Thank you, Meltzer, for sharing your mind. I’m glad that CAF has an obviously astute and thoughtful Jewish voice.
However, a few clarifications are in order, as they are quite essential to the historical situation and even to the differences in theology you address. Christianity, having spread so far so fast, as it did in its earliest centuries (first four, say) cannot be so easily reduced to singular perspectives, especially not on these matters.
It was Christianity that introduced the notion of personal salvation together with the possibility of eternal damnation if one chooses not to do G-d’s will
No, I’m afraid not. The accurate way of stating this would be to say that it was St. Augustine who introduced both of these things—seeing humans as capable of being grouped together, according to good and evil, for God or against him. This is essentially the basic premise of his
City of God (which stands in contest with the “city of man”). Moreover, hell, when a conceived as a never ending, inescapable state of conscious torment and suffering also emanates from the pen of St Augustine.
Many early church fathers held and articulated positions completely contradictory to Augustine’s two premises here. For example, the great intellect of the East, St Gregory of Nyssa, held that Christ came to save
humanity itself—the totality, not merely this or that individual human. And hell was not conceived of as forever and inescapable. Rather, the teaching was that all of God’s creation will, in the end, return back to the Source from which it came. And lest you think St Gregory was a lone wolf here, I add two other preeminent minds to the discussion, who agreed with Gregory in the main: Origen and St Maximus the Confessor. What’s the point of all this? It’s to suggest that what you’ve remarked above most certainly is not “Christian” teaching. Precisely, it’s Augustinian teaching.
nor was the idea that we are all sinners by our very nature…we humans are not “lost” or doomed in the first place
As has been noted by not a few Christian scholars, the teaching you describe above of “original sin” as imputed guilt is also, as it turns out, a fundamental Augustinian teaching. St Augustine, in trying to interpret St Paul’s letter to the Romans, chapter 5, verse 12 (only in the Latin translation—he did not read Greek) came up with the notion of inherited guilt. As in, all descendants of Adam and Eve inherent the primal guilt of the original father and mother of the race. And, again, such a notion was foreign to the greatest minds of the East that I mentioned above. These beliefs are not “Christian,” they’re Augustinian.
In fact, it’s the grappling with, as you mention, the fact of humanity’s bearing the image and likeness of God that forms part of the bedrock for the theologies of ultimate reconciliation of God’s creation and simultaneously has these theologians reject the notion of forever and inescapable hell.