> This is a severe misunderstanding. It's not that God says, "I'll pay if you worship, and if you don't, I torture you for eternity." Instead, what the Bible teaches is that God knows that your sin is leading you in a path of total destruction, and only recognizing the truth will save you.
All people sin. For most people, those sins are minor. Why would those sins "destroy" them? In what possible sense? What sort of God would create a universe where the smallest imperfection would lead to "total destruction", barring entering into some bizarre blood pact involving his son? It's very weird. Certainly not moral. All things being equal, I'd sooner accept punishment for my own sins than be party to human sacrifice.
> You seem to think God is just a megalomanic, but what He is is the truth, and without him there is nothing but destruction in your future.
So in the same breath you say he's not a megalomaniac, and simultaneously say that he created a world where every single person will be destroyed unless they obey his wishes, to the smallest detail. Tell me, what sort of being would create that type of world?
> So he's standing at the edge of the cliff waving his arms, screaming for you to change directions, warning you of danger, showing his care. Instead of listening you say, "Who does that guy think he is? He thinks he knows everything. Why should I listen to him. He's just stuck on himself." See, that's not it at all; he knows the danger, and your only hope of survival is to listen to him.
Your attempt to portray God as an innocent bystander fails. He created the cliff. He created it knowing precisely who would fall off it and how. Indeed, he created those people so that they were designed to plummet to their deaths. It's cruel and perverse.
> So if you owed someone $10 million, and another person offered to pay it for you, you'd refuse because it would infringe on your privacy and freedom? Hmm.
I would if I didn't owe it, sure. Particularly if accepting this generous "offer" would further indebt me to someone else. I'd hardly like to wake up one day and hear, "The good news is that you don't owe $10 million anymore. The bad news is that you're now the eternal slave of a vindictive Jewish war god. We weren't totally sure you actually owed the $10 million, since your sins were pretty minor, but we thought we'd play it safe and enslave you anyway. You're welcome!" No, thanks. No disrespect to Jesus, but I'd much rather speak for myself when it comes to those matters.
> See above. It's not "strings," but the facts of the situation. The cliff is ahead. Please change direction.
"Facts" created solely and absolutely by God for this intended purpose. This isn't an unfortunate accident from which God is generously saving us, any more than the bag man for the bank robber is innocently offering to accept your money, while his accomplice's gun is leveled squarely at your head.
That's the whole problem. The Christian wants his God to be a redeemer and a rescuer, but he also wants his God to be all-powerful and all-knowing. These desires are incompatible. One wouldn't be considered a rescuer if one is also the knowing architect of the calamity putting people in danger. One would merely be considered a psychopath.
> Not necessarily. There are some theories out there that God will continue to attempt to reconcile the lost even after death, and that there may be mechanisms for the damned to not spend eternity there, but only an appropriate amount of time fitting what they did on earth.
"Some theories". Not very reassuring.
> But if I were you, I would avoid that situation entirely and make right with God now.
One does not negotiate with terrorists.
> This is the entire message of the Bible. What Adam and Eve lost in the Garden was not access to the Garden, but access to God's presence. God's presence is a theme that runs through the whole Bible. It's what the covenant is all about (all of the covenants), the tabernacle, the Temple, and even Jesus was "God with us."
I'm referring to hell. I'm aware that there are other stories about being separated from God. This general separation does not appear to be what the Bible is referring to with hell. The very fact that they are described as two different things is evidence that they are distinct. Hell can not merely be separation from God, otherwise the world of Adam and Eve would have been hell.
> People aren't sitting around gnashing their teeth now because on earth we are beneficiaries of God's general grace. Rain falls for all of us; we all benefit from the supply of food, the beauty of the environment, and the characteristic of our bodies to self-heal. But in the afterlife when these things are no longer available, it will be a completely different story.
Wait... so we can be "beneficiaries" of "general grace" without worshiping or obeying God? Why accept him or Jesus, then? Why not just go on our merry way?