December 2019 / January 2020 - Vol.107
.
The Last Judgment, painted
by Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel, Vatican
1536-1541
The
Final
Judgment
.
The final
judgment is another of the central themes of
the Bible and a great foundational truth of
the Christian faith.
Justice is never done perfectly here on
earth: the good die young; the righteous
suffer; the poor are defrauded. But God's
Word speaks over and over of that great Day
of Yahweh, when God's faithful ones will be
rewarded and blessed beyond Measure, when
God's enemies and those who have lived
unrighteous lives will be definitively
punished.
The coming reign of God's anointed
Messiah-King, along with the certain hope
that at his coming all things will be set
right, is prophesied again and again by the
Old Testament prophets.
The reign of God was inaugurated with the
life, suffering, death, resurrection, and
ascension of Jesus, and the sending of the
Spirit; with these, the age of the church
began. But the reign of God will not be
fully established until the age of the
church is brought to a conclusion, along
with all of human history, at the second
coming of Jesus. Jesus' first coming was as
a sacrificial lamb, as an offering for our
sin; his second coming will be as a judge,
to render a verdict about how each human
being and all of human history responded to
his first coming. As the Creed states: "He
will come again to judge the living and the
dead, and of his kingdom there will be no
end."
This Day of Yahweh, this consummation of
human history, this second coming of the
Lord Jesus, will be a day of joy and
exultation for God's faithful ones, but a
day of terror for his enemies. The preaching
of the entire New Testament occurs against
the backdrop of the certainty and centrality
of the coming judgment of human life and
history.
John the Baptist prepared the way for Jesus
by proclaim repentance in the face of the
coming judgment, "the wrath come." His
proclamation of the coming of Jesus is also
announcement of the judgment and wrath that
will follow the completion of Jesus'
mission:
When he
saw that many of the Pharisees and
Sadducees were stepping forward for this
bath, he said to them: "You brood of
vipers! Who told you to flee from the
wrath to come? Give some
evidence that you mean to reform…. Even
now the axe is laid to the root of the
tree. Every tree that is not fruitful will
be cut down and thrown into the fire. I
baptize you in water for the sake of
reform, but the one who will follow me is
more powerful than I. I am not even fit to
carry his sandals. He it is who will
baptize you in the Holy Spirit and
fire. His winnowing-fan is in his
hand. He will clear the threshing floor
and gather his grain into the barn, but
the chaff he will burn in unquenchable
fire." (Matthew 3:7-8, 10-12)
Jesus has
come, declares John the Baptist, to bestow
the Spirit on those who repent and to decree
eternal judgment those who refuse. It is
clear that Jesus saw his mission in the
light of the impending judgment; he saw
himself as calling people to a repentance
and faith in him that would allow the escape
condemnation on the last day.
When entire regions or towns rejected Jesus'
message, he did not hesitate to warn of the
severity of the punishment to be pronounced
on them at the day of judgment. To the non-
responsive Galilean cities that ignored his
miracles, Jesus said:
"I assure
you, it will go easier for Tyre and Sidon
than for you on the day of judgment… It
will go easier for Sodom than for you on
the day of judgment" (Matthew 11:22,
24).
Concerning
those who reject his representatives:
"If anyone
does not receive you or listen to what you
have to say, leave that house or town, and
once outside it shake its dust from your
feet. I assure you, it will go easier for
the region of Sodom and Gomorrah on the
day of judgment than it will for that
town" (Matthew 10:14-15).
Along with
these classic examples of God's previous
judgments, Jesus also counseled his hearers
to view current catastrophes – like
a tower falling and killing eighteen people – as
warnings from God to repent and escape the
coming judgment (Luke 13:4). Whether
directly willed by God (as the destruction
of Sodom and Gomorrah), or whether
apparently "chance" occurrences (as the
collapse of the tower), Jesus sees the
catastrophes of human history as
forewarnings sent or permitted by God to
encourage repentance.
The New Testament continually restates this
basic teaching about the coming judgment.
The preaching of Acts:
God may
well have overlooked bygone periods when
men did not know him; but now he calls on
all men everywhere to reform their lives.
He has set the day on which he is going to
"judge the world with justice" through a
man he has appointed – one
whom he has endorsed in the sight of all
by raising him from the dead. (Acts
17:30-31)
Paul to the
Romans:
We shall
all have to appear before the judgment
seat of God… Every one of us will have to
give an account of himself before God.
