So many Christians highlight love and mercy as the main point of their religion.
That's undeniably appealing.
But is it true to Christianity?
From everything I have read and studied, this is not what was preached by the Apostles. They preached a simple message consisting of two parts. Part 1 - repent, and part 2 - believe on Jesus Christ. Modern Christian evangelism seems to have ignored the "repent" part, and focused soley on the "believe" part. I do not know whether it is "true" Christianity. However I do believe that it is not a complete message.
In the end, isn't the belief all about escaping God's violent wrath?
Yes. Is there a problem with that?
Aren't those that are unable to accept the system's contradictions and absurdities promised suffering and eventual destruction as punishment for their disbelief?
A person's eternal destiny is not relegated to getting a theological question right or wrong. I realize that many may have that idea based on the flawed evangelism of sincere Christians, but that is not Biblical. Biblically, the right to enter God's kingdom is based not on what you have done, but on what God did for you by giving His life in your stead in order to pay the penalty for your sin, and whether or not you believe in this payment enough to accept it.
I am not sure if this is clear. I would be glad to expand further if needed.