> Found this on a Christian site:
> Psalm 11:5 puts it bluntly:
Yeah, I quite radically disagree with this. I wrote to you about Ps 11.5, and explained that's it's not about God hating wicked people down to the bottom of His soul. I certainly agree that He hates their sin, the evil they do, the lies they perpetrate, their false worship and their misguided actions, and all that stuff, but that's different from hating the person. If there's only ONE verse in the Bible that says God hates wicked people, we don't form a theology on one verse. It's a theological principle called "hapax legomena": we are wrong to create a theology based on a single reference.
> Prov. 6.19
You'll notice the verse is part of a sequence starting in v. 16: "There are six *things* the Lord hates." In other words, it's clearly talking about behavior, not the person.
* pride:orientation to self, lack of compassion for others, lack of accurate perception
* lying: lack of trust, lack of honesty, lack of justice, and doing wrong.
* A heart that devises wicked schemes: taking advantage of other people, deceitfulness
* feet that are quick to rush into evil: a person's weakness for a propensity towards being bad and doing wrong.
* A false witness: a specific reference to courtroom proceedings. False testimony in court ultimately leads to a complete travesty of justice and brings an end to the effectiveness of court and even the law.
* A person who stirs up conflict in the community: People who habitually generate conflict are detrimental to the community.
You can see that the text is talking about behaviors that break down a community and individuals. It's still not saying that God hates some people.
> You seemed to say salvation is granted to even God's enemies, yet I pointed out that unless they change to be God's friends salvation will not be given to God's enemies.
Then somehow, somewhere I miscommunicated. Salvation is not granted to God's enemies unless they stop being His enemies and become reconciled to Him.
> There's been wars and unrest probably since about the beginning of the human species. This isn't proof that the world is getting worse. There's been threat of nuclear disaster way before the current day. While it sounds horrible that 300 are killed in a month, there's been incidents that were far, far more deadly and atrocious.
The 20th century was the bloodiest in history. Over 300 million people killed by wars, riots, and genocide.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/20th_cent ... d_politics> But again, even if I granted the world is getting worse, I don't see that as evidence for Hell at all.
It's not evidence for hell. It's was just my disagreement to your statement of "Life is getting easier compared to past generations and crime and murder rates are down across the globe." But I also added the upticks we see in supremacism, racism, and Anti-Semitism. There just seems to me to be a rise in hatred.
> You seem to be saying that by performing the action of accepting God...etc.
We don't earn our way to heaven, but we do earn the amount of reward we will receive there. So I'm not doing any special pleading, but only making a separation: We get to heaven by a gift, not by deserving, but what reward we receive once we get there is contingent on our actions.
> Then couldn't you at least reasonably say the amount and level of reward or punishment was earned by the individual according to their actions?
Yes, I would agree with this.
> This just seems like word play to avoid...
No, not a word play, but trying to help you understand the true dynamics of salvation. Salvation is a free gift, paid for by someone else (Jesus). We either choose to accept it or we don't. It has nothing to do with our deserving it or earning it. Whether we accept or reject it is what decides whether we go to heaven or hell.
After that, once you and I and everyone else are in heaven or hell, now the amount of reward or punishment is according to what kind of person we were and what we did. In this sense our eternal state is always fair. Good people who never received God's gift will be treated far better and differently than a Hitler or Stalin. And evil people who accepted God's gift on their deathbeds will be treated far worse than other people who end up in heaven.
> I'm sure the person who wants to pay your debt could contact the debt collection agency and pay it off on your behalf without you having to accept that or even have any knowledge about it.
Please don't take the analogy where it wasn't meant to go and doesn't pretend to apply. The analogy is about someone else paying the debt for me even though I didn't earn it or deserve it. That's all. You can't go back and add to the analogy and change stuff to create a different point and change the nature of the analogy.