And I think you were right to assume that. Unfortunately they probably didn't give any reasons or scripture to support that view.
What difference would that make?
In addition I sympathize with you because you were educated by priests
Only for Religious Instruction.
I can understand more clearly now why you have the aversion you do to Christianity.
I'm no more averse to Christianity than any other religion; if anything, less so, it being more familiar.
Needless to say, there is no scriptural support for thinking heaven is the ultimate objective for human beings. I would say a much more modest claim is supported, namely that to be where Jesus is and to experience unbroken and intimate fellowship with Him is what makes heaven the joy of the saints.
What has that to do with everyday humans?
I was asking you why you think evil is something that exists as something which was created as opposed to the traditional conceptualization of it as something which is a privation or a lack of something good. Cold is not something that God created, nor is dark. Evil is to be seen the same way. Cold is the absence or lack of heat, dark is the absence of light, evil is the lack or privation of good in a free moral agent. These things have no existence or ontological status as a concrete entity enduring through time and space.
OK; that seems to be a variation of the narrow philosophical concept of evil (i.e. the most morally despicable sorts of actions), whereas I was using the more common broad concept of evil, which divides into moral and natural evils - morally despicable actions, and suffering that is not caused by moral actors, respectively (and seems to be the concept more frequently discussed in theology).
Your question assumes God made evil like He made the earth or the stars. I see no reason to think that.
Yes, I can see that sidesteps the problem of evil.
You're referring to the logical problem of evil. It is an argument which attempts to prove that there is a logical inconsistency or incompatibility with the existence of our world and God.
Are you aware that this version is no longer defended by philosophers and why it's not?
Not all philosophers have abandoned it. I don't agree with the premise that there is no explicit incompatibility between an omnibenevolent entity and evil. I think there is, but it may be the case that the concept of God used in the refutation is not truly omnibenevolent in the sense of eschewing evil under all circumstances. I'm also not comfortable with the idea than an omnibenevolent entity can have morally sufficient reasons to allow evil, if this entity has the option of not allowing evil at all, as an omnipotent creator has - I haven't seen the argument that establishes that there can be a morally sufficient reason to allow evil when evil is not necessary. But, of course, that doesn't mean there isn't one.
As for the probabilistic version, the idea that we are not in a position to establish whether God has a morally sufficient reason to allow evil, because God may have reasons we can't fathom from our limited perspective, amounts to skeptical theism, and begs the question in its own way - if we allow that an actor who does or permits evil may have a morally sufficient reason that observers are unaware of, we would be unable to make
any moral judgements; to restrict this dispensation to an omniscient God is special pleading and makes the argument dependent on the very entity who's existence is in question. But it also makes theism unfalsifiable (and so, irrational); because no matter how bad an evil is, we can say God has a reason for it, and so no evil could ever count as evidence against God's existence. But if no evidence can count against a hypothesis, it's a good indication the hypothesis is irrational.