I did read the works you mentioned, Rus. Thank you.TS - did you read the works I referenced? If this bothers you this much, I'd think you'd be motivated to see what Lewis had to say. (and for those that think that all Orthodox truth must be expressed only by Orthodox Christians, yes, it IS in line with Orthodox theology, so it really doesn't matter that he wasn't an Orthodox Christian in saying it.)
It seems like you're denying the will of a person who. Will. Not. Repent. What about the guy who still, after aeons, would derive pleasure from pulling the wings off flies with a self-satisfied smile and that sickness in his soul that he refuses to let go of, who is still the center of his own universe and would accept heaven only on his own conditions (of which that would be the first - that he would be god unto himself)? He's causing he'll for himself, and refuses to stop.
Haven't you read about the dwarves in Lewis's "The Last Battle", who refused to see heaven, even though it was right there and nobody was "punishing" them?
The only kind of Hell I could believe in is that occupied by those who will not repent. I suppose my issue is that I don't think there exists any human that would eternally refuse to repent unless they were mentally ill to the point where they couldn't help it, but if they couldn't help it should they be punished for something outside of their control?
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