Dude, we're using the Jesus-as-hippie parody. It's a fairly common joke nowadays, and one that the real fundies love to hate. Not really an "old religious" impression.TithonusSyndrome wrote:Why don't we just make Yahweh out to be a genuinely loving old man with a giant flowing beard who has simply been misunderstood and scapegoated by people dissatisfied with their lives on earth, as long as we're leaning on tiresome old religious moderate impressions of Christian icons?
I think the reason the idea is so popular is that the characterization of Heaven is so simple: Yahweh is a delusional superpowered idiot, Michael is plotting to overthrow him, and everybody else is just pawns on the table. It wasn't that simple during the invasion of Hell: there were more players with their own alignments and intentions, a greater sense that Hell's senior leadership weren't just mindless minions.
It's like there's The Plan (a combination of Michael plotting to screw over everyone else in Heaven and Petraeus plotting to kill everyone in Heaven), and there's no deviation from The Plan. The only undetermined element is how much of Michael's plan will survive contact with humanity's plan.
A story where all the plausible endings are foreseeable well in advance and where there's really only one thinking character on the antagonists' side is... problematic, shall we say. So the idea that Jesus (who's supposed to be fairly powerful) might actually do something to screw up The Plan, rather than simply mindlessly obeying Michael's orders and mindlessly wandering into the HEA's gunsights and getting blown up exactly as planned is rather appealing. It makes the plot more interesting.
The phrase "heat death" really, truly, does not belong here, I'm afraid. Heat death isn't a sudden thing where one minute you're fine and the next BOOM! you're heat-dead.Stuart wrote:The hypothetical cosmology is that there are two dimensions in balance and forming a linked pair. Thes eare our (expanding) dimension and the other (contracting) dimension. Together they occupy a space-time continuum of fixed size. The dimension containing Hell, Heaven and all the others is contracting at exactly the same rate as ours is expanding and the two "dimensions" have exactly the same life At the moment when our universe has expanded to its maximum sie, it occupies all of the space-time continuum and suffers heat death. At exactly that moment, the dimension containing Hell reaches its minimum, is compressed to a singularity and explodes in its equivalent of the Big Bang. As a result, the two universes flip roles, "our" universe becomes the contracting one and the universe containing Hell becomes the expanding one. So on ad infinitum.
"Heat death" is what happens when particle densities and energy levels are so low (thanks to the spread-out nature of the universe) that nothing interesting can happen anymore. It doesn't have a sudden onset.
But aside from that, it works.