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... those who find themselves in hell will be chastised by the scourge of love. How cruel and bitter this torment of love will be! For those who understand that they have sinned against love, undergo no greater suffering than those produced by the most fearful tortures. The sorrow which takes hold of the heart, which has sinned against love, is more piercing than any other pain. It is not right to say that the sinners in hell are deprived of the love of God ... But love acts in two ways, as suffering of the reproved, and as joy in the blessed! (St. Isaac of Syria, Mystic Treatises) The Orthodox Church of America website </ref> One expression of the Eastern teaching is that hell and heaven are being in God's presence, as this presence is punishment and paradise depending on the person's spiritial state in that presences.<ref>God himself is both heaven and hell, reward and punishment. All men have been created to see God unceasingly in His uncreated glory. Whether God will be for each man heaven or hell, reward or punishment, depends on man's response to God's love and on man's transformation from the state of selfish and self-centered love, to Godlike love which does not seek its own ends. EMPIRICAL THEOLOGY VERSUS SPECULATIVE THEOLOGY by John S. Romanides part 2 </ref><ref>"Paradise and Hell exist not in the form of a threat and a punishment on the part of God but in the form of an illness and a cure. Those who are cured and those who are purified experience the illuminating energy of divine grace, while the uncured and ill experience the caustic energy of God."</ref> For one who ], to be in the presence of God eternally would be the gravest suffering.<ref name="pelagia.org">Man has a malfunctioning or non-functioning noetic faculty in the heart, and it is the task especially of the clergy to apply the cure of unceasing memory of God, otherwise called unceasing prayer or illumination. "Those who have selfless love and are friends of God see God in light - divine light, while the selfish and impure see God the judge as fire - darkness". </ref><ref>"Those who have selfless love and are friends of God see God in light - divine light, while the selfish and impure see God the judge as fire- darkness". </ref><ref>Proper preparation for vision of God takes place in two stages: purification, and illumination of the noetic faculty. Without this, it is impossible for man's selfish love to be transformed into selfless love. This transformation takes place during the higher level of the stage of illumination called theoria, literally meaning vision-in this case vision by means of unceasing and uninterrupted memory of God. Those who remain selfish and self-centered with a hardened heart, closed to God's love, will not see the glory of God in this life. However, they will see God's glory eventually, but as an eternal and consuming fire and outer darkness. From FRANKS, ROMANS, FEUDALISM, AND DOCTRINE/Diagnosis and Therapy Father John S. Romanides Diagnosis and Therapy </ref> Aristotle Papanikolaou and Elizabeth H. Prodromou wrote in their book Thinking Through Faith: New Perspectives from Orthodox Christian Scholars that for the Orthodox: Those theological symbols, heaven and hell, are not crudely understood as spatial destinations but rather refer to the experience of God's presence according to two different modes.<ref>Regarding specific conditions of after-life existence and eschatology, Orthodox thinkers are generally reticent; yet two basic shared teachings can be singled out. First, they widely hold that immediately following a human being's physical death, his or her surviving spiritual dimension experiences a foretaste of either heaven or hell. ... those who find themselves in hell will be chastised by the scourge of love. How cruel and bitter this torment of love will be! For those who understand that they have sinned against love, undergo no greater suffering than those produced by the most fearful tortures. The sorrow which takes hold of the heart, which has sinned against love, is more piercing than any other pain. It is not right to say that the sinners in hell are deprived of the love of God ... But love acts in two ways, as suffering of the reproved, and as joy in the blessed! (St. Isaac of Syria, Mystic Treatises) The Orthodox Church of America website </ref> One expression of the Eastern teaching is that hell and heaven are being in God's presence, as this presence is punishment and paradise depending on the person's spiritial state in that presences.<ref>God himself is both heaven and hell, reward and punishment. All men have been created to see God unceasingly in His uncreated glory. Whether God will be for each man heaven or hell, reward or punishment, depends on man's response to God's love and on man's transformation from the state of selfish and self-centered love, to Godlike love which does not seek its own ends. EMPIRICAL THEOLOGY VERSUS SPECULATIVE THEOLOGY by John S. Romanides part 2 </ref><ref>"Paradise and Hell exist not in the form of a threat and a punishment on the part of God but in the form of an illness and a cure. Those who are cured and those who are purified experience the illuminating energy of divine grace, while the uncured and ill experience the caustic energy of God."</ref> For one who ], to be in the presence of God eternally would be the gravest suffering.<ref name="pelagia.org">Man has a malfunctioning or non-functioning noetic faculty in the heart, and it is the task especially of the clergy to apply the cure of unceasing memory of God, otherwise called unceasing prayer or illumination. "Those who have selfless love and are friends of God see God in light - divine light, while the selfish and impure see God the judge as fire - darkness". </ref><ref>"Those who have selfless love and are friends of God see God in light - divine light, while the selfish and impure see God the judge as fire- darkness". </ref><ref>Proper preparation for vision of God takes place in two stages: purification, and illumination of the noetic faculty. Without this, it is impossible for man's selfish love to be transformed into selfless love. This transformation takes place during the higher level of the stage of illumination called theoria, literally meaning vision-in this case vision by means of unceasing and uninterrupted memory of God. Those who remain selfish and self-centered with a hardened heart, closed to God's love, will not see the glory of God in this life. However, they will see God's glory eventually, but as an eternal and consuming fire and outer darkness. From FRANKS, ROMANS, FEUDALISM, AND DOCTRINE/Diagnosis and Therapy Father John S. Romanides Diagnosis and Therapy </ref> Aristotle Papanikolaou and Elizabeth H. Prodromou wrote in their book Thinking Through Faith: New Perspectives from Orthodox Christian Scholars that for the Orthodox: Those theological symbols, heaven and hell, are not crudely understood as spatial destinations but rather refer to the experience of God's presence according to two different modes.<ref>Regarding specific conditions of after-life existence and eschatology, Orthodox thinkers are generally reticent; yet two basic shared teachings can be singled out. First, they widely hold that immediately following a human being's physical death, his or her surviving spiritual dimension experiences a foretaste of either heaven or hell.
(Those theological symbols, heaven and hell, are not crudely understood as spatial destinations but rather refer to the experience of God's presence according to two different modes.) Thinking Through Faith: New Perspectives from Orthodox Christian Scholars page 195 By Aristotle Papanikolaou, Elizabeth H. Prodromou </ref> Some Eastern Orthodox expression personal opinions that appear to run counter to official church statements,{{citation needed|date=December 2010}} in teaching hell is separation from God.<ref>] (Sakharov) speaks of "the hell of separation from God" (</ref><ref>"The circumstances that rise before us, the problems we encounter, the relationships we form, the choices we make, all ultimately concern our eternal union with or separation from God" (</ref><ref>"Hell is nothing else but separation of man from God, his autonomy excluding him from the place where God is present" (</ref><ref>"Hell is a spiritual state of separation from God and inability to experience the love of God, while being conscious of the ultimate deprivation of it as punishment" (</ref><ref>"Hell is none other than the state of separation from God, a condition into which humanity was plunged for having preferred the creature to the Creator. It is the human creature, therefore, and not God, who engenders hell. Created free for the sake of love, man possesses the incredible power to reject this love, to say 'no' to God. By refusing communion with God, he becomes a predator, condemning himself to a spiritual death (hell) more dreadful than the physical death that derives from it" (</ref> (Those theological symbols, heaven and hell, are not crudely understood as spatial destinations but rather refer to the experience of God's presence according to two different modes.) Thinking Through Faith: New Perspectives from Orthodox Christian Scholars page 195 By Aristotle Papanikolaou, Elizabeth H. Prodromou </ref> Some Eastern Orthodox expression personal opinions that appear to run counter to official church statements,{{citation needed|date=December 2010}} in teaching hell is separation from God.<ref>] (Sakharov) speaks of "the hell of separation from God" (</ref><ref>"The circumstances that rise before us, the problems we encounter, the relationships we form, the choices we make, all ultimately concern our eternal union with or separation from God" (</ref><ref>"Hell is nothing else but separation of man from God, his autonomy excluding him from the place where God is present" (</ref><ref>"Hell is a spiritual state of separation from God and inability to experience the love of God, while being conscious of the ultimate deprivation of it as punishment" (</ref><ref>"Hell is none other than the state of separation from God, a condition into which humanity was plunged for having preferred the creature to the Creator. It is the human creature, therefore, and not God, who engenders hell. Created free for the sake of love, man possesses the incredible power to reject this love, to say 'no' to God. By refusing communion with God, he becomes a predator, condemning himself to a spiritual death (hell) more dreadful than the physical death that derives from it" (</ref>