(Romans 14:10, 12)
Peter to the
diaspora:
They shall
give an accounting to him who stands ready
to judge the living and the dead. (1 Peter
4:5)
The
present heavens and earth are reserved by
God's word for fire; they are kept for the
day of judgment, the day when godless men
will be destroyed. (2 Peter 3:7)
John, in
Revelation:
The dead
were judged according to their conduct as
recorded on the scrolls. The sea gave up
its dead; then death and the nether world
gave up their dead. Each person was judged
according to his conduct. (Revelation
20:12-13)
From this it
is clear that the very message of salvation
is presented in connection with the coming
judgment. The salvation offered by Jesus is
salvation from the wrath to come, from
condemnation on the day of judgment.
The people
of those parts are reporting what kind of
reception we had from you, and how you
turned to God from idols, to serve him who
is the living and true God and to await
from heaven the Son he raised from the
dead – Jesus,
who delivers us from the wrath to come. (1
Thessalonians 1:9-10)
Now that
we have been justified by his blood, it is
all the more certain that we shall be
saved by him from God's wrath. (Romans
5:9)
The message
of scripture is clear: God is merciful and
just. He extends his mercy now through his
Son Jesus Christ, who died and rose for our
salvation. But this age of mercy and grace
will come to an end; those who have rejected
God's offer of grace and mercy will
experience his wrath. God is just as well as
merciful. Those who choose not to enter his
Kingdom through Jesus, the doorway he has
established, are left outside forever:
Consider
the kindness and the severity of God –
severity toward those who fell, kindness
toward you, provided you remain in his
kindness; if you do not, you too will be
cut off. (Romans 11:22)
Now let us
consider what scripture tells us about the
basis for God's judgment.
The Basis of Judgment
for Christians
For Christians who have believed in Christ
and obeyed him, the day of judgment is the
long-awaited day of fullness of redemption
and reward. Scripture encourages those
Christians who have been living in union
with and obedience to Christ to approach the
day of judgment with confidence and joyful
expectation. For Christians, the Lord's
coming and his judgment are fundamentally
events of vindication and fulfillment. In
fact, as we have seen, Peter urges
Christians to "set all your hope on the gift
to be conferred on you when Jesus Christ
appears" (1 Peter 1:13), and Luke, in
speaking of the events leading up to the
second coming and judgment, says, "When you
see these things, look up in joy, your
deliverance is at hand" (Luke 21:28).
Paul declares that "there is no condemnation
now for those who are in Christ Jesus," and
goes on to specify why: "If the Spirit of
him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in
you, then he who raised Christ from the dead
will bring your mortal bodies to life also,
through his Spirit dwelling in you" (Romans
8:1, 11). Paul then adds that when Christ
comes, we will see that the sufferings of
the present are nothing compared with the
glory to be revealed in us. Indeed, he says,
"the whole created world eagerly awaits the
revelation of the sons of God," and "we
ourselves, although we have the Spirit as
first fruits, groan inwardly while we await
the redemption of our bodies" (Romans 8:19,
23).
John, too, reassures those who are following
the Lord:
Whoever
believes in him avoids condemnation, but
whoever does not believe is already
condemned. (John 3:18)
I solemnly assure you,
the man who hears my word
and has faith in him who sent me
possesses
eternal life.
He does
not come under condemnation,
but has
passed from death to life.
I solemnly
assure you,
an hour is
coming, has indeed come,
when the
dead shall hear the voice of the Son of
God,
and those
who have heeded it shall live…
an hour is
coming
in which
all those in their tombs
shall hear
his voice and come forth.
Those who
have done right shall rise to live;
the
evildoers shall rise to be damned. (John
5:24-25, 28-29)
Our love
is brought to perfection in this,
that we should have confidence on the day
of judgment;
for our relation to this world is just
like his. (1 John 4:17)
Christians
who believe in Christ and obey him, and are
therefore living in the same relation to the
world as Jesus did and does, should have
confidence on the day of judgment.
At the same time, though, Christians too
will have to give an account of their lives.
Things that have not been set right or
corrected adequately before Christ's coming
will be dealt with. However, the Christians
being judged will know – the Lord having
affirmed it – that they are saved and have
escaped from wrath and condemnation.
In other words, their judgment will be in
terms of correction and purification, not
condemnation, and will issue ultimately in
reward.
Among those things for which no reward will
be given, Jesus mentions religious
activities done with impure motives (for
example, to appear good or holy to others).
