by jimwalton » Thu Mar 17, 2016 3:02 pm
Good to hear from you again. Also glad to hear there are so many churches in Ireland. Over here we keep hearing that Christianity is very small in Europe and also England, Ireland, and Scotland. The churches probably all teach turn or burn because it’s the message of the Bible. They are trying to be true to the Word. They shouldn’t be judgmental, though. Jesus tells us not to be (Matthew 7.1-6). And as for boring, church isn’t supposed to be entertaining; it’s supposed to be worship. You go because it’s true, not because it’s fun.
You want to talk about turn or burn. What’s my belief? We were created to have a relationship with God. With God there is life, truth, grace, forgiveness, and love. But not everyone wants to have a relationship with God. Some don’t even believe he exists, despite the evidence. God doesn’t force us to love him — it wouldn’t be love if he did, either him loving us or us loving him. Some people want nothing to do with him, and they choose to separate from him. He will not stop them. Others are openly rebellious and defiant. For them there will be judgment, as any good judge punishes the defiant and rebellious. For those who take a stand as his enemies, he will treat them as such.
I don’t believe that hell is literal fire, because the Bible speaks of degrees of punishment (not levels of hell, as in Dante), but lesser punishments for lesser sin, and more severe punishment for more severe crimes against him. I believe that hell is separation from God, meaning absence of truth, grace, forgiveness, and love. C.S. Lewis, in his short book “The Great Divorce,” speaks of hell as like dismal human existence, where things don’t work right, people are nasty to each other, friendships are brittle, and existence is miserable — void of truth, grace, forgiveness, peace, love, etc.
It’s as if all of us humans are walking towards the end of life. At the end of life there are two doors, one that is marked “Eternity with God” and the other marked “Suit yourself.” Jesus stands at the door marked for God, continually inviting anybody who wants to enter there. But he can’t force anyone. He can express his love, his willingness to forgive, and his desire that you come. But each must make their own choice. For those who choose against him, they choose their fate and eternal destiny, such as it may be based on their lives. For those who are his enemies, he judges them according to their lives. For any and all who will come to him, he accepts them into relationship with himself. That’s what I think. How about yourself?