Verse:
1 Timothy 4:10 ‘For to this end we toil and strive, because we have our hope set on the living God, who is the Savior of all people, especially of those who believe.’
Definitions
<Further defining the place of destruction, the 2nd-death-lake-of-fire where people 'perish;' why say 'especially of those who believe,' for us to not further evaluate the term Savior of all people? Does it imply that living is still good enough in hell?>
Blanket Statements 4a, 4b, 4c, 4d
Blanket Statement #4a – I believe that people do not perish in hell, that souls get to continue their existence and live some sort of existence fairly judged with God’s righteous humaneness always part of the equation. From 1 Timothy 4:10 I believe this means, that unlike Judas who was designated as the traitor ‘better to have never been born,’ that this verse gives a better optimism of belief that people condemned to hell still choose the option to continue – lest he’s not the savior of all people, that saving the soul, even to hell, is still a form of gratitude and living existence to all people.
Blanket Statement #4b – I believe everything in blanket statement 4a, however on top of it I think, through enough various passage warnings where to perish is perceived as to be deleted, that people in hell may have the option to eventually perish more than not, that eventually in hell you can choose to self-delete and no longer live an immortal option. I do acknowledge the risk of ‘relaxing the commandments’ for maintaining this outlook part of my belief.
Blanket Statement #4c - I prefer to not risk my own personal eternal rewards by keeping my knowledge less indicative or exploratory on the matter, the word says whoever relaxes commandments is the least in the kingdom of heaven, so I keep the risk of hell how it reads. Regarding being Savior of all people, I think it goes more the other way that you should never lighten the separation of eternities.
Blanket Statement #4d - Part of my belief up to this point is not going there on hell, even if I'm a fool to do so, so I'm sure he's the Savior of all people more than not. That's about as far as I go on the matter.
1 Timothy 4:10 ‘For to this end we toil and strive, because we have our hope set on the living God, who is the Savior of all people, especially of those who believe.’
Definitions
<Further defining the place of destruction, the 2nd-death-lake-of-fire where people 'perish;' why say 'especially of those who believe,' for us to not further evaluate the term Savior of all people? Does it imply that living is still good enough in hell?>
Blanket Statements 4a, 4b, 4c, 4d
Blanket Statement #4a – I believe that people do not perish in hell, that souls get to continue their existence and live some sort of existence fairly judged with God’s righteous humaneness always part of the equation. From 1 Timothy 4:10 I believe this means, that unlike Judas who was designated as the traitor ‘better to have never been born,’ that this verse gives a better optimism of belief that people condemned to hell still choose the option to continue – lest he’s not the savior of all people, that saving the soul, even to hell, is still a form of gratitude and living existence to all people.
Blanket Statement #4b – I believe everything in blanket statement 4a, however on top of it I think, through enough various passage warnings where to perish is perceived as to be deleted, that people in hell may have the option to eventually perish more than not, that eventually in hell you can choose to self-delete and no longer live an immortal option. I do acknowledge the risk of ‘relaxing the commandments’ for maintaining this outlook part of my belief.
Blanket Statement #4c - I prefer to not risk my own personal eternal rewards by keeping my knowledge less indicative or exploratory on the matter, the word says whoever relaxes commandments is the least in the kingdom of heaven, so I keep the risk of hell how it reads. Regarding being Savior of all people, I think it goes more the other way that you should never lighten the separation of eternities.
Blanket Statement #4d - Part of my belief up to this point is not going there on hell, even if I'm a fool to do so, so I'm sure he's the Savior of all people more than not. That's about as far as I go on the matter.