• Home
  • Staff Articles
  • Article Archives
  • Instagram Links
  • Statement of Faith

Done with Religion

Done with Religion … Not Done with God

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Why I Doubt God Is An Excluder Of Religions!

May 26, 2019 by What God May Really Be Like

By Mike Edwards

I am convinced there are beliefs claimed about God that lead to many tuning out God. Our relationship with God cannot exceed our understanding of God. I have written HERE how we can decide what God is really like. One’s understanding of a Book may be the only reason to think human and godly perfection are different.  Why would a Creator not love us and others how we know we ought to love others? God surely isn’t bias toward any one religion.

A loving God wouldn’t ignore the realities of our world by insisting one can only come to God by believing in Jesus.

The majority of people born into this world died without any knowledge of the Bible or who Jesus was. Also, John Hick rightly acknowledges: “…in the vast majority of cases, probably 98 or 99 per cent, the religion to which anyone adheres (or against which they rebel) depends upon where they are born. When someone is born into a Christian family they are very likely to become a Christian, whether practicing or nominal; when into a Muslim family, very likely to become a Muslim; if into a Buddhist family, to become a Buddhist – and so on round the world” (Who Or What Is God, p. 73). A reason one may think a loving God judges people who have never heard about God or misunderstand God is because a Book supposedly says so.

Did you know many scholars believe the Bible teaches all people eventually get into Heaven? 

Those of us who grew up in church are familiar with Bible verses interpreted to mean the wages of sin is death/Hell if we don’t confess Jesus is Lord (Rom. 6:23; 10:9). Bible folks don’t even have to look up those verses. The Bible also says: “For as in Adam all died, so in Christ all will be made alive” (I Cor. 15:22). Bible scholars who respect the authority of Scriptures interpret this and other verses to mean only those who have never died are excluded from heaven. Obviously, all have or will die. The Bible teaches forgiveness is unlimited (i.e. Mt. 18:21-22), but is that not true of God after one’s last breath despite their circumstances here on earth? We can’t be certain, so we are free to imagine what a loving, merciful God would do.

The Bible doesn’t even rule out decisions after death regarding one’s eternal destination.

John 5:25 says that the dead will hear the voice of God and those who hear will live. Verse 29 says those who have done evil will be condemned but we do not know whether repentance will take place. Romans 14:11-12 says: “It is written: As surely as I live, says the Lord, “every knee will bow before me; every tongue will confess to God.” So then, we will all give an account of ourselves to God.” Why couldn’t some make a decision at Judgment? I Peter 3:18-20 speaks of Jesus preaching to those in Noah’s day who were disobedient. Preaching is normally for the opportunity to respond.  I Peter 4:6 goes on to say that the dead can live according to God’s spirit. Eternal decisions after death doesn’t diminish the blessings of changing here on earth. A perfect, merciful God can best decide when enough chances are given.

Jesus didn’t refer to his followers as Christians.

Jesus simply asked people to follow Him. Jesus seemed more concerned with the benefits of living a loving life than beliefs. God used the human means available to reveal themselves through the life of Jesus, but the Bible was never meant to be God’s only communication. A universal desire to treat others like we want to be treated hints God’s spirit has always existed.  Jesus’ message has been exemplified by many great leaders such as Gandhi. Scriptures speak of all having an internal awareness that someone bigger and better than ourselves exist. We can know in our heart Jesus’ main message – love others like we want to be loved.

Hell’s non-existence requires rethinking the afterlife for all.  

Hell’s supposed existence is why many insist one must believe in Jesus to avoid such a destination. It turns out Jesus or the Bible says nothing about the traditional understanding of Hell. Paul, who wrote the majority of the New Testament, never once warned this dire fate. Why did Noah or the OT say nothing about tragic consequences for evil? Jesus used the Greek word Gehenna that was translated into the word Hell in some of our Bibles. Gehenna was the name of a real valley near Jerusalem used by Jesus to illustrate kinds of lives here on earth that lead to hellish living, not what happens to people in the afterlife.

