Difference between revisions of "Hell is a 404.1"
From Sensus Plenior
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Using only TRUE premises. | Using only TRUE premises. | ||
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::'''therefore''': Hell is uncreated by God or anyone else. | ::'''therefore''': Hell is uncreated by God or anyone else. | ||
Revision as of 17:18, 3 December 2016
1. There is no mention of Hell in God’s Creation - therefore, Hell is uncreated by God or anyone else. See Ge 1:1, Is 65:17, Jer 7:31, Jer 19:5, Joh 1:3, and many instances of “heaven and earth” paired together – without “hell.”
Contents
Premise: There is no mention of Hell in God’s Creation
- PI 1: There is no mention of Hell in God’s Creation
- PI 1.1 Lit. Hell is either physical or heavenly in nature and is included in "heaven and earth".
- PI 1.2 Alt. Hell is a third 'state' of existence: heaven, earth, hell
- PI 2: There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
Argument
Using only TRUE premises.
- A-PI 2. There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by God or anyone else.
For A-PI 2 to be true both must be true:
- A-PI 2.1There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by God
- A-PI 2.2.1There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by anyone else. (self-existent)
- A-PI 2.2.2There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by anyone else. (non-existent)
- A-PI 2.1There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
A-PI 2.1
- A-PI 2.1 There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by God
- Non-sequitor: A single case of something that was not specifically mentioned makes this false.
- Non-sequitor: God could have created it AFTER the initial creation.
A-PI 2.2.1
- A-PI 2.2.1There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by anyone else. (self-existent)
- This presumes hell exists, and is circular reasoning.
A-PI 2.2.2
- A-PI 2.2.2 There is no [specific] mention of Hell in God’s Creation.
- therefore: Hell is uncreated by anyone else. (non-existent)
- Non-sequiror: It could have been created as a state of existence by the act of separating from God by another individual. We may create hell for ourselves.