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Does hell give life meaning and purpose?

Thomas, I'm surprised that I came across as calm. It was my intention to come across, with you, as dismissive, due to your frankly repulsive (yet colorful!) post that you offered. I'm not a priest, yet I could play one on television. Jesuit high school and college, employed by several churches and one seminary, but not enrolled in any order or vocation. I teach kids, so at least I can assume the role of the calm and measured man, yet I insist it isn't true. I'm hyperactive and my mind is always racing.

I do have a good effect on my students, but that might be a bad thing, because students are very impressionable, and I try to make impressions on them when it comes to...dare I say...critical thinking...

Anyhow, I understand how religion, for the most sincere and legitimate reasons, causes you some form of consternation or other. It has been, and can be, an impediment to scientific progress (you do realize, though, that there should exist institutions outside of science that should offer a check to unbridled, or undirected, scienctifc progress). I don't think that scientific progress is the most important thing for humanity in general, and certainly me in particular. Not that I have a problem with it either. It is what it is.

As for critical thinking...I know over a hundred priests, and have talked to I don't know how many religious in a variety of forums and mediums. What kind of generalization can I make easily? The elementary conclusion that religious believers *do* think critically. Believers have such a scattered array of theological notions and explanations, and they have such a hard time of fitting the pigeonholes that they would be stuffed into that it's clear the religious individual does think critically. They just don't come up with the conclusions you'd have them come up with.

A critic can be critical and come up with bad criticism. I think you'd be better served to think that religious people are *bad* thinkers, or *wrong* thinkers. Granted, that's more of a moral judgment.

-Elliot
 
Atlas said:
Good point. Our outrage can push us toward hope for extreme retribution - but hell is so over the top. Unending, incomprehensible torture - its senselessness offends us.

Religionists are trapped by the idea of the eternal soul. Hell is an unfortunate upshot of their assumption.

If it was truly senseless, it wouldn't resonate with people. Yes, I recognize that it does offend a good number of people, for good reason. I think primitive might be a better way of describing the notion of hell. Surely it's not senseless, just based on its pervasiveness and history. It would be senseless that the notion could be in such widespread circulation if the notion truly was senseless.

If the soul doesn't exist...even in that case I wouldn't say the religionist was trapped by the notion of the soul. If it's just this life and no eternity, the individual has the *freedom* to come up with any notions they want. If Hell doesn't exist, I don't think the notion is all that effectively unfortunate.

So, whether or not the soul and/or hell exist, I don't see how it is trapping or unfortuante to any significant degree.

-Elliot
 
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elliotfc said:
As to how it works? A person can believe in anything they want. No labeled person is *confined* to believe in everything that the label is supposed to believe in.

I have to believe these "Christians" are EXTREMELY liberal to not believe in hell. Hell is in the bible, so one would think a Christian would believe it
 
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triadboy said:
I have to believe these "Christians" are EXTREMELY liberal to not believe in hell. Hell is in the bible, so one would think a Christian would believe it

Yes. I think that there are probably even Christians who believe that Christ was a mythical figure. [But he was a mythical figure, i know i know i know]

Triad, do you consider the fact that Christians choose from the chinese buffet of beliefs to be a good thing, a bad thing, or just something curious? Or is that question not really meaningful to you?

If it's a meaningful question. is it significant of what you'd consider to be a fundamental defect of religion?

Personally, it just demonstrates to me that religion isn't some thing that forces anyone to do or think anything (the exception being the imposition of religion on others). The person (even the most fundamentalist or the fudamental) is just believing as they want to believe. Which is OK by me. Since I believe as I want to believe too.

I ask you these questions with some trepidation, as you may have the same emphatic position in regards to believe/belief as you do to faith.


-Elliot
 
Ossai said:


jjramsey (in response to Igopogo)

This is half-wrong and a bit incoherent. Heaven and Hell are certainly doctrines that deal with the fact that those who do wrong often don't get their comeuppance in their lifetimes.

Human centric.

I never contested the human-centeredness of it. My disagreements with Igopogo on the matter were elsewhere. The rest of the paragraph to Igopogo read: "Where you go wrong here is in assuming that those who believe in Heaven and Hell see the prosperity of cheaters as the result of "mistakes they feel that God made in doling out our lots in life." The incoherency is the idea that the concepts of Heaven and Hell imply ignorance of the reality that good things happen to bad people and vice versa, when this is the very reality that the doctrines of Heaven and Hell address." No arguments about human-centeredness here.

Ossai said:
I read Igopogo’s statement differently. It’s not the ignorance but the knowledge that good things happen to bad people that form the basis for heaven and hell. There would be no need for hell if bad people got their comeuppance while alive.

