Hi Blue Money,
Fate
Why does God not just make these people non-existant instead of sending them to Hell?
Yesterday I sinned. I entertained resentment. I was rude to others because it was hot out. At any moment any of us can make a choice to entertain sin or block out the temptation.
Imagine I put two innocent kids in a room (as you say)... which was more prone to sin? A bully might even made a surprising choice.
Put a Hostess HoHo in front of you, and decide whether you will eat it or not. Does God know the outcome? Can you psych Him out? Can you change the course of history?
We know from experience that we make choices all day long, that are not controlled by some preset destiny. As said above, some Christians believe in predestination and timeless omniscience, but the Bible shows choices and variables throughout. Pleas to repent and change. Examples of those who did not change after God and man hoped they would.
Variables
Compare how God's mind might be similar to a supercomputer. The computer stores and sorts variables, and can project outcomes very far into the future.
Our weather projections fairly reliably go out a week, but scientists try to project two weeks, a year, a decade. They use vectors to determine the possibilities. God knows vectors. If He created evaporation and density and wind, then He knows what can happen.
Can happen with a reasonable range of variables.
How much bigger would God be than our most powerful computer? He is a better problem-solver than Chuck Norris. (A concept too outworn to enjoy.)
Look at probabilities in genetics. God designed the world with a fairly predictable set of variables, but also with unpredictable surprises. We can guess the general percentage, not the exact outcome... and mutations can also pop up. The wicked are prone to wickedness, but they can also exercise recessive tendencies to be decent and kind. Or just mutate into Changed Lives.
Wheat with Tares
Sustainability research shows that wheat grows better with tares. The New Testament says that the tares need to be kept. Joseph and Moses were driven out of their home, to immerse their lives with Pharaohs who believed they were sun gods. Daniel's miracles all took place after being kidnapped. In those situations, they had influence with leaders who appeared hopeless oppressors. The leaders softened and made more efforts to take care of their people.
When we hear the word "sin," we often assume it means sin against a set of mandates that God set up. But most of the policies God gave related to how we treat people. A person who stole from others needed to be stopped. A murderer needed accountability. If the community did not stop these people from continued offense, then the community would fall apart, and people would never find justice in their daily lives.
There is a simplicity in God saying that the wicked need punishment. He did not condemn the people who skip church, pick their noses, eat chocolate bars for lunch. It was the people who oppress other people without repentance, that did not fit into the terms of the agreement for salvation.
Eternal Flames
Flames can continue to burn, while organic objects are consumed and left as ash.
Izzy said:
Every original Greek speaking theological school taught temporary punishment.
Raze said:
GOD WOULD NOT HAVE ANY MAN PERISH BUT WANTS ...ALL MEN TO COME TO ETERNAL LIFE.
Chimes said:
there are two beliefs about what happens to non-believers. Either they are cast into the lake of fire and they die forever, or they live for all eternity afterward, seperated from God for all time.
What does
perish imply...
Do a search for the term "second death." Read the verses without any presuppositions, breaking down each word. These verses support the idea of end of the body, then end of the spirit. A few other verses support eternal punishment, but they might also be worded in a way that means an eternal sentence for guilt -- no chance of reprieve after a certain point.
Why would one want eternal heaven when they die, if they did not want heaven while on earth?
What is Hell
NewFoundFaith said:
Years ago we called Pluto our ninth planet. Studying it more, scientists took that away from us. (Dern those astronomers that call it a dwarf.) Old estimates of the number of stars were continually replaced. We will never reach a point where we know everything that is beyond our tiny tiny scope, even if combining all human knowledge. It's a big universe out there.
Gehenna was often used in the NT as the word we call Hell. It was also a garbage heap where fires continually burned -- something people saw in everyday life. Incinerator. Things did not continue to live in it, but burned to ash.
Dust to dust, ashes to ashes.