Are The Gates of Hell Locked From The Inside?
https://godversusreligion.com/are-the-gates-of-hell-locked-from-the-inside/
If someone from Hell was allowed a trip to visit Heaven,
would they stay?
That article seems to consider, and possibly mix up, two very different things. One is how or why atheists reject god during what the article itself correctly calls ‘this short life’. In this case, there might be a way to say that separation from god is self-imposed, yes.
The other, about the afterlife, seems different. There is as far as I know nothing anywhere in the bible to suggest that getting out of afterlife hell is in any way something there is any choice about after someone arrives.
But going along with the thought experiment that I (for example) am offered a way out of hell....
In the end it would hypothetically depend on what hell is like and what heaven is like. If hell were to be a place of extreme physical or mental torture, and heaven wasn’t, only a fool would turn down the chance to get out. Maybe there are such fools. If there were then the pain of hell, like rejecting god while alive, would be self imposed, in that hypothetical, yes.
But here’s the thing. Now, in my life, I’m not in misery because I reject god, so I am having trouble seeing why I would be after I’m dead. And when I look around at those who accept god, they don’t on average, seem to be any happier than me or atheists I know, so I’m not jealous of what they’ve got. Good luck to them. I hope it works for them. And it if makes them a bit happier than me, I can't say that I really mind that.
So why would I suffer in hell?
Well, it could be that in heaven, there is a state of bliss and love that far exceeds anything that I can currently imagine. It would certainly hurt a lot to not experience that, if I knew it could be experienced but that I am missing out on it.
And yes, in that hypothetical scenario some souls might indeed be as daft and obstinate as in life, and would in fact reject the opportunity to leave hell.
However it must I think be stressed that it’s only an interesting hypothetical. Its not part of the situation that is said in the relevant texts to actually pertain. I don’t think the option of getting out of hell is said, in the bible, to be available. As such C S Lewis didn’t actually ‘discover’ anything, about hell as it is described to be.
My guess is that if it were an option, many souls, once they realised the situation and their mistake (a bit like the rich man in the Lazarus parable perhaps) would probably take it. That some wouldn’t would only make hell self-imposed for them only.
And finally, the whole scenario hinges upon whether there actually is a god and an afterlife. I don’t see any good reason to think there is. What if I’m wrong, I hear you say? Sure. But my chances of suffering because of being wrong are not much different to yours. What if there’s an afterlife and it turns out god is not yours, not the Christian one? Maybe only Jews, or only Muslims, or believers in some other god, go to heaven. You might even be worse off than me in one of those situations. At least I wouldn’t be guilty of having worshipped a rival or false deity or redeemer. You might get a worse punishment than me.
Or, what if heaven isn’t all it’s cracked up to be in the sales literature and what if hell ain’t so bad as the scare stories? Scandinavia, for example, doesn't seem to be descending into a heathen bloodbath. Maybe atheist hell would be ok.
Or what if the flawed, imperfect love of a fellow soul is, oddly, better, despite
all the shortcomings, than the supposedly perfect love of a god who can consign those who don't love him back to hell. That strikes me as an odd kind of perfect love.
We really don’t know the truth, neither you, nor I, nor anyone. The possibilities are almost endless. So in the end, we’re all making risky bets, based on our beliefs, you just as much as me. And if you were to say to me that you're pretty sure you're right about your beliefs, that would only tell me how sure you are, not how right you are.
