RE: On Hell and Forgiveness
August 30, 2018 at 3:47 pm
(This post was last modified: August 30, 2018 at 3:48 pm by Amarok.)
Quote:Yes, you are correct that it is a redefinition in the sense that God isn't who you thought He was. As in, He isn't evil or a tyrant, as you imagined He would be. Just as the person who hypothetically asks me what I'd do if God was evil is redefining God from what I believe Him to be.This does not help
So basically, at the moment of your death you find out you misunderstood God... perhaps some stuff in the Bible did not happen the way it was literally written like you would have imagined. Perhaps His motives and reasons for certain things make sense once you understand them. Bottom line is everything is made clear. And you can see that God is indeed completely good and all loving, at His very core and by His very nature. You understand at that point that the only reason love exists in the first place is because God exists. So in other words, love exists because of/through God's existence. Since love wouldn't exist otherwise, God and love are not independent of each other. (this is essentially what I mean when I say God is love)
He wants to share His love with you, wants you to accept it and embrace it because it is good and it is the true source of joy and fulfillment... and He wants you to be joyful because He loves you. However, He gives you the option of rejecting it if you do not want it. Because He is good, He won't force you to accept something you don't want, and allows you to make your own decision. Just as the prodigal son's father wanted him to stay but allowed him to leave when he chose to. He wasn't going to keep his son prisoner, against his will.
Choosing to accept God's love would mean complete fulfillment and joy. In accepting love, you would simultaneously be rejecting greed... as greed is the opposite of love. This means you would strive to leave behind any greed filled intentions or desires, in order to truly desire goodness and love going forward. Admitting past wrong doings and having remorse for them.
Here is again how it was originally written:
Quote:That is fine.It's really not
Seek strength, not to be greater than my brother, but to fight my greatest enemy -- myself.
Inuit Proverb
Inuit Proverb