4) I still dont get what your stance is on the topic of why a 3x omni god allows people to be tortured eternally for their finite sins. Could you answer these questions before we continue please? I think this would help establish a baseline so i can understand your view a bit more
So god knows that people are suffering and will continue to suffer eternally in hell.
1) does god have the ability to intervene in their suffering?
2) if yes, then why doesnt god intervene? (Let nonbelievers just burn in hell for 500 years. Why let a nonbeliever’s stay in hell go on for eternity?)
I'll mostly reply to this one because it seems the most relevant and you requested it.
God does have the "power" to reject our free choice and substitute his own, but this would be a violation of love and freedom he grants us. He cannot both be loving and force us to choose Him.
Imagine a scenario where you love someone who is capable of making decisions on their own, if you force them to live with you despite them desperately not wanting that, is that love? If you have to tie them down and bolt the doors closed so they don't freely leave you, is that love? God gives us the ability to freely choose to unite with him, and respects our wishes to disobey him even though the consequences of sin is death. I think your understanding of death vs damnation is the issue here, and I think it likely stems from a lack of understanding of Orthodox Christianity and you seem to be leaning on some type of protestant view.
Christ harrows hell, after his death on the cross he enters hell and defeats death, and preaches the gospel to those distant from Him in Hades. Damnation, or the second death, is the eternal distance after you have fully chosen to distance yourself from God even after coming to the realization of the Truth, the Life.
Your relation with God is a personal loving relationship of free will, and your choice to reject Him is not met with a legal punishment of hell but that is the natural consequence of rejecting the Truth and the Life.
I think a lot of this confusion also stems from the heretical idea of penal substitution pushed in some Western churches, like the idea that the Father bore his Wrath on the Son as if the Triune God can be separated in will. His work on the cross was a loving act to unite us with Him, not a legalistic substitution to quench the Father's eternal wrath.
This post was edited by majorblood on Oct 2 2025 06:50pm