that Jesus was tortured in Hell to gain our atonement.
Yes, Jesus on the cross said, "It is finished." I see this can mean He did all that was necessary, while on the cross. Jesus died right; so that is enough. He did it right so it did not need to go any further into Hell. And Jesus is God's own Son, able to do that so well, so efficiently, that it is enough to take care of all sins ever committed > 1 John 2:2.
He got it right, the first time; so He did not have to do it again. With God, we too can get things done right, the first time, in His love's creativity.
Also > our Apostle Paul says we have been "reconciled to God through the death of His Son" > Romans 6:17. So, our reconciliation was finished by His death. Nowhere is there New Testament scripture directly saying Jesus suffered for us, in Hell.
Also > we are told to follow how Jesus loved while on the cross >
"And walk in love, as Christ also has loved us and given Himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling aroma." (Ephesians 5:2)
So, our Apostle Paul is commanding that we love the way Jesus was loving, on the cross. I doubt this means we are supposed to become sinful and subject to our Father's wrath, like ones claim Jesus was doing on Calvary.
This scripture says to love like Jesus was doing! Plus, Jesus was "a sweet-smelling aroma" while going through all that on the cross. So, Jesus was not bringing our Father's wrath upon Him, but Jesus was sweetly pleasing our Father - - - satisfying Him, I would say, to forgive us and reconcile with us and adopt us as His children.
And so we are likewise commanded to love so sweetly and kindly and generously, including while we are making sacrifices. But if ones say Jesus was subjected to God's wrath, on the cross, this can take attention also away from how God wants us to follow the example of how Jesus, really, was loving us and so pleasing to our Father.
Even so, another scripture says that Jesus said, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?" And ones claim this means our Father totally abandoned Jesus and God's wrath was upon Him. But Ephesians 5:2, I would say, shows how Jesus was so pleasing, not forsaken.
But > in circumstance and according to the Law of Moses > yes, He was cursed > Galatians 3:13. But Jesus defeated however He was legally and outwardly being cursed. Deeply, He was blessed - - - He was still Jesus, on that cross.
So things around Him did not decide who He was, there, or how He was.
This is what we need to get > how nothing has power over us to decide how we are or what we do. But we obey how our Father personally rules every one of us in His own peace > Colossians 3:15.
"I will not be brought under the power of any," Paul says in 1 Corinthians 6:12.
So, I would say if people are coming up with wrong ideas, this can be a trick to keep our attention away from how we need to follow the example of Jesus on the cross.