How is it that you have the rich man being judged before judgment day? Does the parable teach that rich people go to hell to be tormented? Nothing in the parable says the rich man was wicked or a sinner. Do poor people get saved? Nothing in the parable says that Lazarus was a righteous man or that he was saved. It just tells us he was poor. What in this parable tells you that the rich man deserved to be tormented in hell and that the Lazarus didn't? Why did Abraham say the rich man's brothers had Moses and the Prophets? Why didn't he say they have to believe the Gospel? There is nothing in this passage that indicates hell except for a faulty translation of the word Hades.
It simple. It's not possible that it's a real story. The people in it are dead. Dead people cannot speak, move, or do anything. It can only be claimed to be a true story if one brings to it the Dualism of Greek philosophy. The Bible states plainly that the dead know nothing and that their thoughts perish the day they die. We find that the dead cannot praise God. How exactly can Lazarus, Abraham, and the rich man be conversing in Hades when the dead know nothing and have no thoughts?
Again, this goes back to the unproved premise of your argument. That being that man can live apart from the body. You've not established that from Scripture. Unless you can establish it I have to understand it as conjecture.
As I pointed out. The only place in Scripture that speaks of burning in Hades is speaking of God anger burning in hades. It's not a literal fire. Thus, the rich man was not suffering literal fire. Jesus indicates that the wicked who are to be burned and suffer torment will be cast into Gehenna
You're free to doubt it. However, as I pointed out they are the only to places in Scripture that mention fire in Hades.
They did, but they didn't die the next day. Samuel wasn't in Abraham's bosom. Abraham's bosom isn't a location, it's a man's chest. it's mentioned elsewhere in Scripture.
And Sarai said unto Abram, My wrong be upon thee: I have given my maid into thy bosom; and when she saw that she had conceived, I was despised in her eyes: the LORD judge between me and thee. (Gen. 16:5 KJV)
Did Sarah send her maid down into the center of the earth with the dead? If so how did she conceive? No, we can see from this passage that being in Abraham's bosom means to be in a close relationship with Abraham. Which where we see Lazarus. Again, we see this idea elsewhere in Scripture.
Now there was
leaning on Jesus' bosom one of his disciples, whom Jesus loved. (Jn. 13:23 KJV)
18 No man hath seen God at any time;
the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him. (Jn. 1:18 KJV)
It simply means to be in a close relationship with someone. Likewise there is not place in Hades called Paradise. The Greek word Paradeisos means garden. Where does Scripture tell us there is a garden in Hades? I've looked into this word Paradeisos and I've not seen anything about a garden in Hades.
That's the point. Was Jesus a man then? He wasn't. John tells us that the word became flesh. That was at the incarnation. The point is that the Bible calls the Lord and angels men when they aren't men. So, for the writers who were recording the events of Saul's kingship to call the unfamiliar spirit Samuel when Saul believed he was speaking with Samuel is not unordinary.
Well, see. The rapture occurs when Christ returns. Mathew 24.