Ginny said:
The point is, heaven and hell is being compared to nothing more than a day spa with bad customer service....
I firmly believe if one starts thnking in their mind that hell itself is in no way derogatory, then that will in no way whatsoever motivate someone to truly bring another to Christ- b/c "hey, there really is no loss due to no suffering, no consequences, and no repercussions for one's decision" (just the absence of Jesus).
I understand what you are saying, but I don't think the answer is in horrifying pictures of people perpetually on fire being unable to die, as is the traditional "hellfire and brimstone" way of teaching avoidance of hell. (fire insurance isn't really the message of the Gospel anyway, but that's another topic...

).
I think it's only a matter of defining terms. I do believe that the absolute worst part of hell, for those who end up there, will be the absence of God. but when we are speaking of the absense of God, we must speak of the finer implications. We can do that by doing two things.
First we must understand that the universe is currently enjoying the benefits of what we call the "General Grace of God". Without that the universe quite frankly could not exist at all in it's fallen state. Corruption would have immediately separated it once and for all from God. so it is this general Grace that keeps it in suspension by the will of God in order that He do the things He wishes to do. The most common scriptural support for the idea are the scriptures that say that God causes the sun to shine on the just and the unjust. That sort of thing.
Secondly, the attributes of God are still at work in the universe, though of course it is not 100% all encompassing like it was before the fall. What I mean by this is that even completely unregenerate people sometimes do or think nice things. People can actually sometime show mercy. Those sorts of things. The things that allow us to have society at all are directly because of and through the attributes of God. The bible tells us God's attributes. If we were to list them we would see that they are those things that are good. Jesus said, nobody is good but God, and that is true. He is Love, He is Mercy, He is Gentile, He is King, He is basically all that is good. Period.
So now, as you think about an existance apart from God, what exactly are you coming up with? A place with no hope. No mercy. No love. No conscience. No caring. No thing but unrestricted evil, forever. It is a place where nobody and nothing rules. Ever. Why? Because to rule in hell would necessarily imply that sombody won, and there will be no winning in hell. Only loss, after loss, after loss. The abject totality of dispair...forever.
Actually, I've just barely touched on the implications of the absence of God. But I hope the concept is is a little more understandable.
Asaph