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What Then Shall We Preach on Hell?
9 Marks ^ | Sinclair Ferguson

Posted on 09/25/2010 6:07:59 AM PDT by Gamecock

To speak of hell is to speak of things so overwhelming that it cannot be done with ease.

Yet hell exists; this is the testimony of the Scriptures, of the apostles, and of the Lord Jesus himself. The emotionally intolerable is also the truth—and therein lies its awfulness.

It is incumbent on the Christian pastor to be familiar with it, to feel the weight of it, to preach it, and to counsel his flock in connection with its meaning and personal implications.              

UNVEILING SINFULNESS

The preacher speaks as one who is conscious that he himself must stand before the judgment seat of Christ: “We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive what is due him for the things done in the body, whether good or bad” (2 Cor. 5:10). Perhaps more than anything else, this must become the atmosphere from which God's servants approach their tasks as preachers and pastors. We must appear there. Only those who are consciously aware that they will come before the judgment seat can speak with any sense of the weightiness of the issues of life and death, heaven and hell.

It is here that we learn for ourselves the dreadful unveiling of our sinfulness, and this, in turn, enables us to stress three things essential for our preaching:

Unless we have established these coordinated principles and impressed them on the minds and consciences of our hearers, there is little likelihood that we can make much impression by preaching on hell.

Every member of fallen humanity needs to have thrust in front of him the radical and total inexcusability of sin and the absolute justice of God's condemnation. Only then will he, can he, take hell seriously. The preaching of these truths is intended to tear away the blindness, to arouse and pierce the slumbering conscience. Otherwise, we persist in our assumption that whatever fate befalls others (a Nero, a Hitler, an Idi Amin), we ourselves are safe from divine condemnation.

WHAT SHALL WE PREACH ON HELL?

What then shall we preach on hell? There are several things we need to affirm.

1. Hell is real.

It is as characteristic of Jesus’ teaching to warn against the prospect of hell as it is for him to describe the high privileges of heaven. For him, at least, hell is just as real as heaven.

2. Hell is vividly described in the pages of the New Testament.

Over the centuries theologians have discussed whether the biblical vocabulary for hell is to be taken literally or metaphorically. My own view is that in any aspect of biblical teaching where various descriptions contain elements in tension with each other, those descriptions are in all likelihood metaphorical. But, having said this—and here is a vital point—metaphors are used precisely in order to describe realities greater than themselves.

Hell is a sphere of separation and deprivation, of pain and punishment, of darkness and destruction, and of disintegration and perishing. The vocabulary of the New Testament includes: darkness outside, weeping and grinding of teeth, destruction of body and soul, eternal fire, fire of hell, condemned to hell, forfeiting eternal life, the wrath of God, everlasting destruction away from the presence of the Lord, perishing, separation, blackest darkness.

What is the preacher to do with this language? Exactly what one does with other biblical language: use it to the limits of its significance within the text, no more, no less. In particular, the word “eternal” underscores the magnitude of what is in view. This condition is not only one of separation from God and disintegration of all that is pleasing; it is perpetually and permanently so. It is this that made the great seventeenth-century preacher Thomas Brooks cry out, in words found also on the lips of his contemporaries:

Oh, but this word eternity, eternity, eternity; this word everlasting, everlasting, everlasting; this word forever, forever, forever, will even break the hearts of the damned in ten thousand pieces…Impenitent sinners in Hell shall have end without end, death without death, night without day, mourning without mirth, sorrow without solace, and bondage without liberty. The damned shall live as long in Hell as God himself shall live in heaven.

