Originally posted by: timosyy
I didn't want to get into theology (and this is why I said earlier I wish comparative/world religions were a mandatory course in high school), but I feel the need to point out certain things very quickly/define a few basic concepts.
From a Christian viewpoint/theology because that seems to be the one this thread concerns:
a) Heaven/Hell, defined as eternity with or apart from God. Most people (Christians & non-Christians alike), seem to think it works like this: God gives you x amount of years on earth, and if you haven't made the "right" choices, you're flung into hell for all eternity. This is a misunderstanding of the nature of evil/sin as defined in Christianity. To quote Tim Killer: "...hell is simply one's freely chosen identity apart from God on a trajectory into infinity". Or better yet, C.S. Lewis:
"There are only two kinds of people-- those who say "Thy will be done" to God or those whom God in the end says, "They will be done." All that are in Hell choose it. Without that self-choice it wouldn't be Hell. No soul that seriously and constantly desires joy will ever miss it."
For a Christian to "condemn" another person to Hell doesn't even make sense- those in "Hell" choose it freely, they don't cry out to God saying "I'm sorry, I was wrong, I want to go to Heaven now".
b) So is correct, it is entirely up to the "believers" to prove to the "nonbelievers" that God exists. This is the charge that Jesus left with his disciples.
c) Christianity is much more than what atheists like to pigeonhole into "a belief system that explains how things came to be". Otherwise the Bible would consist solely of Genesis. Christianity, in the end, is a story. After all, "Thou shalt not" speaks to the mind, but "Once upon a time" speaks to the heart. It is a story about a God who created the universe & everything in it, and charged humanity to be good stewards of it. It is a story about the root of sin (selfishness). It is a story about a God who loved humanity so much that he would send his son to be the atoning sacrifice for their sins past & present, that he (Jesus) would serve as an example to those who call themselves Christians. There is honestly nothing in this story/teaching that is detrimental to the human race. If Christians want to believe in this story, then why not. The only thing it could bring about is good, for people to be more caring/honest/forgiving/selfless.*
*Unfortunately, of course, this is not the case, and the church is oftentimes a poor representation of the Christian faith. And so, the secular world does have many legitimate grievances against Christianity. Again, "You Christians are so unlike your Christ."