Is hell a good or bad place?
If it is a good place, then why.
If it is a bad place, then why.
Or answer the poll.
It depends. If you're in hell, it's a very bad place (dark, hot, isolated, eternal). If you're not, but are headed there, it's still a very bad place, though it is easier en route to pretend it's not. If you are a born-again child of God
in paradise, Hell stands as a demonstration of the perfection of God's justice and holiness and as a testament to our deep and vile wickedness. If you're this side of the grave but headed to an eternity with God, Hell is a strong provocation to you to tell others of the Gospel (or it should be). Until one sees and understands reality with the clarity of one who has, through death, fully entered the supernatural, spiritual realm, Hell remains a somewhat poorly-defined prospect, however.
How can a good God create a Hell for the wicked to suffer? How can He not? Is it a good judge who allows crime to go unpunished? Is it a good judge who neglects to give justice to those who have been wronged? Is it a good judge who turns a blind eye to evil? Of course not. Goodness in God necessarily entails that He be just. And His justness requires that He judge and punish our sin.
How can God, being good, make Hell eternal? Isn't that an over-reaction to our sin? How can a finite sin warrant an eternal consequence? Well, how equipped are we to judge clearly the depth of our own sin? We are steeped in sin. It is in and around us all the time. We often enjoy sin, and encourage others in it, too. Are we likely, then, to understand just how awful, how wicked, our sin is? Obviously not. But God gives us some light on just how terrible our sin is by the eternal and fiery punishment He renders upon it. Our sin must be far, far worse than we think it is if God punishes it with eternal Hell!
Is our sin truly finite in nature? Not if it is committed against an
infinite God - which it is. All our sin is ultimately against our holy Creator who commands us to do no evil.
Can we as imperfect creatures ever perfectly atone for our sin as Jesus did? No. Imperfection only give rise to more imperfection. Like begets like. But those who spurn Christ's perfect atonement for their sin, must atone for their sin themselves in Hell. Their imperfection makes doing so an eternal effort, however.
God does no wrong in punishing sin with eternal Hell - especially when He has provided at great cost to Christ a way of escape from that punishment for any who will take it. Hell is the just and appropriate response to those who have rejected God's grace, and mercy, and love, turning to their own way and will and the sin and darkness that results.