That appears to be Igopogo's interpretation of his words as well. However, he still wrote that Heaven and Hell "ignore the reality around them," which seemed an odd statement to make about doctrines that address the knowledge of which you just spoke. I don't doubt that he meant what you said he meant, but he did not express himself too clearly.

jjramsey said:
Seriously, even most inerrantists believe that only the original versions of the Bible documents (which are now lost) are infallible, while copies and translations may have errors.

Ossai said:
From the buckle of the bible belt here, but you’re very wrong on this one, at least in this part of the country. Come down and listen to some Church of Christ sermons for starters.

That's just it, the Chicago Statement on Inerrancy may be too liberal in your neck of the woods, but hardly everywhere. Don't assume that your fundamentalist neighbors are representative of all conservative Christians.
 
Iacchus said:
I am also relativist -- and mystic :) -- and suggest that we are all creatures of our own invention. Do you know of any two people who think and act alike? I don't. So in that sense heaven and hell must be as varied as the number of people on this planet. Which isn't to say we all don't derive our perception from the same thing. There's only one sun in the sky isn't there?
I appreciate your thoughts. You are a very confusing pesonality to me. You invent yourself and choose a hell that must exist for other people. You express complete freedom from dogma, you search for meaning and love and you come away with a God of love that will surely elevate you but has eternal torment in his plan "bad" people. I accused you before of having the idea of hell imprinted on your psyche when you were young - you answered me harshly. That makes me believe that you developed you ideas of hell as you invented yourself. It certainly has no logic to me. And for someone like you, a mystic, full of sunshine, smileys and dolphins, to saddle your personal God with a personality that demands he build a wing of creation for cruelty - as a mystic you are mystifying.

I hope you revisit your idea of the Good and God and the insignificance of man is the largeness of his design and at the very least remove eternity from your idea of hell.

It's strange to me that I care about this. I don't fight the idea among religionists. They buy a religion and are kinda stuck with what it tells them. You are different. You can believe anything and you have chosen hell. You cherish this darkness when merely by changing your mind - mystically - you could embrace the light.

You seem incredibly adept at changing ideas. You hesitate to answer questions I ask. You talk of free will as if I should know that free will demands a God of hell.

I'll pull back now. I wish you'd reconsider your position but I don't think the world cares to much what I wish for. Good Luck.
 
elliotfc said:
Thomas, I'm surprised that I came across as calm. It was my intention to come across, with you, as dismissive, due to your frankly repulsive (yet colorful!) post that you offered.

Yes, that was quite colorful wasn't it? It was also meant to be repulsive, and you should be aware that most religious folks would have ripped my head off for such a post. But you don't, you just ask questions. If that's your aggressive state, then your calm state would have to be sleep or something.


I'm not a priest, yet I could play one on television. Jesuit high school and college, employed by several churches and one seminary, but not enrolled in any order or vocation. I teach kids, so at least I can assume the role of the calm and measured man, yet I insist it isn't true. I'm hyperactive and my mind is always racing.

I remember once you talked about your church, but it merely came out as your church, but I guess that was a misunderstanding then.


I do have a good effect on my students, but that might be a bad thing, because students are very impressionable, and I try to make impressions on them when it comes to...dare I say...critical thinking...

Yes, you often use the Socratic approach, as you mostly give your opinions in the form of questions (but not rethorical ones).


Anyhow, I understand how religion, for the most sincere and legitimate reasons, causes you some form of consternation or other. It has been, and can be, an impediment to scientific progress (you do realize, though, that there should exist institutions outside of science that should offer a check to unbridled, or undirected, scienctifc progress). I don't think that scientific progress is the most important thing for humanity in general, and certainly me in particular. Not that I have a problem with it either. It is what it is.

We differ in opinion there, as I consider science one of the most beneficial approaches mankind has ever used. We wouldn't be able to have this conversation without it.


As for critical thinking...I know over a hundred priests, and have talked to I don't know how many religious in a variety of forums and mediums. What kind of generalization can I make easily? The elementary conclusion that religious believers *do* think critically. Believers have such a scattered array of theological notions and explanations, and they have such a hard time of fitting the pigeonholes that they would be stuffed into that it's clear the religious individual does think critically. They just don't come up with the conclusions you'd have them come up with.

This is an age old debate. It all depends on the definition people use of critical thinking. I'm personally in favor of skepticism in its original form, where you can't be sure about anything. That's what I consider the top of critical thinking, otherwise I wouldn't do it.


A critic can be critical and come up with bad criticism. I think you'd be better served to think that religious people are *bad* thinkers, or *wrong* thinkers. Granted, that's more of a moral judgment.
By your definition of a critical thinker I can agree with that, but I also think it's a rather exotic ad hoc definition you use.

