Suicide
Will people who commit suicide go to hell?
Most Christians in America don't think so
Andre
Mitchell
Although Christian teachings say
that only God can decide when and how a person should die, this has not
prevented most Americans, including Christians, from believing that suicide
will not send a person to hell.
A recent
research conducted by Nashville-based LifeWay Research, one of the most
respected Christian research organisations in the world, showed that more than
six in every 10 Americans say that killing one's self will not result in
eternal damnation, according to a Charisma News report.
Only 23 percent of the 1,000
Americans surveyed through phone interviews said that people who take their own
lives will end up in hell.
Christians (27 percent),
particularly evangelicals (32 percent), however, have a slightly higher tendency
to believe that people who commit suicide will go to hell.
The study also found out that
most Roman Catholics (63 percent) and Protestants (54 percent) think suicide
does not equate to damnation.
Scott McConnell, LifeWay Research
vice president, explained that this prevailing belief that suicide will not
send a person to hell is based generally on teachings about God's mercy.
"The finality of suicide
makes people wonder about its consequences. Most churches teach suicide is
wrong, but many also acknowledge God's mercy and sovereignty," McConnell said.
He added that people tended to be
more compassionate towards family members and relatives of those who commit
suicide.
"Americans are responding
with compassion to a tragedy that touches many families. For example, as
researchers learn more about the effects of mental illness, people may be more
likely to react to suicide with mercy," he explained.
As for the perception towards
those who take their own lives, fewer than 4 in 10 Americans (36 percent) said
that people who commit suicide are selfish.
Again, Christians are more
inclined to take the contrary view.
Nevertheless, more than half of
Americans consider suicide as an epidemic in the United States. The millennial
generation, or those 25 to 34 years old, tended to express deeper concern about
this epidemic.
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