Col 1:23, “if you continue in your faith, established and firm, and do not move from the hope held out in the gospel”, doesn’t say anything about what you have said,”.
Maybe because the part that has meaning for me is in the part that you pass over and don't quote. But I also do not expect you to see what I see in any verse because you do not have the eyes to see the theology of our pre-conception existence (PCE) yet at all. If it was openly seen, then it would not be hidden and would be part of every doctrinal hermeneutic...
I also have no idea what you believe about these verses in which you scorn my interpretative offerings because you just claim I am wrong without telling me what the truth really is... I look forward to your interpretation of both
Col 1:23 and
Matt 13:36-39.
The part of this long verse I'm referring to is the following:
Col 1:23...if indeed you continue in your faith, established and firm, not moved from the hope of the gospel you heard, which has been proclaimed to every creature under heaven, ...
Berean Standard Bible
in the meaning of the implication of
the gospel which we have heard having already been proclaimed to every creature under heaven, in which
every creature under heaven
surely may be read to refer to
every person ever created without doing any damage to the meaning of the words but only bumps heads with orthodoxy's insistence that people are being newly created (as sinners) all the time.
I am told that
has been proclaimed is a past tense which indicates a finished and completed action which then may be repeated in the future. If every creature under heaven has heard this proclamation as a finished act, then it is not being finished here and now on earth, implying that we all heard this gospel in the distant past, pre-earth as pre-conception existence theology contends.
IF every person ever created has heard the gospel then there can't be new people being created sinful and needing to learn the gospel and make a free will choice (while enslaved to sin) to accept it or not. Nor does this
every creature under heaven cover the billions of people who never heard the gospel at all in history past in which billions more people have never heard the gospel in the world than the few who have heard it in this last 2000 years while this verse contends that every person has heard it.
So we see there is a choice here, not just an open and shut case that pce can't possibly be found in this verse.
Again, your citation of Matt 13:36-39, like the Col 1:23 passage, has no correlation with the meaning you attach to it.
The meaning I attach to
Matt 13:36-39 is explicit in the use of the word
EXPLAIN, V36:
Strong's 1285. diasapheó -
to make clear, explain fully
and from Thayer's Greek Lexicon: 1. to make clear or plain, to explain, unfold, declare.
I contend that to use a metaphor or other literary device in an explanation of a metaphor is to not explain it at all but only to provide an extension of the metaphor. Iow, verses
37-39 are to be taken at face value as the gospel truth of who the weeds and the good seed are and how we got to be here in this world.
Sheep are NOT reborn goats.
Good seed are NOT reborn tares.
The Son of Man
sows the sinful people of the kingdom into the world.
The devil
sows the reprobate people of the evil one into the world.
That means they are separated into these groups before they get sown / born into this world, not after.
And for those who need the reminder,
to sow does not mean to create but
to move from a storage bin to a field for growing. The storage bin for sinful spirits would seem to be Sheol as per:
Ps 9:17 The wicked will RETURN to Sheol—all the nations who forget God.
Berean Standard Bible.
To return means in ordinary language
to go back to someplace you have been before, which in this verse refers to Sheol, even though the KJV does its best to dissuade us from ever seeing the word
return by their deliberate mistranslation of
return to hide from our perusal what they consider a heresy.