Difference between revisions of "Eternity"

From GAMEO
Jump to navigation Jump to search
[checked revision][checked revision]
(CSV import - 20130820)
m
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Eternity is a concept understood and used differently within Mennonite and [[Amish|Amish]] circles. The literal interpretation of the Amish is quite different from the more sophisticated description by Mennonites with graduate school training. The conservative and orthodox Mennonites, as well as the Amish, are inclined to perceive of eternity as timelessness, acknowledging their inability to explain, but at the same time believing that God has given enough information to make life profitable on earth, with the assurance that the missing elements will be understood in the hereafter. The person with considerable formal [[Education, Mennonite|education]] is more inclined to critical reflection, or poetic indulgence, such as "Dancing across the meadows of eternity," heard at [[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church (MC)]] general assembly in 1987.
+
Eternity is a concept understood and used differently within Mennonite and [[Amish Mennonites|Amish]] circles. The literal interpretation of the Amish is quite different from the more sophisticated description by Mennonites with graduate school training. The conservative and orthodox Mennonites, as well as the Amish, are inclined to perceive of eternity as timelessness, acknowledging their inability to explain, but at the same time believing that God has given enough information to make life profitable on earth, with the assurance that the missing elements will be understood in the hereafter. The person with considerable formal [[Education, Mennonite|education]] is more inclined to critical reflection, or poetic indulgence, such as "Dancing across the meadows of eternity," heard at [[Mennonite Church (MC)|Mennonite Church (MC)]] general assembly in 1987.
  
 
Eternity is generally understood in three main senses: (a) as an unending extent of time, (b) as that which is entirely timeless, and (c) as that which includes time, but somehow also transcends it. The majority of Mennonite and Amish who base their understanding on Revelation 10:6 in the [[Luther, Martin (1483-1546)|Luther]] German translation, or the King James Version, or both ("that there should be time no longer"), tend to conceive of eternity as entirely timeless, and from everlasting to everlasting, without end, but do not attempt a detailed explanation.
 
Eternity is generally understood in three main senses: (a) as an unending extent of time, (b) as that which is entirely timeless, and (c) as that which includes time, but somehow also transcends it. The majority of Mennonite and Amish who base their understanding on Revelation 10:6 in the [[Luther, Martin (1483-1546)|Luther]] German translation, or the King James Version, or both ("that there should be time no longer"), tend to conceive of eternity as entirely timeless, and from everlasting to everlasting, without end, but do not attempt a detailed explanation.

Latest revision as of 07:29, 5 October 2013

Eternity is a concept understood and used differently within Mennonite and Amish circles. The literal interpretation of the Amish is quite different from the more sophisticated description by Mennonites with graduate school training. The conservative and orthodox Mennonites, as well as the Amish, are inclined to perceive of eternity as timelessness, acknowledging their inability to explain, but at the same time believing that God has given enough information to make life profitable on earth, with the assurance that the missing elements will be understood in the hereafter. The person with considerable formal education is more inclined to critical reflection, or poetic indulgence, such as "Dancing across the meadows of eternity," heard at Mennonite Church (MC) general assembly in 1987.

Eternity is generally understood in three main senses: (a) as an unending extent of time, (b) as that which is entirely timeless, and (c) as that which includes time, but somehow also transcends it. The majority of Mennonite and Amish who base their understanding on Revelation 10:6 in the Luther German translation, or the King James Version, or both ("that there should be time no longer"), tend to conceive of eternity as entirely timeless, and from everlasting to everlasting, without end, but do not attempt a detailed explanation.

A study of word usage and origin, such as Gerald Studer in After death, what? (Scottdale, 1976) brings to the surface issues which lead to a less precise view (pp. 122-28). Measures of Fundamentalist orthodoxy in Kauffman and Harder, Anabaptism Four Centuries Later (pp. 112-13), show about 77 percent of respondents believing in the doctrine of eternal punishment. By the time of a later 1989 study this had dropped to 63 percent (Kauffman and Driedger, The Mennonite Mosaic, 69-70). It is probably safe to assume that the percentage believing in heaven or the infinite continuation of a timeless timelessness, or both would undoubtedly be higher.

For some Mennonites, relationships take priority over considerations of time or timelessness. Embodied in that view, eternity is a continuation of a union, a relationship, begun on earth (John 15; the vine and branch). It is a transformation and completion of that relationship, in which time and space become irrelevant.

See also Death; God; Heaven; Hell; Salvation


Author(s) Elmer S Yoder
Date Published 1989

Cite This Article

MLA style

Yoder, Elmer S. "Eternity." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1989. Web. 28 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Eternity&oldid=102189.

APA style

Yoder, Elmer S. (1989). Eternity. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 28 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Eternity&oldid=102189.




Hpbuttns.png

Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, p. 273. All rights reserved.


©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.