Romans 9-11 has been used to argue for pre-destination and concepts of election. Some jars of clay are made for destruction and some for glory. Cannot the potter smash the clay if that's the potter's desire? This theology has been used to explain eternal conscious torment. If a 14 year old Muslim girl is raped to death and burns in eternally in hell, well that's God's prerogative. The Jews who died in the Holocaust? Eternal conscious torment. The kids who died in residential schools? Suffering eternal torment.
Eventually that way of thinking can mess a person up, not to mention a civilization, and the entire earth.
Romans 9-11 is just as likely to be saying that God chooses which "pottery" gets repaired and saved and it's God's business not mine. And it turns out, in the most surprising text of the New Testament, God chooses... everyone. Eventually everyone. Why do we want there to be a hell? What's in it for us.
Perhaps the wrath of God is redemptive and never punitive. Perhaps God really does reconcile all things and perhaps God really does love the whole world. Maybe one day every tongue does confess that Jesus (the lamb) is Lord and maybe everyone who confesses is SAVED. Maybe Jesus is really the king of creation.
The Holy Spirit Calls from the Future
The Holy Spirit Pours Out
The Holy Spirit Rushes In
Pentecost and Being a Jubilee People
Sabbath for the Animals we call Livestock
Sabbath for the Soil that Sustains Life
Debt Forgiveness and Wealth Re-distribution
Sabbath: Addiction and Recovery
Trauma-Informed Sabbath
Sabbath and Jubilee
He is not Here, He is Risen
Falling in Love: Jesus in the Praetorium
Falling in Love: Jesus and Barabas
Falling in Love: Jesus and Pilate
Falling in Love: Peter’s No and Jesus’ Yes
Falling In Love: Betrayed with a Kiss
Falling in Love: Stay Awake
From Generation to Generation: We Can Choose a Better Way
From Generation to Generation: God Meets Us in Our Fear.
From Generation to Generation: There’s Room in Every Story
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