Ready to take the world’s briefest psychology test? Okay, here goes: which would persuade you to become a person of faith – the promise of Heaven or the threat of Hell?
According to the results of a 32-country study by researchers at universities in Spain and Israel, it’s no contest.
“When heaven and hell are considered valid final destinations, researchers find the notion of eternal bliss is three times more powerful than that of eternal damnation in shaping church attendance and frequency of prayer.” This is from a story in the Windsor Star, a Canadian newspaper.
Is this surprising? When I read the article, I was taken back to the beginnings of my own faith journey. I’ve always believed in a creator, but I decided to follow Jesus in 1990, mostly because I started listening to spiritual rock and pop music and, through that, discovered a positive, loving, closer-than-close God.
Since then, the trip has had rocky moments, primarily because I had faith issues which I didn’t think I could bring to anyone without them wondering about my “salvation”.
In other words, I thought someone was going to tell me if I kept asking hard questions, I could end up in Hell. So I went from embracing the ‘carrot’ (the attraction of a loving God) to running from the ‘stick’ (the threat of God’s damnation).
The story didn’t end there, of course. (If it did, I wouldn’t be writing this essay.) After a long time and many discussions with intelligent, compassionate, non-judgmental followers of Jesus of Nazareth – there are more of them around than you might think – I came back to Jesus.
If I had returned to the faith because those discussions centered around the ‘stick’ – avoiding Hell – I would likely be the poster boy for judgmental, unpleasant religion. I’d be following Jesus only to appease an angry God who doesn’t love me – or anyone else, for that matter – and doesn’t have my best interests at heart.
But he does. One of Jesus’ earliest followers wrote “God put his love on the line for us by offering his Son in sacrificial death [to pay for all the bad things we did and still do] while we were of no use whatever to him.”
It’s this love, plus the promise of a life-long, day-by-day relationship with Jesus, and a future in Heaven, that brought me to this place of faith.
I’m not about to deny the truth and suggest there isn’t a Hell and that it doesn’t influence people’s faith journeys. But more importantly, there is a God who wants every single person on this planet – including YOU – with Him in Heaven.
Does that suggest it might be time to rethink your priorities?
I am always overwhelmed when I think about how much God loves us and wants us to choose a relationship with Him. And, I’m not surprised that the carrot is more powerful than the stick. 🙂
Great post, Frank!
Thanks for reading and commenting, Martha. Glad I managed to get the most important points across reasonably well. 🙂
“which would persuade you to become a person of faith – the promise of Heaven or the threat of Hell?”
Neither as they are both make believe.
And to understand your thought process ..you want to believe in a thing which will choose to put you in “God’s damnation” if you ain’t quite with it?
And the “study” only gives two choices, both of which are quite imaginary ..a study designed to shape “church attendance and frequency of prayer”
Manipulation.
Thanks for reading and commenting, Robert. As this essay starts with a few premises – like belief in a creator and belief in something after this life – it appears we have little to converse about. Too bad. 😦