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aball1035
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Are they physical places, or more like a state of mind?
since we believe, as Jesus taught, in the resurrection of the body, they must be physical places or beings with both soul and body, which humans are, could not inhabit them.Are they physical places, or more like a state of mind?
Definitely physical, as one cannot have a “mind” without their head, which is part of a body.Are they physical places, or more like a state of mind?
Why does it follow from the ressurection of the body that hell must be a physical place?since we believe, as Jesus taught, in the resurrection of the body, they must be physical places or beings with both soul and body, which humans are, could not inhabit them.
I don’t see how it follows that hell is a physical place on the basis that we have a physical body. Can you please explain the logic of your arguement?Definitely physical, as one cannot have a “mind” without their head, which is part of a body.
But physical in a spiritual way. “There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body” (1 Corinthians 15)
ICXC NIKA!
One could say that the “afterlife” ( I personally loathe the term, it relegates the Life Everlasting to the same category as an “aftertaste” or an “aftereffect”) is transphysical; that is, while we will experience it in a physical sort of way, since we must (being not spirits but thinking bodies) we will not experience it with our physical self, which death will have taken from us. Again, “there is a spiritual body.” Physicality is not an accident but essential to our being, and like our LORD, subjected to death in the flesh, we will be made alive in the Spirit.I have come to the conclusion that Hell and Heaven are Spiritual places… the afterlife is NOT physical.
Simple. The resurrectional body, or spiritual body, is for every"body" whether they awaken in Heaven or in Hell. And BODIES have to have some sort of space to “be” in. It may be that spirits can dance on the head of a pin; bodies are by nature extensional. Our limbs, elbows, shoulders, nose, feet, etc. sticking out every which way is not accidental but central to our being, and this is not altered if someone goes to Hell. They still receive a spiritual body. They will still need somewhere to “be.”Why does it follow from the ressurection of the body that hell must be a physical place?
We have a physical body. And, as was remarked, even “states of mind” require that our head, which is part of our body, be functional. No head, no mind; therefore no body, no “states of mind,” either. So Hell as only a “state of mind” is impossible.I don’t see how it follows that hell is a physical place on the basis that we have a physical body. Can you please explain the logic of your arguement?
Being in a place, does not mean that hell is caused by that place. We experience hell because we oppose heaven; we oppose God. God is not reactionary. Gods act is eternal, and we experience certain states in respect of our relationship to that eternal act. Hell doesn’t exist in virtue of being sent to a place or because we went to a place. Hell is a state of being which begins in the soul since that is the substance by which we experience God.Simple. The resurrectional body, or spiritual body, is for every"body" whether they awaken in Heaven or in Hell. And BODIES have to have some sort of space to “be” in. It may be that spirits can dance on the head of a pin; bodies are by nature extensional. Our limbs, elbows, shoulders, nose, feet, etc. sticking out every which way is not accidental but central to our being, and this is not altered if someone goes to Hell. They still receive a spiritual body. They will still need somewhere to “be.”
ICXC NIKA.
Correct. If they were, getting into Heaven or escaping from Hell would simply be a matter of transportation; there would be no necessary change of being, in one case necessary, in the second impossible. But there is nothing to suggest that one can achieve Heaven or escape Hell simply by travelling far enough. You need a new being; you need a new BODY.The very distinction of “Physical body” versus “spiritual body” should raise the argument that heaven and hell as “physical” places could be also interpreted as a glorified “spiritual” place, as in the resurrection of the body. The gospels tell us that although Jesus ate food and walked around after the resurrection, he was able to walk through walls when the apostles locked themselves in the upper room. There is no indication that heaven or hell could be a place in physical space,
Temporality is not just human, it is intrinsic to the physical locations we know. If you observe another star, or galaxy, you necessarily see the past, because the speed of light is finite. That isn’t a human limitation, but a fundamental one. Eternity and its citizens would be exempt from it.especially in the temporal human sense by which we view locations.
No, they are not states of mind, however, they are states wherein one possesses a mind. “Being with God” or the converse implies consciousness. So you still need your head. There may be rocks in Heaven; but they do not “experience” Heaven.Heaven and Hell, as well as God, exist outside of time, and therefore outside of space. They are, in one matter of speaking, a state of being, either with God or against Him. By this terminology, one doesn’t need a head to be, as rocks can exist without a brain to realize it. This opposes heaven and hell as states of mind.
