No, this is why the damned are eternally damned.
The idea is that God created this world between eternity, this universe/multiverse/plane of existence (pick your favored term) is a temporary blip where time exists and humans are capable of making independent choices. Prior to the act of creation there was no passage of time, and after the end of the world all will return to a period of eternal unchangingness.
Once time ends for you at the apocalypse or death and you lose your free will/the body to do it with wherever you were at the time your stuck as forever. So if you were in Gods good books, you stay there, if you were out of them, you burn.
The one and only exception within Christian answers for this is the Catholic doctrine of purgatory, a temporary position for sinners who weren't good enough for heaven but not bad enough for hell, so they burn for a bit in purgatory but at some undefined time will be allowed to move on into heaven.
The idea is that God created this world between eternity, this universe/multiverse/plane of existence (pick your favored term) is a temporary blip where time exists and humans are capable of making independent choices. Prior to the act of creation there was no passage of time, and after the end of the world all will return to a period of eternal unchangingness.
Once time ends for you at the apocalypse or death and you lose your free will/the body to do it with wherever you were at the time your stuck as forever. So if you were in Gods good books, you stay there, if you were out of them, you burn.
The one and only exception within Christian answers for this is the Catholic doctrine of purgatory, a temporary position for sinners who weren't good enough for heaven but not bad enough for hell, so they burn for a bit in purgatory but at some undefined time will be allowed to move on into heaven.