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The Disappearance of Hell
ligonier.org ^ | 2/1/14 | John MacArthur

Posted on 02/09/2014 8:05:52 AM PST by SoFloFreeper

According to recent polls, some 81 percent of adult Americans believe in heaven, and fully 80 percent expect to go there when they die. By comparison, about 61 percent believe in hell, but less than 1 percent think it’s likely they will go there. In other words, a slight majority of Americans still believe hell exists, but genuine fear of hell is almost nonexistent.

Even the most conservative evangelicals don’t seem to take hell very seriously anymore. For decades, many evangelicals have downplayed inconvenient biblical truths, neglecting any theme that seems to require somber reflection. Doctrines such as human depravity, divine wrath, the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the reality of eternal judgment have disappeared from the evangelical message.

The trend has not escaped everyone’s attention. Thirty years ago, for example, Martin Marty, religious historian, professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School, and critic of all things evangelical, delivered the Ingersoll Lecture on Immortality at Harvard Divinity School. The title of his message was “Hell Disappeared. No One Noticed.” Marty’s research had failed to turn up a single scholarly article dealing with the subject of hell in any significant theological journal over the previous century. Citing the dearth of attention being given to so large a topic, Marty suggested that if evangelicals really took seriously what Scripture says about eternal punishment, someone with a voice should notice.

Almost no one did. Eighteen years later, The Los Angeles Times featured a front-page article titled “Hold the Fire and Brimstone,” pointing out that many style-conscious evangelical church leaders were purposely omitting the theme of divine retribution:

In churches across America, hell is being frozen out as clergy find themselves increasingly hesitant to sermonize on … a story line that no longer resonates with churchgoers. [According to] Harvey Cox Jr., an eminent author, religious historian and professor at the Harvard Divinity School, “You can go to a whole lot of churches week after week, and you’d be startled even to hear a mention of hell.”

Hell’s fall from fashion indicates how key portions of Christian theology have been influenced by a secular society that stresses individualism over authority and the human psyche over moral absolutes. The rise of psychology, the philosophy of existentialism, and the consumer culture have all dumped buckets of water on hell.

The article profiled an evangelical pastor who said he believes in hell, but (according to the Times) “you’d never know it listening to him preach… . He never mentions the topic; his flock shows little interest in it.” Asked why the doctrine of hell has gone missing, this pastor replied, “It isn’t sexy enough anymore.”

The article also quoted a well-known seminary professor who more or less agreed. Hell, he said, is “just too negative… . Churches are under enormous pressure to be consumer-oriented. Churches today feel the need to be appealing rather than demanding.”

The article closed with a quote from Martin Marty, almost two decades after his famous lecture on the subject. He agreed that market-driven concerns are the main reason hell is being expunged from the evangelical message:

Once pop evangelism went into market analysis, hell was just dropped. When churches go door to door and conduct a market analysis … they hear, “I want better parking spaces. I want guitars at services. I want to have my car greased while I’m in church.”

Years of indifference finally paved the way for open hostility. In the first decade of the new millennium, certain prominent figures in the “emergent church” declared war on the biblical doctrine of hell. The groundswell seemed to crest a couple of years ago with the publication of Rob Bell’s bestselling book Love Wins. Bell argued that it’s absurd to think a loving God would ever damn anyone to eternal punishment. He portrayed God’s love as a force that clashes with and ultimately eliminates the demands of justice. In the storyline Bell envisions, God requires no payment or punishment for sin. The divine response to evil is always remedial, never punitive. Furthermore, the wages of sin are mild, temporary, and reserved only for grossly malevolent villains—mass murderers, child rapists, tyrants who engineer genocide, and (one supposes) Christians who tell unbelievers they should fear God. When it’s all over, everyone will be together in paradise.

In such a system, God’s righteousness is compromised, repentance is optional, atonement is unnecessary, and the truth of God’s Word is nullified. In other words, nothing of biblical Christianity is left. Once anyone sets out to tone down or tame the hard truths of Scripture, that’s where the process inevitably leads.

Only a few leading voices in the evangelical movement have lobbied boldly for a more orthodox approach to the doctrine of hell. They seem to be outnumbered by those who think the disappearance of hell is a positive development.

Some have proposed alternative ways to speak of sin and judgment in gentler, toned-down, and more refined and socially acceptable terminology than Scripture uses. Sin is deemed wrong not because it is an offense against the righteousness of God, but because of the hurt it causes others. Hell is described not as a place of eternal punishment but simply as a realm apart from God. In the reimagined eschatology of stylish evangelicals, no one is ever “sent” to hell; sinners actually choose to spend eternity apart from God—and the “hell” they suffer is merely an abundance of what they loved and desired the most. Hell is necessary only because God is reluctant to overrule anyone’s free will. Therefore, with a more or less benign acquiescence, He ultimately defers to the sinner’s choice. God’s righteous indignation has no meaningful place in such a scenario.

