by jimwalton » Tue Mar 06, 2018 3:52 pm
OK, that helps. Thanks for the clarification. According to the Bible, people don't go to heaven if they're good (and hell if they are bad). We are not judged (at that stage) for how we act.
The Bible says that those who have the nature of Jesus go to heaven, and those who keep their sin nature go to hell. It's about your nature and your relationship with God, not about how you act. The Bible says we are all born with a sin nature, that is, separated from God and not in relationship with him. But God offers to do a miracle in us and change our nature to the nature of Jesus, free to us. All we have to do is repent of our sins and enter into a love relationship with God: To love God with all our hearts and minds, to love other people, to obey God (which shows that we love him).
Here's the scene: God invites each person into a loving relationship with himself. He has prepared a wonderful place for them, and leaves the door wide open. But some people refuse to come in and choose of their own free will to stay outside in the chaos. The people who reject God choose to be separated from him, and they will go to a fate that was never meant to be theirs (hell was created for the devil and his angels). We are free agents, and the choices we get to make regarding spiritual truths are real choices. God does not force anyone towards heaven or hell. Those choices are ours alone to make.
So here's the true scenario: God loves you (Jn. 3.16), knows that you can't save yourself (since no one is worthy), and so has made every provision for your rescue, offering it as a free gift to all comers. We must repudiate what separates us from God (repent of our sins), and turn to him in love (very different from "religion". It's much like a marriage ceremony, where you forsake all others to commit yourself in love to the one who loves you.). But since love must always be chosen and never forced, he informs and invites all people to come to him for rescue (salvation). The choice belongs to each individual, and it is always ours to make. No worthiness is involved, but only choice and love. All sincere comers will be accepted. All who refuse and choose to have nothing to do with God will endure the consequences of that decision: life without God, and eternity without God, if they get all the way to the end of life spurning his every invitation. They weren't created bound for hell, and Jer. 18.1-12 lets us know that they always have a legitimate choice to do as they wish with their lives. God will make adjustments according to their free-will choices. The path to hell is never a certainty unless the person in question makes it such.
The Bible pictures it this way: Let's suppose there are two doors, one leading to eternal separation from God, and one leading to eternal joy in his presence. Door #1 was only prepared for Satan and his sycophants, and door #2 was prepared for all people. Jesus is standing between the doors, and as people approach, he expresses his love for them and invites them to enter door #2 and bliss. But when people grab the handle to door #1, he cries out to them, "Don't do that. It's a terrible thing. You don't want to go there. Come this way, into door #2." But they choose to enter door #1 anyway.
So I would say that people are not judged for how they act. They are judged on whether or not they turn in love to Jesus, who is God.
As far as eternity, it's just the natural consequence. Jesus is life, so those who align with him have life. Those who refuse to align with him don't have life. It's binary. There's no other course.