I can tell you where it didn't come from and that's the Hebrew Bible which is very interesting. God told Adam in the day he ate the fruit of the tree he would surely die but he never said he would surely go to a place of eternal torment. Some fundamentalist Christians like to think that it was implied but it's really not justified by the text. You have to read a lot into it which I guess you can do if you are so inclined.Maddy wrote:Can anyone pinpoint the origins of the concept of eternal damnation?
In the meantime between the end of the Hebrew Bible and the beginning of Jesus' ministry it seems to have become such a well known concept that he doesn't even have to explain what he is talking about.
So where it came from between the two testaments is an interesting question. I have read that it was borrowed from Zoroastrianism but I'm not sure that this has been nailed down. I looked for a book on the subject a while ago and couldn't find anything at the time but if I decide to look again and find something I'll let you know.
 
				



 
  
 

 ....   and all of it is firmly in the unknown.. nobody knows what happens when you die (you only know what you believe happens) nobody knows you are eternal (except for the dead and they aren't telling) and none of it matters.. we will all find out when we get there.. and not until then...
 ....   and all of it is firmly in the unknown.. nobody knows what happens when you die (you only know what you believe happens) nobody knows you are eternal (except for the dead and they aren't telling) and none of it matters.. we will all find out when we get there.. and not until then...