(January 27, 2017 at 10:28 pm)Redoubtable Wrote:
This is how absurd I find this conception of Hell:
Imagine this scenario: a man instructs a toddler by a poolside not to enter the pool because if they do they will drown and die. Despite the man's instructions the toddler (irrational, ignorant, and impulsive as toddlers can be) is attracted by the water and walks into the pool. As the toddler is drowning, the man sits back and allows the toddler to drown. After the child has died a fearful and agonizing death, a bystander from far off rushes to the scene and questions the man as to why he didn't save the child. The man replies, "I warned the child not to go into the pool, that they would drown and die if they went in it; but alas the child made their choice and I merely confirmed it by allowing them to accept the consequences of their decision."
This is essentially how Christian apologists view god in this conception of Hell, and what a terrible god this is; one who doesn't even afford the children he allegedly loves full knowledge of the "rules of the game" and its consequences, judges us in a most horrific manner, condemning us to unending agony, and then has the gall to wash his hands of this and tell us it was our choice to suffer eternally. This is the mentality of the worst kind of sociopath.
A similar incident in your scenario happened last week in Venice, Italy, when a 22 year-old guy from Gambia jumped into a canal. Not one person tried to rescue him. They shouted "Let him die." So they were all sociopaths because they let the guy do what he wanted to do. They did throw some life rings to him but he refused to grab them. And he drowned. https://www.yahoo.com/news/african-refug...26081.html
Is the real hell being able to do whatever you want to do and then having to suffer the negative consequences? In the case in Venice a guy wanted to jump into a canal and drown himself. That's not something I would do but he thought it was a good idea so he did it. People did try to save him but he needed to make an effort to save himself from his previous decision. He refused to make an effort so he died. Now the people who saw him die will have to live with their decisions not to go to his aid. Will they always take joy in the fact that he killed himself before their very eyes? Or will they regret that they did not not take some positive actions to rescue him from himself? Will that be their hell?