soul” | 934 |
3. Heathen “Gods” Simply Deified Men | 935 |
4. Fate of Sinners Worse Than “Annihilation” | 935 |
5. Our Bodies to Be Reconstructed at Resurrection | 935 |
III. The Resurrection—Wholly Committed to Innate-Immortality Thesis | 936 |
1. Man Created for “Perpetual Existence” | 936 |
2. Dual Premise for Eternal Existence | 937 |
3. Gist of the Resurrection Argument | 937 |
4. Resurrected Bodies Will Be Incorruptible | 938 |
5. Destined for “Perpetual Duration,” Not Final Extinction | 939 |
6. Unceasing Existence Forestalls Ultimate Annihilation | 939 |
7. Pledged Continuance of “Being in Immortality” | 939 |
8. Man: An Immortal Soul in a Perishable Body | 940 |
9. Resurrection Imperative So Body-Soul May Continue Forever | 940 |
10. Continuity of Being Interrupted by Death | 941 |
11. “Sleep” of Death Involves Blackout of Consciousness | 941 |
12. Reunion of Body and Soul Necessary for Recompense | 941 |
13. Man’s Punishment Not Assigned to Soul Alone | 942 |
14. Reconstitution of Body and Soul Into Same Being | 943 |
15. Those Failing God’s Objective Are Punished Proportionately | 943 |
16. Denies Ultimate Annihilation for the Wicked | 943 |
17. Disregards and Repudiates the Biblical “Perish” | 944 |
IV. Logical Demands of Athenagoras’ Reasoning | 944 |
56. Tertullian—Projector of Eternal-Torment Corollary | 947 |
I. Formulation of the Dogma of Endless Torment | 948 |
1. Tertullian’s Espousal of Montanism | 949 |
2. First to Formulate Dogma of Endless Torment | 950 |
3. Persecution Forms Background of Retributive Torment | 951 |
4. Influenced by Stoic “Philosophy” While Rejecting Its “Theosophy” | 952 |
5. Characteristics of His Diversified Writings | 952 |
6. Still Held to Major Prophetic Outline | 953 |
II. Threefold Basis of “Eternal Life in Hell” Postulate | 954 |
1. Three Axioms Underlying Eternal-Torment Postulate | 954 |
2. Invokes Plato in Affirming Immortal-Soulism | 954 |
3. Rejects Plato’s Pre-existence Contention | 955 |
4. Definitive Declaration of Soul’s Origin | 955 |
5. Tertullian’s Definition of the Soul | 956 |
6. Conglomeration Leads Into Hopeless Perplexity | 956 |
7. Drew Supplemental Support From Montanist “Visions” | 957 |
57. Tertullian Holds Wicked Ever Burn but Never Consume | 959 |
I. Mystic Everlasting Fire That Never Consumes Victims | 959 |
1. Nonconsuming Fire Causes Endless Torture | 959 |
2. Exults Over Eternal Torment of Persecutors | 960 |
3. Eternity of Sin Involved in Monstrous Concept | 961 |
II. Alters Basic Scripture Intent to Sustain “Torment” Theory | 962 |
1. “Incorruption” Misapplied to Wicked in Hell | 962 |
2. “Immortality” Wrongly Applied to Wicked | 963 |
3. “Destruction’s Plain Intent” Set Aside | 964 |
4. “Immortal Souls” Cannot Perish in Hell | 964 |
5. “Body” Destined for “Eternal Killing” in Hell | 965 |
6. Resurrection of Flesh Is for “Eternal Killing” | 966 |
7. Perverts Meaning of “Death” and “Dying” | 966 |
8. Forced to Give Improper Turn to Terminology | 967 |
9. Employs Devious Artifice of Distortion | 968 |
58. Universal Restoration Substituted for Eternal Torment | 969 |
1. Significance of the Alexandrian School | 969 |
2. Characteristics of New Alexandrian School | 971 |
3. Hour of Peril for Expanding Church | 971 |
4. Grave Involvements of Origenism | 972 |
5. Roseate Expectations, but Gross Perversions | 973 |
