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    God's judgment of sin is essentially a matter of permitti... — Carmelics
    Home/Afterlife & Death
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    Supports→God's grace is irresistible in the end and will eventually reconcile all sinners to God.

    God's judgment of sin is essentially a matter of permitting sinners to experience the very condition of separation they have confusedly chosen for themselves.

    Afterlife & DeathEternal Conscious Torment
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    Afterlife & DeathEternal Conscious Torment

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    Divine judgment, however harsh it may seem, is itself an expression of divine me...God's grace is irresistible in the end and will eventually reconcile all sinners...If God allows a sinner to live without even an implicit experience of the divine...

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    Such a discovery will elicit a cry for help that is just what God needs to begin...

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    Original sin is a just basis for condemnation.78%God could presumably bring a sinner to a point, just short of actually...78%Divine judgment is itself an expression of divine mercy and therefore ...76%Either God permits sinners to follow a path that leads to an objective...76%

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    However one might answer such a question, the Christian universalist’s understanding of the nature and scope of God’s irresistible grace is very different from the Augustinian understanding of it. For Christian universalists not only reject the Augustinian idea that God’s irresistible grace extends to a limited elect only; they also hold that God’s judgment of sin is essentially a matter of permitting sinners to experience the very condition of separation they have confusedly chosen for themselves. Many Christian universalists are thus fond of quoting St. Paul’s remark that “God has bound ever...

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