===Nature of hell===
According to one Orthodox catechism, "No one knows exactly what the after-life will be like. No one knows quite how the just and the sinners will be living."<ref name = "lifehell">"Eternal Life and Eternal Hell", ''Orthodox Catechism'', Holy Trinity Romanian Orthodox Church, 28 Dec 2010 <http://biserica.org/Publicatii/Catechism/catetern.htm>.</ref>

According to an influential tradition in Eastern Orthodox theology, heaven and hell are both experiences of God's glory. The righteous will experience this glory as heaven, while the wicked will experience it as hell.<ref>Andrew Louth, "Eastern Orthodox Eschatology", ''The Oxford Handbook of Eschatology'' (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 241-42</ref>

According to Iōannēs Polemēs, the Orthodox theologian ] believed that, for sinners, "the divine light will be perceived as the punishing fire of hell".,<ref>Iōannēs Polemēs, ''Theophanes of Nicaea:
His Life and Works'', vol. 20 (Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1996), p. 99</ref>

However, according to Iōannēs Polemēs, the Orthodox theologian ] did not believe that sinners could experience the divine light: "Unlike Theophanes, Palamas did not believe that sinners could have an experience of the divine light Nowhere in his works does Palamas seem to adopt Theophanes' view that the ] is identical with the fire of hell, although this is not a view lacking in patristic foundation."<ref>Iōannēs Polemēs, ''Theophanes of Nicaea:
His Life and Works'', vol. 20 (Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1996), p. 100</ref>

According to Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos, "Paradise and Hell exist not in the form of a threat and a punishment on the part of God but in the form of an illness and a cure. Those who are cured and those who are purified experience the illuminating energy of divine grace, while the uncured and ill experience the caustic energy of God."<ref>(</ref>

According to the article "Heaven and Hell" on the ]'s website, "It is the Church's spiritual teaching that God does not punish man by some material fire or physical torment. God simply reveals Himself in the risen Lord Jesus in such a glorious way that no man can fail to behold His glory. It is the presence of God's splendid glory and love that is the scourge of those who reject its radiant power and light."<ref></ref>

Some Orthodox writers argue that salvation is not salvation from the ] and that hell is not a punishment imposed by an angry God. According to John S. Romanides, God loves the damned in hell as much as the saint in heaven: "God loves equally both those who are going to hell and those who are going to heaven. God loves even the Devil as much as He loves the saint. 'God is the savior of all humans, indeed of the faithful' (1 Tim. 4:10). In other words hell is a form of salvation although the lowest form of it. God loves the Devil and his collaborators but destroys their work."<ref></ref> Metropolitan Hierotheos calls hell "the torment of the love of God".<ref>"Hell is the torment of the love of God. Besides, as St. Isaac says, the sorrow caused in the heart by sin against the ], 'is more poignant than any fear of punishment'. It really is a punishment when we deny and oppose anyone's love. It is terrible when we are loved and we behave inappropriately. If we compare this to the love of God, we can understand the torment of Hell. And it is connected with what St. Isaac says again, that it would be improper for a man to think 'that sinners in Gehenna are deprived of the love of God'. So even those being punished will receive the love of God. God will love all men, both righteous and sinners, but they will not all feel this love at the same depth and in the same way. In any case it is absurd for us to maintain that Hell is the absence of God" (Metropolitan Hierotheos, op. cit.).</ref>

Several Eastern Orthodox sources present hell as "separation from God".

According to one Orthodox article, "The circumstances that rise before us, the problems we encounter, the relationships we form, the choices we make, all ultimately concern our eternal union with or separation from God."<ref></ref>

On page 85 of Michel Quenot's book ''The Resurrection and the Icon'', under the heading ''Light, Freedom, Joy: Fullness of Life'', hell is described as "none other than the state of separation from God".<ref>Quenot writes:
{{Quote|Man finds his way (the truth) only in reference to the light. If the latter allows beings and things to be known, it also conditions their existence and provides a foundation for their life. Yet Christ refers to Himself as "Light, Life, Way, Door, Truth!" He is the fullest expression of "reality"; all that is has its source in Him. <br>At his entrance into hell, Dante has the ancient poet Virgil, declare that he is penetrating into a place that is "mute as to light" (''ogni luce muto'') but full of groaning. The lack of light actually implies a lack of awareness of the other, total isolation, the absence of communication and of love. Hell is none other than the state of separation from God, a condition into which humanity was plunged for having preferred the creature to the Creator. It is the human creature, therefore, and not God, who engenders hell. Created free for the sake of love, man possesses the incredible power to reject this love, to say 'no' to God. By refusing communion with God, he becomes a predator, condemning himself to a spiritual death (hell) more dreadful than the physical death that derives from it.}}</ref> Quenot states on page 86 of the same book that "By His death, Christ did away with the chasm that separated man from God, while the torn curtain of the Temple proclaimed the end of any separation".<ref> With regard to the effect of Christ's death, Russian Orthodox Bishop Hilarion of Vienna and Austria] declared: "The reality of the hell, its existence for sinners and even the possibility of its eternal existence don't contradict the news of its abolition by Christ resurrected. The hell is really 'abolished' in the resurrection of Christ, as it is not inevitable for people anymore and doesn't have power over them. But those, who consciously oppose God's will and commit crime and sin, restore destroyed and abolished hell as they don't want to reconcile with God's love. I'd like to stress it again: God didn't create the hell, people created it for themselves, God destroyed and abolished the hell, but people restore it again and again. The hell is re-created every time when the sin is consciously committed and isn’t repented" (</ref>

] writes: "Hell is nothing else but separation of man from God, his autonomy excluding him from the place where God is present."<ref></ref> Only of a human heart that excludes God can it be said that, in a sense, God is not there, and so Eastern Orthodox Bishop ] wrote: "Hell is a point not in space but in the soul. It is ''the place where God is not''. (And yet God is everywhere!)" (emphasis in the original).<ref name=Ware></ref> In his review of Bishop Kallistos Ware's book, Hieromonk Patapios, taking Ware's reference to a ''place'' where God is not as contradicting the doctrine of God's presence throughout space, questioned the orthodoxy of this expression.<ref>"Without a single citation from the Fathers, His Grace baldly asserts that Hell is 'the place where God ''is not' '' (ibid. ). He then notes, parenthetically, that 'God is everywhere!' If God is everywhere, as the doctrine of Divine omnipresence entails, then how can there be any place from which He is absent? And yet, Bishop Kallistos reasons, if Christ descended into Hell, He must have descended into the depths of the absence of God. There are problems, here, not only with regard to an Orthodox understanding of Heaven and Hell, but also in terms of His Grace's misuse of terminology; that is, as we shall see, his failure to distinguish between Hell as a place of torment for unrepentant sinners and Hades as the place where death prevailed over man before the Resurrection. These words are used interchangeably, we admit, and the distinction to which we have referred is a subtle one; however, it is one essential to any response to the innovative and theologically troublesome idea that Christ, descending into Hades, supposedly went to a place from which God was absent" ( in ''Orthodox Tradition'', Vol. XVI, Nos. 3&4, pp. 30-51).</ref>