Almsgiving, prayer, and fasting to impress
others are particularly singled out (Matthew
6:1-18). What has been hidden will be
brought into the light:
Stop
passing judgment before the time of his
return. He will bring to light what is
hidden in darkness and manifest the
intentions of hearts. At that time,
everyone will receive his praise from God.
(1 Corinthians 4:5)
Anything in
our life and work that has not really been
built solidly on Christ and in harmony with
his intentions will be judged.
Although these things may be found lacking,
we ourselves will be saved:
Thanks to
the favor God showed me I laid a
foundation as a wise master-builder might
do, and now someone else is building upon
it. Everyone, however, must be careful how
he builds. No one can lay a foundation
other than the one that has been laid,
namely Jesus Christ. If different ones
build on this foundation with gold,
silver, precious stones, wood, hay or
straw, the work of each will be made
clear, The Day will disclose it. That day
will make its appearance with fire, and
fire will test the quality of each man's
work. If the building a man has raised on
this foundation still stands, he will
receive his recompense. If a man's
building burns, he will suffer loss. He
himself will be saved, but only as one
fleeing through fire. (1 Corinthians
3:10-15)1
Part of the
judgment for Christians will be a
determining of reward. Apparently, there are
degrees of reward and glory in heaven,
related to the degree of love and service
with which we have followed Christ. For
example, those who turn others to
righteousness will be especially blessed
(Daniel 12:3).
Judgment on Lukewarm
Christians
This may come as something of a surprise,
but scripture indicates that lukewarm
Christians have a chance of being damned. I
was surprised, even shocked, when I studied
what God's Word said about this. The general
tone of preaching, religious education, and
theology today convey the impression that
damnation is not a serious possibility for
the average lukewarm Christian. God's Word
points in a quite different direction.
Jesus' general attitude toward lukewarmness
is vividly expressed in the following
excerpt from Revelation:
I know
your deeds: I know you are neither hot nor
cold. How I wish you were one or the other
– hot or cold! But because you are
lukewarm, neither hot nor cold, I will
spew you out of my mouth!
(Revelation 3:15)
The prophet
Malachi speaks of judgment as a day when
"you will again see the distinction between…
him who serves God, and him who does not
serve him" (Malachi 3:18). And the New
Testament makes clear that saving faith is
not just intellectual assent to certain
truths, or even an emotional "born again"
experience, but a commitment of the heart
and will to act on and live in accordance
with the words that our Savior and Lord
speaks to us, in the power of the Holy
Spirit. "Be assured, then, that faith
without works is as dead as a body without
breath" (James 2:26).
To profess
faith in Christ without the corresponding
actions is counted by Jesus as worthy of
condemnation:
Every tree
that does not bear good fruit is cut down
and thrown into the fire. You can tell a
tree by its fruit. None of those who cry
out, "Lord, Lord," will enter the kingdom
of God but only the one who does the will
of my Father in heaven. When that day
comes, many will plead with me, "Lord,
Lord"… Then I will declare to them
solemnly, "I never knew you. Out of
my sight, you evildoers!" (Matthew
7:19-22, 23)
Likewise to
believe in the Lord but not to profess that
faith before others when necessary is to be
liable to damnation:
I tell
you, whoever acknowledges me before men – the
Son of Man will acknowledge him before the
angels of God. But the man who has
disowned me in the presence of men will be
disowned in the presence of the angels of
God. (Luke 12:8-9)
Not to be
fruitful for the Lord, not to use well what
he gives, is to run the risk of
condemnation. Material possessions, gifts
and abilities, time and resources, insights
and faith – an unprofitable use of any of
these things could result in their being
taken away and their "owners" being declared
unfaithful servants. This is what is
indicated in the parable of the silver
pieces or talents. The servant who has not
made a profit with the master's money is
stripped of the talents he was given and
thrown out into the outer darkness:
Take the
thousand away from him and give it to the
man with the ten thousand. Those who have,
will get more until they grow rich, while
those who have not, will lose even the
little they have. Throw this worthless
servant into the darkness outside, where
he can wail and grind his teeth. (Matthew
25:28-30)2
Scripture
also points out the dangers of becoming so
involved in ordinary life that one is not
living alert to God, eager to do Christ's
will, and ready for Christ's second coming:
The coming
of the Son of Man will repeat what
happened in Noah's time. In the days
before the flood people were eating and
drinking, marrying and being married,
right up to the day Noah entered the ark.
