Who Came
& Who Went To Hell?
What Is Hell?
What Is
Love?
Who Went
to the Hell? Who
Will Return From The Hell?
Where is Hell, and who
created it?
Where Are the Dead?
"Thou
wilt not leave My soul in Hell, neither wilt Thou suffer Thine Holy One to see
corruption."— Ps
16:10.
Although
the caption of my topic has a sensational aspect, I assure you all that it is
not really so, that I shall treat the subject most earnestly and prove every
assertion most conclusively from the Scriptures. God forbid that I should treat
lightly a subject which has caused more distress, more heartache, more sorrow
of mind, than all other subjects combined—caused these distresses to the very
best among the Lord’s followers. I care not to specially address those who are
so selfish as to regard merely themselves and their family connections, and who
are quite content that all others might suffer an eternity of torture so long
as their friends are saved from such a calamity. I would reach especially those
whose hearts and heads have been troubled almost to the extent of distraction
over this subject—those who have wept and prayed as they remembered sons and
daughters, friends and neighbours, parents and children, who died without
having accepted Jesus as their Savior, without having taken upon them the only
name given under Heaven and among men whereby we must be saved.—Ac
4:12.
I hold
that it is the best of God’s people, the tenderest of heart, the most Christ
like, who have had trouble with the question of eternal torment. I know how to
sympathize with them because once I had similar distress of mind, and like
others was obliged to say, "If I believe this doctrine and meditate upon
it, it will surely make me crazy, as it has done hundreds and thousands of
others." Such loving hearts have found a palliation but not a relief, not
a satisfaction, in the thought that somehow, perhaps, somewhere, at some time,
God’s character would be cleared of the dreadful stain cast upon it by this
doctrine, which we believed to be the teaching of God’s Book, the Bible.
I, too,
once so believed and feared, and was ashamed of my God because of the
injustice, lovelessness, devilishness implied in the theory taught me from
infancy, that God, knowing the end from the beginning, had created our race
under conditions as we see them; that He provided a great place called hell for
their torture, and created a corps of fireproof devils to attend to the matter,
and provided also fuel enough to perpetuate the torture to all eternity. I felt
thankful indeed to realize myself an object of Divine mercy and favor, but my
heart went out for the thousands of millions of human beings of civilized as
well as heathen lands who had gone down into death utterly ignorant of
"the only name given under Heaven and among men whereby we must be
saved"—"neither is there salvation in any other."
EARLY
THOUGHTS
That I
thoroughly believed this doctrine you may know when I tell you that at 17 years
of age it was my custom to go out at night to chalk up words of warning in
conspicuous places, where working-men passing to and fro might see them, that
peradventure I might save some from the awful doom. And the while I wondered
why God, who is of infinite power, did not blazon forth some words of warning
upon the sky or cause angel trumpeters to announce positively and forcefully
the doom to which the world in general was, I supposed, hastening. I was an
admirer of the great Baptist preacher, Charles Spurgeon, and esteemed him very
highly for the honesty and candor which made his sermons so dreadfully hot,
believing that he was an exceptionally honest minister, and that others were
grossly derelict in not preaching Hell strenuously, in
proclaiming eternal torment continuously.
But I am
here to explain to you how in great mercy God opened the eyes of my
understanding to see that the doctrine of eternal torment is not the teaching
of the Bible, but on the contrary is a misrepresentation and blasphemy of the
great and holy name. I am here to prove to you that the doctrine of eternal
torment has come down to us from the Dark Ages in the hymns and catechisms and
creeds, and that it is contrary not only to reason, but also to God’s Word.
Demon
gods—vicious, spiteful, merciless—are known to all the heathen
peoples. The Bible alone of all religious books teaches a God of love, sympathy
and compassion, sympathetic with His creatures and desirous of rescuing them
from their fallen estate. It was during the Dark Ages when the spirit of
Christ, the spirit of love, became so nearly extinct even among Christians,
that they thought it perfectly proper and pleasing to God that they should tear
one another limb from limb on the rack, that they should burn one another at
the stake, that they should torture one another with thumb screws and fill each
other’s mouths and ears with molten lead—it was at that time and by some of our
deluded ancestors that this doctrine of eternal torment was torn from
heathendom and engrafted upon the teachings of Jesus and His Apostles.