6. The Progressive Path of Departure | 974 |
7. Platonic Influence Supersedes That of Apostles | 975 |
8. Baleful Effects of Accepting Platonism | 975 |
9. Origenism Banned Under Justinian | 976 |
59. Rise and Spread of Neoplatonic Restorationism | 978 |
I. Clement of Alexandria—Reverses Position in Transition Hour | 978 |
1. Develops Introduction to Philosophic Christianity | 979 |
2. Meeting Point of Two Converging Lines | 980 |
3. Swings to Immortal-Soulism in Latest Treatise | 981 |
II. Earlier Declarations Couched in Conditionalist Terms | 982 |
1. Immortality a Reward to Be Received | 982 |
2. “True” and “Sure” Immortality Is “Gift of Eternal Life” | 982 |
3. God Is Giver of Everything Eternal: Otherwise Death | 983 |
4. Immortality Came Not Through Law, but Through Christ | 983 |
5. Turned Away From Sole Source of Life | 984 |
6. Destruction Is Penalty for Disobedience | 984 |
7. Immortality Set Over Against Destruction | 985 |
8. Everlasting Habitations; Immortality; Eternal Mansions | 985 |
9. Angels Conduct Redeemed to Eternal Life | 986 |
10. The Soul Is “Not Naturally Immortal” | 986 |
III. Exhortation to the Heathen Still Stresses Life Only in Christ | 986 |
1. Christ Offers “Immortality”; Sin Brings “Destruction” | 986 |
2. Christ Brings Light of Eternal Life | 987 |
3. Eternal Life Versus Eternal Death | 988 |
4. Perfect “Boon of Immortality” Bestowed | 988 |
5. Christ Offers to Conduct Us to Immortality | 988 |
IV. The Instructor Intertwines Our Immortality With Christ | 989 |
1. Christ’s Commands Are “Paths to Immortality” | 989 |
2. Are to Put On Immortality of Christ | 989 |
3. Present Chastisement Deters From Everlasting Death | 989 |
4. To Put On Robe of Immortality | 990 |
V. Switches in Stromata to Bald Immortal-Soulism | 991 |
1. Exempts Platonism From Paul’s Strictures | 991 |
2. Old Testament Law Leads to Immortality | 992 |
3. Knowledge of God Communicates Immortality | 992 |
4. Immortality of Soul Openly Avowed | 992 |
5. All Punishment Regarded Restorative | 993 |
6. Purged by the “Fire of Wisdom” | 994 |
7. Christ Preaching the Gospel in Hades | 994 |
8. Dubious Fragments Assert Soul’s Immortality | 994 |
60. Origen—Projector of Universal-Restoration Theory | 996 |
1. Became Head of Catechetical School at Eighteen | 996 |
2. Finally Deposed and Deprived of Office | 998 |
I. Depreciates Literalism; Exalts Mystical and Spiritual | 998 |
1. Master Mind of Mystical Interpretation | 998 |
2. Allegorization Determined Entire Exegesis | 999 |
3. Origen’s Three “Senses” to Scripture | 999 |
II. Universal Restorationism Origen’s Answer to Tertullian’s Eternal Torment | 1000 |
1. Distorts an Obvious Bible Truth | 1000 |
2. Plato the Sponsor of Both Views | 1001 |
3. Life Falsely Promised Instead of Death | 1001 |
4. Two Equally Injurious Perversions | 1002 |
5. Avoids One Pitfall Only to Fall Into Another | 1003 |
III. Pivotal Christian Doctrines Assailed by Origen | 1004 |
1. Scriptures Robbed of Authoritative Force | 1004 |
2. Swept Apostolic Faith Into Discard | 1005 |
3. Pre-existerice Coupled to Restorationism | 1005 |
4. Impinged Vaunted Freedom of Will | 1005 |
5. Relationships to the Empire Revolutionized | 1006 |
IV. Revolutionary Concepts of Life, Death, and Destiny | 1006 |
1. Strange Contentions in Anthropology | 1006 |
2. Adam’s Fall Made Allegorical | 1007 |
3. Revolutionary Concepts of Eschatology | 1007 |