They were totally unconcerned until the
flood came and destroyed them. So will it
be at the coming of the Son of Man.
(Matthew 24:37-39)3
To be
nominal Christians but not to be clothed in
righteous deeds makes one unfit for the
Kingdom of God. Being invited into the
Kingdom is one thing; responding properly is
another:
When the
king came in to meet the guests, however,
he caught sight of a man not properly
dressed for a wedding feast. "My friend,"
he said, "how is it you came in here not
properly dressed?" The man had nothing to
say. The king then said to the attendants,
"Bind him hand and foot and throw him out
into the night to wail and grind his
teeth." The invited are many, the elect
are few. (Matthew 22:11-14)
We also
become liable to judgment if we fail to
persevere in faith and obedience until the
end of our lives or until the Lord's return.
Short-lived enthusiasm followed by a
drifting back into lukewarmness means
possible condemnation:
Happy that
servant whom his master discovers at work
on his return! I assure you, he will put
him in charge of all his property.
But if the servant is worthless and tells
himself, "My master is a long time in
coming," and begins to beat his fellow
servants, to eat and drink with drunkards,
that man's master will return when he is
not ready and least expects him. He will
punish him severely and settle with him as
is done with hypocrites. There will be
wailing then and grinding of teeth.
(Matthew 24:46-51)
Being
faithful to the end is essential for
salvation:
Remain
faithful until death and I will give you
the crown of life… hold fast to what you
have until I come. To the one who wins the
victory, who keeps to my ways till the
end, I will give authority over the
nations – the same authority I received
from my Father. (Revelation 2:10, 25, 26)
Christians
who do not persevere, who end up denying the
faith and leading others to do likewise,
will be dealt with severely:
Just as
weeds are collected and burned, so will it
be at the end of the world. The Son of Man
will dispatch his angels to collect from
his kingdom all who draw others to
apostasy, and all evildoers. The angels
will hurl them into the fiery furnace
where they will wail and grind their
teeth. Then the saints will shine like the
sun in their Father's kingdom. Let
everyone heed what he hears! (Matthew
13:40-43)
Returning to
serious sin after being a Christian puts us
in risk of judgment.
If we sin
willfully after receiving the truth, there
remains for us no further sacrifice for
sin – only a fearful expectation of
judgment and a flaming fire to consume the
adversaries of God. Anyone who rejects the
law of Moses is put to death without mercy
on the testimony of two or three
witnesses. Do you not suppose that a much
worse punishment is due the man who
disdains the Son of God, thinks the
covenant-blood by which he was sanctified
to be ordinary, and insults the Spirit of
grace? We know who said, "Vengeance is
mine; I will repay" and "The Lord will
judge his people." It is a fearful thing
to fall into the hands of the living God.
(Hebrews 10:26-31)
There is
only one way for Christians to meet the
criteria required for heaven: we must allow
the Lord to transform us and make us holy –
not just in external actions, but in our
hearts and minds and wills; for, "unless
your holiness surpasses that of the scribes
and Pharisees you shall not enter the
kingdom of God" (Matthew 5:20).
The Judgment of Those
Who Hear the Gospel But Reject It
Human beings who hear the gospel and
encounter its messengers but close their
hearts to it will be condemned:
He will
provide relief to you who are sorely
tried, as well us to us, when the Lord
Jesus is revealed from heaven with his
mighty angels; when "with flaming power he
will Inflict punishment on those who do
not acknowledge God nor heed" the good
news of our Lord Jesus. Such as these will
suffer the penalty of eternal ruin apart
from the presence of the Lord and the
glory of his might on the Day when he
comes, to be glorified in his holy ones
and adored by all who have believed – for
you already have our witness to you. (2
Thessalonians 1:7-10)
Numerous
other passages speak of condemnation as the
consequence for rejecting the gospel. We
have considered some of these already; we
shall consider others later. Regarding the
reception accorded to messengers of the
gospel, Jesus himself promises that those
who reject his brethren will be judged as if
they rejected him:
If anyone
does not receive you or listen to what you
have to say, leave that house or town, and
once outside it shake its dust from your
feet. I assure you, it will go easier for
the region of Sodom and Gomorrah on the
day of judgment than it will for that
town.