3. Hell, though prepared for the devil and his angels, is shared by real human beings.

It is the wasteland of humanity, inhabited by those who reject Christ and his revelation. Those who do not belong to the kingdom of God are there: “Outside are the dogs, those who practice magical arts, the sexually immoral, the murderers, the idolaters and everyone who loves and practices falsehood” (Rev. 22:15; cf. 1 Cor. 6:9). The rich man is there (Luke 16:19-31); those who did not love Christ’s brothers are there (Matt. 25:41-46); some who prophesied, cast out demons, worked miracles in Christ’s name are there (7:21-23); “those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ” are there (2 Thess. 1:8-9); Judas Iscariot is there (Acts 1:25), for it were better for him that he had never been born (Matt. 26:24); the devil and his angels, the beast, and the false prophet are there, “tormented for ever and ever”; anyone whose name is not found in the Lamb’s book of life will be there (Rev. 19:19-20; 20:10, 15).

So awful is the prospect of this judgment that when it is revealed,

the kings of the earth, the princes, the generals, the rich, the mighty, and every slave and every free man hid in caves and among the rocks of the mountains. They called on the mountains and the rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of him who sits on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb! For the great day of their wrath has come, and who can stand?” (Rev. 6:15-17)

It is, indeed, too terrible to contemplate—more terrible than the vocabulary used to describe it, just as heaven is more glorious than our words can possibly describe.

Like millions of others, on September 11, 2001, in horror and foreboding I watched, in real time, on television in the United Kingdom, the second jet crash into the New York Twin Towers and then saw the buildings collapse in rubble as people fled for their lives. It was the most horrific event most of us will ever witness “live.” As I watched, I also asked: “What kind of cataclysmic horror would make strong men run into that falling rubble to find protection, preferring such a holocaust to the wrath of the Lamb?”

4. Most important, in expounding and applying the biblical teaching on hell, we must emphasize that there is a way of salvation.

There is somewhere to hide from the wrath of the Lamb.

The gospel is not a message about hell. Yet one cannot be faithful to scripture without preaching about it for the simple reason that the gospel itself cannot be understood apart from its reality.

“God made him who had no sin to be sin for us” (2 Cor. 5:21). In a nutshell, the gospel is this: Christ took our place, bearing our sin, tasting our judgment, dying our death—so that we might share his place, be made his righteousness, taste his vindication, and experience his life.

But to be made sin implies liability to the condemnation of God and the righteous judgment of the punishment of hell. This, in effect, is how the New Testament (always in the light of the Old) sees the inner significance of Jesus’ death.

WHAT DO PASTORS THEMSELVES NEED TO PREACH ON HELL?

It is in this context that preaching on hell belongs to the preaching of the gospel. When we understand that this is what the death of Christ means, when this grips our soul, we will begin to find the apostolic model of preaching reduplicated in our own ministry. For constrained thus by the love of Christ, several things follow.

1. Courage and commitment

It takes courage and commitment to preach hell. Courage is needed because in many contemporary contexts one mention of hell is enough to guarantee the accusation of a harsh spirit and a bigoted mind.

Commitment is required because such ministry demands a desire to live for Christ (2 Cor. 5:15) and to see men and women brought to Christ, which is greater than our native desire for security and popularity. It is not possible to be liked for preaching the truth about hell (although it is, paradoxically but thankfully, possible to be loved for having done it).

2.  A truly biblical perspective

Sinful humanity naturally looks at life through the wrong end of the telescope. For them time is long and eternity is short; this life is large, the afterlife is small; this world is real, the world to come is unreal. This is what it means to live kata sarka (“according to the flesh”) rather than kata pneuma (“according to the Spirit”; Rom. 8:4). But the Christian’s eyes have been opened, and they are fixed on Christ, on eternity.

A Christian, then, looks at life in the light of the destination to which it leads, and sees every person within that framework. Famous words penned around 1843 by the still young but soon-to-die Robert M’Cheyne express well this view and its implications: “As I was walking in the fields, the thought came over me with almost overwhelming power, that every one of my flock must soon be in heaven or hell. Oh, how I wished that I had a tongue like thunder, that I might make all hear; or that I had frame like iron, that I might visit every one, and say, ‘Escape for thy life!’” Behind everyone we know and meet stands the shadow of judgment.

