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Proof fire and brimstone fell on Sodom and Gomorrah!
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[quote:Anonymous Coward 8788578:MV8yMDY2ODM0XzM0Nzg2Njc4X0M0MTM1ODAz] [quote:Anonymous Coward 28791621:MV8yMDY2ODM0XzM0Nzg2Mjk0XzU0MkY5MTdB] [quote:Anonymous Coward 8788578:MV8yMDY2ODM0XzM0Nzg2MjI2XzU5RDUyOTlE] [quote:Anonymous Coward 28791621:MV8yMDY2ODM0XzM0Nzg2MDQxXzkyNkZDRkQ2] Mathew 25:46 "Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life." [/quote] Both "eternal"s there are [i]aionios[/i], G166 in the Strong's concordance, which claims the word means 1) without beginning and end, that which always has been and always will be 2) without beginning 3) without end, never to cease, everlasting despite the fact that Paul in Romans 16 uses this term within the phrase "since the word began" and again in 2 Timothy 1 and Titus 1. . . http://www.blueletterbible.org/Bible.cfm?b=Tts&c=1&v=2&t=KJV#conc/2 If [i]aionios[/i] = eternity, then in Titus the phrase rightly should say "before the [u]eternity[/u] began". Completely contradicts the official definition of being "endless" or "without beginning". [/quote] lol, once again you ignore all three distinct possible definitions. The word, can mean [b]1) or 2) or 3)[/b] Do you know what the word [b]'or' [/b]means? In the scripture you presented, the obvious definition is 3) without end. This doesn't mean, it has to have a beginning lol [/quote] That's no different that the word [i]aion[/i], which the same concordance says means an "age", "world" or "eternity", in that they've provided a list of definitions that reflect however they used it, which is kind of backwards. [/quote]
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