In his account of the life of Saint ], ] (Sakharov) speaks of "the dead suffering in the hell of separation from God".<ref></ref>

''The Longer Catechism of The Orthodox, Catholic, Eastern Church'' speaks of hell in the theological sense as separation by sin from the sight of God's ]: it answers the question, "What is hades or hell?", by stating: "Hades is a Greek word, and means a place void of light. In ], by this name is understood a spiritual prison, that is, the state of those spirits which are separated by sin from the sight of God's countenance, and from the light and blessedness which it confers.<ref>, 214</ref>

The modern online Orthodox catechism of Metropolitan Hilarion Alfeyev explains hell as the torment sinners undergo because they cannot participate in God's love and ''they are outside of it''".<ref name=Alfeyev></ref>

Theodore Stylianopoulos wrote that one Orthodox interpretation of hell, "based on certain Orthodox luminaries such as St. Isaac the Syrian, St. Gregory of Nyssa and St. Gregory the Theologian", asserts that "hell is a spiritual state of separation from God and inability to experience the love of God, while being conscious of the ultimate deprivation of it as punishment".<ref name=stylianopoulos></ref>

According to Fr. Sergei Sveshnikov, the damned will separate themselves voluntarily, by "running away" from God: "'These will go away into everlasting punishment' (Matt. 25:46); but they will go on their own accord, they will run from God, continuing on the path that they chose and confirmed with their lives. They will hide away from God as they kept hiding during their lives; and separation from God is everlasting punishment."<ref></ref>

On the website of the "] Christian Archdiocese of North America" Frederica Matthewes-Green, speaking of the "non-physical realm where the souls of all the departed await the Last Judgment", states that the concept of "separation from God" is only a handy metaphor, since nothing can exist outside God.<ref></ref>

Some Orthodox writers point out that hell's separation from God cannot be spatial separation, but only separation in relation to the soul, since "hell is a point not in space but in the soul".<ref name=Ware/> Some argue that such non-spatial separation of the soul from God is a possibility and does actually occur, even in this life: sin separates us from God,<ref></ref> for, while God does not cut us off from his constant love, sinners do cut themselves off: the change is on our part, not God's.<ref>"Sin separates us from God. It is not as though God is moved by sin – he is always love – the same yesterday, today and forever. It is WE who are moved, darkened, stained, separated from God by sin" (</ref> Eternal damnation is the result of their refusal to return God's love,<ref>"God really loves those who refuse to return his love and so are eternally damned" </ref> and they "cannot participate in it and they are outside of it",<ref name=Alfeyev/> having lost at death the ability to return it.<ref>"'What is hell?' I maintain that it is the suffering of being unable to love. … For he sees clearly and says to himself, 'Now I have understanding, and though I now thirst to love, there will be nothing great, no sacrifice in my love, for my earthly life is over'" (</ref> "Someone who is outside of love during his earthly life will not find a way to be inside it when he departs from the body."<ref name=Alfeyev/>


===Images of hell=== ===Images of hell===

Revision as of 13:55, 25 January 2011

See also: Hell, Sheol, and Hades in Christianity

Hell, in Christian beliefs, is a place or a state in which the souls of the unsaved will suffer the consequences of sin. The New Testament speaks of the after-death fate of the wicked, using the Greek words γέεννα (gehenna) and ταρταρῶ (tartarō).

In the New Testament, it is described as the place or state of punishment after death or last judgment for those who have rejected Jesus.

Hell is generally defined as the eternal fate of unrepentant sinners after this life. Hell's character is inferred from biblical teaching, which has often been understood literally. Souls are said to pass into Hell by God's irrevocable judgment, either immediately after death (particular judgment) or in the general judgment. Modern theologians generally describe Hell as the logical consequence of the soul using its free will to reject the will of God. It is considered compatible with God's justice and mercy because God will not interfere with the soul's free choice.

Only in the King James Version is the word "Hell" used to translate certain words, such as sheol (Hebrew) and both hades and gehenna (Greek). All other translations reserve Hell only for use when gehenna is mentioned. It is generally agreed that both sheol and hades do not typically refer to the place of eternal punishment, but to the grave, the temporary abode of the dead, or underworld.

Jewish background

In ancient Jewish belief, the dead were consigned to the Sheol or grave, to which all were sent indiscriminately (cf. Genesis 37:35; Numbers 16:30-33; Psalm 86:13; Ecclesiastes 9:10). It is thought of as a place situated below the ground (cf. Ezek. 31:15), a place of darkness, silence and forgetfulness (cf. Job 10:21). However, by the third to second century BCE, the idea had grown to encompass separate divisions in sheol for the righteous and wicked (cf. the Book of Enoch). And by the time of Jesus, some Jews had come to believe that those in Sheol awaited the resurrection either in comfort (in the bosom of Abraham) or in torment. This belief is reflected in Jesus' story of the rich man and Lazarus.(cf.Luke 16:23)

The Hebrew word Sheol was translated in the Greek Septuagint as Hades, the name for the underworld and abode of the dead in Greek mythology. The realm of eternal punishment in Hellenistic mythology was in fact Tartarus; Hades was rather a form of limbo where the unjudged dead dwelled.

In later Jewish belief, the place of punishment was Gehenna, a place of unquenchable fire (cf. Assumption of Moses, 2 Esdras). The term is derived from ge-hinnom, a valley near Jerusalem originally used as a location for human sacrifices to the idol Moloch, and where refuse and the bodies of executed criminals were later burnt.

Hell (on the right) is portrayed in this 16th century painting.
And he defiled the Tophet, which is in the valley of Ben-hinnom, that no man might make his son or his daughter pass through the fire to Molech. 2 Kings 23:10
And they built the high places of the Ba‘al, which are in the valley of Ben-hinnom, to cause their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire to Molech; which I did not command them, nor did it come into my mind that they should do this abomination, to cause Judah to sin. Jeremiah 32:35

Hell in the New Testament

Three different New Testament words appear in English translations as "hell":

Greek NT NT occurrences KJV NKJV NASB NIV ESV CEV NLT
ᾅδης (Hades) 9 hell (9/10) Hades (10/10) Hades (9/9) Hades (7/9 or 4/9) Hades (8/9) death's kingdom (3/9) grave (6/9)
γέεννα (Gehenna) 11 hell hell hell hell hell hell hell
ταρταρῶ (verb) 1 hell hell hell hell hell hell hell

The most common New Testament term translated as "hell" is γέεννα (gehenna), a direct loan of Hebrew ge-hinnom. Apart from one use in James 3:6, this term is found exclusively in the synoptic gospels. Gehenna is most frequently described as a place of fiery torment (e.g. Matthew 5:22, 18:8-9; Mark 9:43-49) although other passages mention darkness and "weeping and gnashing of teeth" (e.g. Matthew 8:12; 22:13).

