S
spockrates
Guest
Extremely well put, Teacher!Engaging thread.
I’m a hopeful Universalist. I believe God wants everybody to be saved and so my hope is that everybody will be saved. The declaration that “people send themselves to hell,” which resonates throughout the Evangelical world (and perhaps pervades other faith communities as well) strikes me as curious reasoning. Who in their right mind would do such thing? Who’d choose an eternity of agony? The only people who seem to qualify are those who aren’t in possession of all their faculties. And if people are laboring under such a handicap I daresay God, who created them in His image, will be disposed to give them the benefit of the doubt. Nevertheless, I’ve no solid objections to the arguments posed by people who choose to believe that the majority of people created by God are in hell through their own fault. People are free to believe whatever they want. I simply hope that the portrayal of a miserable agonizing eternity for many is not one that God will endorse, visions and proof texts notwithstanding.
It seems to me that if even just one person remains outside the love of God at the end of time it will mean that one person has managed to defeat the love of God. And I don’t see how such a situation can reflect God’s complete triumph over evil. If God were no more than a King or Judge then it would be possible to speak of his triumph if his enemies were agonizing in hell or were totally and completely obliterated out of existence. But God is not only King and Judge – God is Father. It’s difficult for me to suppose that any human father could be happy while there were members of his family forever in agony so I find it even more difficult to believe such a thing about God. And no father I know would count it a triumph to obliterate the disobedient members of his family. It seems to me that the only triumph a father can know is to have all his family back home (cf. Luke 15).
I acknowledge that I could be wrong about this and I do not argue against the judgment that my hope amounts to no more than political correctness. It’s my impression that the majority of people who currently inhabit Christendom do not align themselves with my hope and it causes me no great difficulty to live with that tension. However, as far as Catholics are concerned, my understanding is that the Catholic Church has made no formal pronouncement on the matter so I suppose any Catholic who feels uncertain or troubled about it would be free to hope just as I do.
Cordially,
Mick
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And I believe Christ quite agrees, as the revered Saint of Catholics and Universalists alike says:
The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.
(2 Peter 3:9)
And I have a strong hunch you are correct that no one can defeat His love–not even those who (God forbid!) would be so corrupt as to choose to rot in Hell rather than return such love. The question to answer, then is this: Exactly how does God love those in Hell (few though they hopefully might be)?