Hello everybody!
My name is Rowan, I'm an Interested Atheist. I've been reading the threads here for a while and thought it would be interesting to dip a toe in the water.
I'm sure I'll learn a lot here, and I'm thrilled to be taking part! This is a little question that's been bugging me for a while, just a variation on a much-debated theme.
Now let me introduce you to my mother.
She's a really lovely woman, sweet and kind. A primary school teacher who does a heroic job in a rather tough school, with saintly patience, at home and at work.
She's also not a Christian. But she really is a good person.
She doesn't deserve to spend a million, million years being perpetually roasted, having her skin shrivelled and crisped and her bones blackened in dreadful,
screaming agony. She doesn't deserve to go to hell. To think that she might somehow deserve to go to hell, to think that she could possibly deserve that kind of torture and punishment is quite literally impossible for me. When I do think about it, well...I couldn't love or worship a God who would do that to my mother.
I couldn't love a God who could see that happen and not save her as he has the power to save many others, and apparently does - therefore either effectively either condemning or abandoning her to her evil fate.
Now, I know that hell is a bit of a knotty issue, and in previous discussion with Christians I've heard of a number of versions. For the sake of this one, can we keep to one definition of hell, please? - the fire and brimstone one. That would make discussion simpler, and it is a valid Christian point of view.
So my question is this:
Will the Christians on this forum support my stand? Will they join with me in saying no, this is not right, Rowan's mother should not go to hell?
I am asking if Christians who do believe in this kind of hell would be willing to agree that my mother doesn't deserve this, and to tell God so.
And I am asking if Christians who don't believe in this kind of hell would be willing to object on my mother's behalf to God if they should die and find out that it does exist?
Thank you.
P.S.
I've tried to think of objections to this questionand have come up with these:
a. "This is not the true interpretation of hell. Hell is really (..................................................................)"
ANSWER: Thank you, but I believe the idea of hell as a place of conscious eternal fiery pain is a valid Christian point of view, and I would like to address this one.
In addition, Christians who do not believe in this kind of hell could tell me that, if it did exist, whether they would oppose God over it.
b. "If you're worried about your mother - or yourself - all you have to do is become a Christian and convert her, then you'd both be saved."
ANSWER: The point is, I feel that she doesn't deserve such punishment as it is. Converting myself and her in order to escape hell would mean that I agree with the judgement.
c. "I object to your light and frivolous treatment of this subject. There's no need to laugh at someone's deeply held beliefs."
ANSWER: I hope I haven't caused any offence. I believe it's a serious, if much-discussed, point.
d. "You don't believe in it anyway, why are you getting so worked up?"
ANSWER: Because some people do believe it, and wish me to.
e. It's not that God condemns your mother; it's rather that she's destined for hell by her own sinful nature; God wants to save her.
ANSWER: First of all, I'd like to stick to a viewpoint in which God does judge and condemn people. But in any case, God created hell and God has the power to save her and doesn't.
My name is Rowan, I'm an Interested Atheist. I've been reading the threads here for a while and thought it would be interesting to dip a toe in the water.
I'm sure I'll learn a lot here, and I'm thrilled to be taking part! This is a little question that's been bugging me for a while, just a variation on a much-debated theme.
Now let me introduce you to my mother.
She's a really lovely woman, sweet and kind. A primary school teacher who does a heroic job in a rather tough school, with saintly patience, at home and at work.
She's also not a Christian. But she really is a good person.
She doesn't deserve to spend a million, million years being perpetually roasted, having her skin shrivelled and crisped and her bones blackened in dreadful,
screaming agony. She doesn't deserve to go to hell. To think that she might somehow deserve to go to hell, to think that she could possibly deserve that kind of torture and punishment is quite literally impossible for me. When I do think about it, well...I couldn't love or worship a God who would do that to my mother.
I couldn't love a God who could see that happen and not save her as he has the power to save many others, and apparently does - therefore either effectively either condemning or abandoning her to her evil fate.
Now, I know that hell is a bit of a knotty issue, and in previous discussion with Christians I've heard of a number of versions. For the sake of this one, can we keep to one definition of hell, please? - the fire and brimstone one. That would make discussion simpler, and it is a valid Christian point of view.
So my question is this:
Will the Christians on this forum support my stand? Will they join with me in saying no, this is not right, Rowan's mother should not go to hell?
I am asking if Christians who do believe in this kind of hell would be willing to agree that my mother doesn't deserve this, and to tell God so.
And I am asking if Christians who don't believe in this kind of hell would be willing to object on my mother's behalf to God if they should die and find out that it does exist?
Thank you.
P.S.
I've tried to think of objections to this questionand have come up with these:
a. "This is not the true interpretation of hell. Hell is really (..................................................................)"
ANSWER: Thank you, but I believe the idea of hell as a place of conscious eternal fiery pain is a valid Christian point of view, and I would like to address this one.
In addition, Christians who do not believe in this kind of hell could tell me that, if it did exist, whether they would oppose God over it.
b. "If you're worried about your mother - or yourself - all you have to do is become a Christian and convert her, then you'd both be saved."
ANSWER: The point is, I feel that she doesn't deserve such punishment as it is. Converting myself and her in order to escape hell would mean that I agree with the judgement.
c. "I object to your light and frivolous treatment of this subject. There's no need to laugh at someone's deeply held beliefs."
ANSWER: I hope I haven't caused any offence. I believe it's a serious, if much-discussed, point.
d. "You don't believe in it anyway, why are you getting so worked up?"
ANSWER: Because some people do believe it, and wish me to.
e. It's not that God condemns your mother; it's rather that she's destined for hell by her own sinful nature; God wants to save her.
ANSWER: First of all, I'd like to stick to a viewpoint in which God does judge and condemn people. But in any case, God created hell and God has the power to save her and doesn't.