Knowing this, how can we remain silent—or cowardly? We can only do so if we ourselves live in denial of the reality that we know has been revealed in the gospel.

3. A deep awareness of our calling

“God… reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation…he has committed to us the message of reconciliation. We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us…be reconciled to God” (2 Cor. 5:18-20).

The Christian preacher is a debtor because through Christ he has himself been delivered from future judgment. He is a steward, because the message of reconciliation has been committed to him. He is to employ the resources provided by his Lord, not to diminish, add to, or transform them. He is also an ambassador, whose task is always to represent his Master and faithfully to deliver his message.

This is why our own excuses must never prevail (“I am not that kind of preacher”; “the congregation would not receive it well”; “people do not take these things seriously any longer”; “we are living in a day when that kind of emphasis does not draw people to Christ”).

When Robert M’Cheyne met his dearest friend Andrew Bonar one Monday and inquired what Bonar had preached on the previous day, only to receive the answer “Hell,” he asked: “Did you preach it with tears?”

CONCLUSION

So we are called to preach as his representatives: with biblical balance, with a Christocentric focus, with the humanity of those who realize their own need of grace before the judgment seat of Christ, with a willingness to suffer in the light of the coming glory, with love and compassion in our hearts, and in a way that commends and adorns the doctrine of God our Savior.

Sinclair Ferguson is Senior Minister of First Presbyterian Church in Columbia, South Carolina and is Professor of Systematic Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia.


TOPICS: General Discusssion; Theology
KEYWORDS: hell
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1 posted on 09/25/2010 6:08:05 AM PDT by Gamecock
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To: Gamecock

I recently worshiped at 1st Presbyterian in Columbia, SC, what a powerful preacher!


2 posted on 09/25/2010 6:09:31 AM PDT by Gamecock ( Christianity is not the movement from vice to virtue, but from virtue to Grace.)
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To: Gamecock

Be sure to add that surrendering to Jesus and letting Him in our life lets us avoid it!

Not every FReeper knows that.


3 posted on 09/25/2010 6:16:18 AM PDT by PastorBooks
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To: Gamecock

I heard an evangelist once talk about speaking to unbelievers saying that when they say there is no hell, simply ask them, “What IF there is?” and go into our faith based guarantees against entry. :)

I have mentioned to unbelievers that logically we all know that death should not be, illness should not be, pain, unfaithfulness, etc. All people know what shouldn’t be and those things are the result of sin. Therefore, knowing what should be in regards to the blessings of heaven, from what we know in life, also gives us grounds for our little glimpses of hell. Illness, pain, hunger, burning, doing to others what you don’t want done to you, for eternity.


4 posted on 09/25/2010 6:24:37 AM PDT by huldah1776
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To: Gamecock
Not so.. Heaven and Hell are NOT mentioned with very much clarity to what they actually are in the Bible.. except by innuendo and metaphor.. They become "a bad place" and a "good place" respectively..

Its pretty much left to "your mind" to fill in the blanks..
In the mind hell can become a worse place and heaven a better place then they really are..
Pretty smart tactics actually.. genius really..

5 posted on 09/25/2010 7:09:11 AM PDT by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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A friend of mine once told me this...
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

What it Hell????

Imagine a place that’s like Earth where nothing improves.

Every sin, vice and temptation is abundant but there’s no good, no friendship, no humanity, and no hope....only selfishness, greed, backstabbing and agression. You’re a king one day, only to get a thrown out the next. You’re a bum, a worm and a useless automaton.

At first, it might seem like a good place...a simple “continuation” of what you had on Earth. You’re smart, you’re aggressive, you’re devious, and you think you can make something out of this place. Then reality hits you in the face as others have staked out their turf and the landlords have other plans for you.

