Speaking as a Christian who disagrees with certain aspects of the faith as expounded by RH, I don't think God automatically sends anyone to Hell. Not even those who don't believe in Him (do babies, who know nothing of God, go to Hell upon dying?).Lazerus wrote:If you honestly believe god will send me to hell for not believing in him, say it!
Too late. -:DStrangeWulf13 wrote:Let this be a lesson to y'all. Never argue theology in a forum moderated by the son of a Baptist preacher!
My faith is based in large part on what I believe I to be the FUNCTION of mankind.
I believe, for instance, that God either existed from the beginning of the Universe, or pre-dated it, and in either case was the instigator of the Big Bang. He formed the physical laws in those first instants and set them as binding. And He lived, moment by moment, throughout the billions of years between then and when the Earth began to coalesce from a ball of dust into a planet ("And the Earth was shapeless, and without form").
I believe God guided, at the very least, the progression of evolution from single-cell to the modern day. I believe that the "days" of Genesis mark epochs, not 24-hour periods, and I believe that the Fourth Day does not properly exist as it appears to have been originally part of the Second Day.
Such a thing would be readily explained by the numerology and Earth-centric ideologies in use by the early Church...six Days would be a mark of evil, seven is the Holy Number. But God creates nothing on the Seventh Day; He rests, instead. It is not therefore a Day of Creation, but the Day of Vacation. Splitting Day Two into separate Days, and adding the Day of Vacation, is the only way to arrive at Seven...the "magic number". Also, putting the creation of Earth before the Sun and Moon would have been a very Aristotelian ideal, very much in vogue with the pre-Galileo Church.
Put in this context, the land rising from the seas, the origin of life in those seas, moving to land animals and then birds, before the creation of humans...all of this is in line with modern scientific thought.
But going back to the Big Bang for a moment, and all the billions of years in between--- were the angels made BY Him, or did they come into existence WITH Him? In the first event, wouldn't they amount to artificial intelligence? Did Lucifer have free will, or was he built in order for God to have someone who would actually disagree with him, a form of sounding board? If he had free will, why did he rebel, "Paradise Lost" notwithstanding?
And if the angels are simply AIs with limited will, might not God get lonely for company that thinks --- in all ways --- for itself?
That, in my opinion, is the Purpose of Mankind. To provide God with company. And if you boil it down, the Bible really amounts to God saying "Don't Be an Asshole".
Therefore, that is the Purpose of Religion --- at least, its original intent --- God doesn't want Assholes in Heaven. Be an Asshole on Earth if you want, He won't stop you...but Heaven is invitation-only.
