Free will is often cited as the justification for reward and punishment in these twin Abrahamic religions. But how does this work?
Supposedly, slaves-submitters ("believers") and rebellious hellions ("sinners") both have free will in this life. In fact free will is very important, particularly in most forms of Christianity, for explaining the fall. Sophisticated theologians also explain that free will is retained in heaven, which causes people to sin, which results in their perpetual punishment being "just" because it is the sin that they choose that justifies their torture forever and ever.
Conversely, free will does not appear to exist in heaven. Believers are happy slaves-submitters who spend eternity praising God. In fact they do not have free will, per said sophisticated theologians, because they cannot rebel against God and choose evil.
What is the logic here? How can free will be so necessary and wonderful in this life, but be the "gift" of the damned in the next life? Why not just create people without free will initially, and lose this whole problem of free will and punishment altogether?
If free-will choices did Not exist in heaven then Satan, nor his fallen angels, could Not have rebelled - James 1:13-15
Jesus was sent from heaven to earth by God. What would be the point of Satan tempting Jesus if Jesus could Not be tempted ?
Those called to heaven from earth - Revelation 20:6 - have a first or earlier resurrection. They have proven faithful - Revelation 2:10
Like Jesus they do Not want to rebel. Adam failed under least conditions, Jesus and Job proved faithful under adverse conditions.
So, we can all choose to use our gift of free will however we want to use it.
We can lean toward badness, or we can lean to be upright. The choice is ours to make.
There is a religious myth taught as Scripture but Not really what the Bible really teaches.
KJV Bibles translated the word Gehenna into English as hellfire. That is where the forever burning enters into the picture.
Gehenna was simply a garbage pit where things were destroyed and Not kept burning forever.
So, Gehenna is a fitting symbol for eternal destruction and Not eternal burning. The wicked are destroyed forever - Psalms 92:7
Jesus destroys Satan - Hebrews 2:14 B, and Satan ends up in ' second death ' - Revelation 21:8
So, ' second death ' is a fitting term for destroyed forever as in annihilation. No postmortem penalty involved.
Even father Adam went from non-life, to life, and returned back to non-life. - Genesis 3:19
No postmortem penalty for sinner Adam because 'death ' stamps the price tag of sin as Paid In Full.
However, unlike Satan, his fallen angels, and Adam, we have the opportunity to be resurrected due to Jesus' ransom for us.