4. Mystical Interpretation Invoked to Evade Literalism | 1007 |
V. Documented Definitions and Usages | 1008 |
1. Men Are Souls in Bodies | 1008 |
2. Soul Is Immaterial, Invisible, Immortal | 1008 |
3. Death Neither Perishing Nor Destruction | 1009 |
4. “Destruction” Is Not Ceasing to Be | 1009 |
5. “Fire” Consumes Fuel of Sin | 1010 |
6. “Consuming Fire” Simply Refines | 1010 |
7. Earth’s “Change” Is Not Annihilation | 1010 |
8. “World’s End” Is Its Subjugation | 1010 |
9. “Fall” Counteracted in Future Ages | 1011 |
61. Origen’s Multiple Departures From the Faith | 1012 |
I. Adopted Heathen Transmigration Fallacy | 1012 |
1. Discards God’s Solution to Sin Problem | 1012 |
2. Taught Successive Transmigrations of the Soul | 1013 |
3. Biblical Terms Explained Away by Allegorizing | 1014 |
II. Allegorizing Substituted for Literalism | 1015 |
1. Literalism of Creation Narrative Swept Aside | 1015 |
2. Denies Literal Truth of Biblical Records | 1016 |
III. Spiritualizes Second Advent, End of World, and Millennium | 1017 |
1. Second Advent Mysticized Into “Daily” Coming | 1017 |
2. “End of World” Localized and Individualized | 1018 |
3. Substitutes “Gradual Advance” for Cataclysmic End | 1019 |
4. Denied Millennium Because Incompatible With His Scheme | 1019 |
5. Prophecies Deprived of All Force | 1020 |
IV. Holds Every Immortal Soul to Be Restored | 1020 |
1. Soul Incapable of Death or Destruction | 1020 |
2. Every Rational Being to Be Restored | 1021 |
3. Immortal Sinners “Conducted” to Salvation Slowly | 1021 |
4. Weird Conclusions to Which Origenism Leads | 1022 |
V. Recapitulation: Twin Fallacies of Tertullian and Origen | 1023 |
1. Utter Eradication of Evil Promised | 1023 |
2. Fallacious Threats and Delusive Promises | 1025 |
VI. Subsequent Churchmen Are Divided Between the Conflicting Schools | 1026 |
1. Churchmen Who Supported Tertullian’s Eternal-Tormentism | 1027 |
2. Ecclesiastics Who Favored Origen’s Universal Restorationism | 1027 |
3. Conditionalism Gradually Forced Into Eclipse | 1028 |
62. Lactantius—Emitting Light Amid Encroaching Darkness | 1029 |
1. Revolution in Roman Life and Thought | 1029 |
2. Staying the Tide of Drift and Error | 1029 |
I. Historical Setting of Interest in Man’s Nature and Destiny | 1030 |
1. Scholarship Recognized by Two Emperors | 1030 |
2. First Attempt at Systematic Christian Theology | 1031 |
3. Comprehensive Character of Lactantius’ “Institutes” | 1032 |
4. Course of Empire Portrayed in Prophecy | 1033 |
5. Eschatological Concept Unveils Man’s Destiny | 1033 |
6. Dubious Passages and Known Emendations | 1033 |
II. Immortality—Lost Through Sin; Restored Through Christ | 1034 |
1. God Is Eternal; Man’s Immortality Conditional | 1034 |
2. Nature of “First” and “Second” Deaths | 1035 |
3. Adam Expelled From Eden and Immortality | 1035 |
4. Immortality Is “Reward” for Righteousness | 1036 |
5. Confusion and Ignorance Among Philosophers | 1036 |
6. Fallacious Concepts of Cicero | 1037 |
III. Christ the Source of Our Immortality | 1037 |
1. Christ Came to “Restore” Righteous to Life | 1037 |
2. Took Our Mortality to Restore Immortality | 1038 |
3. Immortality Is Offered to All | 1039 |
4. Contrasting Ends of the Two Ways | 1039 |
IV. Immortality Not Inherent, but a Gift | 1040 |
1. Provision for Attaining Immortality | 1040 |
2. So Placed as to Attain Immortality | 1040 |
