What are your thoughts on the book's 'time versus non-time' interpretation of "last things"?
Posted: 03 Oct 2024, 02:25
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Citing various prophetic biblical passages referencing the day of judgement, the author describes the fiery act by which God will permanently destroy the evil that was committed during the temporal history of man, thereby ridding both man and God of their continual awareness/experience of this evil as they “inhabit eternity.” The author argues that, because time itself is a product of original sin, the entire space-time universe will likewise be incinerated on the day of judgement, after which God will remake the material realm into one that is no longer ordered around time-based rules of physics. What are your thoughts on this ‘time versus non-time’ interpretation of “last things”?
Citing various prophetic biblical passages referencing the day of judgement, the author describes the fiery act by which God will permanently destroy the evil that was committed during the temporal history of man, thereby ridding both man and God of their continual awareness/experience of this evil as they “inhabit eternity.” The author argues that, because time itself is a product of original sin, the entire space-time universe will likewise be incinerated on the day of judgement, after which God will remake the material realm into one that is no longer ordered around time-based rules of physics. What are your thoughts on this ‘time versus non-time’ interpretation of “last things”?