At least, if you beleive in any of the things I ridiculed in the post you call repulsive and colorful, then I personally don't think you're a genuine critical thinker, and I think most of the participants on this board would agree with that.
 
elliotfc said:
If it was truly senseless, it wouldn't resonate with people. Yes, I recognize that it does offend a good number of people, for good reason. I think primitive might be a better way of describing the notion of hell. Surely it's not senseless, just based on its pervasiveness and history. It would be senseless that the notion could be in such widespread circulation if the notion truly was senseless.

If the soul doesn't exist...even in that case I wouldn't say the religionist was trapped by the notion of the soul. If it's just this life and no eternity, the individual has the *freedom* to come up with any notions they want. If Hell doesn't exist, I don't think the notion is all that effectively unfortunate.

So, whether or not the soul and/or hell exist, I don't see how it is trapping or unfortuante to any significant degree.
I could have chosen a better word than senseless. I agree with the rest of humanity on the finality of death. We can never walk this way again. If the soul exists and continues it will be as something different, inhuman. Death for a human being is a forever thing. It is the eternal nature of death that suggests the eternal nature of the departed soul. Along with death is the ugly corruption of the flesh. The corpse is foul and worm food. The underworld is dark and destroying. Visions of a rotting corpse, rotting flesh, offend us and we know it is our fate.

We yearn for an alternative and seek some brighter future. Maybe if we grovel to the God of death and destruction he will not eat us.

For people who lived in dark ages and saw plagues destroy loved ones and had no way to think about themselves except as pawns of the gods, horror was close and all too real. Hell was a natural thing to believe of God. He was harsh and mean and demanded worship, adoration, and fealty. Unscrupulous men saw profit in the wielding of ideas of hell against the masses.

The scientific age has found more terrestrial answers to problems inflicted on us from the gods and demons. It has brought a light into the world. God has changed in my lifetime from a wrathful being to one of love. I was raised Catholic like you.

Hell resonates only because humans have a knowledge and fear of their own death. Priests and other religious exacerbate the problem for business reasons. One God is as good as the next but if you can control people's vision of hell - you own them. They'll pray to whichever God you tell them if they can escape the hell that scares them the most and is promised them if they fail to follow orders.

Just as I told Iacchus, a loving God, if He exists, would reward those whom he chose to reward and leave the rest dead. There is an economy to the vastness of creation. A beauty. For a loving God to make an eternal Hell for cruel and eternal terror and punishment would be senseless. For a priest to tell you about Hell is good business.

ETA: To clarify, the eternal soul traps us by our fear of eternal hell. If hell merely burns up the soul it is not horrible enough for the business of religion to use to control and extract our money and lives.
 
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elliotfc said:
Triad, do you consider the fact that Christians choose from the chinese buffet of beliefs to be a good thing, a bad thing, or just something curious? Or is that question not really meaningful to you?

I'm not convinced that Christians choose from the buffet of beliefs at all. I really don't buy those poll results. It's like imagining Muslims are free to choose from the buffet also.
 
Thomas said:
We differ in opinion there, as I consider science one of the most beneficial approaches mankind has ever used. We wouldn't be able to have this conversation without it.

I didn't say it wasn't beneficial, just not the most important thing in human existence. I tip the cap to science, it does enable this conversation, yet this conversation, likewise, isn't crucial by any stretch. We'll both persist in our particular outlooks, for better or for worse. See, I can take anything I want from science, benefit from it, and not have any reason to elevate it beyond what it is. Without it I wouldn't know any better.

What we make of existence, and what we consider to be beneficial, is not directed by science, but by something outside of science. That something I consider to be more significant.



At least, if you beleive in any of the things I ridiculed in the post you call repulsive and colorful, then I personally don't think you're a genuine critical thinker, and I think most of the participants on this board would agree with that.

I'll have to settle then for the additional qualifier of "genuine". Thankfully yours, and the others, opinion is merely a subjective one of limited significance. For if I am not a critical thinker or if I am disingenuous/non-genuine, by a certain selected standard, that standard does not have any deterministic effect on me. Science can only enable the standard, and not enforce it or make it irrefutably significant.

As for being a skeptic, I remain skeptical of skeptics. :) I question just how skeptical they are of themselves sometimes.

-Elliot
 
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triadboy said:
I'm not convinced that Christians choose from the buffet of beliefs at all. I really don't buy those poll results. It's like imagining Muslims are free to choose from the buffet also.

Interesting, really interesting.

Despite what you say, I *know* that Christians really do pick and choose what they want to believe. I do it myself. Does that mean I'm not really a Christian?

