1. It is Biblical
2. It is reasonable and just
3. It is a necessary expression of God’s love
4. It has been confirmed again and again by the Holy Spirit
I recently received an email from a person in another state asking my thoughts on “hell.” She went on to explain that many of her Christian friends have dispensed with the idea of hell and have chided her for being “stuck in religion” for believing in such an old fashioned doctrine. Indeed, many evangelicals are giving up the doctrine of hell as a place of eternal punishment, arguing that such a belief is not consistent with a God whose chief characteristic is unconditional love. In my own city of Tulsa, Oklahoma one of the most popular Pentecostal-Charismatic preachers in America, Carlton Pearson, has publicly renounced his belief in hell and now preaches that everyone will go to heaven, an old heresy known as universalism. In this essay I will argue, to the contrary, that eternal punishment is a necessary expression of God’s love; that it is Biblical; that it is reasonable and just; and that the Holy Spirit has confirmed this doctrine throughout the history of the Church.
Reason #1
It is Biblical
The ghenna (hell) was a garbage dump south of Jerusalem where fires were continually burning. In the New Testament, ghenna is used metaphorically of the place of condemnation or punishment in the next life. It is the word used by Jesus in Matt. 5:30 where, to emphasize the horror of final condemnation, He exhorts His hearers that if their right hand causes them to stumble (or sin) to cut it off since it would be better to have only one hand in this life than to have two hands and be thrown into ghenna. This word is also used by Jesus in Matt. 10:28 where He exhorts His listeners to not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul, but to fear Him who has the authority to cast both soul and body into ghenna. Bauer's Greek-English Lexicon, the lexicon of choice by students of New Testament Greek, defines ghenna as "the place of punishment in the next life."
Some have questioned whether this punishment is eternal by arguing that the Greek word aionios, translated “eternal” and “everlasting,” actually refers to a long, but finite period of time. While it is true that the noun, aion, is sometimes translated “age” in reference to a period of long duration, the adjective, aionios, almost always refers to that which is eternal or without end. This is borne out by the fact that it is used throughout the New Testament to describe the gift of “eternal” (aionios) life to those who believe in Christ. In Rom. 16:26 Paul uses it in referring to God Himself as the everlasting (aionios) God. The same word is used throughout the New Testament to describe the state of the wicked, i.e., eternal punishment.
It is thus used in Matt. 25:46 where Jesus tells of the final judgment where a separation is made of the wicked to His left hand and the righteous to His right. Referring to the final state of both groups, Jesus says, And these [the wicked] will go away into eternal (aionios) punishment, but the righteous into eternal (aionios) life. If aionios means “everlasting” in regards to the life that comes from God, then it must carry the same meaning when used of the punishment of the wicked for they are obvious parallel expressions. Paul uses the same adjective, aionios, in II Thessalonians 1:9 where he describes the dire state of the wicked when Christ returns,
In flaming fire taking vengeance on those who do know God, and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. These will be punished with everlasting (aionios) destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power.
Reason #2
It is Reasonable & Just
In our finite thinking we cannot imagine the magnitude of sin. Sin is not just a finite injustice against a fellow human being; it is an infinite sin against our infinite Creator. God placed our first parents, Adam and Eve, in a wonderful paradise. They rebelled against Him and His righteous commands and went their own way. All their posterity has followed in their path of rebellion against God. As Paul says in Romans 3:10-18, There is none righteous, no, not one . . . they have all turned aside; they have together become unprofitable . . . there is no fear of God before their eyes.
Because sin is infinite, it required an infinite remedy. God Himself, therefore, took on human form in the person of Jesus Christ and provided the redemption necessary to deal with the sin of all humankind. It is in Jesus Christ that the love and mercy of God is revealed toward the human race. It is also in Jesus Christ that the justice of God is maintained for Christ bore the just punishment that was due every sinner. In fact, Paul clearly says in Rom. 3:25-26 that the death of Christ was a demonstration of God’s justice and, as a result, He now can be both just and the justifier of those who put their faith in Christ.
This, however, intensifies the guilt of those who reject the infinite mercy God has shown in the person of Jesus Christ. The writer of Hebrews expressed it in these terms, Anyone who has rejected Moses’ law dies without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses. Of how much worse punishment, do you suppose, will he be thought worthy who has trampled the Son of God underfoot and counted the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified a common thing, and insulted the Spirit of grace (Hebrews 10:28-29).
Reason #3
It is a Necessary Expression of God’s Love
The well known 19th century revivalist, Charles Finney, who was a converted lawyer, preached a message entitled the "The Justice of Eternal Punishment" by which he saw many judges and lawyers converted to Christ. In this message Finney demonstrated that divine justice, involving eternal punishment, is a necessary expression of divine love. In another message entitled “The Guilt of Sin,” Finney pointed out that the end or objective of all sin, whether it is lying, stealing, adultery, etc., is self-gratification. In other words, the act of sin is merely a means to achieve the end of self-gratification. Finney then points out that this choice to gratify self of necessity involves a rejection of God’s infinite interests and that this is where the guilt lies. He said, “In other words, the guilt consists in rejecting the infinitely valuable well being of God and the universe for the sake of selfish gratification” (C. G. Finney, The Guilt of Sin, Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1965, 16-17). Finney considered hell to be God’s eternal prison house where incorrigible rebels against God and his kingdom will be confined and not allowed to spoil the eternal bliss and happiness of those who have accepted the free mercy and grace God has shown to us in Jesus Christ. Yes, hell is a necessary expression of God’s amazing grace and love
Reason #4
The Holy Spirit Has Confirmed This Doctrine
One of the most somber examples comes from the pen of Jonathan Edwards. Edwards, pastor of the Congregational Church in Northampton, MA and one of the most prominent leaders of the First Great Awakening, tells of a wicked and intemperate man coming to him one day in a very solemn state of mind. This man related to Edwards an alarming dream he had experienced the previous night in which he had descended into hell and observed the horrors of that place. He was told, however, that he was being allowed to return to earth on a one-year probation, the condition being that he must change his manner of life during this time or he would have to return at the end of the year. Edwards was solemnly impressed with the man’s dream and assured him that it was a warning from God. Before retiring for the night, Edwards opened his journal and recorded the details of the dream and the date. Edwards said the man seemed to be serious in his new commitment, leaving off the bottle and faithfully attending church. However, before the year had ended the man returned to his former manner of life. One evening, in a drunken state, he turned to descend a set of stairs when he stumbled and pitched headlong down the stairs breaking his neck and dying instantly. When Edwards was informed of the tragic news he opened his journal and somberly noted that that very evening was exactly one year from the time the man had experienced the dream of his one-year probation from hell.
I rest my case.