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The question assumes that hell is your standard fire and brimstone-type place of tangible physical pain, which is not a given. Eternal torture and suffering does not necessarily have to be of the physical kind, after all, so I'm sure Lucifer would have a special place for the people who consider pain desirable.
@Eve7 wrote:There is no hell or heaven. You die, you rot. End of story. That story doesn't sound very fun.
Surely not as fun as believing in fairy tales and worry about what happens after death:)
That story doesn't sound very fun.
Well there's the key phrase: "According to Westboro baptists". They're the farthest thing I've ever seen from a Christian. Unfortunately, they are at the same time the very essence of modern Christianity. To me, true eternal life belongs to one who lives in the present (per Wittgenstein). And when Christ declared "the kingdom of heaven is within you," it rendered speculation on the nature or divisions of the afterlife utterly irrelevant. However, it seems having those views in this day and age would make me a heretic rather than an apostle, at least by the measurement of the so-called "faith community." It's all very frustrating.
But yes, as far as your question about putting into practice making the world a friendlier place, I think the universal (as well as truly Christian) thing to do is simply to love others, and to love them with your life rather than with empty words or insincere actions. If we all lived by such virtues as love, humility, and an awareness of the immediacy of life, we'd all get along a little bit better.
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