by BigTex » Fri 25 Jan 2008, 01:20:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('POAlex', 'H')ell ain't a bad place to be? Hell gets a bad rap?
Let's consider a day in Hell.
Steve is getting ready for bed. He's flipping through the channels as his wife goes upstairs to pray before bed. Steve mocks her as he usually does. He shuts off the TV and goes to get a glass of water. As he puts it back, he notices a note from his wife on the fridge. He reads it - "Steve, please listen to me about Jesus."
Immediately he crumples it up and finishes drinking his water. "This is the New Age, didn't you know that I'm a god?", he says.
On the way up the stairs Steve feels something unusual. He notices a sharp pain in his chest. Before he can say anything, he falls back down the stairs. "No, I'm only 32 years old", he thinks to himself. As his wife comes screaming, she finds Steve dead on the floor.
Steve awakens to realize he is falling, falling, falling. Things are getting darker and darker and darker. The smell is getting worse and worse and worse. The heat is getting hotter and hotter and hotter. Steve lands in a pit of fire and screams in agony. Horror enters his mind in realizing where he is. The blackness is so thick, he can barely see in front of himself. To his horror, he's surrounded by people in torment. He thinks to himself, this is horrible, what did I do to deserve this?
Then he's reminded - this is eternal justice. He thinks, "for what!?" He's reminded of God's Holy Law, the Ten Commandments. He's reminded of all the times he had lied, stolen, committed adultery in his heart with women on the internet, blasphemed God's Holy Name, coveted, hated, and mocked God who had graciously provided everything for him. He's reminded that God did not create Hell for man but to punish Satan and his angels. He's reminded of His wife's pleas for him to repent and trust in Jesus. He remembers how his wife told him that Jesus, the perfect and Holy Saviour, bled and died in Steve's place to pay the death penalty Steve owed for his sins. He remembers how God gave Steve His Word to read and he ignored it. He remembers how God gave him everything while he wanted nothing to do with Him. He remembers how much God loved him to offer Him a pardon through His Son. He can't believe he rejected it. Now God has no choice but to give him eternal justice. Steve is getting what he always wanted - an eternity without God. Steve screams out for help. He curses Satan, realizing the myth of him ruling this place was a lie from Satan himself. His fate is the same as Steves! He curses the day he was born. His mind cannot comprehend what's happening and he comes to a horrific conclusion - this burning is never going to end! Oh what he'd give for that glass of water he just drank. But there's no water, no rest, no hope, no second chance, no relief, no friends, nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth, forever. Its God's eternal justice for the sins of Steve's eternal soul.
Oh, what would Steve give for one more chance? Just one more chance to accept God's free pardon in Christ.
Its too late.
Justice is served.
It sounds like you are in the Hell is a literal place where you actually go and suffer for eternity camp. If that perspective makes you feel better about what you believe, that's great. For me, I don't find the terrifying images to be a good springboard for a faith that gives me a feeling of wholeness and meaning.
My sense is that Jesus's message stands on its own without the threat of eternal suffering as the alternative if you choose a different way. Being lost is a little different from an eternity of literal torture. I'm not sure I see the justice in this judgment. On the other hand, I think that people who go through the motions of "acceptinng Jesus" and never really make any effort to understand what they believe or seriously embrace their faith, it seems like these people going to Heaven is similarly lacking in justice.
The problem, I suppose, is when you only have Heaven and Hell to choose from, either eternal ecstasy or eternal suffering, what do you do with the group in the middle who weren't really very good Christians, but technically they were Christians, so you can't send them to Hell? It seems like you ought to have a couple of other places for the in-betweeners. For the people who lived good lives but rejected Jesus, maybe send them to Detroit for eternity. For those who accepted Christ publicly, but never actually did anything to develop an understanding of what it means to be a Christian and lead a Christian life, maybe send them to East St. Louis for eternity.