…continued from above:
A generally accepted analogy often used is that humans are the children of God the parent. I am relating that, in general, parents do not stop giving their adult children chances to make things right.
God is our Father. Our Father has set certain conditions. One of those is that, regardless of how He WANTS us to choose Him, we are fully and completely free to not choose Him while we CAN choose Him, and we must make our choice between being “alive” on earth and “alive” after-earth.
If you disagree with the parent-child analogy then we can instead turn the focus to other points of interest.
I do agree with you on the “parent-ness” of God, but you are unclear of what “parent” means.
Hell is considered a permanence. If humans will generally always give their children more chances, and God is superior in mercy and justice, then it seems as though it is illogical that our chances end after a certain time with God, especially when the conditions warranting eternal punishment are not clearly defined and understood by all humans.
But, your “difficulty” is that you insist on YOUR “logic” over that of God…!
God has TOLD us, in no uncertain terms, that there IS in fact a time after which the decision to choose Him ends.
If you don’t believe that, then you don’t believe revelation. If you don’t believe revelation, then the entire subject of “the ends of things” is utterly meaningless to you.
Quote:What if the child simply refuses to tread the “right path”?God does not violate men’s free will to choose, which is what is required to “change the mind” of one who will not have their mind changed.
The door will still be open for the child even if they refuse to tread the right path, in hopes that they may oneday choose to. As to the second part, I fail to see how ensuring men have proper information and understanding would violate their free will.
Your use of the word “proper” shows perfectly where you’re coming from. You impose your views as “more right” than God’s.
Therefore,…
…you see no problem in believing that God sets no timeframes or limits, because to you that would be “cruel” or “rude”.
…you see no problem in believing that God should fully inform all creatures such that they will be guaranteed “heaven”, because to do otherwise is to be “rude” and “cruel”.
Your “arguments” replace God with YOU, which is choosing you over God, which puts you in a curious place relative to the required “final decision”, now, doesn’t it?
Perhaps God WILL give those in hell another choice at some point. Who knows? But we have no hint of that. I’d be a bit nervous of relying on that supposition if I had ANY belief in God as revealed to us.
Someone might argue that, but I’d argue that that is God’s business, and no man should concern themselves with the final disposition of ANY other man, especially one who is not seen to be actively doing evil.
I agree that we should not look at our neighbor and say “you are going to hell because XYZ”. However, as questions about hell are some of the issues that bring people into crisis of faith, overall discussion about general ideas and understandings are valid.
Absolutely…! The reality of hell SHOULD drive people into the truth, and not out of it. How and why do some people use hell to LEAVE that which is there only to help them choose truth?
The answer? Because they come up with “fantasies” to explain that hell is not a reality.
The simple fact is that all religions are more of less “right” about what being “close to God” means.
God knows the hearts of men, and will place them correctly according to His criteria.
Right, and this is the way I have been able to partially reconcile this issue.
If you are “partially reconciled” with the existence of relative levels of truth in the world’s religions, then you aren’t “reconciled” with it at all.
Until you “choose one”, and see where it takes you, you’ll be hanging out in the “hallway” of God’s presence, and be as interesting to talk to about religion as one who’s never been into any of the rooms of the “mansion” yet claims to tell us of the spectacular particulars of the “Grand Hall”, and the marvelous portraiture of the “Family Dining Room”.