Do you think that there are some fundamental Christian beliefs, and others are non-fundamental, and that the Christian can not choose from fundamental Christian beliefs? And that those who do not select some of the fundamentals are not Christians?

How do you define Christian anyhow? Is it what you believe, or what you think you are?

Like a member of my immediate family doesn't believe in the existence of hell or demons, but does believe in Jesus and considers himself a Christian. What can you make of that? Hasn't he picked and chosen what to believe? The only thing you can say to be coherent is that he is not really a Christian. But he says he is a Christian and attends Mass and all that.

-Elliot
 
Atlas said:
I could have chosen a better word than senseless. I agree with the rest of humanity on the finality of death.

But what about the people who say that death is not final? Do they not really know what they are saying, and therefore, there assertion can be ignored? And if so, don't you have to say that humanity doesn't agree on the finality of death, just by the fact that you can state that some people are wrong regarding the question?

We can never walk this way again. If the soul exists and continues it will be as something different, inhuman. Death for a human being is a forever thing.

Christians believe in the resurrection of the body. Or they should. Some don't (the pick and choose thing). It's in all of the earliest creeds. Christians believe that we were created to *be* human.

This might be the time to state something about heaven (I know this thread is about hell). I think that heaven is not a place, but a relationship. Adam & Eve (I'm forgetting the fact that I don't agree in the literal delivery of Genesis) were in heaven. The resurrected Jesus is the form of what I think we'll end up as. We certainly aren't going to end up like angels. Angels are an entirely different species, we are not on their level. And if we were created to be immaterial, why the hell were we given human bodies? And if God means to scrap the whole idea of humanity in the end (all souls being disembodied in heaven) why the hell did he become a human being?

Anyhow, for what I insist are good Christian theological reasons, I disagree that death *for a human being* is a forever thing. I was created to be a human being, and I believe that I'll be one again, that God will rectify the human condition. If I wasn't created to be a human being I would not be a human being. It's pretty elementary to me. And again, the earliest creeds preach the resurrection of the body.

It is the eternal nature of death that suggests the eternal nature of the departed soul.

That's a possibility. But some cultures didn't draw that conclusion, and certainly you don't. I think death suggests death, and that's about it. For death to suggest life you have to have something other than death enter the equation. Right?

Along with death is the ugly corruption of the flesh. The corpse is foul and worm food. The underworld is dark and destroying. Visions of a rotting corpse, rotting flesh, offend us and we know it is our fate.

Yes, but then why do people make zombie movies, and why I can't I get enough of them?

Outside of zombie movies I never think about visions of rotting corpses. Plus, believers and skeptics can be equally adept and nonchalant about doing autopsies or embalmings.

We yearn for an alternative and seek some brighter future. Maybe if we grovel to the God of death and destruction he will not eat us.

Well sheesh, if I had that attitude...

If God really was the God of death and destruction, would there be a brighter future?

For people who lived in dark ages and saw plagues destroy loved ones and had no way to think about themselves except as pawns of the gods, horror was close and all too real. Hell was a natural thing to believe of God. He was harsh and mean and demanded worship, adoration, and fealty. Unscrupulous men saw profit in the wielding of ideas of hell against the masses.

You'll admit that the depictions of Hell did not originate in the Dark Ages.

Interesting that you mention it, anyhow. I never get people telling me about the horrors of hell. In the past few years, the people who insist on them are the skeptics on this board. Meaning they conjure them up, even though they don't believe in them. Talk about unscrupulous...

And since we're past the dark ages, what's the problem exactly? Isn't it good if Christians like me not talk about hell in such ways, and water it down or something? And those who do invoke the horror hell, haven't they been effectively marginalized? I guess that's disputable. Yet you do bring up the....DAH DAH...

The scientific age (boldface mine) has found more terrestrial answers to problems inflicted on us from the gods and demons. It has brought a light into the world. God has changed in my lifetime from a wrathful being to one of love. I was raised Catholic like you.

Yes, of course it has found more answers. It is a vicious cycle, and this isn't my line. They say that for every answer science provides, it raises more questions. Which lead to more answers. It's insane. It's madness. Of course you have found more answers. You're always making the questions!

I'm being a bit silly. But not totally. Some of the questions/answers are banal. Yes, banal I says, and I means it. I don't care about a better GameCube or fancy shmancy TV.

More importantly, it hasn't banished *any* of the fundamental concerns of humanity. Yes, science has cured many diseases. And we expect science to cure every disease. No contentment there. How about suffering? Do humans suffer less, today, than in the Dark Ages? Sure. And we probably bitch and moan about, and are more fearful about, suffering today than then. Are people happier? Ask your shrink for the answer.

