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hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
Fri Apr 25, 2014, 04:30 PM Apr 2014

3 reasons we’re afraid to talk about hell

Jonathan Merritt

Have you seen that new movie “Hell Is for Real?” Of course, you haven’t. Because it doesn’t exist. It’s heavenly counterpart, however, earned $21.5 million in ticket sales in its opening weekend.

Sixty-four percent of Americans believe in the survival of the soul after death, and a majority believes in both heaven and hell, according to a Harris Poll released in December 2013. But while most are comfortable discussing the afterlife and heaven, talk of hell can scatter the masses.

So why are Americans afraid to talk about hell?

Rebecca Price Janney, a cultural historian and author of “Who Goes There? A Cultural History of Heaven and Hell,” traces the shift back about 70 decades to World War II. During this time, many asserted that American soldiers couldn’t possibly go to hell because they’d already served their time having “been through hell” on the battlefield. The idea offered great comfort to those at home who were grieving lost loved ones.

- See more at: http://jonathanmerritt.religionnews.com/2014/04/24/3-reasons-afraid-talk-hell/#sthash.xdmJPMBO.dpuf


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3 reasons we’re afraid to talk about hell (Original Post) hrmjustin Apr 2014 OP
I'm not sure that many people believe in hell... TreasonousBastard Apr 2014 #1
I personally don't believe in hell. hrmjustin Apr 2014 #2
The concept is that hell is the state of separation from God. rug Apr 2014 #3

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
1. I'm not sure that many people believe in hell...
Sat Apr 26, 2014, 02:58 AM
Apr 2014

it's not a Jewish concept, so came from somewhere else. A couple of hints in an epistle here and there? Quakers and others have no particular teaching, but tend to discount the idea since there's no evidence of any kind of an afterlife. I guess we can blame Dante for most of this hellish mess. That, and the annoying feeling that Stalin never really paid for his crimes, so the universe has to have something out there to even the score.

Even the Roman Catholics, who are responsible for a lot of our thinking, don't lightly condemn people to hell, with Purgatory there to even things out for light sinners. The Lutheran teachings of my early life said the only sure way to go to hell was to deny God, therefore cutting off any chance of forgiveness. Everyone else went to heaven as long as they had at least a deathbed conversion. Faith, not works, was the trick.

Personally, I tend to ignore those who make a big deal of hell as a real place since most end up being nutcases. And, yeah, if you're going to talk about an afterlife, Heaven is a much more pleasant place. The residents might not be as interesting, but you can read in peace.



 

hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
2. I personally don't believe in hell.
Sat Apr 26, 2014, 11:17 AM
Apr 2014

Heaven I think is real but I have a hard time with a place of punishment.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
3. The concept is that hell is the state of separation from God.
Sat Apr 26, 2014, 04:34 PM
Apr 2014

The punishment is realizing that.

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