Linguofreak
Well-known member
<soapbox>
Well, the difference is that a doctor wouldn't pull out a flamethrower and torture the patient over and over for days, weeks, years, centuries, millennia, ad infinitum just because the patient didn't pay attention to the right doctor.
Well at this point the analogy breaks down, because the disease itself is listening to the wrong doctor. In the patient/doctor analogy, the patient only goes to the doctor once he starts feeling sick. With God and Man, there was an existing relationship between God and Man, and the point where Man got sick was when he said, "Screw God," walked out, and started making up his own gods that were more to his liking. Also, in the patient doctor analogy, the closest analog to Hell is a combination of the fact that the patient feels excruciating pain on account of his symptoms, and the fact that he eventually dies.
When it comes to religions, there are hundreds (if not thousands) of different "doctors." Each "doctor" has his own "diagnosis" of "what is wrong with you and what you must do to 'get well', and more importantly, avoid a particular kind of eternal torment." Furthermore, as you grow up your parents, school, peers, or whomever are telling you about "the one TRUE doctor that you must listen to!" And if you don't listen to the right doctor, the "one true doctor" will torture you for all eternity because you weren't psychic enough to determine who the "right" doctor was despite being told by 99% of your peers that the other doctor was right. Does this sound like "justice?" Speaking personally (and I think this would apply to 99%+ of all humans) I am appalled at the idea of torturing anyone, even the world's worst criminal.
If 99% of your friends tell you you need an acupuncturist (or other brand of quack of your choice), and what you really need is a doctor to deal with your cancer, you will die.
Remember, Man's crime is seeing the evidence that there is a God (and who he is), and ignoring it. According to Romans 1, such evidence is present even in nature.
Even better than the accupuncturist analogy is if the patient buys a degree in Medicine from some degree mill for himself or one of his friends, and then has that "doctor" treat him.