@georgia im so harrowingpilled bc i see it less as a oneoff incident and more of something always happening everywhere
@georgia tbh i find the part with the pigs to be entirely incomprehensible. i cant answer that one lmao. it does seem to me to be compassionate to the demons though
@georgia yeah i think theyre divinely inspired. i agree with your preferences though. especially the johannine books
@georgia @patchuun i do think it involves a lot of real suffering, just as a more metaphysical place than physical. father of fathers st gregory of nyssa describes it as a ‘refining fire’. in a sense it does gain a proportionality imo, since clinging to one’s injustice brings suffering.
oddly a lot of the other church fathers seem to had a similar perspective that it was purification bc obv God doesnt do retribution, but unlike st gregory they thought that those in it would be claimed forever.
“the ultimate goal is union of the soul with God, and the easiest way to do this is through pure selfless love. thus all become one in Him, no one is left behind to suffer forever” trvke trvke trvke
@apophis @georgia @patchuun a thought i think more than i would like to admit is “if your conception of God is less loving and less forgiving than chief from path to nowhere, youre doing something very wrong” which i first thought bc someone i know really wants people to burn in hell and was projecting that onto God.
but this is even worse than that. if your conception of God is less loving and less forgiving than even you are, wtf.
@apophis @georgia @patchuun pastor at my church last week gave a sermon that basically boiled down to “people often use ‘jesus is God’ to project the tyranny they associate with God onto Jesus, and treat his kindness as a temporary aberration for while he was on earth. we need to remember that it works both ways. ‘God is jesus’. the goodness we witnessed in jesus’s actions is the clearest image of Gods character we have. read that into how we see God, not the other way around”