Perfect Chaos

Steven Colborne's Philosophical Theology Blog


Reflections on abuse, cancer, and everlasting hell

Friends,

I have been working hard. Today, I’m taking a day off to get organised. It’s important to have balance in life, to try to stay organised and have periods of rest.

I have been so disheartened recently. It seems that at every turn there are abusive individuals and organisations waiting to devour the peace and love that reflect my true humanity.

I do believe that all human beings fundamentally want the same thing; the absence of suffering. However, most people are misguided in their approach to achieving this. For example, you have Elon Musk implanting microchips into the brains of human beings because, presumably, he feels the world would be a better place with human / AI hybrids. What an utter fool.

People get cancer due to abuse. At present, my father’s partner is dying of cancer in much the same way that my mother did, all because my father is a coward who isn’t able to be loving. It’s deeply sad, but my father cannot be saved, he is too far gone.

I have been thinking a great deal about justice. I get so angry over injustice, yet there’s a part of me that wants God to be merciful to everyone, because if we don’t have free will (which we don’t) it seems somehow unfair that anyone should endure eternal hell.

I believe that God is good and God is just. Therefore, I believe that the administration of justice will always reflect this. The one sticking point for me is the everlasting nature of hell. For the devil to be tormented day and night forever and ever has always seemed too extreme to me, if the devil truly experiences emotions in the same way as other sentient beings. Suffering is suffering, and it is not my will that anyone should suffer too much.

The problem of the everlasting nature of hell was resolved in The Book of Mercy, a divine revelation which God sent down to me. However, the Scripture has been rescinded due to an almost total lack of interest. So at the present time, we’re back to everlasting hell for some, and everlasting paradise for others.

But the story isn’t over.

May I encourage you to put the interests of others first at all times. Doing this may save you from hell, whether everlasting or not.

With love,

Steven / Jesus




About Me

My name is Steven Nicholas Colborne.
I’m a philosopher and author living in the United Kingdom. On this blog, I write about matters of philosophy and religion and share a variety of personal articles.

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Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy whole heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind, and thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.

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