hell
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| hell [2025/06/22 15:06] – [How could a loving God create a place of eternal punishment like Hell?] kbieb | hell [Unknown date] (current) – removed - external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1 | ||
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| - | ====== All About Hell ====== | ||
| - | ===== What is Hell? ===== | ||
| - | The best explanation that I've heard for what Hell is, comes from a [[https:// | ||
| - | In this sermon, Pastor Burke teaches that God created angels and before our universe. Angels were created to love and serve and therefore required free will since it's not possible to truly love without the capability of not loving and serving without choice is slavery, which a good and just God would not do. The most powerful and beautiful angel was Lucifer (light-bearer) who became prideful and thought he could rise above God. For the sin of pride, God cast Lucifer from Heaven. One third of the angels left Heaven with him. Burke claims that choices made in eternity are eternal choices since there is no time there. Lucifer and his angels wanted to rule apart from God, but since God is everywhere, there was no place for them. So, God, in his love, created Hell, a place without God, for them to rule in. | ||
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| - | In order to teach the remaining two-thirds of angels in heaven not to rebel, he created our universe which contained a fraction of heaven and a fraction of hell. This allowed humans to experience both existences (knowledge of good and evil) though not at full strength. He also gave us Jesus, so that we could repent at any time during our life here in time before we have to make the final eternal choice of one or the other. | ||
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| - | Burke cites three chapters as his source (" | ||
| - | * Ezekial 28 | ||
| - | * Isaiah 14 | ||
| - | * Revelation 12 | ||
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| - | I must admit that I don't read all of what he says in those three scriptures, but I have always tended to be more of a literalist and have always had trouble reading " | ||
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| - | ===== How could a loving God create a place of eternal punishment like Hell? ===== | ||
| - | If you can get behind John Burke' | ||
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| - | C.S. Lewis said that Hell was a self-imposed isolation from God. This seems to agree at least in part with Burke' | ||
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| - | This view has basis in scripture (2 Thessalonians 9-10 NASB): '' | ||
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| - | I like to believe in this version of Hell which seems more in line with a loving God, but God is also a just God, so a more concrete punishment isn't outside the realm of the possible. There is evidence for this version of Hell in scripture too. Jesus describes Hell as a " | ||
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| - | Whether Hell is terrible because God is not there, or if it is specifically a place God designed for eternal torment, the only people that go there are those who choose to. To avoid it, all one has to do is humble themselves, accept the free gift of Jesus' | ||
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