Categories
logic

The only reason you believe in Hell

 

If you believe there is a Hell … why do you believe it? How do you know it really exists?

Did you read about it in the Bible?

Has anyone told you?

Maybe God himself revealed it to you?

Have you read it somewhere?

Is this your own idea? You came up with it by yourself?

Maybe… a little bit of everything?

Many people who believe in the existence of Hell will probably answer ‘yes’ to many of the above questions, but what if the truth is much simpler?

Of course, I will not say with a 100% certainty why you believe in Hell but what I can do is to say why I did.

I believed in Hell for almost 40 years of my life.

I believed in Hell just because…

I was born in Poland.

And no, it’s not a joke. Perhaps just a simplification.

The actual underlying reason is not of course the country you were born, but we’ll get to that soon.

In the second half of 20th century Poland was almost 100% Roman Catholic. The fact that the Pope was Polish did help a lot in maintaining this status quo for many years.

(the caption should actually be ‘a map of Catholic churches in Poland…)

Until I was 20 I hadn’t met any believers who weren’t Catholics, perhaps except for a few Jehovah’s Witnesses and other “sectarians”, as everybody was calling them.

So…  I simply believed in Hell because I was born in a Roman Catholic family at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries, and it was in a country that was almost 100% Catholic.

Until I connected to the Internet, which was when I was 21 (yes, the Internet got to Poland quite a few years late, comparing to the USA), I did not even know people who believe otherwise. I knew they existed but they were spoken about as outcasts and treated with contempt.

And believe it or not, you may have been born in the USA, perhaps much later than me, and you were still in the same situation.

If you are religious, especially of any kind of orthodox faith, it’d bet a $100 it was your family, not you, who chose it.

In my country almost 100% people were of the same religion. In your country it might be 30% or maybe even 5%. It doesn’t actually matters. What matters is how many percent of your family and friends were of the same religion.

Very probably it was also close to 100% or just.. all.

 

Religious people usually marry only people of the same religion, and choose friends in the same church they go to. Your religion might be a small minority in your country, but when you were growing up, when your worldview was being formed; you could still be surrounded by 100% people having the same religious beliefs.

Our brain would die of exhaustion if we tried to question everything around us. We learn that if everyone else thinks something’s normal, it is normal.

Have you ever questioned the necessity to breathe?

Is everyone I know breathing? Yes, then I don’t have to think about it, I breathe and that’s it.

Does everyone I know believe in Hell? Yes, then I don’t have to think about it, I believe and that’s it.

But let’s make a little thought experiment.

Let’s change almost any detail in my curriculum vitae:

Let’s move my birth several thousand miles in any geographical direction.

Let’s move it in time a few hundred years back, or just a few decades ahead.

Let’s change my family’s religion.

My chances of believing in Hell drop from 99% to 1%.

I would probably not even hear of Hell! If I was interested in religions perhaps I would just know that there are people out there who believe that after death God will punish them.

And if you heard about Hell for the first time, when you were already an adult, and if someone told you that God is infinite love, teaching all people to forgive everything without limits, turn the other cheek and pay back good for evil… How come this merciful God created a lake of fire where most of His beloved children will fry endlessly, sending the rest of the people to Paradise, where they will feast without ceasing, perhaps graciously taking away their memory of their family and friends suffering indescribable torments …

And if someone had told you all this …

You would say it is

the stupidest story you’ve ever heard!

Inconsistent, pointless, and that there’s no way anyone normal in the world would believe it.

Well, someone does. According to statistics, over 2 billion people are Christians.

Of course – today there are many liberal factions of Christianity that reject the idea of ​​Hell altogether, and even among members of the greatest churches that teach Hell, such as Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and Baptist – there are more and more people questioning the idea. Not out loud, of course.

Religion likes getting more members. Some members have 2, 3 or even more children – how to make sure they will not run away?

Let’s convince them that all other religions are evil.

Our dogmas sometimes contradict each other… some, maybe lots of things are illogical… well we can’t make them unable to think but we can also try to convince them that doubting is evil as well.