It is a serious mistake to imagine that we improve Scripture or enhance its effectiveness by blunting its sharp edges. Scripture is a sword, not a cotton swab, and it needs to be fully unsheathed before it can be put to its intended use. “The word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Heb. 4:12). The gospel is supposed to be an affront to fleshly pride, offensive to human sensibilities, foolishness in the eyes of worldly wisdom, and contrary to all carnal judgments.

No Christian teaching exemplifies those characteristics more powerfully than the doctrine of hell. It is an appalling truth. We rightly recoil at the thought of it. The doctrine of hell thus stands as a warning and a reminder of what a loathsome reality sin is. No reasonable or godly person delights in the reality of eternal damnation. God Himself says, “As I live, declares the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked” (Ezek. 33:11).

Yet the severity of God’s wrath and the woes of hell are prominent in Scripture. The New Testament speaks more vividly and more frequently about hell than the Old Testament does. In fact, Jesus Himself had more to say about the subject than any other prophet or biblical writer. Far from smoothing over the difficulties that seem to embarrass so many evangelicals today, Jesus said:

Do not fear those who kill the body, and after that have nothing more that they can do. But I will warn you whom to fear: fear him who, after he has killed, has authority to cast into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him! (Luke 12:4–5)

If your hand or your foot causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. It is better for you to enter life crippled or lame than with two hands or two feet to be thrown into the eternal fire. And if your eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away. It is better for you to enter life with one eye than with two eyes to be thrown into the hell of fire. (Matt. 18:8–9)

We do no one any favors by downplaying the truth of God’s wrath or neglecting to mention the severity of His judgment. We certainly don’t eliminate the threat of hell by refusing to speak or think of it. If we truly believe what the Bible teaches about the eternal fate of unbelievers, it is in no sense “loving” to remain silent and refuse to sound the appropriate alarm.

What, after all, is the good news we proclaim in the gospel? It is not an announcement that no one really needs to fear God or fret about the possibility of hell. As a matter of fact, there would be no glad tidings at all if God merely intended to capitulate to the stubborn will of man and forgo the demands of His perfect righteousness.

The good news is even better than most believers understand: God made a way for His righteousness and His love to be fully reconciled. In His incarnation, Christ fulfilled all righteousness (satisfying, not nullifying, the demands of His law). In His death on the cross, He paid the price of His people’s sin in full (assuring the triumph of perfect justice). And in His resurrection from the dead, He put a powerful exclamation mark on His own perfect, finished work of atonement (thus sealing the promise of justification forever for those who trust Him as Lord and Savior).

That is the message we must declare to a worldly culture utterly lacking any real fear of God. We cannot do it faithfully or effectively if from the very outset we have omitted the harsh truth Scripture declares about “the fury of the wrath of God the Almighty” (Rev. 19:15).


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: afterlife; christians; hell; religion; trends; truth
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To: DManA

Everybody dies once (physically), saved people are resurrected to Life while unsaved people end up in the Lake of Fire aka the Second Death.


61 posted on 02/09/2014 10:04:11 AM PST by Former Fetus (Saved by grace through faith)
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To: CatherineofAragon

Your record is expunged. It is as if He never made you.


62 posted on 02/09/2014 10:06:39 AM PST by DManA
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To: Former Fetus

unsaved people end up in the Lake of Fire

And are consumed.


63 posted on 02/09/2014 10:08:19 AM PST by DManA
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To: DManA
"Your record is expunged. It is as if He never made you."

Sorry, I don't understand what you're saying. Do you mean you believe that Christ saves you from vanishing/disappearing?

64 posted on 02/09/2014 10:15:53 AM PST by CatherineofAragon ((Support Christian white males----the architects of the jewel known as Western Civilization.))
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To: Rennes Templar
I think He is more merciful, and he has other ways to punish us.

Nowhere in the Bible is hell described as a place of punishment; instead, the term used is torment (Gk. basanos). The torment of hell is the lack of God's grace, caused by the refusal of those here to have accepted it; put more simply, the love of God compels Him to allow those who do not wish His presence in their lives to not have that presence. The love of God requires the existence of a hell, because if God made everyone accept His salvation, then God would be, not love, but tyranny.

65 posted on 02/09/2014 10:17:08 AM PST by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
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To: DManA
That is not what I said. You said hell does not concern you because you are saved, yet you most surely have loved ones who are not saved and for them hell will be a very real thing (if you are wrong) that fact alone should terrify you and make you be Evangelizing every chance you get.

