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I believe in a kind and loving God. Hell is coming face to face with the person you could have been and then habits no to spend eternity with it in a place much like we live on today. Those who beleive will receive a higher place to liveSomeone please explain why unbelievers must endure eternal hellfire.
My understanding is that Jesus took our place. Doesn't that mean our punishment should just be a crucifixion? Or perhaps 36 hours of hell if you believe Jesus went there while he was dead? Or perhaps a longer finite stay in hell? But how could Jesus have paid our punishment if he didn't endure it?
And this still doesn't explain why his one payment has some sort of multiplier effect to atone for billions of Christians. If the answer is that God can just do whatever he wants, why not just forgive us without torturing himself/his son?
If you don't believe that Jesus took our place but rather bore our sins, then why does hell even need to exist? Also, if Jesus bore our sins, why was he not punished? Wouldn't he be responsible for our sins if he bears our sins?
Or do you not believe in hell? If so, why are you a Christian and why should I care about any of this? If there is no hell aren't you better off hedging your bet and appeasing some other angry deity? If you believe Christianity because it's simply true, why haven't I seen your evidence or good arguments? If you have neither, why believe? Faith? What proposition couldn't be justified by faith? How, then, is faith something that leads to truth?
Someone please explain why unbelievers must endure eternal hellfire.
My understanding is that Jesus took our place. Doesn't that mean our punishment should just be a crucifixion? Or perhaps 36 hours of hell if you believe Jesus went there while he was dead? Or perhaps a longer finite stay in hell? But how could Jesus have paid our punishment if he didn't endure it?
Someone please explain why unbelievers must endure eternal hellfire.
My understanding is that Jesus took our place. Doesn't that mean our punishment should just be a crucifixion? Or perhaps 36 hours of hell if you believe Jesus went there while he was dead? Or perhaps a longer finite stay in hell? But how could Jesus have paid our punishment if he didn't endure it?
And this still doesn't explain why his one payment has some sort of multiplier effect to atone for billions of Christians. If the answer is that God can just do whatever he wants, why not just forgive us without torturing himself/his son?
If you don't believe that Jesus took our place but rather bore our sins, then why does hell even need to exist? Also, if Jesus bore our sins, why was he not punished? Wouldn't he be responsible for our sins if he bears our sins?
Or do you not believe in hell? If so, why are you a Christian and why should I care about any of this? If there is no hell aren't you better off hedging your bet and appeasing some other angry deity? If you believe Christianity because it's simply true, why haven't I seen your evidence or good arguments? If you have neither, why believe? Faith? What proposition couldn't be justified by faith? How, then, is faith something that leads to truth?
It did not say that his ability to think ends. It is saying to those on earth not to trust someone for help whose breath will someday go away - and then the thoughts he had will perish, as in his on earth thoughts end.
When David found out that his young son had died, he said that he could not return to him, but he would go his son.
Jacob thought Joseph had been devoured by a beast and yet said that he would go to him.
Genesis 37:33 And he knew it, and said, [It is] my son's coat; an evil beast hath devoured him; Joseph is without doubt rent in pieces.
Genesis 37:35 And all his sons and all his daughters rose up to comfort him; but he refused to be comforted; and he said, For I will go down into the grave unto my son mourning. Thus his father wept for him
God speaking to Abraham
2 Kings 22:20 Behold therefore, I will gather thee unto thy fathers, and thou shalt be gathered into thy grave in peace; and thine eyes shall not see all the evil which I will bring upon this place. And they brought the king word again.
God didn't say that Abraham would not see after he was dead.
He told him that he would not see the evil that was to come -in an on the earth location.
How would He gather Abraham to his fathers when Abraham was from Chaldea?
The stumbling block is not that you aren't forgiven.
God never undoes something he did, because everything he does is as good as it could possibly be already.
Having our sins paid for made it morally possible for God to save us
Anything tainted with sin can't be cleansed
God is the executor of justice, but he is not the reason for that justice. It is terribly incorrect to view God as an judge who wants to punish evil people forever.
The stumbling block is not that you aren't forgiven.
For doing evil according to your own moral standard, some of which we have as a part of human nature. (Romans 2:12-15)Forgiven for what, exactly?
so many questions....first, hell or also known as the second death or the spiritual death of a man is NOT the punishment for our sins, it is the Consequence for our sins. IOW's it is what happens when we sin by order of the natural law of things. This death is also known as eternal separation from God. Now, in Rev. we see that both death and hades are thrown into the lake of fire...this is where the understanding of hell as you talk about it here comes from. Hell was according to scripture created for Satan and his demons but will also be used for the unbeliever once death and hades are thrown therein. Why are they thrown in? We don't really know. What we do know is that God says He will throw them in it and that it is a fire that never is quenched and those there are tormented day and night.Someone please explain why unbelievers must endure eternal hellfire.
My understanding is that Jesus took our place. Doesn't that mean our punishment should just be a crucifixion? Or perhaps 36 hours of hell if you believe Jesus went there while he was dead? Or perhaps a longer finite stay in hell? But how could Jesus have paid our punishment if he didn't endure it?
