What about hell? (justice, love, and eternal judgment)
Hell is the doctrine most people wish Christianity didn’t have. It’s also the one Jesus talked about more than almost anyone else in the New Testament. Before dismissing it or softening it into something more comfortable, it’s worth asking what it actually says — and why a God of love might require it.
No doctrine in Christianity is more unpopular, more avoided in polite conversation, or more consistently softened in contemporary preaching. And no doctrine was spoken of more plainly, more repeatedly, and with more urgency by Jesus himself. That gap is worth examining.
Most men who’ve been in combat have a clearer sense of justice than most people who debate hell in seminaries. They’ve seen what real evil looks like. They know what it costs when it goes unanswered. And some of them have a harder time with a God who lets everything slide than with a God who doesn’t.
That instinct is worth taking seriously — because it runs closer to the biblical picture of God than the therapeutic version that has largely replaced it in popular Christianity. The God of the Bible is not primarily concerned with making people comfortable. He is concerned with justice, with holiness, and with the weight of what human beings actually do to each other and to him.
Hell is the doctrine that takes evil seriously. It is also the doctrine that most reveals how we think about justice, love, freedom, and what it means for a person to be a person. This post works through it carefully — what the Bible actually says, what the main positions are, what the serious objections are, and what it means for the man who’s trying to figure out where he stands.
What Jesus Actually Said
One of the most striking facts about the doctrine of hell is its source. The person who spoke most explicitly, most frequently, and most urgently about hell in the New Testament is Jesus himself — not Paul, not Revelation’s symbolic imagery, not medieval theologians. Jesus.
This is not a peripheral teaching that can be extracted from the edges of the Gospels without disturbing the center. It is woven into the fabric of Jesus’s preaching — his parables, his direct warnings, his descriptions of the final judgment. Any account of Jesus that removes or substantially softens this teaching is not working from the text. It is editing the text to produce a more acceptable Jesus.
The Language: What the Bible’s Words Actually Mean
The New Testament uses several different words and images for the final state of the condemned, and understanding them matters for any honest engagement with the doctrine.
Gehenna — The Greek word Jesus most commonly uses, translated “hell” in most English Bibles. It refers to the Valley of Hinnom outside Jerusalem, historically associated with child sacrifice and later used as a burning refuse dump. Jesus uses it as a vivid image of final judgment and destruction — the place where what cannot be redeemed is permanently disposed of.
Hades — The Greek word for the realm of the dead, roughly equivalent to the Hebrew Sheol. In the New Testament it often refers to the intermediate state before the final judgment rather than the final destination itself.
The lake of fire — Revelation’s imagery for the final state after the last judgment (Revelation 20:14–15). Described as the “second death” — permanent separation from the God who is the source of all life and good.
Eternal / aiōnios — The Greek word translated “eternal” in “eternal punishment” (Matthew 25:46). The same word describes “eternal life” in the same verse. The parallelism is intentional and significant: the duration of judgment and the duration of life for the righteous are described with the same word.
The images — fire, darkness, weeping and gnashing of teeth, separation — are almost certainly not meant to be read as literal physical descriptions of a place. They are the Bible’s attempt to communicate in human language something that has no direct human analogue: permanent, irreversible exclusion from God, from love, from all that is good. The images point at something real; they are not a map of a location.
The Three Main Christian Positions
The majority position across the history of the church: those who die apart from Christ enter a state of conscious, ongoing punishment that is permanent and irreversible. The condemned are not annihilated — they continue to exist, but in a state of separation from God that constitutes suffering.
This position is grounded in the direct language of Jesus (the rich man in Luke 16 is conscious and suffering), the parallelism of “eternal punishment” with “eternal life” in Matthew 25:46, and the affirmation of the Apostles’ Creed and virtually every major confessional document in church history.
Defenders include Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin, Jonathan Edwards, and the overwhelming majority of theologians across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant traditions throughout history.
The view that the unsaved do not experience eternal conscious torment but are ultimately destroyed — ceasing to exist entirely. The “second death” of Revelation is understood as literal extinction. The fire of hell is the fire that consumes, not the fire that tortures endlessly.
Proponents include John Stott, Clark Pinnock, and a growing number of evangelical scholars. They argue that the biblical language of “destruction” and “perishing” (Matthew 10:28; John 3:16) more naturally implies cessation of existence than ongoing torment, and that endless suffering serves no redemptive or judicial purpose once judgment has been fully rendered.