I also remind you of the parable of the rich man in Sheol begging for a drop of water. If hell is not real, then where was he? I know there is some discussion that this place is not hell but a holding place until the final judgment. However regardless of what it is, it is a real place where the dead currently are.

66 posted on 02/09/2014 10:18:09 AM PST by LukeL
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To: McBuff
If there is no Hell . . .where is God going to put these two?

Depends upon their faith in the grace of God (Ephesians 2:8-9). The blood of Jesus covers all sin. If they accept His saving grace paid for on the cross, they will be in heaven; if not, they will be in hell.

67 posted on 02/09/2014 10:26:13 AM PST by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
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To: LukeL

God will treat every soul with perfect justice. No one will be able to find fault with it. You think perfect justice for some is eternal agony. I don’t know where that idea of justice comes from but it doesn’t come from Heaven.


68 posted on 02/09/2014 10:26:21 AM PST by DManA
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To: CatherineofAragon; DManA

I think DManA is a Seventh Day Adventist, they believe that unsaved people burn instantly in hell and, after that, there is nothing! I had 3 of them in my Sunday school class and I never got them to admit that “no punishment for eternity” (ceasing to exist) is not the same as “eternal punishment”. It would be the same as catching a criminal and sentencing him to live in another place, never in the city where he committed the crime.


69 posted on 02/09/2014 10:29:27 AM PST by Former Fetus (Saved by grace through faith)
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To: Former Fetus
Everybody dies once (physically), saved people are resurrected to Life while unsaved people end up in the Lake of Fire aka the Second Death.

You're almost there. Hell is the grave. Those in Messiah are resurrected at his second coming. Those not are resurrected at the end, after Yeshua's 1,000 year reign on earth to be Judged by him. Those whose names aren't written in the 'book of life' are said to be cast into the 'lake of fire' - some read this as cast apart (i.e., the second death).

70 posted on 02/09/2014 10:30:10 AM PST by Errant (Surround yourself with intelligent and industrious people who help and support each other.)
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To: Former Fetus

Not a member of that church but I agree with their doctrine on Hell.


71 posted on 02/09/2014 10:31:31 AM PST by DManA
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To: Former Fetus; DManA

Thanks for responding, Former Fetus.

I was going to ask him to explain why his view of hell differs from what Jesus told us.


72 posted on 02/09/2014 10:36:31 AM PST by CatherineofAragon ((Support Christian white males----the architects of the jewel known as Western Civilization.))
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To: Rennes Templar

I’ve addressed that. You need to study the Bible; it is very apparent from this post you are not aware of the genres of literature in the Scripture.


73 posted on 02/09/2014 10:36:53 AM PST by SoFloFreeper
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To: CatherineofAragon

You just misunderstand Him.


74 posted on 02/09/2014 10:37:48 AM PST by DManA
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To: Former Fetus

Amen


75 posted on 02/09/2014 10:38:20 AM PST by Mom MD
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To: SoFloFreeper

G-D gave the devil a choice between Texas and Hell. He chose Hell, we got Texas. Some say the devil got the best of the deal, I don’t know. In this life it seems we are having to run across Hell to get over to Heaven on the other side.

The master whom I serve (whether by his election or my choice) holds the keys to hell and death. That’s enough to convince me there is a hell and things could be get much worse in the long run. But my master has given me hope that I (a big time sinner) will make it to the other side and enjoy the everlasting life HE has promised.


76 posted on 02/09/2014 10:39:01 AM PST by Texicanus (Texas, it's a whole 'nother country.)
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To: chajin
If they accept His saving grace paid for on the cross, they will be in heaven

The Clintons will go to Heaven, but only if, first, God agrees to step down.

77 posted on 02/09/2014 10:39:48 AM PST by McBuff
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To: Errant
Hell is the grave

Like I said earlier, before the cross Sheol (often times translated as hell) was the place of the dead. But after the cross, the believers go straight away to heaven, because to be absent from the body is to be present with Jesus (2 Cor. 5:8). Other than that, I agree 100% with you.

78 posted on 02/09/2014 10:42:06 AM PST by Former Fetus (Saved by grace through faith)
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To: SoFloFreeper
"Scripture is a sword, not a cotton swab..."

Excellent verbiage!

79 posted on 02/09/2014 10:43:52 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: DManA

Some of your answers come across as kind of arrogant: you don’t care about the salvation of others, everybody else is wrong... Let me remind you that pride was Satan’s sin (Isa. 14:12-15; Eze. 28:14-15) and was behind the Fall of man. The Bible warns us plenty of times to watch out against pride in our lives: Proverbs 16:18, Proverbs 11:2, Proverbs 18:12.


80 posted on 02/09/2014 10:49:12 AM PST by Former Fetus (Saved by grace through faith)
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