Apart from the use of the term gehenna (translated as "hell" in all English translations of the bible), the Johannine writings refer to the destiny of the wicked in terms of "perishing", "death" and "condemnation" or "judgment". St. Paul speaks of "wrath" and "everlasting destruction" (cf. Romans 2:7–9; 2 Thessalonians 1:9), while the general epistles use a range of terms and images including "raging fire" (Hebrews 10:27), "destruction" (2 Peter 3:7), "eternal fire" (Jude 7) and "blackest darkness" (Jude 13). The Book of Revelation contains the image of a "lake of fire" and "burning sulphur" where "the devil, the beast, and false prophets" will be "tormented day and night for ever and ever" (Revelation 20:10) along with those who worship the beast or receive its mark (Revelation 14:11).

The New Testament also uses the Greek word hades, usually to refer to the abode of the dead (e.g. Acts 2:31; Revelation 20:13). Only one passage describes hades as a place of torment, the parable of Lazarus and Dives (Luke 16:19–31). Jesus here depicts a wicked man suffering fiery torment in hades, which is contrasted with the bosom of Abraham, and explains that it is impossible to cross over from one to the other. Some scholars believe that this parable reflects the intertestamental Jewish view of hades (or sheol) as containing separate divisions for the wicked and righteous. In Revelation 20:13–14 hades is itself thrown into the "lake of fire" after being emptied of the dead.

Eastern Orthodox concepts of hell

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"A Monster from Hell". A 19th-century Russian hand-drawn lubok.

Basic Orthodox teachings on hell

Eastern Orthodox views

The theological concept of hell, or eternal damnation is expressed differently within both Eastern and Western Christianity

The Eastern Orthodox church teaches that Heaven and Hell are being in God's presence which is being with God and seeing God, and that there no such place as where God is not, nor is Hell taught in the East as separation from God. One expression of the Eastern teaching is that hell and heaven are being in God's presence, as this presence is punishment and paradise depending on the person's spiritial state in that presences. For one who hates God, to be in the presence of God eternally would be the gravest suffering. Aristotle Papanikolaou and Elizabeth H. Prodromou wrote in their book Thinking Through Faith: New Perspectives from Orthodox Christian Scholars that for the Orthodox: Those theological symbols, heaven and hell, are not crudely understood as spatial destinations but rather refer to the experience of God's presence according to two different modes. Some Eastern Orthodox expression personal opinions that appear to run counter to official church statements, in teaching hell is separation from God.

Images of hell

Icon in Saint Catherine's Monastery, Sinai, showing monks falling from the Ladder to Heaven into the mouth of a dragon, representing hell

According to Theodore Stylianopoulos, "many Orthodox saints and writers assume the general view of hell as a place of punishment, even by means of material instruments such as fire, whether of the soul after death or both soul and body after the resurrection". Saint John Chrysostom pictured hell as associated with "unquenchable" fire and "various kinds of torments and torrents of punishment".

Depiction of hell on an icon in Gelati Monastery, Georgia

Eastern Orthodox icons of the Last Judgement often depict the various torments inflicted on sinners in hell. Pages 66–69 of John-Paul Himka's Last Judgment Iconography in the Carpathians provides an illustrated description of some such 15th-century Carpathian icons based on a northern Rus' prototype (p. 193). The depiction in these particular icons, a depiction that may have developed from 12th-century Greek and South Slavic depictions differentiating sinners and their punishments (p. 68), is referred to by Himka as "the new hell", "because various sinners are being punished in a squarish area with torments that did not appear in the standard Byzantine iconography" (p. 42).

Icons based on The Ladder of Divine Ascent by John Climacus show monks climbing a 30-rung ladder to heaven represented by Christ, or falling from the ladder into hell, often represented by an open-jawed dragon.

Roman Catholicism

Medieval image of hell in the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg (c. 1180)

Nature of hell

The Catechism of the Catholic Church (which, when published in 1992, Pope John Paul II declared to be "a sure norm for teaching the faith",), defines hell as a state involving definitive self-exclusion from communion with God:

We cannot be united with God unless we freely choose to love him. But we cannot love God if we sin gravely against him, against our neighbor or against ourselves: "He who does not love remains in death. Anyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him." Our Lord warns us that we shall be separated from him if we fail to meet the serious needs of the poor and the little ones who are his brethren. To die in mortal sin without repenting and accepting God's merciful love means remaining separated from him for ever by our own free choice. This state of definitive self-exclusion from communion with God and the blessed is called "hell."

A place?

Pope John Paul II stated that in speaking of hell as a place the Bible uses "a symbolic language", which "must be correctly interpreted … Rather than a place, hell indicates the state of those who freely and definitively separate themselves from God, the source of all life and joy." That the words "rather than a place" – the phrase used, in Italian "più che un luogo", could also be translated as "more than a place" – do not amount to a denial that hell is a place has been pointed out by sources that state that the words include the idea that hell is "some place", and were only directing attention away from what is secondary to the real essence of hell.

While some have believed that the Pope has declared that hell is not an actual place, widespread publicity was given, in March–April 2007, to an article by journalist Richard Owen, who interpreted a remark by Pope Benedict XVI in the homily he gave on 25 March 2007 as declaring that hell is a place.

The full text of the Pope's homily on that day is available on the Vatican website and shows, as reported also by CiNews of 28 March 2007, that what the Pope said was: "Jesus came to tell us that he wants us all in heaven and that hell, of which so little is said in our time, exists and is eternal for those who close their hearts to his love." Thus, like Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict neither affirmed nor denied that hell can be spoken of as a place, but instead insisted on its reality: commenting on an account on the New York Post about the controversy, an editor writing for the Ignatius Press blog on 27 March 2007 took issue with that newspaper's report that "Vatican officials" had said the Pope wished hell to be understood "symbolically rather than physically".

Theologians have historically held that hell is a place, A metaphorical interpretation has historically been rejected by the Church. and have generally located it in the earth, but not all have accepted this location.

Some theologians have preferred to describe hell as a "place or state". Ludwig Ott's work "The Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma" said "Hell is a place or state of eternal punishment inhabited by those rejected by God", Robert J. Fox wrote "Hell is a place or state of eternal punishment inhabited by those rejected by God because such souls have rejected God's saving grace." Evangelicals Norman L. Geisler and Ralph E. MacKenzie believe official Roman Catholic position on hell is that "Hell is a place or state of eternal punishment".

The Catechism of Saint Pius X, another catechism authorized by a Pope (1908), while not denying that hell can be referred to as a place, preferred to use the word "state":

Hell is a state to which the wicked are condemned, and in which they are deprived of the sight of God for all eternity, and are in dreadful torments.

Nature of suffering in hell

The Maynooth Catechism used in Ireland from 1939-1962 identified hell as a place of suffering. A work by Friar Kenneth Baker published by Ignatius Press with Imprimatur and Imprimi potest, teaches that "Hell is the place and state of eternal punishment for the fallen angels and human beings who die deliberately estranged from the love of God".

Charles Steven Seymour understands the Catechism of the Catholic Church as phrased ambiguously, and as indicating a shift from traditional Catholic teaching on hell with regard to suffering of the senses. It states:

The teaching of the Church affirms the existence of hell and its eternity. Immediately after death the souls of those who die in a state of mortal sin descend into hell, where they suffer the punishments of hell, "eternal fire". The chief punishment of hell is eternal separation from God, in whom alone man can possess the life and happiness for which he was created and for which he longs.

