A perfect God would not exact punishment for punishments sake.A perfect
God operating with perfect Love would understand the pain of a soul who no longer resides in the perfection of His Love.To allow someone to reside in a place called Hell is tantamount to the human quality of revenge not rightousness or justice.
Is the injustice perpetrated against God ,a perfect being?Has God somehow been injured by a souls free will?Or is it the soul who continues to be seperated and in bondage and pain for his free will decision?And how would residing in Hell ease the pain of a soul already suffering from his seperation?I ask you again has God been slighted or injured or offended by any of mankinds free will decisions?These are human traits.Who gave man free will in the first place,knowing the possibility of making a wrong choice?And to punish him eternally for that decision?Not a perfect being,surely?I would rather be pulled by God's love than pushed by fear back into His arms.The original meaning of sin by the way is to "miss the mark".When a child learning to walk misses the mark and falls you don't punish him eternally.
I understand where you are coming from, but it seems a few points were missed from my previous argument. First off would be the seriousness of sin. Yes you are correct the original meaning of sin was "to miss the mark". This definition however needs to be applied to the context of the original writing. Sin is not simply a case of a child learning to walk and falling, it is willing and purposeful disobedience to God. In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were warned not to eat of the fruit of knowledge of good and evil or even to touch it. Furthermore, they were told of the consequences which was death. For a more fitting analogy say a city is built and in that city a law is passed stating that no one must commit murder. The law is read clearly to each citizen and the consequences are made known. Now say a citizen of this city does just that and murders his neighbor. When brought before the ruler of this city would you say a simple pardon is in order? or perhaps the man should be punished according to the law that was passed? what if the one killed was your closest loved one? Would you say it was the rulers fault that the citizen killed his neighbor because the ruler allowed the possibility of this by not keeping the citizens locked inside their own houses? The ruler is now forced to pass judgement according to the law that was broken. It was even more difficult for the ruler to do this because the ruler knew the murder personally. Now imagine the unthinkable happens. After passing judgement the rulers son steps up and takes the punishment instead. The only thing the son asks is that the murderer admits to his crime and allows him to step in in his place. Would that man be grateful? would you in that circumstance? That man is Jesus. One thing your argument doesn't mention is that God gave a way to be freed from consequence of sin if you repent and put your faith in His only Son who received the punishment in place of us. To answer some of your questions as best as I can...
Is the injustice perpetrated against God ,a perfect being?
Yes sin is rebellion against God and against Him
Has God somehow been injured by a souls free will?
No the injury was not caused by a souls free will but by a rebellion against God.
Or is it the soul who continues to be seperated and in bondage and pain or his free will decision?
Free will gave us the ability but definetly not the necessity to sin. Furthermore, even though seperation from God was brought on by man's decision to sin, there is a way to be freed from that seperation.
And how would residing in Hell ease the pain of a soul already suffering from his seperation?
The obvious answer is it would not, I hope I understood what you were asking here correctly
I ask you again has God been slighted or injured or offended by any of mankinds free will decisions?
As I stated before sin is against God. The difference in our opinions is where the blame lies. Again it is not God that made the decision to sin. In fact it was against his will that sin occured.
These are human traits.Who gave man free will in the first place,knowing the possibility of making a wrong choice?
As you are implying yes, God gave man free will. God however did not will for sin to happen. The word
choice is an important one here. It was man that made that choice. Being given free will does not free a person from the consequences of their actions. Sin can not be downplayed to being simply the accident of a young child learning to walk. As stated before it is willingful disobedience to God.
Not a perfect being,surely?
This conclusion is based on placing the blame on God on giving us free will and as I stated that would be misplacing it. Thus this conclusion is incorrect. God in fact does understand the pain of our seperation from Him. Why is God no stranger to this? Because God feels the pain of our seperation too. God's will is that all mankind be saved and not be condemned. God does not want to see people turn from Him in rebellion. He went to the greatest lengths to secure our salvation, even to the point of taking the punishment of death upon His only son. People are imperfect and the idea of a perfect loving being may be difficult to grasp for some. People who are sinners do not always show love and correct judgement. God in contrast does has a perfect love.
Fundamental premise:
Christian God - I'm going to put the source of knowledge next to you and give you free will, but you should remain ignorant.
Christian Devil - Go ahead, seek knowledge.
The reason it was called the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was not because it granted knowledge of good and evil as in a lack of ignorance and discernment but that they would know not just good but evil from experience.