We find
indeed that the inquisitors of old justified the tortures of their fellow creatures with the very claim that they were thus copying God, and that their
victims would receive still worse treatment when after death they should come
into the hands of the Almighty. People will copy their conceptions of the
Creator—how necessary, therefore, that we have the right conception, that we
worship a God who is greater in Justice, Wisdom, Love and Power than ourselves.
With such a terrible misconception of God the wonder is that Christianity made
any progress at all. The only offset has probably been the thought of the love
of Jesus and of His willingness and endeavor to rescue men.
INFIDELITY
FOSTERED BY HELL THEORY
Intelligent
people everywhere are very generally discarding the doctrine of eternal torment
as being contrary to reason. But, alas, thinking that it is taught in the
Scriptures these same intelligent people are rejecting the Bible, losing faith
in it, drifting into unbelief in general—into Christian Science, spiritism,
theosophy, etc.
If this
afternoon I shall succeed in proving to you that the Scriptures do not teach
this unreasonable theory of eternal torment, which is supposed to be built upon
its statements—if on the contrary I shall show you that the "Hell" of
the Scriptures is logical and reasonable, I shall hope to have planted the feet
of some upon firmer ground, to have re-established to some extent faith in the
Bible as the Word of God and to have prepared your minds to see that as this
error is not of Scriptural foundation, so likewise all the unreasonable
teachings of the creeds of the Dark Ages are without foundation in the Bible. I
hope thus to lay a foundation for your future growth in knowledge and in grace.
I could not possibly ask for you of the Lord a greater Blessing than has
already come to my own heart and life through better knowledge of the
Scriptures along these lines.
I will
endeavor to give you Scriptural proofs that the Hell of the Bible is not a
place of torment at all; that the word refers to the state of death, the Tomb,
the Grave. I shall show you that the Scriptures teach that both the good and
the bad alike go to the Biblical hell, the Tomb, and that their hope of salvation
is a resurrection hope—to be delivered from the power of death by the Redeemer
in God’s due time.
THE HELL OF
THE BIBLE
You are
all aware that the Old Testament portion of the Bible was written in the Hebrew
language and the New Testament in the Greek. We will commence with the Old
Testament. We find that the word "Hell" everywhere throughout the
Old Testament is a translation of the Hebrew word "sheol," which occurs altogether 66 times, and is
translated three different ways in our Common Version; 32 times Grave, 31 times Hell and three times Pit. It should have been translated Grave or Pit or Tomb in every instance. Indeed, in two instances, where it is rendered Hell in the
Common Version, the marginal reading says, "Hebrew, the Grave."
One of
these is Jon
2:2. Jonah is represented as telling how he prayed to God while he was in
the belly of the great fish. He was buried alive, entombed. Our Common Version
reads, "Out of the belly of hell cried I"; the literal meaning is,
"Out of the Grave-belly I prayed."
Adding
these two instances to the last we would have Grave 34 times, Pit three times
and Hell 29 times, or the word is erroneously rendered 29 times out of 66.
I
shall not weary you by giving you all of these 66 passages, nor is this
necessary; for we have a free booklet to which you are all welcome on read
entitled Where Are the Dead?. It takes up every text in which the word Hell occurs, from Genesis to Revelation, and every passage which in any sense of the
word appears to teach an eternity of torture. It analyzes these with their
context and shows what they do and what they do not mean. It will convince any
fair-minded man who will give it careful reading.
In
passing I remark that much of the difficulty on this subject has arisen from
careless handling of the Word of God, adding to its statements in our minds if
not in our words. For instance, when we read in the Bible, "All the wicked
shall God destroy" (Ps
145:20), we unwittingly said to ourselves, "Destroy must mean
preserve, preserve in fire, preserve in torment, preserve with devils
eternally." Thus we distorted the Word of God to our own injury as well as
to the injury of others.
Similarly
the word die; when we read in the Scriptures, "The soul that sinneth it
shall die" (Eze
18:20), we perverted the Word of God as we would not think of perverting
any other writings and said, "Die must here mean live, live in torment
eternally with devils in suffering."
Similarly
the word perish; on reading in the Scriptures that the "wicked shall
perish" (Ps
37:20), we turned the language upside down and said, "Perish means
preserve." Thus our confusion continued; we were blinded by the Adversary
on the lines on which he has blinded the entire heathen world, hindering the
glorious light of the goodness of God from shining more and more into the
hearts of men.—2Co
4:4.
