All You Want to Know About Hell by Steve Gregg
Author:Steve Gregg
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: ebook
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Published: 2013-10-01T00:00:00+00:00
THE PHILOSOPHICAL CASE
There are a number of philosophical issues that we must consider in coming to grips with the truth about ultimate judgment. Most of them have to do with the definition of love and the necessity of justice.
1. Eternal torment and the love of God
One great objection to the view that God will punish sinners forever is that this seems inconsistent with the biblical affirmations of the love of God for mankind. How does eternal punishment square with such a characteristic in Godâs nature?
Those who raise this objection are often viewing God as a one-dimensional Being, having a single characteristicâomnibenevolence. However, Godâs love is not His only attribute.
John Piper wrote, âThe statement âGod is loveâ does not imply that God relates to individuals only in terms of love.â45 Arthur Pink has complained that there is a common tendency among critics to invoke âthe love of Godâ against the traditional doctrine of hell: âThe Divine love is commonly regarded as a species of amiable weakness, a sort of good-natured indulgence; it is reduced to a mere sticky sentiment, patterned after human emotion.â46
Love and wrath can coexist, as separate aspects of justice. Both are attributes of God described in Scripture. There are two alternative explanations by which Godâs love and His wrath have been harmonized: the Calvinistic and the Arminian.
Calvinism teaches that God maximally loves some people, but not all. Godâs redeeming love is restricted to the elect, as Calvin, commenting on 1 John 4:8 (âGod is loveâ), wrote: âHere then he does not speak of the essence of God, but only shows what he is found to be by us [i.e., by the elect].â47 Since God really only loves the elect, in the sense of willing to save them, it is not inconsistent for Him to punish others, whom He does not love similarly.
The Arminian explanation affirms that God really does love, and desires to save, every human being, but that mankind is endowed with the capacity and privilege of free will. This means that people have the power, if they choose, to reject Godâs love, and to choose His wrath and punishment instead. Robin Parry and Christopher Partridge, explaining (though not affirming) such a view, noted: âIf humans keep on rejecting Godâs offer of salvation, God could only save them by disregarding their freedom, and thereby treating them not as persons but as objects.â48
On this view, God makes every effort to persuade, to convict, to thwart the sinnersâ headlong dash to damnationâbut His love can only do so much. The sinner, on this view, may end up in hell against Godâs wishes, but does so only by overcoming every obstacle God places in his way en route. One might say that whoever ends up in hell must get there by sheer determination!
Both of these explanations (though they cannot both be correct) provide alternative ways by which the fact of hell and the love of God may be harmonized.
2. The demands of justice
A. It would be unjust for sinners to go unpunished.
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