southernhybrid
Contributor
I was raised by parents who became converts to an evangelical type of Christianity when I was about five. Being a good little girl, I believed what I was told in church at a very early age. By the time I was 7 or 8, it bothered me greatly that many of my friends as well as other good people who weren't fundmentalist Christians, would be spending eternity in some awful place that was known for torture and misery. It bothered me so much that I often questioned my father about this, but he never had a good answer, so I simply put it out of my mind until I was about 18 and quickly started to realize that what I had been told was not true. Attending a fundamentalist Christian college for one semester really helped speed things along. Being around all the fundamentalists, simply opened my mind.
So, while I would love to know how any Christians here that believe in a literal hell deal with this cognitive dissonance, I'd also like to hear if other former conservative Christians had problems with the issue of hell and eternal suffering. Did the concept of a literal hell have any influence on your dismissal of that branch of Christianity?
Once I left Christianity and began looking for a more rational religion, the concept of eternal damnation based on one's beliefs sounded more and more ludicrous. I try not to judge those that believe this too harshly, because I feel as if they have been brainwashed, manipulated or successfully indoctrinated. I forgave my parents for indoctrinating me into their religion because I saw them as victims themselves. In my last job before retirement, people who knew I was an atheist were always trying to convince me to come back to Jesus, insinuating that I was going to suffer in hell because I didn't have the same beliefs as they did. To this day, I have a difficult time understanding how they can believe in a god that is so egotistical that he rewards or punishes people based on whether or not they believe he's their savior and not on how they live their lives. Seriously. How do people do that?
So, while I would love to know how any Christians here that believe in a literal hell deal with this cognitive dissonance, I'd also like to hear if other former conservative Christians had problems with the issue of hell and eternal suffering. Did the concept of a literal hell have any influence on your dismissal of that branch of Christianity?
Once I left Christianity and began looking for a more rational religion, the concept of eternal damnation based on one's beliefs sounded more and more ludicrous. I try not to judge those that believe this too harshly, because I feel as if they have been brainwashed, manipulated or successfully indoctrinated. I forgave my parents for indoctrinating me into their religion because I saw them as victims themselves. In my last job before retirement, people who knew I was an atheist were always trying to convince me to come back to Jesus, insinuating that I was going to suffer in hell because I didn't have the same beliefs as they did. To this day, I have a difficult time understanding how they can believe in a god that is so egotistical that he rewards or punishes people based on whether or not they believe he's their savior and not on how they live their lives. Seriously. How do people do that?