He who
welcomes you welcomes me, and he who
welcomes me welcomes him who sent me. He
who welcomes a prophet because he bears
the name of prophet receives a prophet's
reward; he who welcomes a holy man because
he is known to be holy receives a holy
man's reward. And I promise you that
whoever gives a cup of cold water to one
of these lowly ones because he is a
disciple will not want for his reward.
(Matthew 10:14-15, 40-42)
Reward and
punishment for the treatment of Jesus'
disciples are both amplified in the judgment
scene from Matthew:
"I assure
you, as often as you did it for one of my
least brothers, you did it for me."
Then he
will say to those on his left: "Out of my
sight, you condemned, into that
everlasting fire prepared for the devil
and his angels! … "I assure you, as often
as you neglected to do it to one of these
least ones, you neglected to do it to me."
These will go off to eternal punishment
and the just to eternal life. (Matthew
25:40-41, 45-46)
In the New
Testament, the word "brethren" always refers
to fellow Christians. Thus this
judgment scene describes the consequences of
how Christ's disciples, his brothers, are
treated. (This is not to deny that
Christians are also called to be "good
Samaritans," compassionate and merciful to
all men. This too will affect the judgment
[Luke 10:30-37; Matthew 5:43-48).])
The scripture also specifies certain types
of behavior which will exclude their
practitioners from the Kingdom
of God. Among those barred from heaven will
be those who dishonor marriage; those who
live as thieves, idolaters, sodomites,
misers, fornicators, adulterers, drunkards,
slanderers, robbers; those who are liars or
who do detestable acts; those who are
cowards, traitors, deceivers (Hebrews 13:4;
1 Corinthians 6:9-11; Revelation 21:8,
26-27).
In addition, false teachers – especially
those who deny the Lord, his second coming,
or the judgment, or who encourage immorality
– will be excluded from the Kingdom. Even
the fallen angels will receive a final
judgment and be eternally banished from it
(2 Peter 2:1-22, 3:1-4).
The Judgment of Those
Who Haven't Heard the Gospel
Scripture indicates that human beings who
have not heard the gospel before their
deaths or the Lord's coming will be judged
on the basis of their response to the light
that God gave them. God gives this
light, or revelation of himself, at least
minimally to all mankind through the
material creation. It also manifests itself
in that call to a moral life that God gives
to all men – the instinct, sense of right
and wrong, or conscience implanted in each
of us:
The wrath
of God is being revealed from heaven
against the irreligious and perverse
spirit of men who, in this perversity of
theirs, hinder the truth. In fact,
whatever can be known about God is clear
to them; he himself made it so. Since the
creation of the world, invisible
realities, God's eternal power and
divinity, have become visible, recognized
through the things he has made. Therefore
these men are inexcusable. They certainly
had knowledge of God, yet they did not
glorify him as God or give him thanks;
they stultified themselves through
speculating to no purpose, and their
senseless hearts were darkened… They know
God's just decree that all who do such
things deserve death; yet they not only do
them but approve them in others. (Romans
1:18-21, 32)
Concerning
the instinct for right and wrong in all men:
Sinners
who do not have the law will perish
without reference to it; sinners bound by
the law will be judged in accordance with
it. For it is not those who hear the law
who are just in the sight of God; it is
those who keep it who will be declared
just. When Gentiles who do not have the
law keep it as by instinct, these men
although without the law serve as a law
for themselves. They show that the demands
of the law are written in their hearts.
Their conscience bears witness together
with that law, and their thoughts will
accuse or defend them on the day when, in
accordance with the gospel I preach, God
will pass judgment on the secrets of men
through Christ Jesus. (Romans 2:12-16)
In the
Catholic context, the Second Vatican Council
presents this scriptural teaching about the
possible salvation of those who have not
heard the gospel in a way that may be of
interest to many Christians. The Council
document Lumen Gentium affirms God's
closeness to and desire to save all men:
Nor is God
Himself far distant from those who in
shadows and images seek the unknown God,
for it is He who gives to all men life and
breath and every other gift (cf. Acts
17:25-28), and who as Savior wills that
all men be saved (cf. 1 Timothy 2:4). (Constitution
on the Church, 16)
It then
points out the scriptural revelation about
how people in this situation will be judged,
and how salvation is possible to them:
Those also
can attain to everlasting salvation who
through no fault of their own do not know
the gospel of Christ or His Church, yet
sincerely seek God and, moved by grace,
strive by their deeds to do His Will as it
is known to them through the dictates of
conscience. Nor does divine Providence
deny the help necessary for salvation to
those who without blame on their part have
not yet arrived at an explicit knowledge
of God but who strive to live a good life,
thanks to His grace. Whatever goodness or
truth is found among them is looked upon
by the Church as a preparation for the
gospel. She regards such qualities as
given by Him who enlightens all men so
that they may finally have life.
