Posted on 06/04/2014 6:52:46 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
In certain schools of Christian thought, hell is not everlasting, but a more painful form of purgatory.
M any Christians presume that hell is a place where brutally painful punishments are inflicted on evildoers for an indefinite, and perhaps infinite, amount of time in the afterlife. Think of a medieval torture chamber with no exit or fire extinguishers.
But this, as I argued in a recent column, makes no theological sense. If morality is good, then doing the right thing must be its own reward and doing the wrong thing must be its own punishment. To think that a sinner deserves extra, externally imposed suffering presumes that morality isn't good and that those who commit evil deeds benefit from their actions which is another way of saying that those who do the right thing are fools.
The more theologically sound position is to hold that hell is a state of being, whether in this life or the next, in which we confront our own self-imposed alienation from what is truly good from God, in other words. This educative punishment can be extremely painful, but the pain flows intrinsically from knowledge of our own immoral acts. It isn't inflicted on us by some external tormenter.
That, at any rate, was my argument.
Let's just say that my readers weren't universally appreciative of it. A fair number of them apparently want very much to believe that a fairly large number of people are going to be made to suffer egregiously in hell for their bad behavior in life.
I suspect that these same readers, and perhaps many more, will be equally adamant that I'm wrong to follow the implications of my argument a few steps further to assert that Christians have reason to believe that the punishments of hell, whatever they may be, are temporary for all.
That's right: I think it's likely that if there is an afterlife, everyone even Judas, even Hitler eventually ends up in heaven.
Now, I'm perfectly willing to concede that several Gospel passages seem to describe an eternity of damnation for at least some people in the afterlife (Matthew 7:13-14, 25:31-46; Mark 9:45-48; Luke 16:23; John 3:36). Though I'd also like to point out that only in one verse (Matthew 25:46) does Jesus speak of something that could plausibly be translated as "eternal punishment," and in words (aeonios kolasis) that could perhaps more accurately be rendered as "eternal correction."
Then there are those contrary passages that seem to imply that God wants everyone and perhaps even all of creation to enjoy salvation (Romans 5:18, 11:33-36; 1 Corinthians 15:22, 28; Philippians 2:10-11; Colossians 1:19-20; 2 Peter 3:9; Revelation 21:4).
This tension not to say contradiction has led some thinkers to dismiss or argue away the implications of the latter passages. Of all the church fathers, Tertullian may have gone furthest in this direction, writing at length and in gory detail about the endless sufferings inflicted on sinners in hell, and even suggesting that observing these torments is an important source of the bliss that accompanies salvation in heaven.
The problem with this position is that it seems to be a form of what Friedrich Nietzsche called "Christian malice": A psychological malady in which the stringent self-denial that Christianity demands of its adherents leads them to feel intense resentment for those who are insufficiently ascetic. Nietzsche delighted in showing how this dynamic can turn Christians from preachers of love into hateful fanatics out to inflict suffering on anyone who dares to enjoy life.
Not all Christians have confirmed Nietzsche's critique as perfectly as Tertullian. Others have been driven by theological reflection to move in the opposite direction to speculate that all people might eventually enjoy salvation in heaven, no matter how awful their worldly sins may have been.
Origen in the 3rd century and Hans Urs von Balthasar in the 20th both affirmed versions of universal salvation. Yet I find the most compelling variation in the writings of the 4th-century theologian Gregory of Nyssa a major figure in the history of Christianity, though one more widely revered today by the Eastern Orthodox than by the Western churches.
Gregory maintained that hell resembles something like what Catholics have traditionally called purgatory: A place of sometimes excruciatingly painful purgation of sins in preparation for heaven. The pain is not externally inflicted as punishment, but follows directly from the process of purification as the soul progresses toward a perhaps never fully realized union with divine perfection. Gregory describes this process as a "constant progression" or "stretching forth" (epektasis) of oneself toward an ever greater embrace of and merger with God in the fullness of eternity a transmutation of what is sinful, fallen, and finite into the transcendent beauty of the infinite.
Hell, in this view, would be the state of agonizing struggle to break free from sin, to renounce our moral mistakes, to habituate ourselves to the good, to become ever more like God. Eastern Orthodox theologians (and, interestingly, Mormons, who hold similar views) call it a process of divination or sanctification (theosis) that follows directly from the doctrine of God's incarnation in Jesus Christ. It is a formula found in the writings of Clement of Alexandria, Athanasius, and other ancient theologians: God became a human being so that human beings might become like God.