Something you were taught last Sunday didn’t make sense? How can you even say that? Millions of others have believed this for centuries, do you think you’re smarter than them?

These tricks were made to keep you there, to keep going to church, pay your tithe, and some years later – to bring new believers.

My most serious error was believing that God hates it when you question His holy laws.

Stop. The laws are not His. They’re made by people. If God could hate…

He would never hate asking questions

He’d hate that we don’t use the brain He gave us!

 

Everything that was essential I had to say is contained in this one sentence:

 

I only believed in Hell because I was born in Poland.

Categories
Bible

Hell (1/2) – is this logical?

This is my first, but definitely not last, article about the awesome HELL subject.

I was born, and lived – for the first 20-something years – in Poland, and remember very well folk believes held in this interesting country.
Why interesting? At the time more than 90% Poles declared to be Catholics while about 50% of them rejected some of Catholic major dogmas while that Church condemns anyone who even doubts in anything they teach.

 

Today unbelievers and lots of “Sunday Christians” either say the hell is on earth or that they aren’t sure they should believe in Hell as they can’t understand how loving God could create something like this. But the Catholics I knew back then were absolutely sure hell was real and whoever didn’t share their belief was treated as a weirdo.

 

Today the subject of hell sort of unifies Christian denominations. Hundreds of different churches may argue forever about various doctrines but almost with no exceptions – they all are absolutely sure hell is real.

 

But if we pay a closer attention to details of teachings about hell, questions like “how does hell look like” or “how not to get there after you die” – here, everyone has different ideas. Once I read a book by Martin of Cochem – “The Four Last Things: Death, Judgment, Hell, Heaven” and there I found, with extreme detail, how exactly hell looked like… I found out that devils fry people in sulfur, at the same time calling them names and beating them to pulp… but that’s not it, the ideas of torturing are endless and very creative… how did the author find out such details, I don’t remember, but I remember even back in those times, when I was Catholic, I was shocked that this book and imprimatur (an official license by the Roman Catholic Church to print). Anyone with a little bit of common sense, after reading that book, would say that the story of Little Red Riding Hood would be more probable to be real.

 

But yes, there are huge differences between Christian denominations on details regarding hell, but some points are almost universally agreed upon – things like its eternal lasting or that separation from God and some kind of suffering, often in fire.

 

We all experienced burns… thinking our whole body could burn terrifies us, even if this burning lasted 5 minutes… or 10 seconds, as for me… But eternity? I feel like fainting from just one thought about it.

 

But this is the goal of religion! To scare us! Nothing makes us more eager to go to church (and donate money, by the way).
At the same time, Churches that make God the creator of hell, proclaim him to be the personification of the greatest love you could imagine. But how can a loving God torture people forever in such a way?

 

Religion is great in making up very “logic” stories. Here’s some of the most popular ones:

 

  • God is eternal, so the punishment for rejecting Him must be too. One beautiful day someone made this statement, and that’s what it is – fiction, speculations. We won’t find a word about it in the Bible.
  • Sin against infinite God requires infinite punishment. As in the previous example, this is nothing but speculations. Yes, a sentence may sound nice and you can find it in lots of religious books… but this doesn’t make it true.
  • God doesn’t make anyone go to hell, people choose hell themselves. I’ve never met anyone who would like to be burned in fire for any reason. Pure nonsense.
  • Though God is infinitely merciful, he is also infinitely just. Wait, what?

Merciful but…? Psychology says anything before BUT is erased by our brain. When we say BUT we mean something completely different that everything that was said before BUT. It’s like a husband tells his wife one day, “I love you BUT I also fell in love with someone else and I’m leaving.

 

Is there a woman in the world who would care for the fact that her husband started this speech with, “I love you”?

 

If God is merciful… I expect mercy from him! He expects it from us, doesn’t he? He tells us to love our enemies, forgive 77 times…

 

Is he demanding that we behave better than him?