GRAY
HAIRS IN HELL
The first
occurrence of the word Sheol is in connection with the patriarch Jacob and his
twelve sons. His two youngest sons, nobler than their brethren, were most
beloved by Jacob. Joseph, his favorite, clothed in his handsome coat of many
colors, was sent to his brethren, who were pasturing the sheep at a distance
from home, to take them delicacies and bring back word of their welfare.
The
brethren, moved with envy, first thought to kill him, but subsequently sold him
to the Ishmaelites, who in turn sold him to the Egyptians, in whose land under
God’s providential care he in after years became ruler next to the king.
Meantime the brethren took the peculiar coat of many colors, bedraggled it in
the blood of a goat and in the dust, and sent it home to Jacob, inquiring if he
recognized it. He answered, "Alas, it is Joseph’s coat; wild beasts have
devoured him! I will go down to Sheol to my son mourning." (Ge
37:35.) What did he mean? Did he mean by Sheol a place of fire and torment?
Did he believe that Joseph, his best son, had gone there, and that he, Jacob,
also expected to go to that place? No, we answer. He meant that evidently
Joseph was dead, and that he would mourn for his favorite son the remainder of
his life, until he also should go into the state of death, into Sheol, into Hell.
The
second occurrence of the word is a little further on in the same narrative. The
brethren had been to Egypt to buy corn, because of famine in Canaan. It was
necessary that they should go for more, but they explained to Jacob that the
Governor, whom they knew not was Joseph, had required of them that if they came
again they must bring with them Benjamin, their brother, the one whom Jacob now
specially loved. Jacob protested, but finding that there was no escape he
finally told them to take Benjamin, but declared also that if they did not
bring the lad back safe they would bring down his own gray hairs in sorrow to
the Grave, Sheol. Jacob evidently meant not that he would go to a place of eternal torment if Benjamin did not return, but that a failure to bring
Benjamin back would hasten his death through sorrow. Does any sane person have
any doubt as to the meaning of Sheol in these instances, the first two
occurrences in the Bible? No! you have no doubt, nor reason for any. And the
word has the same meaning exactly in its every occurrence throughout the
Scriptures, as you will see when you read carefully our booklet Where Are the
Dead?
HELL IN
OLD ENGLISH LITERATURE
Just a
word in defence of the translators of our Common Version English Bible. All
living languages are subject to variation in meaning, and this seems to have
been particularly true of the English. To illustrate, the word hell at one time
meant the Grave in the English language. But gradually this meaning has been
dropped out of the word, until now it is never used in ordinary conversation.
As illustrations of its use in bygone times we find in ancient English
literature reference to the helling of a house, meaning not the burning of the
house nor the torturing of it, but the thatching of it. Similarly we read of
the farmer helling his potatoes, the meaning of the expression being not the
roasting of potatoes nor the torturing of them, but the putting of them into a Pit for preservation from the frosts, etc., until needed.
As for
the translators of the Revised Version they seem to have been too honest to use
the word hell as a translation for Sheol and Hades, but not honest enough to
tell the people the truth on the subject. Hence you will find that in the
Revised Version no translation at all is given, but the Hebrew word Sheol in
the Old Testament and the Greek word Hades in the New Testament are used
instead of the word Hell when Grave is not used. The translators evidently
anticipated what occurred; namely, that the public, knowing nothing about Greek
and Hebrew, would esteem this as an attempt to do away with Hell, whereas the
real animus of the translators was to perpetuate it. The translators knew that
the public would say that Hell was just as hot and just as real, although now
called Sheol and Hades. They knew that the public would never suspect that the
wool was being pulled over the eyes of their understanding to hinder them from
seeing the plain teaching of God’s Word, that Sheol means the Grave or Tomb or
death state—nothing more, nothing less.
PRAYING
TO GO TO HELL
Job, one
of the most prominent characters of the Old Testament, one especially mentioned
as a favorite with God, made a most eloquent prayer that he might go to Hell,
to Sheol, to the Tomb. And no wonder, poor man; for surely in his case was
fulfilled the statement, "Many are the afflictions of the righteous!"
(Ps
34:19.) Unwilling to suicide, he craved relief from his sorrows and
troubles in death. Refresh your memory respecting his troubles. The Almighty,
while approving him, permitted the Adversary to vex him sorely, to the extent
of taking away every earthly possession except the mere thread of life itself.
