Uravip2me you find nothing to oversee in a biblical hell as you believe hell is the biblical grave. Well be that as it may. God still does overlook the grave as well. Is it not he that calls forth the dead from the grave and from the sea or wherever they may be.. So yes God certainly does look over the grave as well. As to everything else about death and the afterlife I’m not so sure about this being just purely a man made invention. What about Enoch and Elijah both who were translated fully alive into into heaven seems that no grave was needed for them. You have Jesus saying to the sinner apon the cross ( today you shall be with me in paradise ). You also have the terms forever and everlasting which are very strong in its meaning about the future and eternity and what that means for us. Than you have the case of Lazarus who seems to have remembered nothing about the afterlife with his time in the grave as if he was asleep. You also have much terminology ( with all shall not sleep ) which could mean that all do truly sleep now. As to who is condemned and who is righteous that is for God to decide. For no religion By itself has ever had the power to save anyone. For that power is exclusively Gods power and Gods choice too.
Wow, you have given a lot of thought about hell ( biblical or otherwise )
Biblical hell ( grave ) does cover those buried and drowned at sea - (sea gives up the dead - Revelation 20:13 ).
I can agree God does look 'over' the grave, but God is Not 'in' the grave, Not in any hell.( fiction or non-fiction)
God 'looks over the grave' in the sense that God arranged the Resurrection Hope for the dead.
There is a BIG difference between: resurrection and afterlife.
'Afterlife' implies being more alive 'after' death than before death.
The living or ' being more alive ' do Not need a resurrection.
No one goes to Heaven before Jesus . Jesus was first.- John 3:13
So, the promise Jesus made to the thief was made on the day they died. (today)
The ' today ' meant on this day I promise you a future ' paradise ' a paradisical resurrection.
Since the thief died first, then that future resurrection will be on a paradisical Earth.
This is why Acts of the Apostles 24:15 uses the ' future tense ' that there ' is going to be ' a resurrection...
Enoch and Elijah
3,000 years after Enoch's day Jesus stated No one goes to Heaven before Jesus - John 3:13
Enoch is part of those pre-Christians mentioned at Hebrews 11:13,39 who did Not receive the promise.
The only means of being saved is by Jesus' ransom. In Enoch's day the ransom had Not yet been paid.
This is why even King David did Not ascend - Acts of the Apostles 2:34
What happened was that God was Not going to let enemies kill Enoch.
So, God 'took' Enoch in the same way that God 'took' Moses. - Hebrews 11:5; Jude 1:9; Deuteronomy 34:5-6.
Enoch's life was simply cut short to spare him being killed ( maybe tortured ) by enemies.
Elijah went ascending ( Not resurrecting ) but ascending as a windstorm could take someone to the mid-heavens.
The mid-heavens or the atmospheric expanse where the birds fly.
The wind moved Elijah from one place to another place as we can see in wind storms today.
Elijah was Not greater than John the Baptist and John did Not ascend - Matthew 11:11.
We find at 2 Chronicles 21:12-15 that Elijah was still alive years later and writing to the king.
So, as with all who died before Jesus died, they are all asleep in the grave as was Jesus' friend of John 11:11-14.
Since the 'dead know nothing' is why Jesus' resurrected friend said nothing beyond death.
- Psalms 115:17; Isaiah 38:18; Ecclesiastes 9:5