Sunday, February 15, 2015

A Theology of Hope over a Theology of Horror (part 1)

The following series of posts are likely to challenge the assumptions of some of my readers and provoke a range of responses.  I appreciate your feedback, but please do so with the same grace in which these posts are offered. 

I am writing in challenge to and refutation of the concept of the eternal torment of the lost.  

Here is why I feel compelled to write.  

First, what one believes about what will happen to those apart from Christ on Judgment Day is itself not a 'salvation' issue and should not be used as any type of litmus test.  Our primary concern should be for those without Christ now and our responsibility to share the Good News of Jesus with them now.  How long will the second level issues prevent unity in the Body of Christ?  (One might question the wisdom of such dogmatic statements on these types of issues being part of an 'official statement of faith' in the first place.)  

Second, for me, the issue of the nature of final punishment is a matter of integrity in Biblical interpretation.  Can the notion of eternal torment be defended with sound interpretive principles?  If it can, then so be it.  If not, then why do we insist on holding to it in opposition to the sacred text?

The position of eternal burning hell rests on the assumption of the natural immortality of man's 'soul' which must therefore live forever in some condition either of blessedness or torment.  But what happens to an eternal hell if man's 'soul' is not immortal?  Then the concept of eternal hell shudders and collapses as a house of cards deprived of its underpinnings.

Here is the truth of God's Word.  Man is not naturally immortal.  Whoa!  What of that old saying, "may God have mercy on your immortal soul"?  It's false.  It's blatantly un-Biblical.  

Scripture tells us plainly that God "alone has immortality" -1 Timothy 6:16. The word 'alone' is the Greek monos (from where we get the prefix 'mono' meaning one, or only).  Immortality is an inherent quality of Divine Being; to say that any other possesses what belongs to God alone is, and I use the word with precision, heresy.  There really is no way around this verse.  It is direct and simple.  It is not ripped from its context to stand as a proof text.  Only God possesses immortality.

Man therefore can only exist eternally by the will of Him Who alone possesses the power to confer that blessing, the Triune God (God the Father through the agency of God the Son in the power of God the Spirit- so see John 5:21, 6:63)

And what of those on whom God does not choose to confer the blessing of eternal life?  The opposite of life is death- a complete end to existence.  The opposite of eternal life is not eternal torment or even eternal dying, but eternal death, an end of existence that cannot be undone.   

The position I hold, a position which goes back into the earliest centuries of the Christian Church*, is that of 'Conditional Immortality', namely that the promise of any enduring, eternal existence is completely contingent upon the gift of God through Jesus Christ.  Thus, those without Christ will not and cannot indefinitely exist in any form, even in the torturous horrors of 'hell'.

The concept of man's immortal soul appeared in the late 200's AD with the synthesizing of Christian theology and pagan Greek philosophy, notable with theologians such as Origen and Tertullian.  Biblical theology was submerged and drowned in a pagan philosophy which posited the duality of matter and spirit, body and soul.  It was that philosophy which taught an immortal nature which was to be set free from the bonds of its material prison (here is the roots of the idea of 'going to heaven when we die').  Rather than refute philosophy, the theologians embraced it and mutilated the Scripture to say what it was never meant to say.

To uphold the natural immortality of man's 'soul', a part of man which cannot die, is not only poor theology, but treads into some very dangerous territory: "But the serpent said to the woman, 'You will not surely die.'"- Genesis 3:4.  God told Adam that disobedience would lead to death; satan refuted God's words. 

Friends, with humility I ask, if God tells us in His Word that the "wages of sin is death (Greek  thanatos)" -Romans 6:23, and the plain meaning of death is a cessation of all life, by what right do we have to declare that what God said is not right and that the wages of sin is not death, but a continuation of 'life' in unending torment?  Do you see where this road leads?  I will not, and I pray you see also that you cannot, hold to the 'traditional' view of hell which drips with the poison of a serpents fangs.

In my next post I will explore some of the texts that are often used to defend the notion of eternal torment and, with grace, show why they cannot be made to say such things.
    

*Notable post-Biblical theologians and teachers who held to Conditionalism: Clement of Rome, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Athanasius, Wycliffe, Tyndale, Watts, Pannenberg  
  

1 comment:

  1. A comment from David Alves

    Your post is spot-on. You did a great job of enunciating what I believe Scripture teaches. In addition, any who want to argue rather than discuss the point are not true "Bereans." If they love the Lord and the Word, they will be open and teachable. If not, they remain fixed in what their well-meaning teachers taught them. I believe your post is perfectly written for the open heart and mind of a student of the Word and a disciple of Jesus. I hope this encourages you.

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