Yeah, I second this.
I guess a lot of my objection to eternal Hell is that on the face of it, it sounds incredibly unjust. 1. There is torture. 2. The torture is eternal.
People say “you choose eternal Hell when you commit a mortal sin” but that sounds a little like double speak. Felons don’t choose to be punished, their punishers choose to punish them. God has to make the choice at some point, either in the creation of the world or at your particular judgment. Basically what I’m saying is God is in the dock for torturing people for eternity no matter how you slice it. You could claim that torture is just when it is done by God. I guess you could do that. I guess you could also make the argument that God loves you when he does that, but those arguments have always fallen flat for me.
I’d also say Christians treat eternal Hell as intuitive, like they are old fogies defending the Old Logic, that liberals don’t want to admit. The fact of the matter is, you only get eternal hell through divine revelation of some kind. Pagan Greeks, Hindus, ancient Jews and Buddhists among others didn’t believe in eternal Hell. Either you burned through your good and bad actions, or your just ended up a shade. Heck, some even make it to perfect happiness. Or in the case of Hindus and Buddhists, we all get eternal happiness. It just takes a while.
In my mind the Good News of Christianity as believed by many sounds a lot like a protection racket. “God saves you from your sins” To which I respond, “that’s great, but what I’m really concerned is Him protecting me from Himself.”
The thing is, I’m actually a fan of retributive justice, but it has to actually be justice. Torture for a time, is that just? I’d be open to that argument. Eternity? I honestly find it hard to understand how so many can make that logical leap. But, I guess the answer is “God said so,” so whatever answer we come up with has to be right.