The Heresy of Hell
I am currently preparing a snazzy new, annotated
edition of Rev. Thomas Allin's 1885 classic, Universalism
Asserted. Anyway, I just wanted to float one of Allin's objections to hell
past your discerning gaze and see what you think of it.
Allin is very concerned with being
true to the catholic faith of orthodox Christianity and perhaps his chief
concern with hell is that it is, in his view, incompatible with orthodoxy!
At first blush that claim seems
absurd, given that most orthodox Christians since the sixth century at least
have affirmed eternal hell! So a
little clarification is in order. Allin does not mean that those who affirm
hell are unorthodox. Rather, his point
is that eternal hell is a cuckoo in the nest that is a live threat to the
rest of the chicks.
Perhaps an illustration: if hell
continues to all eternity then sinners continue in their resistance to God for
all eternity, sin continues forever, evil continues forever. As such, we end up
with an everlasting cosmic dualism in which good and evil are co-eternal. Even
if God can imprison sin in an eternal
chamber in some corner of creation, he has not undone and defeated it, but
merely contained it. But such an idea threatens to undermine some central
Christian convictions about God and evil.
Allin also argues that a hell from
which there is no ultimate restoration—whether that be eternal torment or
annihilation—would undermine the doctrine of God (his love, his justice, his
goodness, his omnipotence), the victory of Christ, the power of the atonement,
and so on and so forth.
Of course, those who believe in hell
also affirm God's love and justice, omnipotence, the atonement, divine victory,
etc. But, Allin's point is that when they do so they either have to add in
qualifications that serve to undermine the very beliefs that they affirm or
they have to simply ignore the contradictions in their belief set and talk out
of both sides of their mouth at the same time.
Given the oft-heard, though
incorrect, assertion that universalism is heretical, what is interesting is
that the heart of Allin's case, though he does not put it in these words, is
that in order to maintain a
consistent and healthy Christian orthodoxy one ought to jettison belief in eternal
hell. Hell, in other words, is bad for orthodoxy.
Who said Anglicans were wishy-washy!
Comments
I don't just mean abstract propositions (heaven must have this, hell must be that) but what these places might actually look like, what things they would contain, how they would function, concrete attributes.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Heaven-World-Biblical-Promise-Earth/dp/0862019508/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427225823&sr=8-1&keywords=david+lawrence+heaven
Though, speaking for myself, I am very cautious about being too concrete about the new age. I think some kind of "fuzzy" is very appropriate.
Hello anonymous. You could be one of several people, but I am going to take a guess at Andy Hill. Right?
Andy H