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Home > 2007 > FebruaryChristianity Today, February, 2007  |   |  
GOOD QUESTION
Three Models of Hell
"Is hell nothing more than eternal torture of the unsaved? Why would God engage in punishment that seems so cruel?" -- Tony De Luca, New York, New York



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God would not be party to anything as sordid as torture; Christians can agree on that. However, theologians are divided about how eternal judgment is not tantamount to such.

Two competing answers are proposed: (1) Yes, hell involves eternal pain inflicted on the unsaved, but this should not be regarded as gratuitous, unjust, or cruel; and (2) the final judgment will not involve eternal, conscious torment as has been traditionally assumed, and this misreading of biblical teaching needs modification. Both sides raise legitimate concerns worth careful consideration.

The first position is the view of most Christians. It argues that people commonly underestimate the appropriate punishment for defying an infinitely holy God. When human rebellion wrecked God's original good design, God undertook, at great cost, to restore humans to a loving relationship with himself. Those who spurn God's love deserve their eternal destiny, justly suffering the pain of God's wrath.

Of course, God alone has the right to execute this type of sentence. And God gets no sadistic enjoyment from pain he inflicts (Ezek. 18:23, 32). In righteousness and justice, God exacts deadly retribution for wickedness on those not under the blood atonement of Christ.

Other Christians argue that God would never be so seemingly punitive or vicious. They say the Bible's imagery occasionally reflects vindictive presuppositions of ancient cultures, but no one should take this imagery literally. Since rejection of God's love is reprehensible, they say, God will ultimately (and here the answers vary): overcome all evil and all resistance (universalism), destroy all evil (annihilationism), or inflict only as much pain as is necessary to extract repentance, leaving only the incorrigibly evil in everlasting pain (a purgatorial view of hell).

As we contemplate the questions raised by hell, it is helpful to remember two strands of complementary biblical teaching. First, just sentences for sin, as described in Scripture, are both proportional and prorated. Divine punishment is meted out in accordance with the severity of a crime and the awareness a person had of God and of sin. To whom much is given, much is required.

The deuteronomic code forbade beating a guilty person beyond 40 lashes, lest the person be "degraded" (Deut. 25:3). In addition, although a person guilty of heinous crimes might be executed, nowhere was infliction of pain over a lengthy period of time commanded or countenanced. That is partly why medieval Christians constructed an elaborate purgatorial scheme, which allowed for varying levels and lengths of suffering, and which posited a host of variables that God might take into account in rendering verdicts (see Luke 12:47-48). In purgatorial hell, only incorrigibly evil people suffered a limitless duration of pain (see Rev. 14:9-11). This view has never been common among Protestants, but believing in purgatory as the state that purifies and hell as the state of eternal damnation continues to be an official teaching of the Roman Catholic Church.

Second, we must remember that it is never cruel for God to enforce penalties appropriate to crimes committed. Pity toward the guilty is actually suppressed in the Old Testament (Deut. 7:2, 16; 19:21; 25:12). We sometimes assume that this stands in contrast to Christ and his work. It does not. Indeed, God in the Old Testament may have overlooked some wrongs as a concession to the immaturity of his people, but he never forbade them to do something (showing pity to the guilty, in this case) that Jesus later declared to be godly. Jesus came to fulfill the Old Testament, not to overturn it.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 56 comments.See all comments
Manfred   Posted: February 13, 2007 10:57 PM
Who, in his right mind, would reject God's offer of salvation and chose hell? All I can think of is to try to work out my salvation with fear and trembling. I don't understand why I procrastinate and leave things undone or why I pamper myself in the face of poverty and suffering in the world. How can I be justified only becouse I regularly ask for forgiveness and those who don't understand go to hell? I just hope that God is even more mercyfull than what the bible teaches. Perhaps our problem is literal interpretation of scripture?

Jim Walker   Posted: February 12, 2007 4:56 PM
Hell, at it's core, is a complete absence of God. In the present age, humans can dull the pain of an unmet need for God with the stuff and experiences of this age. Aching for God? Have a beer. Feel empty inside? Focus on your career. Vague uneasiness? Take a vacation. ...and so on. But in the age to come, those "fixes" will not be available. And those who have not become reconciled to God...who still view God as distant, alien, or even hostile to them...those persons will somehow be made aware of that God-need. To someone who, by continuing on with a life without Jesus Christ will inevitably enter into such a new awareness and dynamic in the coming age, it is certainly no kindness to try to diminish the warnings of Scripture to not go to hell. Whatever hell is...and it certainly is a mystery to some extent...it's not good and it is real. Thank God that Jesus died for our sins and took our punishment so that we not only don't have to go to hell, but we now have eternal life

Ken L Landry   Posted: February 13, 2007 1:23 AM
"The truth is ..." this seems so simple to most people but truth can be very difficult to know. What I do know is that God does not torture people forever. I am writing a book on it. Radmachers comment is almost trite though he is a respected sholar. Has every unsaved person knowingly refused the redemptive price? Does not Gods justice send people to hell or at least his rules or his..? Fudamentalist generally do not know enough about the heart of God to know that hell is not as traditionally portrayed. The hermeneutics is rife with problems. More than the normal Christian would be comfortable hearing about. God is both good and just. All sin will be dealt with and as the Bible teaches the wages of sin is death. NOT life which is so bad that we CALL it death. It will really be death just as Paul proclaimed. We read into Paul our own theology not listening to his clear teaching. Did you ever notice Paul nowhere teaches about hell yet he proclaims to have taught the whole gospel. Hell NO

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