 

No! In Gospel of Matthew 5:43 Jesus tells us to do good to our enemies and says that this is what heavenly Father does, and by doing this we’ll be as perfect as he is.

 

What do you think would happen if, after I discover that my child stole some money from me, I would tie him up in our basement, keep him there and beat up for a few days?

 

I would go to jail and I would be ostracized by society. Our built-in conscious tells us that the way I punished my child would be way too harsh.

 

In case of hell we have something harsher beyond compare… something infinitely harsher

 

Religion tries to convince us that people, born sinners – against their will of course – might go for eternity to hell because they rejected Gospel, even if they spent their whole life helping others?

 

And the Gospel they rejected probably had nothing to do with the one that Jesus preached, and it was told by people who, by their behavior, were a nasty contrast to everything they taught?

 

Lots of Christians also believe that you will go to hell not only for actual rejecting Gospel, also by passive not accepting it, for a reason like.. you’ve never been introduced with it. For example, when you’re a child who can’t understand language yet… what a nonsense!!!

Some orthodox Christians also claim that water baptism is necessary for salvation… Is God seriously sending babies to hell for something their parents did… or failed to do? Please let me know if you’ve ever heard of bigger stupidity! Plus… if it’s true, why not baptize babies right after their born? Why doesn’t Church tell people to do it right away after birth? Doesn’t Church want people to be saved?

 

It’s not hard to find tons of inconsistencies in religion.

 

Most of Christians however (including me, for many, many years) believe though the doctrine called “age of accountability”, which means that God won’t condemn you to hell if you’re too young to understand Gospel. But when, let’s say, a child is 10, hears about Gospel, gets to understand it but rejects it…

 

A day before – this child would have not been condemned.

 

Wouldn’t it then make sense to… murder children before they reach the age of accountability?

 

If we let them grow, we have a huge chance (yes, huge, most Christians believe the Bible teaches us that only few will be saved from hell) that our child – for the whole eternity – will be screaming in agony and cursing us off for not killing them early enough!

 

Too bad religion also teaches us that murdering anyone sends us to hell as well. So… the choice is yours. Will you kill your child and go to hell… or not kill your child and most probably let them land there?

Oh, religious logic…

 

What if you have more kids? 3, 4? Wouldn’t sacrificing your life make more sense then?

 

No?

 

How can you let them burn in hell?

 

Do you even love your children?

 

Ok, let’s stop here.

 

Logical thinking is the correct work of our brain. It’s given us by God but everyone knows that certain circumstances people, single or groups, well, even entire nations, can start believing something completely illogic. Shortly speaking – logic is great while it works. But it can fail.

 

We want to believe the Bible is logical, that it is consistent. The way someone can read it though… Houston, we have a problem.

 

In the second part of this article I am going to write about almost everything that religion teaches us as regards to biblical hell.

 

It’s not much, to be honest!

 

For now… just one fun fact!

 

Who is called “The Pagan’s Apostle”?

 

Who is the author if 2/3 of the New Testament books?

 

Of course, Paul.

 

Nowhere does Paul mention or provides us with any hint about hell! He never says one word about its place of unquenchable fire, eternal suffering where all non-Christians will go…

 

There’s more! Paul didn’t also even ask anyone to convince their families, friends to become Christians or else…

 

Did you ever think about it?

 

Remember, most of addressees of the Epistles had never seen even one Bible passage, they didn’t have pocket Bibles or Bible apps which can find all verses containing “hell” in one second, so you can’t believe explanation that they already knew about hell and Paul didn’t have to talk about it.

 

For example the Epistle to Romans is most probably the only piece of what we know today is the Bible that Romans have ever seen. Contrary to today, Christians were not encouraged to read the Old Testament back then.

 

While writing the Epistle, Paul had to include then all crucial things he wanted them to know and remember.

 

The mere fact he failed to mention hell would be a reason good enough for me to reject its existence.

 

But there are more reasons. Many more.

 

Today: 2 Total: 246143