Science will never cure the human condition, short of nuclear or viral or weather-related annihalation. It's an admirable goal, but all the answers just lead to more questions. No end in sight. Unless that's the point. Never-ending question and answer.

It's fine for what it is. I'll reap the benefits of science without worshipping it or making it the most important thing in my life. It ain't gonna deliver me from death, that's for sure.

Hell resonates only because humans have a knowledge and fear of their own death.

So, people who find resonance in hell must be afraid of their own death? What if a person claims to find resonance in hell, and also claims to not be afraid of their own death? Are they mistaken? And if so, how can that be determined short of empathic supernatural powers?

To make that statement suggests you need to believe that people who have certain beliefs have to be motivated in a certain way. The only way you can have such a belief with any knowledge is if a)when you were a believer, you know that you were motivated by fear or b)an ex-believer admits a similar scenario or c)a believer admits to be motivated by fear. But why should those three scenarios be deterministic for how all believers would be motivated. Now there's a question I'd like to see science answer.


Priests and other religious exacerbate the problem for business reasons.

Bwah! And skeptics. Skeptics make money give speeches and write books about how the religious exacerbate the problem. It's a conspiracy!

One God is as good as the next but if you can control people's vision of hell - you own them. They'll pray to whichever God you tell them if they can escape the hell that scares them the most and is promised them if they fail to follow orders.

Sheesh, that's pretty harsh.

Let's say you're right. So what?

Just as I told Iacchus, a loving God, if He exists, would reward those whom he chose to reward and leave the rest dead.

Yeah, but you're not the expert on what a loving God would have to be, so that doesn't mean much. It only means something if God exists. If God exists, and he's not the loving God that you would define, that would be the hypothetical I'd like to hear you comment on. The other hypothetical is impotent, since you have no control on what a loving God would or wouldn't do.

You're not a theologian, nor do you claim to be one on television. That's why I'm being dismissive about your definition of a loving God. You're defining a God that you don't believe exists.

There is an economy to the vastness of creation. A beauty. For a loving God to make an eternal Hell for cruel and eternal terror and punishment would be senseless. For a priest to tell you about Hell is good business.

No, anything that God would do would make sense.

The good thing here is that you recognize how bad hell would be, so I'm not that worried about you.

The business stuff doesn't mean much because I can't remember the last time a priest told me about hell and nobody on this forum spends more time listening to priests talk than me.

This ignores one point I'd like you to address. Would a human being have the right to make the choice to reject God? And if so, shouldn't that choice be respected? And if it's a bad choice, shouldn't discomfort arise from it?

And if you are to say "but who would choose hell if it's so bad", I'd ask you to address the other point I asked earlier. What would you make of a God who would have hell exist? Would you reject that God? If the answer is yes, than the answer would be you. You would choose hell. And failing to choose means you would be too proud to choose, or above the choice. Which is itself a choice.

The more people insist about the nature of a loving God, but more they insist that God must be as they want God to me, the more hell makes sense. I'm not saying you're going to hell, because over the months I've determined that you are a fair-minded and sensible person. But any opinion (a loving God MUST be this way) can be held for eternity.

I guess that's what I'd like Atlas. Could you address those two questions?

1)If God existed, and if Hell existed, would you have a problem with that?
2)If you had a problem with that, would you prefer Hell (as bad as it may be) to a reconciliation with a God who you have a serious problem with?

Personally, I don't find the existence of Hell as problematic as you. I see it as an existence of Free Will. The fact that it is painful (you are free to use additional adjectives as you'd like) follows the reality that the rejection of God is a bad choice. Why shouldn't a bad choice lead to bad consequences? It all just makes sense to me, and if it doesn't make sense to you at the moment, I think God understands that and it won't be held against you (unless you want it to be held against you).


ETA: To clarify, the eternal soul traps us by our fear of eternal hell. If hell merely burns up the soul it is not horrible enough for the business of religion to use to control and extract our money and lives. [/B]

Heck, we all have to make a living. I could question the motivation of anyone who got paid, I guess.

-Elliot
 
Atlas said:
You seem incredibly adept at changing ideas. You hesitate to answer questions I ask. You talk of free will as if I should know that free will demands a God of hell.
There are lots of "Gods" in hell, and they expect to be worshipped. The problem is, they're competing with all the rest of the "Gods" in hell -- which, is the origin of their torment.
 
Iacchus said:
There are lots of "Gods" in hell, and they expect to be worshipped. The problem is, they're competing with all the rest of the "Gods" in hell -- which, is the origin of their torment.
You choose to believe so much that is at odds with Judeo Christian ideas. Why cling so fiercely to the ugliest idea of all?
 