Why would a loving God torture anyone forever since such pain serves no lasting purpose? Besides, delayed torture is still torture. Humans wouldn’t even create a place like Hell for their worst enemies! Such a place may be only imagined because of one’s interpretation of a Book. God can’t be a hellish, sadistic, torturer. The word hell is a substitution not translation for certain Hebrew and Greek words and seems invented over the centuries to scare people into obedience.

We must avoid all appearances that a good God is like a terrorist or extremist.  

Terrorists believe you must be of a certain religion or be killed. If our Creator believed this way, why haven’t they controlled evil here on earth by dashing to pieces those who don’t accept God’s ways. A loving God knows true love and lasting convictions are obtained when chosen freely than forced. An infallible Book would not be so dangerous if extremists acknowledged literature is subject to interpretation, thus their interpretation cannot be proclaimed as “certainty” in God’s name. We must allow personal views to be challenged without declaring “The Bible says…”  No human or spiritual parent brings children into the world requiring that one’s eternal destination is based on circumstances out of one’s control.  It is true bad and good religion must be distinguished, but the Bible mustn’t be used to claim all must convert to Christianity to be accepted by God.

Rate this:

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Blogger (Opens in new window) Blogger
  • Click to share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Digg (Opens in new window) Digg
  • Click to share on StumbleUpon (Opens in new window) StumbleUpon
  • Click to share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
Like Loading...

Related

Posted in Acceptance of Others, christian living | Tagged Christian, God, heaven, hell, religions, terrorist | 2 Comments

2 Responses

  1. on May 26, 2019 at 12:05 PM What God May Really Be Like's avatar What God May Really Be Like

    Love the analogy. Thanks for your comment and open-mindedness. If only we could always have an open discussion with those who disagree with us!

    LikeLike


  2. on May 26, 2019 at 11:49 AM jmwe29's avatar jmwe29

    Your post reminded me of a book I bought recently by Reba Riley called Post-Traumatic Church Syndrome. She visited 30 religions by her 30th birthday, going to all kinds of services where she was able to take something away from all of them that revealed God a little more to her. It’s a fun read. I tried to explain this book to a Christian friend, and of course the immediate reaction was rejection. But clearly you’re seeing it too. Thank you!

    Oh, one of my favorites from my church days- “My Bible says…”. I want to slap them! You know some condescending comment is coming.

    LikeLiked by 1 person



Comments are closed.

  • Unknown's avatar

  • Follow Done with Religion on WordPress.com
  • Archives of All Articles

  • Helping Survivors is on a mission to help heal, educate, and empower people who have been impacted by sexual abuse, assault, or harassment. We are a passionate group of experts and advocates who believe individuals who have experienced sexual assault, abuse, or harassment deserve to know their rights and options.

  • The unSunday Show

    Leaving Religion, Finding Ekklesia
    A conversation with Rocky Glenn and Jim Gordon

  • If you are in crisis and need support call the Trevor Lifeline at 1-866-488-7386

  • Undue Medical Debt

    Undue Medical Debt empowers donors to forgive billions in oppressive medical debt. We are dedicated to removing the burden of medical debt for individuals, families and veterans across America. Click HERE to donate now.

  • __________________________________________________________________

  • _________________________________________________________________

  • Doctors Without Borders help people worldwide where the need is greatest, delivering emergency medical aid to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters or exclusion from health care. Help support us by making a donation here:

  • Call | Veterans Crisis Line

    https://www.veteranscrisisline.net/

  • Need Help? Click Here
    or call the number listed below

  • Click Here to Make a Donation to St Jude Hospital

  • Wishes are more than just a nice thing, they can be a game-changer for a child with a life-threatening medical condition. We grant the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions to enrich the human experience with hope, strength and joy. To make a donation click here:

  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts

    Join 2,399 other subscribers
  • Blog Stats

    • 177,697 hits

Blog at WordPress.com.

WPThemes.


  • Reblog
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Done with Religion
    • Join 905 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Done with Religion
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • View post in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d