Nothing seems to change but most of all you have a feeling of EMPTINESS. No matter what vice, pleasure or thrill you seek it’s just never enough. You realized that without the presence of God your soul feels incomplete. Your lifeline and relationship with Him is at an end. THEN the REAL pain begins.

In time, the damned will be begging for the eternal fires for it will be the only sensation that stirrs them.

They’ll curse their friends
They’ll curse their family
They’ll curse the church
They’ll curse their community
They’ll curse God
They’ll curse themselves (screaming “JESUS IS LORD”)

The damned will beg, cajole, prostrate, cry and make all manor of excuses, but this will fail as the damned surrenders to their fate. Madness follows shortly when they begin to understand eternity.

God does not send people to Hell. People go to Hell because because of their thoughts, words and deeds. The damned choose not to have a relationship with God and God simply puts them in a place where such a relationship doesn’t exist. He respects your free will.


6 posted on 09/25/2010 7:26:16 AM PDT by ak267
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To: Gamecock
This is a professor of theology? Send him back to ist year Bible class and give him a Bible to read!
7 posted on 09/25/2010 7:28:17 AM PDT by count-your-change (You don't have be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: Gamecock

What the hell ?!?!?!?


8 posted on 09/25/2010 7:54:59 AM PDT by Chi-townChief
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To: Gamecock

I love 9 marks

It is not “popular” to teach the wrath of God, or Judgement or hell.

Everyone wants a buddy God ...

Without an understanding of the Holiness of God and His hatred of sin, and the consequences of that sin, the atonement has little meaning


9 posted on 09/25/2010 12:46:45 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: count-your-change
This is a professor of theology? Send him back to ist year Bible class and give him a Bible to read!

And your problem with this article is?

10 posted on 09/25/2010 12:58:27 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: RnMomof7
My problem with the article is that what is commonly called “hell” in the Bible has nothing to do with with the description in the article:

“Hell is a sphere of separation and deprivation, of pain and punishment, of darkness and destruction, and of disintegration and perishing. The vocabulary of the New Testament includes: darkness outside, weeping and grinding of teeth, destruction of body and soul, eternal fire, fire of hell, condemned to hell, forfeiting eternal life, the wrath of God, everlasting destruction away from the presence of the Lord, perishing, separation, blackest darkness.”

The author is confusing several different terms with “hell” or it's NT equivalent in Greek “Hades”.

Peter said both Christ and David were in Hades or as the AV translates Hades, “hell”.

Acts 2:27, “Because thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.”

Acts 2:31, “He seeing this before spake of the resurrection of Christ, that his soul was not left in hell, neither his flesh did see corruption.”

That's for starters.

11 posted on 09/25/2010 2:24:38 PM PDT by count-your-change (You don't have be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: count-your-change

The greek word can be translated as grave or hell so it depends on the translator


12 posted on 09/25/2010 6:44:07 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: RnMomof7

Indeed, but the author of the article equates the Greek “hades” with the English “hell” in quoting from Luke 16.
He does likewise with the lake of fire of rev. 19:21, calling it hell though Rev. 20:14 speaks of the two as being different.

So while a translator might choose grave or hell the Bible writers used the word Hades with a particular meaning that the author ignores.


13 posted on 09/25/2010 8:25:52 PM PDT by count-your-change (You don't have be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: Gamecock

Life is a horrifying. The only way to avoid a life of bottomless depression and an eternity of torment is to believe in an invisible God who cannot be perceived in any persistent or verifiable way?!

This is the reason why I will never have kids. I should be the last of my line to experience the horrible curse of life and a possible eternity of misery.

I can accept that there is a possibility that God exists and that hell exists. However, the fact that I don’t have this special mystical relationship and 100% certainty means that by the time I find out that God definitively exists (in the afterlife) it will be too late.

Why doesn’t God just reveal himself to those who are desperate? I will NEVER be a spiritual person after all these years of depression. It’s no longer possible. I’m not going to be able to detect this “little voice” that supposedly means that God is speaking to me.

