Dont start with the silliness that I didn't answer the questions. I answered but apparently you dont like the answer or it's not the answer your looking for.
That would be the second option. Instead of answering my questions you went off on a tangent about consequences. So yes, you didn't initially answer the questions I was asking. You did here in this response down below though, so thank you
I don't care what answer you're looking for.
A little rude, but ok. At least you're being honest
If you can't handle my answer move on.
What is there to handle? You misinterpreted my question so I brought it back on track
If you can then address it.
Sure. The fact consequences exist is irrelevant to the point I was making, which was that consequences exist
within the context of the rules that have been put in place by the one who made them
Your whole response here speaks directly to what I said in my previous post. I will give you one more shot though.
You can "give me one more shot," or not. If you aren't having fun discussing the topic, I'd move on then
To your first question, hell is properly understood as separation from God. It's not a place per se as much as a consequence. You are free to decide not to be with God. That decision has consequences.
Ok good! Question, though: How does separation from God = eternal torture when I can experience life torment free now while also being separated from God? Why should separation from God in life be painless while separation from God in death mean never ending torment? It seems to me that if this is the case, couldn't god just make it so that separation in death from him would be torment free like it is now? Why didn't he make it that way? Why did he specifically choose for people to experience never ending torment in death?
The second question is just the drama queen version of the first. Why? BECAUSE CHOICES HAVE CONSEQUENCES
...consequences that the rule maker made. If I'm playing Monopoly and I draw the go to jail card and "do not pass go and do not collect 200$," that is a consequence that is specifically structure by the creators of that game according to the rules they've put together. They could have made the card say anything, but that was what they chose to print on the card
All choices and consequences in life are made within the context of the rules governing the world we inhabit. If I smoke a pack of cigarettes every day, chances are that I'll get lung cancer or emphysema due to the rules on how smoke and tar inhalation effect lung tissue, specifically
So why would God create a reality where separation from him would = eternal and never ending torment? Why were those the rules he stuck with? Sure, we can just say that those are just the consequences of our actions, but it certainly seems evil to create those consequences in the first place
You say you understand choices have consequences then blast God for creating the consequences.
Blast him? No. I'm just looking for a logical reason for how he can be considered all good and loving while structuring a fundamental system that is so starkly opposite of those two things. He can create those rules, but those rules are unimaginably evil. Doesn't seem reasonable
Any consequences you experience are YOUR choice not his.
True, but those consequences are consequences he made possible. He could have made them anything
It's reasoning like yours that leads places like Harvard to hire an atheist to hear their religious studies department.
I'm not sure what you mean by this. Could you unpack this a little more for me?