There is way too much stuff to comment on in this post. So I'll answer with short statements and I'll expand on anything you'd like more in depth later.
elliotfc said:
But what about the people who say that death is not final? Do they not really know what they are saying, and therefore, there assertion can be ignored? And if so, don't you have to say that humanity doesn't agree on the finality of death, just by the fact that you can state that some people are wrong regarding the question?
My comments were directed at this lifetime only. Any resurrection will be on a new Earth or heaven. This life ends, on that we can rely.
Christians believe in the resurrection of the body. Or they should. Some don't (the pick and choose thing). It's in all of the earliest creeds. Christians believe that we were created to *be* human.
Do humans stay dead til they get their bodies back or do they hover as disembodied spirit consciousness. What is the difference? Jesus was resurrected bodily, so way his mom. Why? Heaven is for angels and God - spirits - what's a body for?
This might be the time to state something about heaven (I know this thread is about hell). I think that heaven is not a place, but a relationship. Adam & Eve (I'm forgetting the fact that I don't agree in the literal delivery of Genesis) were in heaven. The resurrected Jesus is the form of what I think we'll end up as. We certainly aren't going to end up like angels. Angels are an entirely different species, we are not on their level. And if we were created to be immaterial, why the hell were we given human bodies? And if God means to scrap the whole idea of humanity in the end (all souls being disembodied in heaven) why the hell did he become a human being?
"Our Father who art in 'a relationship'"?? You can believe what you want. The people he taught the prayer to knew different. According to the NT we were made lower than the angels to be placed above them. How is the body going to help with that? Why did God become a human being? Pick your answer... All humans are God or --- He didn't.

Anyhow, for what I insist are good Christian theological reasons, I disagree that death *for a human being* is a forever thing. I was created to be a human being, and I believe that I'll be one again, that God will rectify the human condition. If I wasn't created to be a human being I would not be a human being. It's pretty elementary to me. And again, the earliest creeds preach the resurrection of the body.
A human centric idea, very Ptolemaic. We are the greatest God could conceive. He fashioned a Universe from his word and a human out of dust and spit and why would he build more? Your's is the same idea that dust and spit would individually offer.
That's a possibility. But some cultures didn't draw that conclusion, and certainly you don't. I think death suggests death, and that's about it. For death to suggest life you have to have something other than death enter the equation. Right?

Outside of zombie movies I never think about visions of rotting corpses. Plus, believers and skeptics can be equally adept and nonchalant about doing autopsies or embalmings.
Our world is not the world of the ancients. Death was ugly and smelly and close. We clean it up and get it out of sight. In the "Unforgivable Sin" thread I've got a link to Gehenna. It was a refuse dump. They threw some human corpses into the brimstone fire. Death doesn't suggest life. It suggests eternity. Life, that thing before death, is what suggests life. The equation includes hope.
If God really was the God of death and destruction, would there be a brighter future?
There is no reason except hope to expect anything of any God who created us. He created earthly horrors as well as sunshine. We may be being treated as we do cattle. Feed and raise them - for slaughter and to eat.
You'll admit that the depictions of Hell did not originate in the Dark Ages.
I think Dante's ideas come from the 1200s. I discuss it a little more in the "Unforgivable Sin" thread.

Interesting that you mention it, anyhow. I never get people telling me about the horrors of hell. In the past few years, the people who insist on them are the skeptics on this board. Meaning they conjure them up, even though they don't believe in them. Talk about unscrupulous...
Visiting Christians to this forum do occasionally remind us that we are doomed to the pit. You don't hear it because the business has changed. The God of love sells today. The pendlum will swing back though. The Falwell types believe we deserve God's wrath and that 9/11 was caused by our permissive society wheeling us all toward perdition. Hell is alive and well and dwells just under the surface of love.
And since we're past the dark ages, what's the problem exactly? Isn't it good if Christians like me not talk about hell in such ways, and water it down or something? And those who do invoke the horror hell, haven't they been effectively marginalized? I guess that's disputable. Yet you do bring up the....DAH DAH...
The Christ myth is evolving, much of the darkness is being jettisoned. But it is the same harsh desert God of the Bible. He lurks ready to raise jihad in the hearts of all of Abraham's spiritual descendents. We live inside this myth and can be turned inside out by charismatic interpreters.
Yes, of course it has found more answers. It is a vicious cycle, and this isn't my line. They say that for every answer science provides, it raises more questions. Which lead to more answers. It's insane. It's madness. Of course you have found more answers. You're always making the questions!
More importantly, it hasn't banished *any* of the fundamental concerns of humanity.
Religion has been around alot longer, nothing changed. Jesus died for our salvation - nothing changed. Sin didn't disappear, nor disease, nor war, nor pestilence, death is just as big as ever. And people still have all the same questions. Science lets me ponder these ideas because I can read the thoughts of many different opinions and see great minds discuss both sides. I'd be tending sheep in ignorance or dead from smallpox or something without science.
Yes, science has cured many diseases. And we expect science to cure every disease. No contentment there. How about suffering? Do humans suffer less, today, than in the Dark Ages? Sure. And we probably bitch and moan about, and are more fearful about, suffering today than then. Are people happier? Ask your shrink for the answer.

