So, just to repeat what you are saying, God should have the right to override an individual human being's choices made during their lifetime?
No, I'm saying that it would be more in keeping with the claim of a loving god if there were a chance at accepting the offer once all the information is available. To condemn people for not believing an incredible story with insufficient evidence is cruel.
So have I, but if you look at the contexts of the passages (and more often, verses) that they use as the basis of their sermons, they have nothing to do with 'fire and brimstone'. In fact, I understand from some Church history texts I read that the 'fire and brimstone' sermon didn't become common until after Dante's Divine Comedy' became popular.
Apologies, I think we're meaning different things with 'fire and brimstone'. I didn't intend to imply the loud, bombastic delivery, but rather the eternal fires content of the sermons.
Dante's Divine Comedy was written in the 1300's, and shaped Western Christian culture from the early 1400s - that's a long time for you to dismiss it as a passing fad. Christianity, at the end of the day, is that which is done by Christians - you might disagree with it, but it is what it is.
O.