Note here
the qualifications placed on the possibility
for salvation. First, those ignorant of the
gospel are saved only by grace given by God,
as a result of the sacrifice of Christ.
Also, these people must be ignorant of the
gospel "through no fault of their own," and
they must be people who "sincerely seek God"
and who "strive… to do His Will as it is
known to them."
Recognizing that such people may be
comparatively rare and that the fallen human
race does not often fulfill the mentioned
conditions, the Council document goes on to
realistically point out the actual
situation:
But rather
often men, deceived by the Evil One, have
become caught up in futile reasoning and
have exchanged the truth of God for a lie,
serving the creature rather than the
Creator (cf. Romans 1:21, 25). Or some
there are who, living and dying in a world
without God, are subject to utter
hopelessness. Consequently, to promote the
glory of God and procure the salvation of
all such men, and mindful of the command
of the Lord, "Preach the gospel to every
creature" (Mk 16:16), the Church
painstakingly fosters her missionary work.
The fact is
that it is infinitely preferable for human
beings to be found "in Christ" on the day of
judgment rather than to presume that fallen
humanity is sincerely and actively seeking
God and his will. So often men are "deceived
by the Evil One" and end up worshiping the
creature rather than the Creator.
Therefore, to preach the gospel to every
creature is not just an optional extra, or
even simply a duty out of obedience, but it
is an act of great mercy to fallen mankind.
The Consequences of
Judgment: Hell and Heaven
With the second coming of Christ, the
resurrection of the dead, and the final
judgment, human history as we currently know
it will come to an end. The time of mercy
will draw to a close for those in rebellion
against God, and along with it the chance to
escape his wrath and punishment. Evildoers
will be banished from his Kingdom forever
and enter into eternal punishment. Those who
have responded to the light God gave them
will enter into eternal joy.
Hell, the fate of the damned, is vividly
described in scripture. Sometimes it is
referred to as "outer darkness" (Matthew
22:13), where there will be weeping and
gnashing of teeth. Sometimes it is described
as "unquenchable fire" (Mark 9:43), or the
"furnace of fire" (Matthew 13:42, 50), or
the "lake of fire" (Revelation 20:15; 21:8).
Sometimes, it is the place where the
tormenting worm never stops gnawing (Mark
9:48). Sometimes it is simply "damnation" or
"death" (John 5:25, 29), the "second death"
(Revelation 2:11, 20:14), "eternal
punishment" (Matthew 25:46), or "eternal
ruin" (2 Thessalonians 1:7-10).
The reality of the scriptural teaching on
hell gives rise to a number of questions –
most immediately, perhaps, concerning the
images used to describe it. Will hell
literally be a place of flames, darkness,
and tormenting worms? Perhaps. Perhaps not.
The only certainty is that scripture warns
us to do everything possible to avoid ending
up there, since its sufferings are truly
awful. But at the same time, we are
overstepping our bounds if we simply ignore
the images given and psychologize the
reality of hell. An ancient tradition of the
Christian church holds that because of the
very nature of the resurrection, the
sufferings of hell must include
not only the awful pain of
separation from God, but corporeal suffering
as well. Just as we will be judged in the
body for deeds done in the body, we will
also suffer in the body for deeds done in
the body. God takes our bodily nature
seriously both before and after death.
Another question about hell is whether it is
indeed of eternal duration. The "scandal" of
hell's eternity has led men to speculate
that perhaps one day God will pardon those
in hell and that they, along with the fallen
angels and Satan, will eventually be
reconciled to God. Such efforts to
"demythologize" hell – or even ignore it
completely – are becoming more common today
both on the theological and popular levels.4
Nowhere does scripture indicate that this
might be the case; it clearly states quite
the contrary. The Christian church has
always condemned this attempt by the fallen
mind to recast revelation in a way more
pleasing to fallen man. The existence of
hell and its eternal duration have been
taught and affirmed as certain revelation
throughout the centuries.