Science will never cure the human condition, short of nuclear or viral or weather-related annihalation. It's an admirable goal, but all the answers just lead to more questions. No end in sight. Unless that's the point. Never-ending question and answer.

It's fine for what it is. I'll reap the benefits of science without worshipping it or making it the most important thing in my life. It ain't gonna deliver me from death, that's for sure.
Whatever is the destiny of man will be realized more from science than religion. We seem to be in disagreement on a lot, don't we.

So, people who find resonance in hell must be afraid of their own death? What if a person claims to find resonance in hell, and also claims to not be afraid of their own death? Are they mistaken? And if so, how can that be determined short of empathic supernatural powers?

To make that statement suggests you need to believe that people who have certain beliefs have to be motivated in a certain way. The only way you can have such a belief with any knowledge is if a)when you were a believer, you know that you were motivated by fear or b)an ex-believer admits a similar scenario or c)a believer admits to be motivated by fear. But why should those three scenarios be deterministic for how all believers would be motivated. Now there's a question I'd like to see science answer.
Psychology might help - I'm not sure it's science but it often tries to follow scientific ideals. Skinner box behaviorists have shown "superstition" to be the most powerful reinforcement mechanism known. Fear is uncomfortable and discomfort is a strong reinforcement mechanism as well.

Bwah! And skeptics. Skeptics make money give speeches and write books about how the religious exacerbate the problem. It's a conspiracy!
As long as you agree about the religious agenda, we're cool.
Sheesh, that's pretty harsh.

Let's say you're right. So what?
So we should look for better myths and recognize that the desert God is not a healthy choice for humanity.

Yeah, but you're not the expert on what a loving God would have to be, so that doesn't mean much. It only means something if God exists. If God exists, and he's not the loving God that you would define, that would be the hypothetical I'd like to hear you comment on. The other hypothetical is impotent, since you have no control on what a loving God would or wouldn't do.

You're not a theologian, nor do you claim to be one on television. That's why I'm being dismissive about your definition of a loving God. You're defining a God that you don't believe exists.
I have notions about what love is. Saying God is all love doesn't make it so. If you would question the meanings of common phrases abvout the deity you'd realize the mythic truth is the real truth. And there is no hell except in scare stories. Heaven can still be sought.... as in "A man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for"?
No, anything that God would do would make sense.
But to no one else but God. And we can only hope He's sane.
This ignores one point I'd like you to address. Would a human being have the right to make the choice to reject God? And if so, shouldn't that choice be respected? And if it's a bad choice, shouldn't discomfort arise from it?
My right to explore athiestic ideas should be respected, if that's what you mean.
And if you are to say "but who would choose hell if it's so bad", I'd ask you to address the other point I asked earlier. What would you make of a God who would have hell exist? Would you reject that God? If the answer is yes, than the answer would be you. You would choose hell. And failing to choose means you would be too proud to choose, or above the choice. Which is itself a choice.
This is a good question. And I would like to turn it back on you. If an alien ship appeared in our skies and began to systematically turn the Earth into a vision of Hell, would you fight it? Why would you it from a stronger being than an alien. Wrong is wrong. Hey maybe the alien would even call itself God - would you cower or would you fight it as evil?


The more people insist about the nature of a loving God, but more they insist that God must be as they want God to me, the more hell makes sense. I'm not saying you're going to hell, because over the months I've determined that you are a fair-minded and sensible person. But any opinion (a loving God MUST be this way) can be held for eternity.

I guess that's what I'd like Atlas. Could you address those two questions?

1)If God existed, and if Hell existed, would you have a problem with that?
Yes, I would - The Catholic Hell anyway.
2)If you had a problem with that, would you prefer Hell (as bad as it may be) to a reconciliation with a God who you have a serious problem with?
Would I trade a thousand years in flames for a hundred billion of bliss or would I prefer that death null me out? I would prefer death null me out. I really really would.
Personally, I don't find the existence of Hell as problematic as you. I see it as an existence of Free Will. The fact that it is painful (you are free to use additional adjectives as you'd like) follows the reality that the rejection of God is a bad choice. Why shouldn't a bad choice lead to bad consequences?
Hell is a gun to your head. If you accept its reality you are not making a free will choice to worship and adore God.
It all just makes sense to me, and if it doesn't make sense to you at the moment, I think God understands that and it won't be held against you.
Well, at least I got that going for me.
 
