Many contemporary Christians find the doctrine of hell disturbing for another reason, though. We find the idea of a soul being damned to hell difficult to square with a loving God.
The Lord is a gentleman, though. As St. Augustine once put it, “God who created you without you, will not save you without you.”
And are we sure we really want to go to heaven? As Msgr. Charles Pope put it in an excellent post last year, of course we all want to go to a heaven of our own design. Desiring the real heaven is something else.
In heaven, God’s Kingdom, there is love for the truth, love for chastity, love for the poor, love for justice, love for one another, mercy and forgiveness are esteemed and God is at the center. But not everyone wants these things. Not everyone wants the truth, wants to be chaste, not everyone wants to forgive and love everyone. Not everyone wants God to be at the center, they prefer that spot for themselves or some other idol.
Msgr. Pope goes on to pose questions previously posed by C.S. Lewis.
“Many people can’t stand to go to Church at all, or if they do they want it to be as short as possible. If we don’t want to spend time with God here what makes us think we will want to do so after death? If the liturgy is boring or loathsome to someone now, what makes them think they will enjoy the liturgy of heaven?”
We have to pray to desire heaven truly, and allow the Lord to school us in his love, helping us to acquire a taste for the things which are noble and true, right and just.
What today’s feast of All Saints and tomorrow’s All Souls’ Day celebrate is the fact that this transformation into one who loves and desires to be with God in eternity is not only possible, but the ordinary way of a Christian – a path that we don’t walk alone, but together with those who have gone before us.