@glennbutner Loved Trinitarian Dogmatics and the Son who Learned Obedience, recommending them so very often. I would love to see your summaries on these topics esp as I prep for a project on the topic.
Here’s a giveaway for Christological Dogmatics!
To enter: Retweet and comment below or in quote with something that interests you from the book. I will randomly select one winner at the end of the day Wednesday to receive a free copy! (US mainland 48 states only - sorry!)
Haldane understood it!
“The love of God in Christ is set before us, in a multitude of passages, as the most powerful motive we can have to love Him with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind.”
—Robert Haldane, Romans, p21
@JstevensDK7@Curi_Christian@ScottAniol The term is only used elsewhere in Isaiah 66:24.
“Then they will go forth and look On the corpses of the men Who have transgressed against Me. For their worm will not die And their fire will not be quenched; And they will be an object of contempt to all mankind.”
@JstevensDK7@Curi_Christian@ScottAniol Like I said in my other replies to you, Isaiah says more overall about the eschaton. Daniel itself is not evidence for ECT, it just says the wicked will forever be remembered negatively (to simplify).
It would probably help to note that I’m ECT.
@JstevensDK7@Curi_Christian@ScottAniol This doesn’t make the point you’re trying to make, the abhorrence is in the observers, the wicked are the objects, not the experiencers. You quoted it right there: “they shall be an abhorrence” (same word).
Yes it’s a part of judgment, but says nothing of ECT vs CI in itself.
@RevivedThoughts If the concern is age appropriateness, language was the only issue other than the obvious slapstick violence.
Idk if you’ve heard of it but common sense media is great for this kind of thing
Here’s the home alone example https://t.co/wolbvU0PZp