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Click Here for the Latest Edition of the Charlottesville Beacon
Sermons Preached in Harrisonburg, VA
Receiving Forgiveness (4) by Larry Rouse
What is God's
Forgiveness Like? (2)
by Larry Rouse
Instrumental
Music and the Cross of Christ
Where Are the Dead
The Foundation
of Forgiveness (1) Sermons Preached in Williamsburg, VA
In Search of the Servant of God (Part 1) by Larry Rouse Planning to Visit Us?
What
to Expect Thoughts To Ponder
The
highest reward Restudying the Issues of the 50's and 60's
Bill
Hall Series
Kitchens and Fellowship Halls
You will need
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Assembly Times Sunday Bible Classes (10:00 am) AM Worship (11:00 am)
Wednesday Bible Classes (7:00 pm)
Location
180 Townwood Drive Charlottesville, VA 22901 |
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The
Immortality of the Soul A recent e-mail correspondent, influenced by Jehovah's Witness doctrine, has stated, "...man does not live on after he dies..." The Witnesses case against life after death is primarily based on the claim that such is pagan philosophy, and not Scriptural. In addition, the misapplication of some Bible texts, in conjunction with the disregard of others, simulates support for this godless doctrine. It may be true that pagans accepted the existence of an immortal soul. However, this fact does not automatically nullify the validity of such a doctrine in Christianity. If every thought which existed among the pagans invalidated a similar thought among God's people, then we must of necessity reject the Bible account of creation, the flood, the virgin birth, and perhaps much more. Biblical truth needs to be determined by what the Bible says, not what the pagans believed.
IS THE SOUL
MERELY THE BODY? If there
is no distinction to be made between the soul and body, why did the apostle
Paul pen,
"...may
your whole spirit, soul, and body be preserved blameless at the coming of
our Lord “THE SOUL WHO SINS SHALL DIE” These words can be found in Ezekiel 18:4, 20. Witnesses use this, and similar texts to support their doctrine of soul annihilation. The text certainly speaks of the soul dying, but it is NOT the same death which come upon the body. Our bodies die a physical death (Gen. 3:19; Heb 9:27), the only exceptions being those who are alive at the Lord's coming (1 Cor. 15:51-53). The soul dies a spiritual death, not related to the physical design of the body (dust), but the actions of the person (Rom. 6:23). From the text, note that the wicked will die, but the righteous will live. And yet our constant experience, when it comes to physical death, is that both wicked and righteous die.
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob all
died (Gen
25:8; 35:29; 49:33),
and yet the Lord speaks of them as living (Mat
22:32). They died
physically, as all men do, but spiritually, they live (John
11:25), for they were
faithful to the Lord.
Solomon
is not affirming that the dead have slipped into nonexistence, but that they
have no more part on this earth. They "know nothing" about "anything done
under the sun". Consider the circumstances of the rich man and Lazarus, as
revealed by the Lord. Neither man is spoken of as annihilated. They existed
in a different realm; Lazarus in Abraham's bosom and the rich man in
torments. Both had
THE HADEAN
REALM In Luke 16:19-31, Jesus teaches about this hadean realm. Two abodes exist there, Abraham's bosom (paradise) and torments. Souls in Hades are not "asleep in the grave" as the Witnesses would tell us, but in fact are alert, able to receive comfort and torments (v. 25). The body has gone to the ground (v. 22), but the person has gone to a spirit realm. The
common argument levied against this text is that Jesus was simply teaching a
parable. A whole complex explanation has been devised to give credence to
this interpretation. However, the text does not fit the fabric of a parable.
A parable is "a usually short fictitious story that illustrates a moral
attitude or a religious principle." (4) When Jesus taught via parables, He
used This is not a parable. Jesus taught in short about the diverse lifestyles of two men, and their respective rewards after death. The rich man, guided by greed (vs. 19, 21, 25) and wicked living (v. 30), received condemnation; Lazarus, leading a troubled life (vs. 20-21, 25), but apparently faithful to the Lord, receiving comforts. If we live faithfully, we also have the hope of comfort in Abraham's bosom. While on the cross, Jesus promised the penitent thief, "Assuredly, I say to you, today you will be with Me in Paradise." (Luke 23:43). What a blessed hope, and thereafter, to be raised to dwell with the Lord eternally (1 Thes. 4:16-18).
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