What kind of sick joke is this?


14 posted on 10/16/2010 3:15:10 PM PDT by Soothesayer (“None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license...")
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To: Soothesayer
Why doesn’t God just reveal himself to those who are desperate?

He did, in the person of His Son Jesus Christ. Christ raised people from the dead, gave the blind sight, cured the sick and cured the lame. And yet people didn't believe.

As miserable as this life can some time be, for those who have forgiveness this life is the worst it will ever be. Conversely, for those who don't believe this life is the absolute best it will ever be.

He can to save people from Hell. Come to Him and you to will be saved.

15 posted on 10/16/2010 3:42:59 PM PDT by Gamecock ( Christianity is not the movement from vice to virtue, but from virtue to Grace.)
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To: Gamecock

Supposedly there were 500 witnesses for the resurrection of Christ. Correct? That’s not really a lot.

Caesar had tens of millions of witnesses for his major deeds.

Even if these events happened months ago rather than 2000 years ago I’d have trouble being certain about it. This is hopeless.


16 posted on 10/16/2010 3:59:14 PM PDT by Soothesayer (“None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license...")
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To: Soothesayer
Supposedly there were 500 witnesses for the resurrection of Christ. Correct? That’s not really a lot.

One reliable witness is enough in a court of law.

17 posted on 10/16/2010 5:18:52 PM PDT by Gamecock ( Christianity is not the movement from vice to virtue, but from virtue to Grace.)
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To: Soothesayer

Have felt similarly in my life.

However, as Job discovered . . .

HE IS GOD AND WE ARE NOT.

This crucible is to train us for an eternal glory and leadership in love and humility that is too grand for mortals to conceive of.

And the crucibles and fiery furnaces must do their work.

Crawling off the operating table doesn’t help. Just prolongs the process.

I don’t understand hell well . . . however, Mary K Baxter’s visions of hell and Heaven strike me as quite authentic and accurate.

You might read them both. Good to get some info regardless of where one expects to be.


18 posted on 10/29/2010 8:43:06 AM PDT by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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To: Soothesayer; Alamo-Girl; Amityschild; AngieGal; AnimalLover; Ann de IL; aposiopetic; aragorn; ...

LOTS of things FEEL hopeless and can be conceived of as hopeless, Soothsayer.

Feelings are just information. They can be important and reliable or they can be unimportant, deceiving and deadly.

HOW ONE RESPONDS to feelings is crucial.

JimRob could feel hopeless in his physical state and likely has more than a few times. However, he has created a wonderful redemptive thing in FR in the midst of his wheel chair ridden struggles.

Soothsayer . . . seretonin enhancing meds may be useful if you’d check them out. I normally prefer COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY to rewire the stinking thinkin circuits which have been so strengthened from such a long depression. However, the meds can give you enough of a breather space to begin the hard work of literally rewiring things.

There must be some therapy and med help near enough to you.

There are reasons for the trapped helpless feelings. And after such a long depression etc, one of those reasons is likely that there’s too little of the neurotransmitter seretonin between the nerve cells in your brain. Stress will also deplete seretonin. Some people seem to have a lack of it because of a genetic predisposition.

A lot of us will be praying for you, regardless of what you think that’s worth.

The enemy if your soul is eager to grab you with a literal death grip for all eternity. You CAN disappoint him by the Blood of The Lamb.

It may seem like an impossible struggle, climb out. I know from experience it is possible.

It IS exceedingly and eternally worthwhile.


19 posted on 10/29/2010 8:52:45 AM PDT by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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To: hosepipe

When you take Hell, Hades, Gehenna, Sheol, etc.

Hell is mentioned more times in the Bible than heaven is.

Additionally, Christ admonished — the Kingdom of Heaven is like..................to the Pharisees.

Somehow they did not get the message of the allegorical parable. Sad.


20 posted on 10/29/2010 9:00:38 AM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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