Stuff it, I’ll bite:
Yes, yes I do. God has created us with longings, pains, hurts, desires, weaknesses, even to the point where we don’t even function properly without him. As such God does have obligations towards us, obligations that outweigh our own obligations - for He’s the one who has created us unable to function without Him. So yes he is obligated to show us grace, if indeed you can call it an obligation - though this ‘obligation’ is not from a law external to Himself per se but is from His very own nature and being and is carried out with ultimate liberty, not from a sense of extrinsic duty.
I would advise you not to make such sweeping statements as “You know nothing about grace” when you haven’t got a clue what I think about grace.
Your second sentence here is made up of two points that do not follow on from each other. While I agree grace is unmerited favour and that we do not have to earn what God gives us, I also believe that God is obligated from His own being to give us this grace, especially through his own act of creation. By creating us, He has obligated Himself to us, and by creating us as only able to function with Him, He has obligated Himself to get us functioning perfectly according to His will, His will which is to share in His fellowship.
Clearly they’re not completely separated from God’s grace. After all, He’s keeping them in existence.
Eternal hell is just punishment is it? Why? Why is it necessary for justice to be fulfilled that sinners must suffer for all eternity? What does it do? What is the point? (Note: do not quote Romans 9 at me again here - it’s wider context is utterly irrelevant to the point you’re trying to make)
All glory to God for keeping and sustaining the victory of evil! Hallelujah!
Technically God’s punishment cannot become more just than it was before otherwise it was unjust in the first place. God is infinitely just yesterday, today and forever. He does not change in that regard.
Again I’ll ask; why is it necessary for justice that sinners must suffer for the sake of suffering? How does it deal with or correct sin? How does it destroy sin? How does it render everything just?
And no love at all to His enemies. All hail His tender love! Hallelujah!
Completely agree - but don’t be separating mercy from justice here. He is just to those who are saved and merciful to those who are being punished.
No joy for the others down there though. Mind you, who cares if they’re having a miserable time, God looks pretty damn powerful administering his justice up here. All hail his power! Hallelujah!