God and Hell
I’ve been thinking that hell is incompatible with the existence of the Judeo-Christian God. I’m open to being wrong and am looking forward to your objections.
My first argument has to do with God’s quality of being love/loving and his creating hell. Many Christians understand God’s creating humans and sending His son Jesus to die for our sins as acts of munificent love. 1 John 4:8 says God is love. But there’s also hell, and I think God being loving and creating hell are at odds with each other. I’m taking hell to be what most Christians believe in, the hell that is contains the “lake of fire”, where non-Christians go to suffer forever. Here’s my argument in a more regimented form:
1- If God is all-loving, He would not have created hell
2- He did create hell
3- Therefore, he must not be all-loving (1,2 MT)
Obviously, if you don’t believe in God or hell this won’t be of interest to you. I’m more interested in seeing someone square the commonly-understood concept of hell with the loving character of the Judeo-Christian God. Thanks everyone! — Empedocles
I’ve been thinking that hell is incompatible with the existence of the Judeo-Christian God. I’m open to being wrong and am looking forward to your objections. — Empedocles
If God is supposedly omniscient, and he knew what choices you would make before he created you, why would he create you knowing you would end up in hell? That for me, makes God immoral. — Sam26
1 John 4:8 says God is love. But there’s also hell, and I think God being loving and creating hell are at odds with each other. — Empedocles
:up: :cheer:No one is more Biblical-Literalist or Fundamentalist than an Atheist. — Michael Ossipoff
I’ve been thinking that hell is incompatible with the existence of the Judeo-Christian God. — Empedocles
I’ve been thinking that hell is incompatible with the existence of the Judeo-Christian God.
— Empedocles
Nothing would be incompatible, illogical or impossible etc. with a being of infinite ability. — Jake
Knowing that some event will happen, doesn't necessitate the event. We know that from our own knowledge. — Sam26
I have no idea what you're talking about. If you're trying to tell me that God's knowledge necessitates events, I disagree. Knowing that some event will happen, doesn't necessitate the event. We know that from our own knowledge. — Sam26
So you're saying god can be wrong, right? — VagabondSpectre
Completely compatible, and entirely deserving of each other. — Marcus de Brun
Christians generally do not believe in a God of infinite ability — tim wood
Ok, what is it that limits God's ability?
In any case the point stands. Trying to analyze some intelligence so large that it can create galaxies with something so small as human reason can be a fun game, but that's all it is. It's a fool's errand if we take it seriously. — Jake
In any case the point stands. Trying to analyze some intelligence so large that it can create galaxies with something so small as human reason can be a fun game, but that's all it is. It's a fool's errand if we take it seriously. — Jake
My only point is that if God knows before he creates you, that you will make choices that necessitate being sent to hell, why would he create you? Why even bother to create a being that will spend eternity in hell? I can't make any sense of a God like this. — Sam26
Finally, the Christian idea of God, makes God responsible for evil. For example, if I created a robot with a free will knowing that robot would kill millions of people, then I would be responsible for the evil. This is why I think that the God of the Christians is ultimately evil, given the way they define God. It's not a loving being at all, it's a being that you should despise. I don't think such a being exists. If there is a God, then this God doesn't have the attributes Christians assign to him/her. — Sam26
I'm not sure that God is a being of infinite ability. Is he able to sin? Can he make a stone so big He can't lift it? And isn't He limited by His promises (to never wipe out mankind again, to send His son to die as a sacrifice for mankind, etc...)? Can he make squared-circles, or both exist and not exist? All this seems to me to limit God and leave Him still vulnerable to paradoxes/conflicts. — Empedocles
I mean all those terms in the way we usually mean them. Of course God has more qualities than being loving. If you're interested in learning more about what love is, perhaps read through this entry: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/love/ . And for hell, I mean a place of eternal torment where people's souls go if they never became Christians. — Empedocles
Couldn't God have the true knowledge in conditional form, "if I create x, they will go to hell", and in that way he could choose not to create x and not "violate his prior knowledge"? — Empedocles
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