I believe the purpose would be that a just God requires a penalty for the sin of rejecting His provision of salvation. This penalty or wage does not need to be never ending to have an eternal or final affect. Is God's wrath against such a sin so great that His mercy is set aside or will it be that His mercy is what endures forever and His wrath will be satisfied at a point of sentence that is not never ending ?warhoop wrote:And what purpose does judgement and sentence and punishment serve?
As I first posted, if the apostles believed that hell was really going to be a never ending place of torment, how do we account for them not preaching this way in the New Testament ? It would only seem reasonable to me that if anyone believed that God's wrath against an unbeliever would never be satisfied, they would not be very much of a fellow human being if they are not diligently warning and pleading with everyone to not go there.
I often hear a song that goes -'the wrath of God was satisfied' referring to Christ's suffering for the sins of the world over several hours. However, non-ending suffering for unbelievers appears not to satisfy God's wrath over their own individual sin. This doesn't appear just to me and that is why I also am leaning toward annihilation as the final state of unbelievers. I don't think our sense of just and fair can be ignored because we interpret certain words like 'eternal' to apply in a certain way.
I raise these questions coming from a background where my father was a street corner, hell fire, preacher. He witnessed/proclaimed the Gospel to people every day and was one of the few I know that came quite close to really living out his belief in never ending torment. And reading the New Testament, I expected the same approach as my father and men like Jonathan Edwards but couldn't find it. So, why not ? I have some similar questions on the extent of the apostles involvement on social issues but thats another thread.
Anyway, I'm open to explanations as I work through my biblical worldview.