A BRIEF HISTORY OF HELL - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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A BRIEF HISTORY OF HELL

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Title: A BRIEF HISTORY OF HELL


1
A BRIEF HISTORY OF HELL
2b Models in Science and Religion
2
Models of Hell
  • Many cultures and religions believe in Hell. What
    they believe varies, but the common theme uniting
    all models of Hell is that it is not a desirable
    place or state to be in!
  • This presentation explores the various ways that
    Hell has been understood in the language and
    thought world of Christianity. It will become
    clear that more than one model of Hell has been
    used.

3
Models aid understanding
  • It is perhaps inevitable that in pre-literate
    cultures concepts such as hell were explored
    using stories and images. Indeed it is necessary
    in to try to find ways to imagine the unseen in
    religion, just as it is in science in those
    situations where no direct apprehension of the
    object of study is possible.
  • Such models have difficulties however. They can
    easily dominate our vision and blind us to other
    models which may be better. A problem with all
    models is that they can too easily become the
    object that they are meant to represent. Think of
    the way we imagine an atom because of the model
    we have been taught in school.

4
What images spring to mind when you think of
Hell? Which sources influence your
thinking?Art? Preachers? Milton? Dante?Jesus?
5
The image on this slide is part of the fresco
covering the entire outer western wall of the
Voronet monastery in Romania. It was painted in
1547 and depicts the Last Judgement. St. Peter
leads the righteous into heaven while the
sinners, chained by the devils, are dragged into
Hell.
6
This is part of the (in)famous triptych, an
altarpiece entitled The Garden of Earthly
Delights (1504) by Hieronymus Bosch. The torments
of hell, a dark, icy, yet fiery nightmarish
vision awaits those whose sinful pleasures lead
inexorably to their eternal separation from God.
7
Gehenna - 1
  • If you were tracking down the most widely used
    term for hell in the New Testament this would be
    it. The other common one is Hades, the Greek word
    for the Hebrew idea of Sheol, the place of the
    dead.
  • Much of the teaching of Jesus was in parables and
    he made frequent use of simile and metaphor.
    Typically his teaching about the Kingdom of God
    was in the form of comparisons The Kingdom of
    God is like . Gehenna as a model for hell is an
    interesting choice. Models generally result from
    extending a comparison making it fruitful,
    suggesting new ways of thinking about an idea.

8
Gehenna - 2
  • So why would Jesus use Gehenna as his preferred
    term for Hell?
  • Its origin is in the valley of Gehinnom (in
    Hebrew) which lay to the south of Jerusalem. It
    was a place where in the time of the Book of
    Kings children were sacrificed. According to
    Jeremiah it would be the place of Gods
    judgement. Jewish apocalyptic literature assumed
    it would become the hell of fire at the end of
    time.
  • In Jesus teaching the emphasis seems to be on
    Gehenna as a place of judgement for body and soul
    with eternal consequences.

9
Gehenna - 3
  • Does this mean that people will be tormented for
    ever in Gehenna, in what seems to be an
    excessively disproportionate punishment for a
    finite lifetime of sinning!?
  • This seems to have been the commonest
    interpretation of Gehenna in history. But is it
    the correct way to understand the model? What was
    Jesus getting at?
  • Recently many scholars have pointed out that the
    traditional understanding of Gehenna as a model
    of eternal punishment is mistaken. Their
    reasoning is as follows

10
Gehenna - 4
  • Consider these typical texts about Gehenna
  • Fear Him who can destroy both body and soul in
    hell (Matthew 1028)
  • If your eye causes you to sin, pluck it out it
    is better for you to enter the kingdom of God
    with one eye than with two eyes to be thrown into
    hell, where the worm does not die, and the fire
    is not quenched. (Mark 947,48)
  • In the time of Jesus the valley of Gehenna was
    used as a rubbish tip where material was burned
    continually and where organic matter was
    biodegraded by worms and the like. Along with the
    background of its use as a place of child
    sacrifice and as an image of hell after judgement
    it was a powerful model to use.

11
Gehenna - 5
  • But what does the model intend to teach about the
    fate of those who are judged and found wanting by
    God? We have to interpret the model.
  • Consider these two alternative views of the soul
  • 1 Once created by God your soul is immortal.
    This is a typically Greek philosophical view.
    This would mean that the action of the fire and
    the worms would be an eternally enduring reality.
    Presumably you would be conscious of your never
    ending punishment. Tortured for eternity.
  • 2 The soul has conditional immortality. God can
    choose for you to live on for ever or to be
    destroyed. The image of Gehenna is best
    understood as one of final destruction. Rubbish
    on the tip returns to dust. Jesus is speaking of
    the final fate of the enemies of God as one of
    destruction, of annihilation.

12
Gehenna - 6
  • All models have positive, negative and neutral
    features. They are like the reality they try to
    depict in some ways but not in others.
  • Perhaps by latching on to the (wrong?)
    understanding of souls as being necessarily
    eternal, interpreters of Jesus model have
    misunderstood him. A consequence has been to
    sharpen the problem of how God can justly punish
    people for eternity in response to finite
    sinning.
  • Other theologians have suggested that to
    understand the model, you need to see it as a
    temporary punishment and purging to prepare
    everyone for heaven. Is this what Mark 949 is
    about? Everyone will be salted with fire.

13
Gehenna - 7
ETERNAL CONSCIOUSLY ENDURED PUNISHMENT
Gehenna Fire Worms
ANNIHILATION
TEMPORARY PURGING PRIOR TO HEAVEN FOR ALL
  • One model Gehenna. Three interpretations
    depending on what you believe about other matters
    such as the nature of the soul. Models and
    theories form a complex nexus of beliefs and it
    is almost impossible in theology and in science
    for one idea to be understood in isolation from
    the rest of the content of the discipline.

14
FIN
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