His children, gathered for a birthday party, were killed by a cyclone; later
his flocks and herds and property in general were destroyed. Finally his health
gave way, and he broke out in boils from head to foot.—Job
1:6-22.
To add to
his sorrows his friends and neighbors, instead of consoling him, turned against
him and declared that he had been acting the part of a hypocrite, and that God
was now exposing him—showing His disapproval.
In vain
did Job protest his innocence and appeal to the Lord, until subsequently the
Lord gave His verdict in favor of Job against the friends. But as though all
these trials and difficulties were not enough for the poor man, to cap the
climax his wife exclaimed, "You are acCursed of God and should die!"
Then poor Job poured forth his prayer for death, saying: "Oh, that Thou
wouldst hide me in Sheol until Thy wrath be past!"—Job
14:13.
Does
anyone of sane mind think that poor Job, after passing through all these
afflictions, was in these words praying to God to cast him into a place of
eternal torment, to be the sport of devils? No; such a supposition would be
irrational. Very evidently Job meant that, if God were willing, he would be
glad to die, to go into Sheol, the Tomb, the state of death.
SHEOL NOT
DESIRABLE FOREVER
But Job
had a hope for the future—he was not desirous of being annihilated; hence his
prayer is, "Oh, that Thou wouldst hide me in Sheol [Hell, the Tomb] until
Thy wrath be past." The "wrath" here mentioned is elsewhere
called the "Curse." Back in Eden, when our first parents were
perfect, by disobedience they brought upon themselves the Divine sentence of
"Curse" or "wrath"—the death sentence, which includes all
mental, moral and physical degeneracy known to our race, and which has been
afflicting us as a whole for now 6,000 years. Job was looking beyond the period
of the permission of this "Curse" or "wrath" to a time
future, when the "Curse" would be removed, and instead of it a
"Blessing" would come to every member of the race, himself included.
As a Prophet he recorded his hope of a coming Redeemer: "I know that my
Redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand in the latter day upon the earth."
Through
this Redeemer’s work he realized that the "Curse" would be abolished,
and his prayer to be hid in Sheol, the Grave, the Tomb, was merely until the
"Curse" the wrath" would be over—until the great Blessing time,
the Millennial Reign, should begin. His prayer continuing shows his hope of a
resurrection, "that Thou wouldst appoint me a set time and remember
me." Then particularly referring to the resurrection, he says, "Thou
shalt call and I will answer Thee, for Thou wilt have regard unto the work of
Thy hands."—Job
14:15.
We
remember also the Prophet David’s prayer for deliverance from death. He said,
"Oh, save me for Thy mercies’ sake. For in death there is no remembrance
of Thee; in Sheol [Hell, the Tomb] who shall give Thee thanks?" (Ps
6:4,5.)
We remember the good King Hezekiah also, whose life was spared 15 years in
answer to prayer. In thanking the Lord for this he said, "Death cannot
celebrate Thee; Sheol [the Tomb] cannot praise Thee."—Isa
38:18.
QUOTE THE
ENTIRE PROVERB
One of
Solomon’s inspired proverbs much quoted is, "Do with thy might what thy
hand findeth to do." But very rarely do we ever hear the remainder of the
quotation, namely, "because there is neither wisdom nor knowledge nor
device in Sheol [the Grave] whither thou goest."
(Ec
9:10.) How reasonable is this statement, rightly understood—there is no
wisdom nor knowledge nor work in the hell to which the good and the bad, all
mankind, have been going for the past six thousand years! The dead are really
dead, extinct, except as God has provided for them a resurrection from the
dead, a reawakening to sentient being. The very moment of their awakening will
seem to each to be the next moment to the one in which he died; for there is no
wisdom or knowledge in the Tomb, in Sheol, in Hell. How wonderful the goodness and mercy of God will appear to the great mass of our race when they are awakened
from the sleep of death and learn for the first time of the goodness of God,
that instead of having provided devils and torture, He has provided through His
Son an opening of the prison doors of the Tomb and a setting at liberty of the
captives of death, providing also for their future uplift out of sin and
degradation under the favorable conditions of the Millennial Kingdom of God’s
dear Son.
SHEOL IS
IN THE GREEK HADES
We now
call your attention to the fact that the word Sheol in the Old Testament, which
we have shown means merely Tomb, the death state, is the exact equivalent of
the word Hades in the New Testament Greek, which likewise means the Tomb, the
state of death. For instance, in Psalm
16:10 we read, "Thou wilt not leave my soul in Sheol" (hell, the Tomb), and we find St. Peter quoting this on the day of Pentecost (Ac
2:27-31), "Thou wilt not leave My soul in Hades," hell, the Grave.
