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Hell is just as fictional as heaven.I've done far too many bad things. And burned too many bridges. I don't even try to live a Christian life. I never repent or say sorry. Hell is appropriate punishment for my actions.
You might be right.Hell is just as fictional as heaven.
This is funny though.
It gets even "brighter". Those that go to hell will also get to hang out with Almighty God because Almighty God is omnipresent (everywhere).On the bright side, if I go to hell, I can hang out with Barry Goldwater.
I thought most Christians consider hell to be the absence of God. Wouldn't God being in hell defeat the purpose of heaven?It gets even "brighter". Those that go to hell will also get to hang out with God because God is omnipresent (everywhere).
I've done far too many bad things. And burned too many bridges.
I don't even try to live a Christian life.
I never repent or say sorry. Hell is appropriate punishment for my actions.
We lived the same life! Southern Baptist high school. Guest preachers affiliated with Bob Jones University preached during chapel every Wednesday. No rock music, no dancing, no nothing. Fire and Brimstone. Always a negative message. We were all going to Hell unless we repented right there on the spot.Interesting thread. I will be curious to see where it goes.
I was raised in my mother's Southern Baptist church, where hell was a frequent topic. Summers there were esp. interesting because they would do revival weeks and invariably bring in fire and brimstone preachers who thundered on about malicious demons and eternal torture and pain and darkness and damnation and wailing and the gnashing of teeth.
I dropped out of organized religion as a teen, and it took a long time to deprogram from the fear and anxiety that sort of preaching brought on. I used to despair that i wasn't truly saved, or I had somehow voided that salvation by the inevitable sinning, or (and this was the worst) that I had committed the "unpardonable sin" and was therefore irrevocably damned. Maturity and experience allowed for a more nuanced understanding of religion and theology as human inventions (and therefore flawed). I am no longer held in fear of a "Jack Chick" conception of hell - it falls under the umbrella of theodicy to me. The concept of Hell and what supposedly goes on there is outside the boundaries of an all loving, all powerful god. Either some Christian denominations are mistaken in putting justice and wrath above Christ's message of forgiveness and goodness, or the divine is not truly all loving and/or all powerful and therefore one wonders if it is worthy of adoration.
It gets even "brighter". Those that go to hell will also get to hang out with Almighty God because Almighty God is omnipresent (everywhere).
Sounds like a logical contradiction. If god is omnipresent, then how can God not be in hell? God is already an absentee landlord or parent here. So I imagine no god in hell wouldn't be any different than it is now.I thought most Christians consider hell to be the absence of God. Wouldn't God being in hell defeat the purpose of heaven?
We lived the same life! Southern Baptist high school. Guest preachers affiliated with Bob Jones University preached during chapel every Wednesday. No rock music, no dancing, no nothing. Fire and Brimstone. Always a negative message. We were all going to Hell unless we repented right there on the spot.
If you are still religious I'm happy for you. Not me. I've moved beyond it.
Do they just hate fun?We lived the same life! Southern Baptist high school. Guest preachers affiliated with Bob Jones University preached during chapel every Wednesday. No rock music, no dancing, no nothing. Fire and Brimstone. Always a negative message. We were all going to Hell unless we repented right there on the spot.
If you are still religious I'm happy for you. Not me. I've moved beyond it.
Nice catch, sir. Now, maybe a nice Christian theist will come along and explain the contradiction in Christian theology claiming that God is both omnipresent (everywhere), but God is absent from hell, which of course negates the claim of an omnipresent God.I thought most Christians consider hell to be the absence of God. Wouldn't God being in hell defeat the purpose of heaven?
Even better, we will be able to hang out. I'll bring the whiskey and some classic rock tunes.On the bright side, if I go to hell, I can hang out with Barry Goldwater.
Sounds like a logical contradiction. If god is omnipresent, then how can God not be in hell? God is already an absentee landlord or parent here. So I imagine no god in hell wouldn't be any different than it is now.
Hell is just a silly fear tactic theists use to emotionally manipulate one into belief or obedience. Satan is the Boogeyman for adults.I've done far too many bad things. And burned too many bridges. I don't even try to live a Christian life. I never repent or say sorry. Hell is appropriate punishment for my actions.
I'd rather laugh with the sinners than cry with the saints,
The sinners are much more fun.
--Billy Joel.
Hell is just a silly fear tactic theists use to emotionally manipulate one into belief or obedience. Satan is the Boogeyman for adults.
Do they just hate fun?
I identify as agnostic these days. If I'm pressed I'll say I do not believe in the divine, but I choose to have faith anyway. As paradoxical as it might sound, it feels like the most honest answer for such a complex question.We lived the same life! Southern Baptist high school. Guest preachers affiliated with Bob Jones University preached during chapel every Wednesday. No rock music, no dancing, no nothing. Fire and Brimstone. Always a negative message. We were all going to Hell unless we repented right there on the spot.
If you are still religious I'm happy for you. Not me. I've moved beyond it.
The mere fact that you are still walking on this earth tells me God has plans for you. Your only sin is you have not accepted Jesus Christ as your savior. Don't trivialize nor diminish your existence. When you understand your true role in life, the hardships and pain you've experienced will provide a lens to see the world's gritty underbelly with crystal clarity.
I identify as agnostic these days. If I'm pressed I'll say I do not believe in the divine, but I choose to have faith anyway. As paradoxical as it might sound, it feels like the most honest answer for such a complex question.
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