Time to be saved?

Parousia, Purgation, and Psychological Time Dilation

Authors

  • Aaron Davis University of St Andrews

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.69574/aejpr.v2i1.23011

Abstract

James Turner has argued that views of purgatorial post-mortem salvation face a dilemma given how their motivating intuitions seem to intersect with the concept of Jesus’s second coming (i.e., the parousia). Namely, they can accept that some persons experience “abrupt purgation” (undermining a key reason for affirming purgation), they can posit all who are not already saved at the second coming are damned (a view which is highly distasteful to purgatory advocates), or they can deny the parousia (a position which is unorthodox). I offer a way of defusing this problem by constructing a second-chance soteriology on which persons in post-mortem purgation experience a state of psychological time dilation. In so doing, I first articulate the problem at hand before turning to relevant examples from fictional media and the neuropsychology of dreaming to support my constructive efforts. Finally, I apply this solution to a pre-existing soteriological model which already uses such resources so as to demonstrate its usefulness: namely, my compassionate exclusivist view.

Downloads

Published

2025-05-19

How to Cite

Davis, A. (2025). Time to be saved? Parousia, Purgation, and Psychological Time Dilation. AGATHEOS – European Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 2(1), 173–190. https://doi.org/10.69574/aejpr.v2i1.23011

Issue

Section

Original Articles