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What is the fundamental belief system of Christianity? And how is it at it's very core hypocrisy?

What is the fundamental belief system of Christianity? And how is it at it's very core hypocrisy? What is an essential part of it's very center of what they believe? It is Jesus Christ as your savior. That is their core belief. That is the foundation of their belief system. Jesus Christ is our savior from our sins. The foundation is their belief that if you do not accept Jesus Christ as your savior from your sins you shall perish. You shall suffer in hell.

You cannot say that only a few or that not all Christians believe this to be true. You must believe this. You must have faith that this is true. This is the will of God. Otherwise you are not a Christian. You are not a believer in Jesus Christ.

And this is why Christianity in its essence represents evil. In that the existence of hell is a part of the very center of their belief system. At the very center of their belief is that you should suffer you must suffer eternal damnation if you do not accept Jesus Christ as your savior from sin. And this is the epitome of hypocrisy of betrayal of abandonment of everything of every belief they hold. They deny themselves of their very salvation by condemning those who do not believe. They condemn themselves to the greatest of all sins. The damnation of others the suffering of others.
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SW-User
See my previous thread "The two greatest commandments", here repeated:-

According to the Word, the two greatest commandments are found in the NT Gospels.

The short version: ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and love your neighbour the same as you love yourself’ (Matthew 22:37-39)

Here is a short extract from a book on Universalism regarding these two greatest commandments:-

Having quoted those commandments, it is said that from the position of those who insist upon the existence of a hell of eternal torments these commandments present an irresolvable contradiction:-


..[i].. I think an honest interrogation of our consciences, if we allow ourselves to risk it, tells us that this is a contradiction that cannot be conjured away by yet another flourish of specious reasoning or bad dialectics. Can we truly love any person (let alone love that person as ourselves) if we are obliged as the price and proof of our faith, to contemplate that person consigned to eternal suffering while we ourselves possess imperturbable, unclouded and unconditional everlasting happiness? Only a fool would believe it.... It is a picture that demands of us that we ignore the contradiction altogether. It also demands that we become - at a deep and enduring level - resolutely and complacently cruel.
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