W
Wesrock
Guest
You really haven’t.
- “You have failed to show…” I have succeeded and any reasonable person must admit it. The logic says it all.
You really haven’t.
- “You have failed to show…” I have succeeded and any reasonable person must admit it. The logic says it all.
Tim never claimed this was evidence for Purgatory. He was simply implying that since a time frame was not placed on the beginning statement then it is possible to conclude that some sins can be forgiven in the age to come.My argument is that the claim that the author of the article, Tim Staples, makes by saying (in written word, NOT in spoken word as Arkansan states by conflating the original text vs. the Article itself) “This declaration of our Lord implies there are at least some sins that can be forgiven in the next life to a people who already believed it.” has committed a logical fallacy and I would expect the author to admit that and to retract it. He cannot use the scripture presented to claim this is evidence of Purgatory through what is a clear logical error. If there are other arguments for Purgatory, that is fine, we can discuss. But, this particular claim is erroneous.
Once again the author never makes this claim. Maybe this is why you are having troubles with Tim’s words. He’s speaking about when sins are being forgiven in this verse. But you keep reading his words as if he is using this verse as a proof text for purgatory.The author makes an erroneous inference by claiming the passage implies that Purgatory exists for reasons I have already covered.