St. Peter proceeds to explain that David spoke this not respecting his own
soul, but the soul of Jesus, and thus foretold our Lord’s resurrection from the
dead on the third day.
How
simple, how plain the entire matter is from this the Scriptural standpoint!
Take
another illustration: the prophet Hosea declares, "I will ransom them from
the power of Sheol [the Grave, Hell], I will redeem them from death: O Death
where is thy sting? O Sheol [Grave, Hell], I will be thy destruction." The
Apostle Paul quotes this passage in his great discourse on the resurrection,
saying, "O Death where is thy sting? O Hades [Grave], where is thy
victory?" (1Co
15:55.) What could be simpler, plainer?
All that
we need is to get the smoke of the Dark Ages out of the eyes of our
understanding, and to allow the true light from the inspired Word of God to
speak to us plainly and be its own interpreter.
See the
dead risen from land and from ocean; Praise to Jehovah ascending on High;
Fall’n are the engines of war and commotion; Shouts of salvation are rending
the sky.
"Gehenna"
Rendered "Hell"
This word
occurs in the following passages -- in all twelve times: Matt.
5:22,29,30; Matt.
10:28; Matt.
18:9; 23:15,33; Mark
9:43-47; Luke
12:5; James
3:6. It is the Grecian mode of spelling the Hebrew words which are
translated "Valley of Hinnom." This valley lay just outside the city
of Jerusalem and served the purpose of sewer and garbage burner to that city.
The offal, garbage, etc., were emptied there, and fires were kept continually
burning to consume utterly all things deposited therein, brimstone being added
to assist combustion and insure complete destruction. But no living thing was
ever permitted to be cast into Gehenna. The Jews were not allowed to torture any creature.
Therefore,
while Gehenna served a useful purpose to the city of Jerusalem as a place for
garbage burning, it, like the city itself, was typical, and illustrated the
future dealings of God in refusing and committing to destruction all the impure
elements, thus preventing them from defiling the holy city, the New Jerusalem,
after the trial of the Millennial age of judgment shall have fully proved them
and separated with unerring accuracy the "sheep" from the
"goats."
So, then,
Gehenna was a type or illustration of the Second death -- final and complete
destruction, from which there can be no recovery; for after that, "there
remaineth no more sacrifice for sins," but only "fiery indignation,
which shall devour the adversaries." -- Heb.
10:26,27.
Let us
remember that Israel, for the purpose of being used as types of God's future
dealing with the race, was typically treated as though the ransom had been
given before they left Egypt, though only a typical lamb had been slain. When
Jerusalem was built and the temple -- representative of the true Temple, the
Church and the true Kingdom as it will be established by Christ in the
Millennium -- that people typified the world in the Millennial age. Their
priests represented the glorified Royal Priesthood, and their Law and its
demands of perfect obedience represented the law and condition under the New
Covenant, to be brought into operation for the Blessing of all the obedient,
and for the condemnation of all who, when granted fullest opportunity, will not
heartily submit to the righteous ruling and laws of the Great King.
But what
about the undying worms and the unquenchable fire?
In the
literal Gehenna, which is the basis of our Lord's illustration, the bodies of
animals, etc, frequently fell upon ledges of rocks and not into the fire kept
burning below. Thus exposed, these would breed worms and be destroyed by them,
as completely and as surely as those which burned. No one was allowed to
disturb the contents of this valley; hence the worm and the fire together
completed the work of destruction -- the fire was not quenched and the worms
died not. This would not imply a never-ending fire, nor everlasting worms. The
thought is that the worms did not die off and leave the carcasses there, but
continued and completed the work of destruction. So with the fire: it was not quenched, it burned on until all was consumed. Just so if a house were ablaze
and the fire could not be controlled or quenched, but burned until the building
was destroyed, we might properly call such an "unquenchable fire."
Our Lord
wished to impress the thought of the completeness and finality of the Second
death, symbolized in Gehenna. All who go into the Second death will be
thoroughly and completely and forever destroyed; no ransom will ever again be
given for any (Rom.
6:9); for none worthy of life will be cast into the Second death, or lake
of fire, but only those who love unrighteousness after coming to the knowledge
of the truth.
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