It concerns me that most of the discussion here regarding the Bible seems to be based off Google searches of small portions rather than any actual understanding of the text. It's a massive book and the easiest thing in the world (apparently) to misinterpret. I know that Christians you've hypothetically gotten into arguments with on the Internet before probably blabber on and on about 'context' and it sounds like a weak argument, but seriously, there comes a point where you actually have to give the Bible the benefit of the doubt and try to look at the big picture.
I'm going to be honest and say I don't have as much knowledge of the actual text as I ought, but... even I cringed at all the misinformation I saw last time I read through here. I would try to remedy that, but despite the amount of time I'm spending on this post I actually have other things to do. Yes, I realize that's kind of hypocritical; I'm sorry.
Oh, and as for this-
First, Hell is never mentioned by name, but- actually, it is; there are several references to Hades. Also a lake of fire Satan gets tossed in and, in one of several 'heaven-as-wedding-feast' analogies, the darkness outside God's 'house' that many are left in because they all were "busy" that day. Sounds like hell to me.
Second, that's what the Bible is for. Yes, there are plenty of nuances that people disagree over, but I think the basics are quite clear- at least when people aren't preoccupied with mastering the form of religion rather than its substance. "Love your neighbor as yourself", anyone? To paraphrase (and add to) C. S. Lewis, we don't necessarily feel any love for ourselves, but we (generally) forgive ourselves, look out for ourselves and try to improve ourselves. We can also acknowledge that we are not always good people but (generally) not hate ourselves. I suppose not even that is readily apparent- I hadn't really thought of it that way until I read Lewis' Mere Christianity- but even if you don't think through every implication, "love your neighbor as yourself" sounds like having a great amount of patience, forgiveness and good intentions.
On that note, I apologize if this post tends towards being inflammatory at one point or another. I don't know if it shows, but I got a bit worked up while typing this.
The thing is the bible is quite clear. The only misinterpretation comes from those who try to justify text to fit whatever or read into way too much to find a hidden meaning. What exactly does it mean when God sent bears to kill the children that made fun of a persons bald spot means? Thats quite clear to me, just like when it says gays should be put to death. The misinformation comes when people try to change the text to fit the times when the bible still states it.
As for Hell, its been proven (there is evidence to support this) that the bible has been copied from the many past religions before it. The first draft never mention Hell but a place call Sheol, where all the dead goes, no matter how evil or good the person was. To be clear, there is a big difference between Hades and Satan. The Greek religions predate Christian based religions so its understandable where the idea of Hell came from. Humans by nature want to be rewarded for good acts and expect those who do evil to be punished, thus Heaven and Hell were created, after all you cant sell a idea if a murderer is treated the same as a righteous person.
I find it important to tell the right information. I'm not bible expert but I know a lot about it and a lot about the worlds religions. Everything I have said can be looked up and research but you have to do the work, if you want to have a honest discussion about this.