All human beings.
One imagines that this would be a long, painful process rendered longer and more painful for those who have fallen furthest from God during their lives. They are the ones for whom the afterlife is truly hellish like a climb up a peak far, far higher than Mount Everest with little prior preparation or training, no expensive gear, and no Sherpas to help carry the load. But there would eventually be progress toward God, even for the climber who starts out in the worst possible shape, and from the lowest possible point in the valley below.
And at least there would be no dungeon pointlessly presided over by satanic, whip-wielding sadists.
RE: It doesnt have to.
Why not? Names are provided. A Historical figure exists.
Well, he is showing us in what he taught in Luke 16, A PICTURE OF THE AFTERLIFE AND THE FATE THAT AWAITS PEOPLE WHO ARE LIKE THE RICH MAN.
Good points. I am mindful to be careful what I teach as well.
;-)
RE: Its a little like saying, even though the bible speaks many times of the brothers of Jesus, since the word could also sometimes be translated as cousin, we should assume it really means cousin - espeically if that interpretation is absolutely necessary to support some other beliefs we have about Jesus mother.
I don’t see how that applies.
In this teaching of Jesus — A PLACE IS MENTIONED — Hades.
The sin of the rich man is mentioned.
His fate is mentioned.
His torment is mentioned.
If any, the one who argue as if Jesus’ brothers are really his “cousins” are the ones who are arguing that Jesus never meant his teaching to be a picture of the fate that awaits people who are like the rich man.
It’s intuitively obvious.
RE: I mean before he was in torment.
So, you agree that he was in torment then AFTER he died...
RE: Its intuitively obvious.
No it is not.
1) Unlike other parables, nowhere in the account found in Luke 16 does Jesus say this is a parable.
2) Nowhere in the account does the writer Luke the physician say that anything Jesus says or describes is "a parable".
When Jesus spoke to the people in parables he nearly always later, usually in private, interpreted and explained the real meaning of the parable to his disciples. Nowhere in this account does Jesus do this because the account is not a parable, it is a genuine description of life on the other side of the grave and EVERYTHING that Jesus says within it is to be taken at face value... it needs no "spiritual interpretation".
The final and most important point leading to the fact that Jesus account here in Luke 16 is not a parable but a genuine description if the reality if life on the other side of death is the simple fact that Jesus never uses a proper name/an individuals name in ANY of His known parables. There is not one mention of a persons name in any of the parables of Christ which are plainly declared/stated to be parables, not one! However, that is decidedly NOT the case here in Luke 16. Jesus goes out if his way to specifically state that the name if the poor man was/is "Lazarus". Lazarus' name literally means "friend if God", which, given where he ends up after his death is an indication of his faith and of his relationship with God inspite of his impoverished and wretched physical condition and circumstances in this life (so much for Joel Osteen's false "health and wealth" false "gospel"). Jesus stated Lazarus by name BUT the one thing He does not do in the account is name the rich man. Why? Well, some biblical scholars speculate that the crowd to whom Jesus was speaking were familiar with Lazarus, which, given the graphic nature of the description Jesus had given if him would make him easy to remember. As for the rich man, there was no need to state his name; given the vivid and extensive personal description Jesus gives of the rich man, his extravagant and exceedingly lavish lifestyle along with intimate information regarding his personal family ("I have five brothers"), there is no need to name him because in all likelihood the people Jesus was speaking to probably knew exactly who the deceased rich man was!
The existence and reality of life beyond the grave; a literal heaven and hell beyond death, along with the actual conditions which exist there are the focus and sincere warning of Jesus words. This is no "parable" that whose meaning and interpretation can be "spiritualized", trivialized or explained away. Jesus said exactly what he meant and each one of His words in this account mean exactly what they say. It is a dire warning concerning the reality if a literal heaven and hell, which, in the case of the latter is a place of fire and unspeakable, never ending torment from which there is NO ESCAPE FOREVER because "there us a GREAT GULF FIXED" (this is in the perfect tense in the Greek which indicates this great gulf was established at a point in time and it is permanently established (ongoing results). Jesus also totally destroys and false doctrine or notion of "Purgatory". He clearly states that one's position after death: either blessed or cursed in this place of fire and torment is permanent! There us no getting out, no escape after suffering in torment for eons because God Himself has established this "great gulf" barrier for the express purpose of preventing ANYONE from either side from EVER crossing over to the other side. After death, one's position, whether blessed in heaven or eternally cursed in hell is permenanly "fixed".