In connection with the punishments of hell that it calls "eternal fire", the Catechism of the Catholic Church states:

Jesus often speaks of "Gehenna" of "the unquenchable fire" reserved for those who to the end of their lives refuse to believe and be converted, where both soul and body can be lost. Jesus solemnly proclaims that he "will send his angels, and they will gather . . . all evil doers, and throw them into the furnace of fire", and that he will pronounce the condemnation: "Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire!"

Protestantism

Hell as depicted in Hieronymus Bosch's triptych The Garden of Earthly Delights (cca 1504).
Main article: Hades in Christianity

The varying Protestant views of "hell", both in relation to Hades (e.g. the abode of the dead) and Gehenna (e.g. the destination of the wicked), are largely a function of the varying Protestant views on the intermediate state between death and resurrection; and different views on the immortality of the soul or the alternative, the mortality of the soul. For example John Calvin, who believed in conscious existence after death, had a very different concept of hell (Hades and Gehenna) to Martin Luther who held that death was sleep.

In most Protestant traditions, Hell is the place created by God for the punishment of the devil and fallen angels (cf. Matthew 25:41), and those whose names are not written in the book of life (cf. Revelation 20:15). It is the final destiny of every person who does not receive salvation, where they will be punished for their sins. People will be consigned to Hell after the last judgment.

(A) Eternal torment

One historic Protestant view of Hell is expressed in the Westminster Confession (1646):

"but the wicked, who know not God, and obey not the gospel of Jesus Christ, shall be cast into eternal torments, and punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power." (Chapter XXXIII, Of the Last Judgment)

According to the Alliance Commission on Unity & Truth among Evangelicals (ACUTE) the majority of Protestants have held that Hell will be a place of unending conscious torment, both physical and spiritual, although some recent writers (such as C. S. Lewis and J.P. Moreland ) have cast Hell in terms of "eternal separation" from God. Certain biblical texts have led some theologians to the conclusion that punishment in Hell, though eternal and irrevocable, will be proportional to the deeds of each soul (e.g. Matthew 10:15, Luke 12:46–48).

Another area of debate is the fate of the unevangelized (i.e. those who have never had an opportunity to hear the Christian gospel), those who die in infancy, and the mentally disabled. According to ACUTE some Protestants agree with Augustine that people in these categories will be damned to Hell for original sin, while others believe that God will make an exception in these cases.

(B) Conditional immortality and annihilationism

Martin Luther's belief in soul sleep led him to reject the idea of hell torments in the unconscious intermediate state between death and resurrection:

"It is enough for us to know that souls do not leave their bodies to be threatened by the torments and punishments of hell, but enter a prepared bedchamber in which they sleep in peace".

Luther did however hold that the torments of the rejected after the resurrection of the dead and Last Judgement would be eternal.

According to the Evangelical Alliance U.K. (ACUTE) a "significant minority" of Protestants believe in the doctrine of conditional immortality, which teaches that those sent to Hell will not experience eternal conscious punishment, but instead will be extinguished or annihilated after a period of "limited conscious punishment".

Prominent evangelical theologians who have adopted conditionalist beliefs include John Wenham, Edward Fudge, Clark Pinnock and John Stott (although the last has described himself as an "agnostic" on the issue of annihilationism). Conditionalists typically reject the traditional concept of the immortality of the soul.

Seventh-day Adventism

Main articles: Annihilationism and Christian conditionalism

Seventh-day Adventists hold a conditional immortality and annihilationism viewpoint; that the wicked will perish, and do not believe the wicked will suffer in Hell as a place of conscious eternal punishment, but instead teach conditional immortality. Adventists believe that depictions in the Bible describing punishment for the wicked by fire describe the final fate of sinners after the second coming of Christ. In addition, like Mennonites and other groups within the Anabaptist tradition, they believe in the doctrine of soul sleep.

Seventh-day Adventists believe that at the second coming, Christ will come for the righteous who have died along with the living righteous. The second coming of Jesus Christ marks the beginning of the millennium, and the righteous dead will be resurrected (the "first resurrection", Revelation 20:5), and both they and the righteous living will be taken to heaven to reign with Christ for 1000 years. God will kill the rest of mankind (the wicked, or unrighteous) leaving only Satan and his fallen angels on earth, with earth devoid of human life.

During the millennium, Satan and his angels will occupy the desolate earth; the "binding" of Satan described in chapter 20 of the book of Revelation. The millennium will also be the time when the wicked will be judged. Satan and his angels will be loosed at the end of the millennium when the wicked, or unrighteous are brought back to life to face judgement. At the close of the millennium, Christ will again return to earth together with the righteous and the "Holy City" (the New Jerusalem, Revelation 21:10). He will then raise the wicked (the "second resurrection"), who will surround the New Jerusalem along with Satan. At this point God will permanently destroy Satan, his angels, and wicked humanity who will suffer annihilation in the lake of fire ("the second death", Revelation 20:8). Finally, after the wicked perish in the lake of fire, God will create a new earth where the redeemed will enjoy eternal life free of sin and suffering.

Teachings of other groups

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Christian Universalism

Main article: Christian Universalism

Though a theological minority in historical and contemporary Christianity, some holding mostly Protestant views (such as George MacDonald, Karl Barth,Hans Urs von Balthasar, William Barclay,Keith DeRose and Thomas Talbott) believe that after serving their sentence in Gehenna, all souls are reconciled to God and admitted to heaven, or ways are found at the time of death of drawing all souls to repentance so that no "hellish" suffering is experienced. This view is often called Christian universalism — its conservative branch is more specifically called 'Biblical or Trinitarian universalism' — and is not to be confused with Unitarian Universalism. See universal reconciliation, apocatastasis and the problem of Hell.

Christian Universalism teaches that an eternal hell does not exist and is a later creation of the church with no biblical support. Reasoning by Christian Universalists includes that an eternal hell is against the nature, character and attributes of a loving God; the nature of man; sin's nature of destruction rather than perpetual misery; the nature of holiness and happiness; and the nature and object of punishment.

Christian Science

Christian Science defines "Hell" as follows: "Mortal belief; error; lust; remorse; hatred; revenge; sin; sickness; death; suffering and self-destruction; self-imposed agony; effects of sin; that which 'worketh abomination or maketh a lie.'" (Science and Health with Key to the Scripture by Mary Baker Eddy, 588: 1-4.)

Jehovah's Witnesses

Jehovah's Witnesses believe the Bible presents "Hell", as translated from "Sheol" and "Hades", to be mankind's common grave for both the good and the bad (Ecclesiastes 9:10), whereas "Gehenna" signifies eternal destruction or annihilation (Matthew 10:28), and that the idea of a place of eternal torment is something detestable to God, inconsistent with his love. (1 John 4:8; Jeremiah 32:35)

Jehovah's Witnesses reject the traditional concept of "hellfire". They consider doctrines like particular judgment, the doctrine that one is judged and either punished or rewarded immediately after death, to be an innovation of the early Church. They understand Revelation 20:13 -"And death and Hell gave up the dead in them." - to mean that those in Hell do not remain there indefinitely. Hades is emptied during the judgment of Revelation.

A particular difference that affects their belief regarding Hell is their belief regarding the soul. Unlike religions that believe the soul is something immortal (or "conditionally immortal") that lives on after death, Jehovah's Witnesses believe that the soul is the life of a living body itself, referring to the literal translation of the original language terms. (Ezekiel 18:4; compare Genesis 2:7, 3:19) Jehovah's Witnesses consider disobedience to God a matter resulting in eternal nothingness rather than eternal punishment, a belief others call "annihilationism".

