I had a serious shock a couple of
months ago when a Christian friend of many years’ standing whom I have always
held in high regard started dropping hints that he was moving in the direction
of Christian Universalism—the doctrine that says that all men without exception
with eventually be reconciled to God, that the penalty for sin is not
everlasting.
I confronted him with the question So do
you think that Jesus Christ himself believed in Universalism? and after some prevarication he replied
that there
might indeed be some hints and suggestions in that direction. In response I’ve taken a few hours out to go through Mark, which I generally regard as the archetypal gospel narrative to see what ‘hints and suggestions’ might come out. Any trawl through a segment of the Bible undertaken with a specific question revolving in your mind will always yield fascinating and often surprising results, and for me this was no exception. This is what I found.
might indeed be some hints and suggestions in that direction. In response I’ve taken a few hours out to go through Mark, which I generally regard as the archetypal gospel narrative to see what ‘hints and suggestions’ might come out. Any trawl through a segment of the Bible undertaken with a specific question revolving in your mind will always yield fascinating and often surprising results, and for me this was no exception. This is what I found.
In the first box here I've listed
the passages from Mark’s gospel—all familiar ones—that struck me on a straight
read-through as being relevant to the question in point, which can really be
equally phrased as Did Jesus Christ believe in Hell?
3.29. Whoever blasphemes against the Holy
Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin
8.35+. Whoever would save his life will
lose it but whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel’s will save
it. For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his
soul? For what can a man give in return for his soul?
9.43+. And if your hand causes you to sin,
cut it off. It is better for you to enter life crippled then with two hands
to go to hell, to the unquenchable fire… (and likewise for feet and eyes) …
where their worm does not die and the fire is not quenched.
10.27. For all things are possible
with God.
12.40. They will be punished more
severely, (or They will receive
the greater condemnation).
13.13. But the one who endures to the
end will be saved.
14.35. (Jesus) fell on the ground and
prayed that, if it were possible, the hour might pass from him. And he
said, "Abba, Father, all things are possible for you. Remove this cup
from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will."
15.34. "My God, my God, why have
you forsaken me?"
16.16. Whoever believes and is baptized
will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned.
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The original Gehenna - the Valley of Hinnom outside Jerusalem as it is today. Better now than then? |
So where does
this take us? Jesus says very little about Hell but what he does say is quite
strong. It is however worth remembering that the scariest bits of it—the worm
that doesn’t die and the fire that is not quenched—are Jesus quoting directly
from Isaiah 66. In Isaiah it seems to be a battlefield metaphor—the aftermath
of a great battle in which the corpses are either being piled up to be burnt or
else being left to rot (worms, maggots and so on). The fire in Isaiah is the
fire of disposal rather than the fire of torture. Still nasty but not as bad as it could be.
A note on
GEHENNA and HADES
The King James
Version did us the inestimable disservice of translating two unrelated
Greek words, Gehenna and Hades, by the single English word of Hell. Recent
translations have generally tried to put this right, but the confusion is
deeply rooted in the psyche of the Christian church and may take a couple
more centuries to root out.
Gehenna, the
Valley of Hinnom outside of Jerusalem, was the city rubbish dump in Jesus’
day (and probably a site of human sacrifice in earlier times) and becomes
by analogy the Hell of the New Testament.
Hades is adopted
from the Hades of Greek mythology. Originally it was the name of the god
who ruled over that shadowy underworld, but later it became the name of the
underworld itself. It seems to correspond to the Old Testament Sheol, the
place of the dead. After that it gets complicated. Interestingly it is
Hades, not Gehenna, that is cast into the lake of fire in Revelations 20,
Hades where Dives goes in the parable of Dives and Lazarus, and it is the
gates of Hades which will not prevail against the Christian Church.
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The third theme in Mark [3.29] is
the eternal sin that is never forgiven. This is disturbing. If it’s never
forgiven, presumably there is never reconciliation. This also brings in the
question of what exactly is meant by eternal.
Nowadays it usually means something that goes on and on, through time,
indefinitely with no end. However it can also mean something more like ‘outside
time’. The Greek word actually translates more literally as ‘in the age to
come’, less time-focused than we usually think of it. Having said that, the
statement ‘shall not be forgiven in the
age to come’ still seems to have a certain finality about it.
I think my Universalist friend is
drawing some comfort from the repeated phrase with God all things are possible
(10.27, 12.35). This he takes to mean that if God wants to he is capable of
reforming and sparing everyone; and if he is a kind, loving God he would wish
to do that, and since he can he will. I don’t really buy this argument. This is
the ‘If I were God I’d do things differently’ argument that comes up in all
kinds of contexts in Christian discussions. I’m not God, I don’t know much of
what God is like, but I know that he’s not much like me. Every day I am
confronted by the reality that things that are trivial to me are hugely
important to him, and vice versa. I can
never safely predict his reactions to anything, still less assume that they
will mirror my own.
Jesus explores this argument in 14.35—God, you can do all things; so you can spare
me this ordeal and do it another way if you so choose; so do it! Then he
quickly recognizes the dead-end he’s heading into and backs off. No human
brain, even that of the incarnate God, is in a position to pass rational
judgment on God’s choices. Jesus backs off, and we have to do the same.
So where does all this take me?
- Probably to a conception of Hell a lot less clear-cut than I might have imagined, stretched somewhere between the Jerusalem municipal rubbish dump and a shadowy underworld borrowed from Greek mythology.
- There’s a lot less about Hell than I thought there would be, but it’s still there and—if Jesus is to be believed—its somewhere we do well to avoid going to at all costs.
- There’s talk of punishment and of destruction but not of torture—certainly no indication of a God in any way taking pleasure anyone’s pain, which I find comforting.
- As to whether Hell has a finite end or goes on forever—I suspect it’s the wrong question to ask, presupposing as it does a continuation of the current space-time continuum into the age to come, which is far from certain.
- I haven’t found anything to actively support my friend’s doctrine of Universalism which I suspect owes more than a little to a combination of wishful thinking and a kind heart.
- But in the meantime I feel a lot better about the whole thing than I did before.
- For a long time now I’ve gone to extreme lengths to avoid using the word Hell where humanly possible, particularly in conversations with non-Christian people. I much prefer to talk about separation from God or exclusion from the Kingdom which I think portray the reality in a more helpful way. My brief study leaves me feeling fully vindicated in this, and in fact I think I will try and avoid the word even more from now on.
Link to my blog archive on Pharisee Church website.
Link to preview my book How to Survive in the Pharisee Church and Other Questions for Confused Christians
Thanks for this - it's always interesting to take a fresh look at what the Bible actually says about something, rather than just taking the traditions we hear at face value. Sometimes traditions just pass from person to person, and spread without being Biblically justified at all, so it's good to carefully check what is actually going on.
ReplyDeleteCertainly the popular image of hell, with the devil and his demons in charge of tormenting everybody within it, is wrong - and not referring to it seems sensible. But for me "separation from God" (which has become increasingly popular) seems to go too far the other way in minimising the issue. If Jesus considered it worthwhile to die in order to save me from death, it's surely got to be quite bad? But I don't have a ready alternative....
I think the common mistake is to think that when God judges, that was his first choice option, when actually it's a last choice - rather like amputating a part of the body to save the rest. If there is in the end no separation between good and bad, there will in the end be no good. But if you are the part that is cut off, it's not a good outcome.
Phillip Cary in his lectures on Luther gives a very vivid illustrative story about how for a child to be disowned by his father could really actually be worse than "mere" punishment. He has a point.
ReplyDeleteThere certainly won't be any tormenting demons or devil as they will have already been dealt with.