There is one more vitally important fact about what Jesus says in Luke 16 that must be addressed: Lazarus was not in heaven because he was poor and the rich man was not in hell because he was rich. Each man found themselves in their individual position because if what they had done with God in this life BEFORE they died. It all boils down to FAITH in Christ. Lazarus had "repented" and believed upon Jesus, while the rich man, had not. While alive, the rich man filled his life with his "good things" and had no place for God in his life or heart. He received all that he wanted in this life and he received it in full. However, AFTER he was dead and it was eternally too late he recognized the eternality of his damned position and the sole solution to keep every man, including his five brothers from ending up in hell: individual men need to repent; they need to have a change if heart concerning Jesus and they need to believe upon Him and Him alone unto the saving of their souls. This is why the rich man BEGS Abraham to send Lazarus back from the dead to WARN his five brothers to "REPENT" (I.e. to place their individual faith in the Lord Jesus Christ; Israel's promised messiah) lest they too end up in the same place of eternal torment. And what is Abraham's response to the rich man's request? : "They have Moses and the prophets, let them HEAR them", in otherwords: "your brothers have the Word of God, let them read it and heed its message." And what did the Lord Jesus Christ say about Moses and the Old Testament prophets? : "They testify of Me!"
But what was the rich man's response? "No father Abraham" (the Word of God and its message of salvation through faith in Jesus the Messiah was not enough for them to repent and place their faith in Jesus.) but they would be persuaded to REPENT IF someone returned from the dead to warn them about the terrors if hell and to tell them to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. But what us Abraham's final answer and response to the rich man's request: If they are not willing to hear and heed the clear message of the Word of God concerning their dire need to believe upon the Lord Jesus Christ to save them from their sin and from hell, "neither would they be persuaded if someone arose from the dead.". Jesus' quote from Abraham is utterly true and has been factually born out in reality. The Lord Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God bodily arose from the dead a full three days after His sacrificial death upon the cross of Calvary in order to pay the FULL penalty for ALL of the sins of ALL of mankind for all of human history. He was visibly seen, bodily alive after His death by all of the Apostles along with upwards of five hundred people! Nevertheless, the overwhelming majority of people within the nation of Israel and the entire world fail to be persuaded an to believe in Him unto the saving of their eternal souls up to this present day.
Jesus' story in Luke 16 isn't a "parable", His message is a clear warning concerning the ultimate reality which awaits each and every one if us on the other side of the grave; whether heaven or hell. The one, all important question is this:
What will you do with the Lord Jesus Christ? Will you repent, believing on Him and on Him alone receiving Him as your personal savior by faith in order to save you from your sin, and from a Christless eternity, separated from the very God who loves you and from His heaven. Or will you continue to harden your heart, rejecting the Lord Jesus Christ and the free gift of salvation that He wants to give to you? The choice is yours, but listen carefully to the warning of Jesus: "Unless you believe that I am (in me, that I am the Messiah) you shall surely die in your sins." (John 8:24)
Sorry for some of the spelling errorsin my previous post. The above was typed on an IPod touch with “spell correct”, hence some of the improperly “corrected” spelling, and my IPod’s inability to recheck the enire document for errors prior to posting due to its visual text limitations.
RE: We need to get our doctrine from other places, not by pressing the incidents that go to make up a parable. That’s all I’m saying.
Sure, I understand.
But this teaching ( I don’t call it a parable because I am not sure that it is intended to be one ) SHOULD BE INCLUDED AND TAKEN INTO CONSIDERATION AND NOT BE IGNORED in any doctrine we formulate.
Agree, and if the saving power of Christ’s sacrifice and death is insufficient to save a Hitler or Judas or Manson or Dahmer, that is, if there are limits to God’s grace, then it isn’t grace at all but a reward system for those who do good. That’s not the grace described by Paul, that’s not the grace that saved Paul (chief among sinners), and it’s not the grace that has saved me.
Oy vey, I was trying to clarify and simplify.
Too many things for me to comment on.
You do have access to the verses that contain the word predestinate, etc., right ?
If God predestinated you to salvation, how can we not agree what that means ?
What do you think that means - is it that God knows that you will choose salvation ? or is that God actively chose you, i.e., caused you to be saved ?
The first death is physical death.
The second death is eternal separation from God.
...or you can read this excellent summary of the true position from metmom, if you prefer the non-10,000+ word version! :)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.