Latter-day Saints

Further information: Outer darkness and Plan of Salvation

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teaches that the word Hell is used in scripture in at least two senses. To correctly understand these concepts the context of each is relevant.

Mormons believe in a concept of Hell as a state of punishment. Those who reject Christ and His Atonement ultimately will be accountable for their choices and the resulting sin(s). Righteous people, whether Latter-day Saint or not, will be resurrected and live with Christ on earth after His return. The work of teaching and ministering to those in the spirit realm continues.

After the 1000 years, the individuals in spirit prison will also be resurrected and receive an immortal physical body. The LDS Church explains biblical descriptions of Hell being "eternal" or "endless" punishment as being descriptive of their infliction by God rather than an unending temporal period. Latter-day Saint scripture quotes God as telling church founder Joseph Smith, Jr.: "I am endless, and the punishment which is given from my hand is endless punishment, for Endless is my name. Wherefore—Eternal punishment is God's punishment. Endless punishment is God's punishment." It is in this sense of the word "Hell" that David prayed to the Lord, "thou wilt not leave my soul in Hell".

Latter-day Saints also believe in a more permanent concept of Hell, commonly referred to as outer darkness. It is said that very few people who have lived on the earth will be consigned to this Hell, but Latter-day Saint scripture suggests that at least Cain will be present. Other mortals who during their lifetime become sons of perdition, those who commit the unpardonable sin, will be consigned to outer darkness. It is taught that the unpardonable sin is committed by those who "den the Son after the Father has revealed him". However, the vast majority of residents of outer darkness will be the "devil and his angels ... the third part of the hosts of heaven" who in the pre-existence followed Lucifer and never received a mortal body. The residents of outer darkness are the only children of God that will not receive one of three kingdoms of glory at the Last Judgment.

It is unclear whether those in outer darkness will ultimately be redeemed. Of outer darkness and the sons of perdition, Latter-day Saint scripture states that "the end thereof, neither the place thereof, nor their torment, no man knows; Neither was it revealed, neither is, neither will be revealed unto man, except to them who are made partakers thereof". The scripture asserts that those who are consigned to this state will be aware of its duration and limitations.

Swedenborgianism

See: Swedenborgianism

Unity Church

The Unity Church of Charles Fillmore considers the concept of everlasting physical Hell to be false doctrine and contradictory to that reported by John the Evangelist.

