I’ve been teaching a course on world religions this past school year.
One basic thing about Christianity is that, in philosophy, Christianity teaches people to turn the other cheek, to love their enemies, to make sure that love is always evident, to cut away bitterness. We are supposed to wage war, but not as the world wages war. We are supposed to be light - to be the good thing in our community that draws people to call upon God. Early Christians brought liberation with them. Christianity is supposed to be spread by love - “They’ll know we are Christians by our love.”
Islam is a different story. Islam says, when the time is up, lay in ambush for nonbelievers, slay them everywhere you find them unless they pay the tax and convert to Islam. Islam is a religion that spread by oppressing others and putting the fear of Allah into them.
Many modern Christians teach that Christianity is the way, but they behave like Muslims. The vast majority of modern Christians do not engage violently with people over religion, but they like to throw around fear of Hell and damnation. Instead of being light and letting the goodness of God shine in us, we tend to wage war like the world does. God is present here with us and He is sorting things out - its not as if He is absent. Its His job to be the judge. He hasn’t given us that responsibility. Is it right for a person to become a Christian because they are afraid of Hellfire? I tried that and it didn’t work. It wasn’t until years later, when I was really hungry for God, ready to surrender, that He revealed Himself to me.
Thoughts?
Hi swplan76,
Well I wouldn’t say throwing around damnation of hell. But, as you well know, for every action there is a reaction for every decision there is a concequence trivial or great.
Unlike muslims, Christians are not commissioned to bring about the judgment of God on people nor are to judge unbelievers at all. This is God’s domain. We as Christians are to bring the good news (the gospel) to the unbeliever. And we can certianly rebuke each other as fellow christians as we grow and sharpen each other’s iron (biblical metafore for exorting biblical doctrine with each other)
For us, the divine concequense to sin is the Wrath of God. Sin being the direct disobedience to the commandments of God. Insituted by God. You want to know the main reason why a Chrstian would mention the fears of Hell?
Its exactly as this Athiest put it in discourse with a Christian pastor:
"Ray,
You are really convinced that you’ve got all the answers. You’ve really got yourself tricked into believing that you’re 100% right. Well, let me tell you just one thing. Do you consider yourself to be compassionate of other humans? If you’re right, as you say you are, and believe that, then how can you sleep at night? When you speak with me you are speaking with someone who you believe is walking directly into eternal damnation into an endless onslaught of horrendous pain which your ‘loving’ god created, yet you stand by and do nothing.
If you believe one bit that thousands every day were falling into an eternal and unreacheable fate, you should be running the streets mad with rage at their blindness. That’s equivalent to standing on a street corner and watching every person that passes you walk blindly directly into the path of a bus and die, yet you stand idly by and do nothing. You’re just twiddling your thumbs, happy in the knowledge that one day that ‘walk’ signal will shine your way across the road.
Think about it. Imagine the horrors Hell must have in store if the bible is true. You’re just going to allow that to happen and not care about saving anyone but yourself? If you’re right then you’re an uncaring, unemotional and purely selfish (expletive) that has no right to talk about subjects such as love and caring.
James Franz " -
wayofthemaster.com/atheistletter.shtml
So to answer your question. The gospel is not the gospel without Sin, the nature of sin and the condemnation of Sin. If you try to teach a gospel that doesn’t involve what it was Jesus saved us from, then we do not preach the true gospel. And it would be bunk and turn out to yeild no seeds planted on furtile soil.
Now if someone tries to turn to God due to fear of Hell is turning to God for the wrong reason. The thing is, at the end of the day, it is not about hell or heaven for that matter, it is about being with God, knowing God, glorifying God. The worst thing about Hell is being completely separated from God.
I hope that answers your question. Please let me know if you have more