3. Immortality Not a Consequence of Nature | 1041 |
4. God Alone Can Confer Immortality | 1041 |
5. Immortality Is Received as Reward | 1042 |
V. Conditionalism Placed in Eschatological Setting | 1043 |
1. False Philosophical Views on Immortality | 1043 |
2. Philosophical Confusion Regarding Immortality | 1044 |
3. Righteousness Alone “Procures” Eternal Life | 1045 |
4. Beginning and End of the World | 1046 |
5. Formation of Man and Results of Fall | 1046 |
VI. Immortality’s Place in the Prophetic Outline | 1047 |
1. Rome’s Division, Antichrist, and Coming Climax | 1047 |
2. Second Advent and the Resurrection | 1047 |
3. Paralleling but Distorted Concepts of Poets | 1048 |
4. Satan Bound, City Planted. Wicked Destroyed | 1049 |
5. Lactantius’ Conditionalism Presented to Emperor | 1049 |
VII. Pitfalls Lurk in Abbreviated “Epitome” | 1050 |
1. Contains Certain “Dubious Passages” That Mislead | 1050 |
2. Lactantius Recognizes Hazard of Abridgment | 1050 |
3. Preponderant View Is Conditionalist | 1051 |
4. Presented With “Garment of Immortality” | 1051 |
VIII. Significance of Lactantius’ Conditionalist Witness | 1052 |
63. Athanasius—Then Conditionalism Into Eclipse | 1053 |
I. Shifting Emphasis of the Three Schools Concerning the Soul | 1054 |
1. Historic Alignments in Ante-Nicene Period | 1054 |
2. Post-Nicene Shifting of Greatest Import | 1054 |
3. Ultimate Ascendance of Eternal-Torment School | 1055 |
II. The Athanasius-Arius Controversy and the Nicene Creed | 1056 |
1. Absolute Deity of Christ at Stake | 1057 |
2. The Arian yiew Summed Up | 1058 |
3. The Athanasian View Epitomized | 1058 |
4. The Semi-Arian or Eusebian Concept | 1059 |
5. Tide of Battle Ends in Athanasian Victory | 1060 |
III. Athanasius—Powerful Defender of Deity of Christ | 1061 |
1. The Center of the Theological World | 1061 |
2. Four Times Banished in Stormy Career | 1061 |
3. Championed Certain Aspects of Conditionalism | 1063 |
IV. “The Incarnation” in Relation to Man’s Sin and Redemption | 1063 |
1. Classic Portrayal of Restoration of Man’s Life | 1063 |
2. Direct Quotations Not Employed With Athanasius | 1064 |
3. Man Not Created With Perverse Tendencies | 1065 |
4. Creator Must Both Renew and Restore | 1065 |
5. Became Man to Restore Life to Us | 1066 |
6. Purpose of Public Death and Three Days in Tomb | 1066 |
7. Prophecies Establish Facts of Incarnation | 1067 |
8. Answers Scoffing of Greeks Regarding Incarnation | 1067 |
9. So Live as to Eat of Tree of Life | 1068 |
64. Augustine—Immortal-Soulism’s Hour of Supremacy | 1070 |
I. Projects Fallacious Philosophy of History | 1070 |
1. “Infallible” System of Doctrine Based on Authority | 1070 |
2. Basic Fallacies of Augustinian Concepts | 1071 |
3. Already Committed to Immortal-Soulism Before Conversion | 1072 |
II. Augustine Sets Immortal-Soulist Pattern for Thousand Years | 1073 |
1. Projects New Philosophy of History | 1073 |
2. Everything That Conflicts Interpreted Spiritually | 1074 |
3. Revolutionary Principles of Interpretation | 1075 |
III. The Fatal Fallacy of Majority “Orthodoxy” | 1076 |
1. Biblical Truth Is Recognized in Time | 1076 |
2. Orthodoxy Determined by Written Word | 1077 |
3. Truth Crushed to Earth Springs Forth Again | 1078 |
[CD-ROM Editor’s Note: In the original, the “Index of Personal Names” and “Scripture Index” is located on pages 1119-1132]