One last question about eternal
condemnation: is it probable that those who
have rejected Christ will be offered an
opportunity for repentance and faith at the
time of death or after death? All that can
be said in this regard is that dying seems
to be a time when faith is tested rather
than suddenly given. Although deathbed
conversions certainly happen, scripture
indicates that, in general, death is the
moment of summons to judgment on the basis
of a life's choices and decisions, and not
primarily a "last chance." It seems fairly
clear that if one is not ready before the
moment of crisis, it is presumptuous to plan
on "preparing" at the last minute (Matthew
25:1-13; John 9:4).
In conjunction with the judgment, Satan,
death, the rebellious angels, and rebellious
humanity are all finally banished from the
Kingdom, undergo the "second death," and are
condemned to eternal torment in the lake of
fire (Revelation 20:10-15). Those who have
responded to God's offer of salvation enter
into fullness of life: "Inherit the kingdom
prepared for you from the creation of the
world" (Matthew 25:34).
Heaven is variously described in scripture.
It is eternal life (Matthew 25:46), "glory
beyond compare" (2 Corinthians 4:17),
a place in which the redeemed
participate in the life of God in glorified,
immortal, incorruptible bodies (1
Corinthians 15:35-55). It is "dwelling in
the heavens" (2 Corinthians 5:1), "the city
of the living God" which is filled with
"angels in festal garb" (Hebrews 12:22).
Heaven is "the new Jerusalem, the holy
city," part of "a new heaven, a new earth"
(Revelation 21:1-4, 10-11; 2 Peter 3:13).
Perhaps the passage from Revelation says it
best:
Then I saw
new heavens and a new earth. The former
heavens and the former earth had passed
away, and the sea was no longer. I also
saw a new Jerusalem, the holy city, coming
down out of heaven from God, beautiful as
a bride prepared to meet her husband. I
heard a loud voice from the throne cry
out: "This is God's dwelling among men. He
shall dwell with them and they shall be
his people and he shall be their God who
is always with them. He shall wipe every
tear from their eyes, and there shall be
no more death or mourning, crying out or
pain, for the former world has passed
away." (Revelation 21:1-4)
………………
Notes
1. The Catholic understanding of
"purgatory" is related to scriptures like
these, which indicate the need for a
purification by "fire" for those who are
not to be condemned but are in need of
some purification before being able to
enter fully into the heavenly presence of
God.
2. Remarking on this passage, The
Jerome Biblical Commentary states:
This paradoxical saying indicates that the
powers conferred on the disciples grow
with use and wither with disuse. The
punishment for this type of infidelity is
as severe as the punishment for more
positive sins; it is expulsion into outer
darkness. (The Jerome Biblical
Commentary, p. 106)
3. Again, the explanations of The
Jerome Biblical Commentary are
helpful:
The warning about the deluge is
significant; it does not say that men were
sinning but that they were engaged in
innocent secular occupations. Their sin
was to give no thought to impending
catastrophe. The disciples are warned
against that interest in secular business
that makes them forget the parousia. (Ibid.)
4. The Council of Constance in 543
explicitly rejected as unscriptural the
notion that there will be an end to hell
or an eventual reconciliation of its
inhabitants. The early creeds of the
church, the Fourth Lateran Council, and
the Councils of Lyons, Florence, and Trent
all reaffirmed the traditional teaching.
Under the leadership of John Paul II, the
Catholic Church has again reaffirmed these
truths:
In fidelity to the New
Testament and tradition, the church
believes in the happiness of the just
who will one day be with Christ.
She believes that there will
be eternal punishment for the sinner,
who will be deprived of the sight of
God, and that this punishment will have
a repercussion on the whole being of the
sinner. ("Certain Questions," Ibid.)
This article is excerpted from The
Return of the Lord, Chapter 7, ©
copyright 1983 by Ralph Martin, and
published by Servant Books, Ann Arbor,
Michigan, USA.
Ralph Martin is president of Renewal
Ministries, an organization devoted
to Catholic renewal and evangelization.
Ralph also hosts The Choices We Face, a
widely viewed weekly Catholic television
and radio program distributed throughout
the world. Renewal Ministries is also
actively involved in assisting the Church
in more than 30 different countries
through leadership training, evangelistic
conferences and retreats, and the
publication and distribution of Catholic
resources.
Ralph is the author of a number of books,
including Will Many Be Saved? and The
Urgency of the New Evangelization:
Answering the Call. He and his wife
Anne have six children and seventeen
grandchildren and reside in Ann Arbor,
Michigan, USA.
Article © copyright 1983,
2019 by Ralph Martin
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