There are plenty of people today
who don't believe in the Bible's teaching on everlasting punishment, even those
who do find it an unreal and a remote concept.
In 2003 a research group
discovered 64% of Americans expect to go to heaven when they die, but less than
1% think they might go to hell. Not only are there plenty of people today who
don't believe in the Bible's teaching on everlasting punishment, even those who
do find it an unreal and a remote concept. Nevertheless, it is a very important
part of the Christian faith, for several reasons.
1. It is important because Jesus
taught about it more than all other Biblical authors put together. Jesus
speaks of "eternal fire and punishment" as the final abode of the
angels and human beings who have rejected God (Matthew 25:41,46) He says that
those who give into sin will be in danger of the "fire of hell"
(Matthew 5:22; 18:8-9.) The word Jesus uses for 'hell' is Gehenna, a valley in
which piles of garbage were daily burned as well as the corpses of those
without families who could bury them. In Mark 9:43 Jesus speaks of a person
going to "hell [gehenna], where 'their worm does not die and the fire is
not quenched.' " Jesus is referring to the maggots that live in the
corpses on the garbage heap. When all the flesh is consumed, the maggots die.
Jesus is saying, however, that the spiritual decomposition of hell never ends,
and that is why 'their worm does not die.'
If Jesus, the Lord of Love and
Author of Grace spoke about hell more often, and in a more vivid,
blood-curdling manner than anyone else, it must be a crucial truth.
In Matthew 10:28 Jesus says,
"Do not fear those who can kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather
be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell." He is
speaking to disciples, some of whom will eventually be tortured, sawn in half,
flayed and burned alive. Yet, he says, that is a picnic compared to hell.
Clearly, for Jesus hell was a real place, since he said that after judgment day
people would experience it in their bodies. Hell is a place not only of
physical but also of spiritual misery.
Jesus constantly depicted hell as
painful fire and "outer darkness" (Matt 25:30; cf. Jude 6,7,13,) a
place of unimaginably terrible misery and unhappiness. If Jesus, the Lord of
Love and Author of Grace spoke about hell more often, and in a more vivid,
blood-curdling manner than anyone else, it must be a crucial truth. But why was
it so important to Jesus?
2. It is important because it
shows how infinitely dependent we are on God for everything.
Virtually all commentators and theologians believe that the Biblical images of
fire and outer darkness are metaphorical. (Since souls are in hell right now,
without bodies, how could the fire be literal, physical fire?) Even Jonathan
Edwards pointed out that the Biblical language for hell was symbolic, but, he
added, 'when metaphors are used in Scripture about spiritual things . . . they
fall short of the literal truth." (from "The Torments of Hell are
Exceeding Great" in volume 14 of the Yale edition of Edwards works.) To
say that the Scriptural image of hell-fire is not wholly literal is of no
comfort whatsoever. The reality will be far worse than the image. What, then,
are the 'fire' and 'darkness' symbols for? They are vivid ways to describe what
happens when we lose the presence of God. Darkness refers to the isolation, and
fire to the disintegration of being separated from God. Away from the favor and
face of God, we literally, horrifically, and endlessly fall apart.
In the teaching of Jesus the
ultimate condemnation from the mouth of God is 'depart from me.' That is
remarkable--to simply be away from God is the worst thing that can happen to
us! Why? We were originally created to walk in God's immediate presence
(Genesis 2.) In one sense, of course, God is everywhere and upholds everything.
Only in him do we all speak and move and have our being (Acts 17:28.) In that
sense, then, it is impossible to depart from the Lord; even hell cannot exist
unless God upholds it. But the Bible says sin excludes us from God's 'face'
(Isaiah 59:2.) All the life, joy, love, strength, and meaning we have looked
for and longed for is found in his face (Psalm 16:11)-that is, in his favor,
presence, fellowship, and pleasure.
Sin removes us from that aspect
of his power that sustains and supports us. It is to us as water is to a
fish-away from it our life slowly ebbs away. That is what has been happening to
us throughout history. That is why, for Paul, the everlasting fire and
destruction of hell is 'exclusion from the presence of the Lord." (2
Thessalonians 1:9.) Separation from God and his blessings forever is the
reality to which all the symbols point. For example, when Jesus speaks being
'destroyed' in hell, the word used is apollumi, meaning not to be annihilated
out of existence but to be 'totaled' and ruined so as to be useless for its
intended purpose.
The image of 'gehenna' and
'maggots' means decomposition. Once a body is dead it loses its beauty and
strength and coherence, it begins to break into its constituent parts, to stink
and to disintegrate. So what is a 'totaled' human soul? It does not cease to
exist, but rather becomes completely incapable of all the things a human soul
is for--reasoning, feeling, choosing, giving or receiving love or joy. Why?
Because the human soul was built for worshipping and enjoying the true God, and
all truly human life flows from that. In this world, all of humanity, even
those who have turned away from God, still are supported by 'kindly
providences' or 'common grace' (Acts 14:16-17; Psalm 104:10-30; James 1:17)
keeping us still capable of wisdom, love, joy, and goodness. But when we lose
God's supportive presence all together, the result is hell.
