Justice Means Fairness to All, not Payback for Sin

As parents we get frustrated when our young children do irritating or harmful things. We don’t punish them because we are angry even if we are. We punish them so they will learn not to do that. And we get scared when they do something dangerous. So, we try to come up with a punishment to keep them from harm. Punishment is not about payback. It’s about teaching and learning. Unfortunately, many times it takes consequences to teach us enough to change our pattern of behavior. As we age, if we have learned enough times from consequences, then it may just take a verbal warning. 

A lot of us, perhaps even most of us, must learn some things through consequences.  

When we talk about hell as consequences for sin, sometimes that experience of hell happens in this life until we get the message.

The point is the word justice is about fairness.  It’s not payback. As an imperfect human being in the heat of hurt or anger, I may want payback.  I don’t think God needs justice in the sense of payback or evening up a score.  Humanity projects our own human anger and desire for payback onto God.

If you believe in evolution and God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit you see humanity as unfinished and ourself as unfinished. We are in a personal spiritual journey of evolving that falls way short of perfect, but hopefully inches us forward enough to be at least perceptible to God and doesn’t set humanity back.

I recognize that some people can see the light, but most of us need to feel the heat. So, the idea of a Hell may have a use, since many, if not most people, experience a taste of it here. But the idea of a vindictive God wanting the satisfaction of seeing us getting a payback of suffering doesn’t mesh with a Jesus who fleshed out the Love of God and died forgiving not only his own people who got him tortured and killed, but even forgiving God for letting him feel abandoned on the cross.

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About Eileen

Mother of five, grandmother of nine, great-grandmother of five. 1955 -1959 Rice University in Houston, TX. Taught primary grades; Was Associate Post Director of Religious Education at Ft. Campbell, KY; Consultant on the Myers/Briggs Type Indicator, Was married for 60 years to an Architect in Middle Tennessee.

Posted on February 18, 2024, in A Jesus kind of Love. The Sacred Laughter of the Sufis. The Spiritual Journey rather than a Religious Country Club. the Called, not the Chosen., Each Person's Spiritual Journey is both similar and unique., God doesn't want to get even., Justice is not payback., Sins have consequences, so we learn not to repeat them., Some of us can see the light. Some of us need to feel the heat., We don't need to pay for our sins, we need to learn.. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.

  1. berghane@optonline.net's avatar berghane@optonline.net

    Thank you for reminding us of just who God isn’t😊We need to hear this truth.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. What you’ve shared rings as true to me. Through Jesus we see who God is, and I agree, it doesn’t mesh with the traditional view of Hell.

    It’s something I’ve reflected on before, but still don’t have answers for. The morally good often seem to live on past their deaths (love lives on), whereas where love isn’t present often seems to fade away/ or its influence fades.

    It reminds be of how Jesus talks of a harvest, and a sorting. It’s not eternal torture for the weeds, but rather destruction. Or maybe in human words, our influence not making it into the future unfolding of the story (a permanent death).

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