D
DL82
Guest
As I understand it, many Orthodox sources talk about hell as being the experience of God’s love as a fire. From an Orthodox perspective, heaven, hell and purgatory are the same ‘place’, the inescapable presence of God, which burns like a fire for those who are not disposed to receive it, but is the light of life for those who have been purified to experience it in joy.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church, however, explicitly states that hell is a place away from God, it is His absence. If we choose to turn away from God in this life, He will allow us the freedom to be apart from Him in eternity. In a way, this is also His mercy, as we could not endure His presence if we were in sin.
Have I understood this correctly?
Are these two views compatible? I could see how you could say that hell is both the presence of God, knowing He exists, and His absence, knowing you can never receive His goodness - that seems to be the case with the parable of the rich man and Lazarus.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church, however, explicitly states that hell is a place away from God, it is His absence. If we choose to turn away from God in this life, He will allow us the freedom to be apart from Him in eternity. In a way, this is also His mercy, as we could not endure His presence if we were in sin.
Have I understood this correctly?
Are these two views compatible? I could see how you could say that hell is both the presence of God, knowing He exists, and His absence, knowing you can never receive His goodness - that seems to be the case with the parable of the rich man and Lazarus.