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Reuben_J
Guest
1 Cor 3 v.14 and v.15Your own words contradict your statement. The works of the faithful are tested; the faithful themselves are not being purified. There is a huge difference.
The passage tells us why clearly and plainly: for the determination of reward or lack of reward.
What would the reward be, if not heaven?
Pass the test –-> reward.
If the work is burned, builder suffers loss. → No heaven.
But builder will be saved, but only as through fire (v.15)
The builder will be saved but only through fire (purgatory).
What would that reward after death be? I would say heaven is the reward.As to the first two questions, the text loudly and clearly tells us why: to determine reward or lack of reward.
Exactly – heaven. Or purgatory – one is saved but only as through fire.As to your third question, of course it is intertwined with his destiny: what rewards (if any) he or she will have in eternity.
Perhaps you have to be a Catholic to understand its context. Repentance is the gateway to heaven. Without it, there’ll be no heaven for us. That’s why the first call for Christian in Jesus ministry is a call to repent.As I pointed out in my last post–and I think I made a reasonable, clear case of this–the text says absolutely nothing–zero–about work done outside of the context of building on the foundation. It is that specific kind of work that Paul has in view here. If you want to see penance and repentance as part of that work, you will need to show that those things are in fact ways that we build on the church’s foundation.
True repentance can only be done built on the foundation of the Lord – believing in him and all it entails. How can we achieve true repentance outside of it?
Repentance is a process. For some people it can be a long one. I mentioned this earlier on. We can call it work. Of course there are other types of Christian work but that’s another topic.
Then this does not make practical sense.Suffering loss does not involve suffering of pain or purification; it is the loss of a reward. The phrase “as through fire” could refer to purification of the person by fire, but I would doubt that view since Paul includes the word “as” (ὡς), thus indicating that the person is not actually going through fire. If you disagree, please explain why Paul would include that word “as.”
Suffering loss causes pain, one way or the other. I cannot imagine that a person would be normally happy in suffering loss. Paul is even more specific here – this loss result in being ‘unsaved’; that the person could only be saved ‘but only as through fire’. Whether the person would literally undergoing purification through fire is secondary, one can debate that all day long, but what is certain is that the person only can be saved BUT as through fire. I would not be wrong if I understand as through fire means pain; but if not, it would still does not negate purgatory.
The Catholic doctrine of Purgatory essentially means that purgatory is a state. V. 15 then says how one is saved in that state.
I said earlier the idea of purification after death is contained in this passage. It does not necessarily define purgatory here.Someone who has never heard of Purgatory at all would not see it in this passage; only if you first learned of it, then embraced it, and then decided it must be in this passage, would you see it here. You first made up your mind that this passage teaches it, and now you’re trying to show that it does–but not through exegesis.
You do not see purgatory here because you do not want to listen to the Catholic teaching on it. And I agree, one has to be taught this doctrine to see how purgatory is explained here because without knowing what it is, one would not see purgatory. That I would agree with you.
In all honesty I see an otherwise unsaved person can be saved here. Call it what you want but we have a word for it – purgatory.Folks, this passage does not convey the idea that people are being purified. It just doesn’t. Read the text honestly and objectively. I know it’s hard, but try to do so.![]()
Reuben