We have our LORD Himself as the “floor model” of the pneumatikon soma, spiritual body. He remained a Human Body: head, hands, feet, etc. So will we. Yet HE had given up earthly breath for heavenly breath, and human flimsiness for Heavenly power: so will we.However, as far as the physicality of heaven and hell, we can only surmise what a spiritual body, a post-resurrection body might look like and what properties it might have.
Probably none at all. With the change to a new method of being, the human pneumatikon soma, will be able to move and “be” without the need for the space that we understand; having all eternity to wiggle around in. Recall that in Einstein’s theory, space and time are connected. It stands to reason that Eternity will have spaces and bodies all its own, including our own pneumatikon soma. Praise be to our LORD!So while I hate to take a cop-out, we simply don’t know how much physical space heaven and hell might need.
ICXC NIKA!What is most important is that we will have bodies after death, those bodies and their eternal destinations will be eternal and outside of human time, and that human thought about heaven and hell can only ever be allegorical, theoretical, or metaphorical, never complete.
Without your head/body, therefore without your mind, what would be left of you for “being”?By this terminology, one doesn’t need a head to be, as rocks can exist without a brain to realize it.
It doesn’t negate their extensionality, but it raises the point that perhaps we don’t need a place to be at, we simply can be. Space and Time are connected, so outside of time, any physical place would be eternal, as would any inhabitant of that place. One theory, with which I tend to agree, is that heaven allows one to live or experience anytime or any place ever on earth, since heaven and hell and everyone who ever lived can view the whole world at one instance. However, having a place to do this from might not be necessary, as God created spiritual bodies which could walk through walls and eat breakfast at the souls desire, or could be eternally large.But Heaven and Hell being outside the “physical world” we understand, in no way negates the extensionality of the realms where they are lived (higher dimension?); nor the essential bodyness of those human beings who enter them.
I think that time is in some ways a human limitation, even if past, present, and future are fundamentally ordered and outside our control. The whole reason arguments like this about heaven and hell exist is because we want to make heaven seem like the greatest, longest lasting temporal place we can think of, where every dead person can live comfortably. The same is true of hell, hence why Dante had a job as do many fiction writers today. Eternity and its citizens being free of time almost necessarily points to the fact that heaven and hell don’t really have a space, and the resurrected bodies don’t “float” or “fly” through space, but that they “are” and the way they experience both God and the world, or themselves in hell, is beyond any human verb to tell.Temporality is not just human, it is intrinsic to the physical locations we know. If you observe another star, or galaxy, you necessarily see the past, because the speed of light is finite. That isn’t a human limitation, but a fundamental one. Eternity and its citizens would be exempt from it.
I doubt it, as space is one of the basic attributes of bodyhood. Your nose, feet, shoulders, etc, need to stick out into “something.” Light needs a space to go through to your eyes, as do smells to your nose. Since we will have limbs, we need a space in which to wiggle them. The pneumatikon soma will not reduce to a point, anymore than our natural human soma would.It doesn’t negate their extensionality, but it raises the point that perhaps we don’t need a place to be at, we simply can be.
But since they are connected, could any physical places known to us be eternal? Is it not more probable that Eternity has its own spaces and extensions?Space and Time are connected, so outside of time, any physical place would be eternal,
Indeed, but to “be nowhere” is inconsistent with bodyhood.as would any inhabitant of that place. One theory, with which I tend to agree, is that heaven allows one to live or experience anytime or any place ever on earth, since heaven and hell and everyone who ever lived can view the whole world at one instance. However, having a place to do this from might not be necessary, as God created spiritual bodies which could walk through walls and eat breakfast at the souls desire, or could be eternally large.
Not really. Most folks haven’t given time that much thought to wonder about its absence and how that would affect us. I believe that these debates exist because we want to hope for some real human life to exist beyond our eyes rolling back, (as opposed to “clouds of spirit” wishing in vain for bodies); and the clock speed of that life is a secondary concern.I think that time is in some ways a human limitation, even if past, present, and future are fundamentally ordered and outside our control. The whole reason arguments like this about heaven and hell exist is because we want to make heaven seem like the greatest, longest lasting temporal place we can think of, where every dead person can live comfortably.
There is no need for floating or flying, or otherwise crossing space; just bodying around. But extensional space is still needed for that.The same is true of hell, hence why Dante had a job as do many fiction writers today. Eternity and its citizens being free of time almost necessarily points to the fact that heaven and hell don’t really have a space, and the resurrected bodies don’t “float” or “fly” through space,
ICXC NIKA.but that they “are” and the way they experience both God and the world, or themselves in hell, is beyond any human verb to tell.