See also

Notes and references

  1. Biblical Reference: John 3:18
  2. ^ "Hell." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  3. New Bible Dictionary third edition, IVP 1996. Articles on "Hell", "Sheol".
  4. What the Bible says about Death, Afterlife, and the Future, James Tabor
  5. ^ New Bible Dictionary 3rd edition, IVP Leicester 1996. "Sheol".
  6. New Bible Dictionary 3rd edition, IVP Leicester 1996. "Hell".
  7. Hades
  8. : Mt 11:23; 16:18; Lk 10:15; Ac 2:27Template:Bibleverse with invalid book,2:31Template:Bibleverse with invalid book; Rev 1:18; 6:8; 20:13–14. Some late Greek manuscripts, which are followed by KJV and NKJV, have ᾅδης in 1 Cor 15:55
  9. The King James Version translates "ᾅδης" 9 times as "hell" and once as "grave" (in 1 Cor 15:55)
  10. The ©2010 New International Version translates "ᾅδης" 7 times as "Hades", and 2 times as "realm of the dead"; the ©1984 NIV translates it 4 times as "Hades", twice as "depths", twice as "grave", and once as "hell".
  11. The English Standard Version translates "ᾅδης" 8 times as "Hades" and once as "hell".
  12. The Contemporary English Version translates "ᾅδης" twice as "hell", once as "death", twice as "grave", once as "world of the dead", three times as "death's kingdom".
  13. The New Living Translation renders "ᾅδης" once as "place of the dead", twice as "the dead" and six times as "the grave".
  14. Gehenna
  15. Mt 5:22, 5:29–30; 10:28; 18:9; 23:15, 23:33; Mk 9:43, 9:45, 9:47; Lk 12:5; James 3:6.
  16. ταρταρόω (uncontracted form of the contracted verb ταρταρῶ used in the New Testament)
  17. 2 Peter 2:4
  18. New Bible Dictionary 3rd ed., IVP, Leicester 1996. Article "Hell", pages 463-464
  19. ^ New Dictionary of Biblical Theology; IVP Leicester 2000, "Hell"
  20. Evangelical Alliance Commission on Truth and Unity Among Evangelicals (ACUTE) (2000). The Nature of Hell. Paternoster, London. pp. 42–47.
  21. ^ Evangelical Alliance Commission on Unity and Truth among Evangelicals (2000). The Nature of Hell. Acute, Paternoster (London).
  22. Having reached this point, we will turn our attention to those aspects of differences between Roman and Frankish theologies which have had a strong impact on the development of difference is the doctrine of the Church. The basic difference may be listed under diagnosis of spiritual ills and their therapy. Glorification is the vision of God in which the equality of all mean and the absolute value of each man is experienced. God loves all men equally and indiscriminately, regardless of even their moral statues. God loves with the same love, both the saint and the devil. To teach otherwise, as Augustine and the Franks did, would be adequate proof that they did not have the slightest idea of what glorification was. God multiplies and divides himself in His uncreated energies undividedly among divided things, so that He is both present by act and absent by nature to each individual creature and everywhere present and absent at the same time. This is the fundamental mystery of the presence of God to His creatures and shows that universals do not exist in God and are, therefore, not part of the state of illumination as in the Augustinian tradition. God himself is both heaven and hell, reward and punishment. All men have been created to see God unceasingly in His uncreated glory. Whether God will be for each man heaven or hell, reward or punishment, depends on man's response to God's love and on man's transformation from the state of selfish and self-centered love, to Godlike love which does not seek its own ends. One can see how the Frankish understanding of heaven and hell, poetically described by Dante, John Milton, and James Joyce, are so foreign to the Orthodox tradition. This is another of the reasons why the so-called humanism of some East Romans (those who united with the Frankish papacy) was a serious regression and not an advance in culture. Since all men will see God, no religion can claim for itself the power to send people either to heaven or to hell. This means that true spiritual fathers prepare their spiritual charges so that vision of God's glory will be heaven, and not hell, reward and not punishment. The primary purpose of Orthodox Christianity then, is to prepare its members for an experience which every human being will sooner or later have. EMPIRICAL THEOLOGY VERSUS SPECULATIVE THEOLOGY by John S. Romanides part 2
  23. God himself is both heaven and hell, reward and punishment. All men have been created to see God unceasingly in His uncreated glory. Whether God will be for each man heaven or hell, reward or punishment, depends on man's response to God's love and on man's transformation from the state of selfish and self-centered love, to Godlike love which does not seek its own ends.EMPIRICAL THEOLOGY VERSUS SPECULATIVE THEOLOGY by John S. Romanides part 2
  24. Thus it is the Church's spiritual teaching that God does not punish man by some material fire or physical torment. God simply reveals Himself in the risen Lord Jesus in such a glorious way that no man can fail to behold His glory. It is the presence of God's splendid glory and love that is the scourge of those who reject its radiant power and light. ... those who find themselves in hell will be chastised by the scourge of love. How cruel and bitter this torment of love will be! For those who understand that they have sinned against love, undergo no greater suffering than those produced by the most fearful tortures. The sorrow which takes hold of the heart, which has sinned against love, is more piercing than any other pain. It is not right to say that the sinners in hell are deprived of the love of God ... But love acts in two ways, as suffering of the reproved, and as joy in the blessed! (St. Isaac of Syria, Mystic Treatises) The Orthodox Church of America website
  25. For those who love the Lord, His Presence will be infinite joy, paradise and eternal life. For those who hate the Lord, the same Presence will be infinite torture, hell and eternal death. The reality for both the saved and the damned will be exactly the same when Christ "comes in glory, and all angels with Him," so that "God may be all in all." (I Corinthians 15-28) Those who have God as their "all" within this life will finally have divine fulfillment and life. For those whose "all" is themselves and this world, the "all" of God will be their torture, their punishment and their death. And theirs will be "weeping and gnashing of teeth." (Matthew 8:21, et al.) The Son of Man will send His angels and they will gather out of His kingdom all causes of sin and all evil doers, and throw them into the furnace of fire; there men will weep and gnash their teeth. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the Kingdom of their Father. (Matthew 13:41-43) According to the saints, the "fire" that will consume sinners at the coming of the Kingdom of God is the same "fire" that will shine with splendor in the saints. It is the "fire" of God's love; the "fire" of God Himself who is Love. "For our God is a consuming fire" (Hebrews 12:29) who "dwells in unapproachable light." (I Timothy 6:16) For those who love God and who love all creation in Him, the "consuming fire" of God will be radiant bliss and unspeakable delight. For those who do not love God, and who do not love at all, this same 66consuming fire" will be the cause of their "weeping" and their "gnashing of teeth." Thus it is the Church's spiritual teaching that God does not punish man by some material fire or physical torment. God simply reveals Himself in the risen Lord Jesus in such a glorious way that no man can fail to behold His glory. It is the presence of God's splendid glory and love that is the scourge of those who reject its radiant power and light. ... those who find themselves in hell will be chastised by the scourge of love. How cruel and bitter this torment of love will be! For those who understand that they have sinned against love, undergo no greater suffering than those produced by the most fearful tortures. The sorrow which takes hold of the heart, which has sinned against love, is more piercing than any other pain. It is not right to say that the sinners in hell are deprived of the love of God ... But love acts in two ways, as suffering of the reproved, and as joy in the blessed! (St. Isaac of Syria, Mystic Treatises) The Orthodox Church of America website
  26. God himself is both heaven and hell, reward and punishment. All men have been created to see God unceasingly in His uncreated glory. Whether God will be for each man heaven or hell, reward or punishment, depends on man's response to God's love and on man's transformation from the state of selfish and self-centered love, to Godlike love which does not seek its own ends. EMPIRICAL THEOLOGY VERSUS SPECULATIVE THEOLOGY by John S. Romanides part 2
  27. "Paradise and Hell exist not in the form of a threat and a punishment on the part of God but in the form of an illness and a cure. Those who are cured and those who are purified experience the illuminating energy of divine grace, while the uncured and ill experience the caustic energy of God."
  28. Man has a malfunctioning or non-functioning noetic faculty in the heart, and it is the task especially of the clergy to apply the cure of unceasing memory of God, otherwise called unceasing prayer or illumination. "Those who have selfless love and are friends of God see God in light - divine light, while the selfish and impure see God the judge as fire - darkness".
  29. "Those who have selfless love and are friends of God see God in light - divine light, while the selfish and impure see God the judge as fire- darkness".
  30. Proper preparation for vision of God takes place in two stages: purification, and illumination of the noetic faculty. Without this, it is impossible for man's selfish love to be transformed into selfless love. This transformation takes place during the higher level of the stage of illumination called theoria, literally meaning vision-in this case vision by means of unceasing and uninterrupted memory of God. Those who remain selfish and self-centered with a hardened heart, closed to God's love, will not see the glory of God in this life. However, they will see God's glory eventually, but as an eternal and consuming fire and outer darkness. From FRANKS, ROMANS, FEUDALISM, AND DOCTRINE/Diagnosis and Therapy Father John S. Romanides Diagnosis and Therapy
  31. Regarding specific conditions of after-life existence and eschatology, Orthodox thinkers are generally reticent; yet two basic shared teachings can be singled out. First, they widely hold that immediately following a human being's physical death, his or her surviving spiritual dimension experiences a foretaste of either heaven or hell. (Those theological symbols, heaven and hell, are not crudely understood as spatial destinations but rather refer to the experience of God's presence according to two different modes.) Thinking Through Faith: New Perspectives from Orthodox Christian Scholars page 195 By Aristotle Papanikolaou, Elizabeth H. Prodromou
  32. Archimandrite Sophrony (Sakharov) speaks of "the hell of separation from God" (Sophrony, The Monk of Mount Athos: Staretz Silouan, 1866-1938 (St Vladimir's Seminary Press 2001 ISBN 0-913836-15-X), p. 32).