Atlas said:
You choose to believe so much that is at odds with Judeo Christian ideas. Why cling so fiercely to the ugliest idea of all?
Why do I choose to observe the negative? Why does the word strife exist in our vocabulary? Does turning my head the other way make the ugliness go away? No, in fact it doesn't. So, all that I ask is where does ugliness manifest itself from? It just doesn't appear out of thin air does it?
 
Iacchus said:
Why do I choose to observe the negative? Why does the word strife exist in our vocabulary? Does turning my head the other way make the ugliness go away? No, in fact it doesn't. So, all that I ask is where does ugliness manifest itself from? It just doesn't appear out of thin air does it?
What? Ugliness comes from hell? God created hell so the world would bubble up ugly?

The question was put this way.... You choose to believe so much that is at odds with Judeo Christian ideas. Why cling so fiercely to the ugliest idea of all? Please try again and reread your answer before posting it to see if it comes close to answer the question that was asked.
 
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elliotfc said:
Interesting, really interesting.

I'll say

Matthew 5:22 But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment: and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council: but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire.

I understand there are many different fragments of xianity - because the words are so vague.

But a traditional Christian must:

believe in hell

believe in a devil

believe in heaven

believe in Yahweh (or 'God' - his egotistical nickname)

believe in a 'Holy Spirit' (who used to be female, but apparently had an operation called an Addidictomy)

believe in Jesus as God

believe in a talking snake (without the talking snake Jesus is not needed)

Now - of course there are mutations - but when questioned, their beliefs will contradict themselves. True Christian beliefs are a long string of spaghetti logic - every little meatball must be in place for it to work.
 
Iacchus said:
Do you deny that negativity exists? This is not what you mean by ugly?
Look, you might be thinking you're defending the existence of Hell with these comments but your reasoning is lost on me. Still, I'll answer your questions though you don't seem inclined to defend the thoughts that drive your own assertions.

Man is the measure of all things. That's from the Greek philosopher Protagoras. I accept it as fact and I don't see where a subjectivist such as yourself would argue against it. I also accept that we live in a world of opposites. Perceived opposites, that is. Up is not down. That's our assessment. But up and down are not principles of the universe. Likewise, human beings perceive good and bad. They are artifacts of a consciousness afflicted by survival based needs that produce brain states appreciated as pleasure and pain. Good and Bad are not principles of the universe.

It is our plight that the world of opposites is so apparent. We make judgements around these assessments so naturally that we make them even when they are not warranted. God and the devil are examples, for me, of such unnecessary perceived (manufactured) opposites. It is because of those assessments of Good and Bad, and their Lords, that we name their domains - (Heaven and Hell).

It is because I have adopted a posture that identifies the opposites of Good and Bad (negativity, or whatever you like to call it) as ghosts that I do not accept religions the identify them with their core principles. I can dispense with the devil and with his domain. I am left to wrestle only with the God of Creation. And here, in my philosophy, I find myself drifting spiritually in a kind of Buddhist enlightenment. The appreciation of the One, of Oneness, liberates me from the twoness of God and Creation. There is only one thing and that is what the materialist/naturalist calls the Universe. I still often refer to it as Creation but I mean Universe.

And God? God is a human feeling. An emotional rationalization not based in logic or evidence. Merely a felt experience not unlike hunger, yearning, joy, or even headache. That's really all I know and all I can know about God at large in the Universe - I occasionally have feelings that remind me of the God concept that was part of my religious upbringing.

The Universe is what it is. It is sometimes experienced as awesome and beautiful and sometimes as ugly and banal. But it is really always all those things and more. As humans we must live within the world of opposites we perceive but we should not be slaves to that world. It is in the middle we find the balance of the opposites and in each new moment where we choose which side holds the most value for our own human life, the darkness or the light.

Anyway, that's my simple construction and that's how I end up dismissing Hell. I'll expand on anything you find bizarre or confusing. I offer it as kind of a framework or an example for the kind of response I'd like from you. I'm asking why you reject the Hell of the various religions but feel the need to create your own special version where the bulk of humanity will suffer. You're not like Elliot who actually lives in a religion with dogma and a name. You blaze your own way and choose your own God but for some reason you choose a God with a torture chamber that offers horrors forever - in God's love and the soul's love of torment. It's a weird choice you have made and I am unable to see why you have constructed it into your subjective appreciation of the unknown.
 

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