Saturday 21 July 2012

The Lowdown on Hell


Text: 2 Thessalonians 1:1-10
Well, it’s summer.  It’s hot.  We’ve no air conditioning here.  So, I figure talking on Hell would be appropriate; and if can I make this sermon last a while, I figure we will get a taste of an eternal Hell.  I though a good title for this sermon would be “What the Hell Is Hell”.  A bit tongue in cheek I realize, but that seems to be the question that is at the fore of discussions on it.  “What is Hell?” is a  very confounded question to answer.  Sorting out Hell is a lonely and isolating task that leaves one with nothing short of a Hell of a mess.  Is Hell a fiery abyss where people are tortured by demons for all eternity or is it an eternal state of being where a person by his own choice unhindered by sin continually rejects the full onslaught of the passion or burning fire of the Trinity’s unconditional love poured upon them.  There is a spectrum of belief on what Hell is making it just as important to ask “who's Hell”.  Eastern Orthodox churches understand Hell quite differently than do Western churches whose beliefs on the subject are rooted in medieval Roman Catholicism when the Church used the threat of an eternal fiery punishment in Hell to keep a largely illiterate Europe in line socially and politically. 
For your information, The Presbyterian Church in Canada makes a double confession.  By our adhering to the Westminster Confession of Faith, which is the bastion confession of Calvinism and from which our denomination seems to be effectively distancing itself, we confess Hell to be “eternal torments” where the wicked who do not know God and have not obeyed the gospel of Jesus Christ are “punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of His power” (33.2).  So how did we come up with that?
Well, we draw “eternal torments” from Jesus' parable of The Sheep and the Goats in Matthew 25 where the goats who showed no compassion were sent away into “eternal punishment”.  Allow me here to murky the water and wrestle with the Greek.  If we look at where the word we translate as “punishment” shows up in other classical Greek works contemporary with the Bible, we find that “correction” might be a better word than punishment.  Thus, “eternal punishment” might be better translated as “eternal correction”.  Moreover, “eternal” may not be referring to time, but rather to its quality by nature of being from or of God.  For example, when we read eternal life in the Bible it almost never refers simply to life that goes on for forevermore, but rather to the quality of life found in the Kingdom of God or in knowing God in Christ, a quality of life that comes from eternity.
We must also take note that the method of eternal punishment or correction is an “eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.”  Once again, take what I just said about “eternal” meaning a quality from God and since we are using metaphorical language rather than literal (its a parable after all) add to it that Deuteronomy 4:24 and Hebrews 12:29  both metaphorically state “God is a consuming fire”; i.e., the loving communion of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is experientially like a consuming fire.  It may just be that this “eternal fire” of “eternal punishment” is experiencing the presence of the God who is love in, might I say, a corrective or purgative way.  You see, God in his love by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ the incarnate Son of God has destroyed evil, sin, and death and is presently about the work of refining it out of his Creation.  It may be then that this eternal fire of punishment for the wicked is really a purgative exposure to the presence and the power of the God who is love that is not meant to be for forever.  The Eastern Orthodox traditions from very early on in church history have understand Hell this way. 
The second passage involved is the one we read from 2 Thessalonians.  In it Paul is not making a doctrinal statement about Judgement Day and of the end of the wicked.  He is actually trying to comfort persecuted Christians there in Thessalonica.  He is basically saying: The fact that they are being persecuted for Christ and are enduring will work out to be proof of God's righteous judgement when Jesus returns when they will be rewarded for their perseverance and experience relief.  Their persecutors and those like them who do not heed the fact that Jesus is Lord will, on the other hand, suffer the consequence of persecuting Christians by means of (not away from) being exposed to the presence of the Lord.  At his coming Jesus will be openly revealed to be the Lord (rather than Caesar being Lord) and the persecutors will bow the knee in shame, wailing and gnashing their teeth as the burning, consuming fire of the presence of the God who is love works them over with a love from which they cannot hide.  Note that Paul there has not mentioned the resurrection or the judgement that will follow. Rather, he has simply said that the persecutors of the church and those like them who do not heed that Jesus is Lord even though having been told that when he returns are going to experience his presence in a way that confronts them with their shameful doings. 
Moving on, The Presbyterian Church in Canada's second confession of faith, Living Faith, confesses Hell to be simply “eternal separation from God” which is a theological euphemism based on what is likely to be a mistranslation of a preposition in 2 Thessalonians 1:9 which reads “They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might”.  The “away from the presence of the Lord” there should probably be read with the sense of “by means of” reading “the eternal punishment that comes from the presence of the Lord.”  It's like being an eight year old and Mom and Dad come home and catch you in the act of smoking.  Although you probably will eat the cigarette, you won't be permanently separated from the family.  There is a fundamental belief of the ancient church saying that there is nowhere that God is not present quoting Psalm 137:7-8, “Where shall I go from your Spirit? Or where shall I flee from your presence?  If I ascend to heaven, you are there!  If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there!”  Sheol is the Hebrew name for the concealed, underworld holding place for the dead.  In most instances it just means “the grave”.  Yet, it's the closest thing to Hell you'll find in the Old Testament and the Spirit of the Lord is even present there.  The early church couldn't fathom an eternal separation from God for that would entail a cessation of existence.  The point of Hell is that it is a form of existence.  So, maybe we in the church in this day and age might what to reconsider describing Hell as eternal separation from God.
So, I've only breached the surface of Hell here and hopefully I've done it in such a way as to avoid giving you fodder to have me defrocked for teaching contrary to the beliefs of this denomination.  To close, one of the comforts of the Gospel is that God has reconciled the world to himself in Jesus Christ.  He has dealt with sin once and for all on the cross.  Jesus took upon himself our sin and its consequence of death and died with it.  Jesus death on the cross was God's judgement of sin and us a sinners.  Thus, at the cross sin and the fact that we are sinners has been utterly dealt with.  They have been born away from us by Jesus.  We are forgiven.  There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ.  As I said, that is one of the comforts of the Gospel.  The Gospel itself is about the resurrection of our Lord Jesus, the incarnate Son of God and new life in him by the power of the Holy Spirit.  It is that God has saved, is saving, and will save his Creation and fill it with his glory, with his very self.  God is doing this because God is love.  Notice that I did not say that the Gospel is that there is a Hell of eternal punishment which we all deserve for our sins and the way to avoid Hell is simply to believe that Jesus died for our sins.  That is Good Friday faith and it falls far short of Easter.  Amen.