  33. "The circumstances that rise before us, the problems we encounter, the relationships we form, the choices we make, all ultimately concern our eternal union with or separation from God" (Life Transfigured: A Journal of Orthodox Nuns, Vol. 24, No. 2, Summer 1991, pp.8-9, produced by The Orthodox Monastery of the Transfiguration, Ellwood City, Pa.).
  34. "Hell is nothing else but separation of man from God, his autonomy excluding him from the place where God is present" (the World, of the Church: A Paul Evdokimov Reader (St Vladimir's Seminary Press 2001 ISBN 0-88141-215-5), p. 32).
  35. "Hell is a spiritual state of separation from God and inability to experience the love of God, while being conscious of the ultimate deprivation of it as punishment" (Father Theodore Stylianopoulos).
  36. "Hell is none other than the state of separation from God, a condition into which humanity was plunged for having preferred the creature to the Creator. It is the human creature, therefore, and not God, who engenders hell. Created free for the sake of love, man possesses the incredible power to reject this love, to say 'no' to God. By refusing communion with God, he becomes a predator, condemning himself to a spiritual death (hell) more dreadful than the physical death that derives from it" (Quenot, The Resurrection and the Icon (St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press 1997 ISBN 0-88141-149-3), p. 85).
  37. Cite error: The named reference stylianopoulos was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  38. Epistle I to Theodore of Mopsuestia
  39. Robin Cormack, Icons (British Museum Press 2007 ISBN 0-674-02619-5), p. 20
  40. "Fidei depositum". Libreria Editrice Vaticana. 11 October 1992. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  41. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1033
  42. Pope John Paul II, Audience Talk, 28 July 1999
  43. "The original Italian says, "(Più che) More than a place, hell indicates..." This suggests correctly that although hell is not essentially "a place," rather the definitive loss of God, confinement is included. Thus, after the general resurrection the bodies of the damned, being bodies not spirits, must be in "some place," in which they will receive the punishment of fire." – "Heaven, Hell and Purgatory: Pope John Paul II", Eternal Word Television Network.
  44. "In the common sense of the word 'place', if you were to say 'Hell is not a place', you would be denying that hell exists. Unfortunately, some thought that the Pope, in the statement quoted above, was denying that hell is a place in this sense. He was, of course, doing nothing of the sort. Thus, to return to the Pope’s words again, John Paul II must not be misinterpreted when he said 'Rather than a place, hell indicates state….' He certainly was not denying that it is a place, but instead was shifting our focus to the real essence of hell—what the term 'hell' truly indicates—the self-chosen separation from God. The 'place' or 'location' of hell is secondary, and considerations of where it is should not deflect us from our most important concerns: what it is, and how to avoid it." – "Hell: the Self-Exclusion from God"
  45. "Hell is traditionally considered a literal place of eternal torture, but the Pope has also described hell as the condition of pain that results from alienation from God, a thing of one's own doing, not an actual place.", Burke, Chauvin, & Miranti, "Religious and spiritual issues in counseling", p. 236 (2003).
  46. The Times, 27 March 2007, reported "Hell is a place where sinners really do burn in an everlasting fire, and not just a religious symbol designed to galvanise the faithful, the Pope has said" – The Fires of Hell Are Real and Eternal, Pope Warns
  47. Fox News reproduced the article as published on The Times, under the heading:"Pope: Hell Is a Real Place Where Sinners Burn in Everlasting Fire" – Pope: Hell Is a Real Place Where Sinners Burn in Everlasting Fire
  48. The Australian published Richard Owen's article on its 28 March 2007 issue – Hell is real and eternal: Pope
  49. The Canada National Post of 28 March 2007, quoting The Times, reported: "Pope Benedict XVI has been reminding the faithful of some key beliefs of their faith, including the fact hell is a place where sinners burn in an everlasting fire" – Hell 'exists and is eternal,' Pope warns
  50. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette of 3 April 2007, again referring to The Times reported: "Pope Benedict XVI has reinstated hell as a real place where the heat is always on" – Playing with fire
  51. "The Post also says: 'Vatican officials said that the Pope - who is also the Bishop of Rome - had been speaking in "straightforward" language "like a parish priest". He had wanted to reinforce the new Catholic catechism, which holds that Hell is a "state of eternal separation from God," to be understood "symbolically rather than physically".' This didn't sound quite right to me, so I took a look. Nope, the Catechism never talks about Hell as being symbolic, but instead insists on the reality of Hell" – The Pope believes in what?!
  52. "Hell was a place of eternal suffering for sinners.", Flatt, 'Religion in the Renaissance", p. 8 (2009).
  53. "However, no cogent reason has been advanced for accepting a metaphorical interpretation in preference to the most natural meaning of the words of Scripture.", Joseph Hontheim, "Hell" in The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. Retrieved 3 September 2010
  54. "Hence theologians generally accept the opinion that hell is really within the earth.", Joseph Hontheim, "Hell" in The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. Retrieved 3 September 2010
  55. Summa Theologica, Supplement, question 97, article 7
  56. "The Church has decided nothing on this subject; hence we may say hell is a definite place; but where it is, we do not know.", Joseph Hontheim, "Hell" in The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. Retrieved 3 September 2010
  57. "Further, it is certain from Scripture and tradition that the torments of hell are inflicted in a definite place. But it is uncertain where the place is.", Addis & Arnold (eds), "A Catholic Dictionary Containing Some Account of the Doctrine, Discipline, Rites, Ceremonies, Councils, and Religious Orders of the Catholic Church: Part One", p. 404 (1903).
  58. Ott, "The Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma", p. 479 (1955).
  59. Fox, "The Catholic Faith", p. 262 (1983).
  60. "The official Roman Catholic position on hell is that "The souls of those who die in the condition of personal grievous sin enter Hell (De fide). Hell is a place or state of eternal punishment inhabited by those rejected by God"", Geisler & MacKenzie, "Roman Catholics and Evangelicals: agreements and differences", p. 143 (1995).
  61. LESSON THIRTY-SEVENTH: On the Last Judgment and the Resurrection, Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven, (Question 1379)
  62. "The Green Catechism (1939-62) said: Hell is a place of torments. God made hell to punish the devils or bad angels, and all who die in mortal sin. No one can come out of Hell, for out of Hell there is no redemption.", Crawford & Rossiter, "Reasons for Living: Education and Young People's Search for Meaning", p. 192 (2006).
  63. "What do we mean by "hell"? Hell is the place and state of eternal punishment for the fallen angels and human beings who die deliberately estranged from the love of God. The existence of hell, as the everlasting abode of the devils and those human beings who have died in the state of mortal sin, is a defined dogma of the Catholic Church.", Baker, "Fundamentals of Catholicism", volume 3, p. 371 (1983).
  64. "Even the Roman Catholic church, which has long maintained the existence of "pains of sense" in hell, seems of late to be heading in a separationist direction. The recent Catechism is ambiguous, neither denying nor confirming the existence of physical torments.", Seymour, "A Theodicy of Hell', p. 82 (2000).
  65. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1035
  66. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1034
  67. Calvin Psychopannychia
  68. Luther Exposition of Salomon's Booke etc.
  69. Bruce Milne (1998). Know the Truth, 2nd ed. IVP. p. 335.
  70. C. S. Lewis, The Great Divorce, 1946
  71. Lee Strobel, The Case for Faith, 2000
  72. Millard Erickson (2001). Introducing Christian Doctrine, 2nd ed. Baker Academic.
  73. Weimarer Ausgabe 43, 360,21-23 (to Genesis 25,7-10): also Exegetica opera latina Vol 5-6 1833 p120; "Sufficit igitur nobis haec cognitio, non egredi animas ex corporibus in periculum cruciatum et paenarum inferni, sed esse eis paratum cubiculum, in quo dormiant in pace."
  74. Edward Fudge, Robert A. Peterson Two views of hell: a biblical & theological dialogue p122 2000 "When asked his opinion of certain artists' conceptions of hell, Luther replies (in his exposition of Jonah 2:3) that hell's torments will be worse than anyone can imagine. "
  75. "The Nature of Hell. Conclusions and Recommendations" (Document). Evangelical Alliance. 2000. {{cite document}}: Unknown parameter |url= ignored (help)
  76. Guild, E.E. 'Arguments in Favour of Universalism'. http://www.tentmaker.org/books/InFavorCh20.html
  77. What Really Is Hell? - Jehovah's Witnesses Official Web Site
  78. "Is There LIFE After Death?". Jehovah's Witnesses official website. 15 July 2001. Retrieved 17 September 2007.
  79. "Insight On The Scriptures" -1 p. 1016 Hades "when Revelation 20:13, 14 says that the sea, death, and Hades are to give up or be emptied of the dead in them."
  80. ^ LDS Church. "Chapter 46: The Last Judgment", Gospel Principles, 294.
  81. Doctrine and Covenants, Section 138
  82. Doctrine and Covenants 88:100-101.
  83. Doctrine and Covenants 19:10-12.
  84. Psalms 16:10.
  85. Moses 5:22-26.
  86. LDS Church, Guide to the Scriptures: Hell; see also Doctrine and Covenants 76:43-46.
  87. Doctrine and Covenants 29:36-39.
  88. Doctrine and Covenants 76:45-46.
  89. "The word Hell is not translated with clearness sufficient to represent the various meanings of the word in the original language. There are three words from which "Hell" is derived: Sheol, "the unseen state"; Hades, "the unseen world"; and Gehenna, "Valley of Hinnom." These are used in various relations, nearly all of them allegorical. In a sermon Archdeacon Farrar said: "There would be the proper teaching about Hell if we calmly and deliberately erased from our English Bibles the three words, 'damnation,' 'Hell,' and 'everlasting.' I say - unhesitatingly I say, claiming the fullest right to speak with the authority of knowledge - that not one of those words ought to stand any longer in our English Bible, for, in our present acceptation of them, they are simply mistranslations." This corroborates the metaphysical interpretation of Scripture, and sustains the truth that Hell is a figure of speech that represents a corrective state of mind. When error has reached its limit, the retroactive law asserts itself, and judgment, being part of that law, brings the penalty upon the transgressor. This penalty is not punishment, but discipline, and if the transgressor is truly repentant and obedient, he is forgiven in Truth. - Charles Fillmore, Christian Healing, Lesson 11, item eleven."

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