3. It is important because it
unveils the seriousness and danger of living life for yourself. In
Romans 1-2 Paul explains that God, in his wrath against those who reject him,
'gives them up' to the sinful passions of their hearts. Commentators (cf.
Douglas Moo) point out that this cannot mean God impels people to sin, since in
Ephesians 4:19 it is said that sinners give themselves up to their sinful
desires. It means that the worst (and fairest) punishment God can give a person
is to allow them their sinful hearts' deepest desire.
What is that? The desire of the
sinful human heart is for independence. We want to choose and go our own way
(Isaiah 53:6.) This is no idle 'wandering from the path.' As Jeremiah puts it,
'No one repents . . . each pursues his own course like a horse charging into
battle. (8:6)' (We want to get away from God-but, as we have seen, this is the
very thing that is most destructive to us. Cain is warned not to sin because
sin is slavery. (Genesis 4:7; John 8:34.) It destroys your ability to choose,
love, enjoy. Sin also brings blindness-the more you reject the truth about God
the more incapable you are of perceiving any truth about yourself or the world
(Isaiah 29:9-10; Romans 1:21.)
What is hell, then? It is God
actively giving us up to what we have freely chosen-to go our own way, be our
own "the master of our fate, the captain of our soul," to get away
from him and his control. It is God banishing us to regions we have desperately
tried to get into all our lives. J.I.Packer writes: "Scripture sees
hell as self-chosen . . . [H]ell appears as God's gesture of respect for human
choice. All receive what they actually chose, either to be with God forever,
worshipping him, or without God forever, worshipping themselves."
(J.I.Packer, Concise Theology p.262-263.) If the thing you most want is to
worship God in the beauty of his holiness, then that is what you will get (Ps
96:9-13.) If the thing you most want is to be your own master, then the
holiness of God will become an agony, and the presence of God a terror you will
flee forever (Rev 6:16; cf. Is 6:1-6.)
Why is this so extremely
important to stress in our preaching and teaching today? The idea of hell is
implausible to people because they see it as unfair that infinite punishment
would be meted out for comparably minor, finite false steps (like not embracing
Christianity.) Also, almost no one knows anyone (including themselves) that
seem to be bad enough to merit hell. But the Biblical teaching on hell answers
both of these objections. First, it tells us that people only get in the
afterlife what they have most wanted-either to have God as Savior and Master or
to be their own Saviors and Masters. Secondly, it tells us that hell is a
natural consequence. Even in this world it is clear that self-centeredness
rather than God-centeredness makes you miserable and blind. The more
self-centered, self-absorbed, self-pitying, and self-justifying people are, the
more breakdowns occur, relationally, psychologically, and even physically. They
also go deeper into denial about the source of their problems.
On the other hand, a soul that
has decided to center its life on God and his glory moves toward increasing joy
and wholeness. We can see both of these 'trajectories' even in this life. But if,
as the Bible teaches, our souls will go on forever, then just imagine where
these two kinds of souls will be in a billion years. Hell is simply one's
freely chosen path going on forever. We wanted to get away from God, and God,
in his infinite justice, sends us where we wanted to go.
In the parable of Luke 16:19ff,
Jesus tells us of a rich man who goes to hell and who is now in torment and
horrible thirst because of the fire (v.24) But there are interesting insights
into what is going on in his soul. He urges Abraham to send a messenger to go
and warn his still-living brothers about the reality of hell. Commentators have
pointed out that this is not a gesture of compassion, but rather an effort at
blame-shifting. He is saying that he did not have a chance, he did not have
adequate information to avoid hell. That is clearly his point, because Abraham
says forcefully that people in this life have been well-informed through the
Scriptures. It is intriguing to find exactly what we would expect-even knowing
he is in hell and knowing God has sent him there, he is deeply in denial, angry
at God, unable to admit that it was a just decision, wishing he could be less
miserable (v.24) but in no way willing to repent or seek the presence of God.
I believe one of the reasons the
Bible tells us about hell is so it can act like 'smelling salts' about the true
danger and seriousness of even minor sins. However, I've found that only
stressing the symbols of hell (fire and darkness) in preaching rather than
going into what the symbols refer to (eternal, spiritual decomposition)
actually prevents modern people from finding hell a deterrent. Some years ago I
remember a man who said that talk about the fires of hell simply didn't scare
him, it seemed too far-fetched, even silly. So I read him lines from C.S.
Lewis:
Hell begins with a grumbling
mood, always complaining, always blaming others . . . but you are still
distinct from it. You may even criticize it in yourself and wish you could stop
it. But there may come a day when you can no longer. Then there will be no you
left to criticize the mood or even to enjoy it, but just the grumble itself,
going on forever like a machine. It is not a question of God 'sending us' to
hell. In each of us there is something growing, which will BE Hell unless it is
nipped in the bud.
To my surprise he got very quiet
and said, "Now that scares me to death." He almost immediately began
to see that hell was a) perfectly fair and just, and b) something that he
realized he might be headed for if he didn't change. If we really want skeptics
and non-believers to be properly frightened by hell, we cannot simply repeat
over and over that 'hell is a place of fire.' We must go deeper into the
realities that the Biblical images represent. When we do so, we will find that
even secular people can be affected.
