What to do about the salvation of non-Christians?


Jerry Coyne discusses some recent attempts to address a troubling problem for Christians: How do you treat those believers in other faiths who seem to be perfectly nice people or who existed in times and places that your brand of religion did not reach?

Consigning them to the fires of everlasting hell seems a tad unfair, no? But saying that all good people go to heaven removes the sense of being special in god’s eyes which is, after all, the main recruiting tool that religions have.

Coyne makes the point that all ‘solutions’ to this problem that tend to universalize salvation will appeal only to theologians and academics. Most religious believers will prefer to think that they are fortunate enough to believe in the one true god, and the rest will simply have to hope that their eventual fate is not too horrendous.

Comments

  1. says

    The Koran, having been influenced by Christianity, treats non-believers similarly; except that “people of the book” can get into heaven by following it. The Islamic way of following it, that is.

  2. says

    Wow, that’s unbelievable. Taxes have gone up that much over the years, I’m just shocked and I have no idea how far it will go in future.

  3. says

    @Mike its spelled as Quran, and I don’t think so there is any harm in believing in one God, if we all do that then half of the problems can be sorted out.

  4. says

    In 2011 world population will reach 7 billion (vs. 3 billion in 1960). There are now approximately 2.2 billion Christians. Some of them believe that 4.8 billion people face eternal hell because they do not accept Jesus.

    Concepts of afterlife vary between religions and among divisions of each faith. Not all Christians agree on what happens after this life, nor do all Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, or other believers. Rebirth, resurrection, purgatory, universalism, and oblivion are other possibilities…none of which can be proven.

    Mystics of all faiths have more in common than the followers of their orthodox religions. True mystics realize that eternal life is here and now; it does not begin after mortal death. The age of Earth is said to be 4.5 billion years, of the Universe 13.7 billion, yet few humans live to be 100. This lifetime is a fleeting moment.

    Scriptures are subject to interpretation; people often choose what is most beneficial for them.

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