And this still doesn't explain why his one payment has some sort of multiplier effect to atone for billions of Christians. If the answer is that God can just do whatever he wants, why not just forgive us without torturing himself/his son?
If you don't believe that Jesus took our place but rather bore our sins, then why does hell even need to exist? Also, if Jesus bore our sins, why was he not punished? Wouldn't he be responsible for our sins if he bears our sins?
Or do you not believe in hell? If so, why are you a Christian and why should I care about any of this? If there is no hell aren't you better off hedging your bet and appeasing some other angry deity? If you believe Christianity because it's simply true, why haven't I seen your evidence or good arguments? If you have neither, why believe? Faith? What proposition couldn't be justified by faith? How, then, is faith something that leads to truth?
Please clarify.For doing evil according to your own moral standard, some of which we have as a part of human nature. (Romans 2:12-15)
your sins - transgressions
/Take a look at what happens to those type of men on the new earth.
they will be - abhorred
But with Jesus Christ, we by His precious blood that He shed for us -believe on Him for everlasting life - and our sins have been blotted out.
A person either dies in their sins or dies in Christ.
God's nature defines what is good. He has rightful authority over everyone because everything was created by him in one sense or another.Please clarify.
1. Do you just assume that I do evil?
2. Or are you saying that because I am human, that I can't help BUT to do evil? Is that what you mean by it being "part of my nature"? Something like "breathing" for example, if breathing were evil? I mean, I HAVE to breath. I can't help but breath. If I stop breathing, I die.
If it is 1, then belief in a specific religion is not required for "salvation" - only not doing any evil is. And it would also be quite...what's-the-word...of you to just assume that I engage in doing evil as you know nothing about me.
If it is 2, then I can only wonder what there is to forgive. Especially considering the context here... In this context, the "judge" who does to forgiving, is also the one who created humans, including their own human nature.
That infamous statement of AaronRa, if I remember correctly, comes to mind: Created sick and commanded to be well.
So if it is 2, it seems to me that it should be turned around... God would have to be asking us for forgiveness for creating humans that have no other choice but to be evil. It would also extremely put into question this god's ethics and moral compass.
If there is some obscure option 3 that I haven't thought off, do share.
That's OK you don't have to believe. But you also don't get to pick the consequences either for your unbelief. It's like a thief going to court and then getting to choose what happens to him. A thief doesn't get to tell the judge, hey I'm not a thief. Therefore nothing should happen to me despite the fact the judge has video of him stealing. The thief doesn't get to say, well I think your law is wrong therefore I'm not bound by your law. Doesn't work.What sins and transgressions?
Is that it? I should act a certain way out of fear of punishment for doing otherwise? The reason I should not run around raping people is ... because I would go to jail? There isn't another, better, reason for not running around raping people?
You know, when I teach my son how to act properly, morally and ethicly... I'm not telling him "you shouldn't fight at school because you will get expelled".
Instead, I'm explaining to him how it's not nice to do so, why it is not okay to hurt other people. When it comes to teaching/educating/developing a moral compass, potential punishment is secondary.
Moral values aren't established based on fear of punishment.
To me, that is total moral bankrupcy.
I don't see how punishing a scapegoat covers guilt of immoral behaviour in any way.
And it also still isn't clear to me what immoral behaviour we are talking about either.
It actually seems to be that this isn't a question of behaviour or moral responsability at all.
Rather, it just sounds like a major non-sensical guilt trip.
It smells like snake-oil.
First, the religion says that you are "sick" by nature.
Then, it conveniently provides the only cure. And the source of the cure, ironically, is the very same source that made you sick in the first place. And somehow and for some reason, you are even supposed to feel guilty about it.
Worse even, if you don't buy into that convenient "cure", you even get punished for it.
It reads like a really bad cult movie.
If you say so.
That's OK you don't have to believe. But you also don't get to pick the consequences either for your unbelief.
It's like a thief going to court and then getting to choose what happens to him.
A thief doesn't get to tell the judge, hey I'm not a thief. Therefore nothing should happen to me despite the fact the judge has video of him stealing. The thief doesn't get to say, well I think your law is wrong therefore I'm not bound by your law. Doesn't work.
except that belief unto salvation is a belief of the heart not the mind as such it is something you can choose to do or choose not to do.I'm not "picking". If anything, I'm merely questioning the moral undertone of "punishing" people for being rational.
No. A thief actually engaged in an immoral act: stealing (I'll let it slide for now that even that isn't as black and white as theistic "morality" tends to present it - sometimes stealing might be the moral thing to do)
I don't see how "not being convinced of bare fantastical claims" has any moral implications.
As said above, this analogy is not appropriate.
Not being convinced of something is not within your control. So how can it have any moral implications? How can you be held responsible for things that are out of your control?
I don't "choose" what convinces me and what doesn't. Neither do you. Belief is a compulsion, based on trust, reason, rational evidence and stuff.
I could "pretend" to believe a certain claim, but I can't "force" myself to actually believe a certain claim. If I remain unconvinced, then I remain unconvinced. I can't help that.
A thief, on the other hand, gets to choose wheter or not he sets out to go stealing. So holding somebody responsible for their beliefs, is rather like punishing someone for having a certain skin color...