We run from the presence of God
and therefore God actively gives us up to our desire (Romans 1:24, 26.) Hell is
therefore a prison in which the doors are first locked from the inside by us
and therefore are locked from the outside by God (Luke 16:26.) Every indication
is that those doors continue to stay forever barred from the inside. Though
every knee and tongue in hell knows that Jesus is Lord (Philippians 2:10-11,)
no one can seek or want that Lordship without the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 12:3.This
is why we can say that no one goes to hell who does not choose both to go and
to stay there. What could be more fair than that?
4. The doctrine of hell is
important because it is the only way to know how much Jesus loved us and how
much he did for us. In Matthew 10:28 Jesus says that no physical
destruction can be compared with the spiritual destruction of hell, of losing
the presence of God. But this is exactly what happened to Jesus on the cross-he
was forsaken by the Father (Matthew 27:46.) In Luke 16:24 the rich man in hell
is desperately thirsty (v.24) and on the cross Jesus said "I thirst"
(John 19:28.) The water of life, the presence of God, was taken from him. The
point is this. Unless we come to grips with this "terrible" doctrine,
we will never even begin to understand the depths of what Jesus did for us on
the cross. His body was being destroyed in the worst possible way, but that was
a flea bite compared to what was happening to his soul. When he cried out that
his God had forsaken him he was experiencing hell itself. But consider--if our
debt for sin is so great that it is never paid off there, but our hell
stretches on for eternity, then what are we to conclude from the fact that
Jesus said the payment was "finished" (John 19:30) after only three
hours? We learn that what he felt on the cross was far worse and deeper than
all of our deserved hells put together.
And this makes emotional sense
when we consider the relationship he lost. If a mild acquaintance denounces you
and rejects you--that hurts. If a good friend does the same--that hurts far
worse. However, if your spouse walks out on you saying, "I never want to
see you again," that is far more devastating still. The longer, deeper,
and more intimate the relationship, the more tortuous is any separation. But
the Son's relationship with the Father was beginningless and infinitely greater
than the most intimate and passionate human relationship. When Jesus was cut
off from God he went into the deepest pit and most powerful furnace, beyond all
imagining. He experienced the full wrath of the Father. And he did it
voluntarily, for us.
Fairly often I meet people who
say, "I have a personal relationship with a loving God, and yet I don't
believe in Jesus Christ at all." Why, I ask? "My God is too loving to
pour out infinite suffering on anyone for sin." But this shows a deep
misunderstanding of both God and the cross. On the cross, God HIMSELF,
incarnated as Jesus, took the punishment. He didn't visit it on a third party,
however willing.
So the question becomes: what did
it cost your kind of god to love us and embrace us? What did he endure in order
to receive us? Where did this god agonize, cry out, and where were his nails
and thorns? The only answer is: "I don't think that was necessary."
But then ironically, in our effort to make God more loving, we have made him
less loving. His love, in the end, needed to take no action. It was
sentimentality, not love at all. The worship of a god like this will be at most
impersonal, cognitive, and ethical. There will be no joyful self-abandonment,
no humble boldness, no constant sense of wonder. We could not sing to him
"love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all." Only
through the cross could our separation from God be removed, and we will spend
all eternity loving and praising God for what he has done (Rev 5:9-14.)
And if Jesus did not experience
hell itself for us, then we ourselves are devalued. In Isaiah, we are told,
"The results of his suffering he shall see, and shall be satisfied"
(Isaiah 53:11). This is a stupendous thought. Jesus suffered infinitely more
than any human soul in eternal hell, yet he looks at us and says, "It was
worth it." What could make us feel more loved and valued than that? The
Savior presented in the gospel waded through hell itself rather than lose us,
and no other savior ever depicted has loved us at such a cost.
Conclusion The
doctrine of hell is crucial-without it we can't understand our complete
dependence on God, the character and danger of even the smallest sins, and the
true scope of the costly love of Jesus. Nevertheless, it is possible to stress
the doctrine of hell in unwise ways. Many, for fear of doctrinal compromise,
want to put all the emphasis on God's active judgment, and none on the self-chosen
character of hell. Ironically, as we have seen, this unBiblical imbalance often
makes it less of a deterrent to non-believers rather than more of one. And some
can preach hell in such a way that people reform their lives only out of a
self-interested fear of avoiding consequences, not out of love and loyalty to
the one who embraced and experienced hell in our place. The distinction between
those two motives is all-important. The first creates a moralist, the second a
born-again believer.
We must come to grips with the
fact that Jesus said more about hell than Daniel, Isaiah, Paul, John, Peter put
together. Before we dismiss this, we have to realize we are saying to Jesus,
the pre-eminent teacher of love and grace in history, "I am less barbaric
than you, Jesus--I am more compassionate and wiser than you." Surely that
should give us pause! Indeed, upon reflection, it is because of the doctrine of
judgment and hell that Jesus' proclamations of grace and love are so
astounding.
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