The view that ultimately all people will be saved — that God’s love will, in the end, overcome all resistance and every person will be reconciled to him. Some versions (Christian universalism) hold that post-mortem repentance and restoration are possible; others (like Rob Bell’s popularized version in Love Wins) suggest that love ultimately wins over judgment.
The Hard Questions — Answered Honestly
“How can a loving God send people to hell forever? That sounds more like a monster than a Father.”
This objection rests on a partial account of love. Love that is incapable of judgment is not love — it is sentimentality. A father who never holds his children accountable, who ignores the harm they do to others, who treats cruelty and kindness as equally acceptable, is not a loving father. He is an indulgent one, and indulgence is not the same as love.
The God of the Bible is not a God who “sends” people to hell in the sense of dispatching them against their will. He is a God who honors the choices of people who have persistently and finally chosen to live without him. C.S. Lewis put it precisely: “There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, ‘Thy will be done,’ and those to whom God says, in the end, ‘Thy will be done.’ All that are in Hell, choose it.” Hell is not God overriding human freedom. It is God respecting it — permanently.
Moreover, the New Testament does not pit God’s love against his justice. At the cross, both are fully expressed simultaneously. The same God who is love (1 John 4:8) is also a “consuming fire” (Hebrews 12:29). Treating love as the only attribute of God that matters, and making it override every other divine attribute, is not taking love seriously. It is flattening God into a cosmic approval machine.
“Eternal punishment for a finite life of sin seems wildly disproportionate. Why forever?”
The proportionality question is serious and deserves a serious answer. The traditional response has two parts. First, the severity of an offense is not determined only by the duration of the act but by the nature and dignity of the one sinned against. An insult directed at a stranger carries different weight than the same insult directed at a king — not because the words are different but because of who receives them. Sin against an infinite God — the source of all being, all goodness, all life — is not a minor infraction against a peer. The traditional view holds that this is why the consequences are not proportionate to the clock time of the offense.
Second, the traditional view also holds that the condemned do not simply stop sinning — they continue in rebellion, and judgment continues to be just. This is not a comfortable picture, but it is internally consistent: the eternality of judgment tracks the eternality of the rejection that produces it.
The annihilationist position offers a different answer: the punishment is eternal in its finality (you are permanently, irreversibly destroyed) rather than in its duration. Both positions are wrestling honestly with the same difficult question.
“What about people who were never given a real chance — raised in abuse, addiction, or with no exposure to the gospel?”
This is the question of divine justice and the unevangelized — addressed more fully in the post on religious exclusivity. The short answer: the Bible consistently affirms that God judges according to available light, not unavailable light. Romans 2:12–16 describes those without the written law being judged by the law written on their hearts. Romans 1:19–20 affirms that general revelation gives everyone genuine knowledge of and accountability to God.
What the Bible does not do is give us a case-by-case account of every human situation. What it does give us is enough confidence in the character of God — who is both perfectly just and perfectly merciful — to trust that no one will be condemned for failing to respond to revelation they genuinely never received. The judge of all the earth will do right (Genesis 18:25). That is not a dodge. It is a theological confidence grounded in who God is.
“How could anyone be happy in heaven knowing people they loved are in hell?”
This is one of the most emotionally difficult questions about hell, and the honest answer is that Scripture does not resolve it in detail. Several responses have been offered by serious theologians. Augustine argued that the redeemed will see God’s justice clearly and affirm it — not because they are callous, but because their vision of God and reality is perfected. C.S. Lewis suggested that in the new creation, the redeemed will understand what was true all along: that the people in hell are there because they finally, definitively, freely chose it — and that honoring that choice is the most respectful thing left to do.
The question also contains a hidden assumption worth examining: that our present emotional attachments are the final measure of what is right. The Bible suggests that in the new creation, our loves and perceptions will be transformed — that we will see all things, including judgment, as God sees them. That’s not a fully satisfying answer. It is an honest acknowledgment that we do not yet have the vantage point to feel what we will one day understand.
“Isn’t hell just a tool the church invented to scare people into compliance?”
This objection is more about motivation than evidence — it’s saying that if a belief is useful for social control, we should be suspicious of it. That’s a fair principle, but it cuts both ways: the removal of hell from contemporary preaching is also useful — for church attendance, for avoiding offense, for cultural acceptability. The question of whether hell is a useful social tool has no bearing on whether it is true.
The historical record actually complicates the control-mechanism theory: the people who spoke most urgently about hell — Jesus, Paul, the apostles — were not the ones in power. They were the ones being persecuted, imprisoned, and executed by the powers that were. Using hell as a tool for social control works when the preacher has social power. The early church had none.
Why Hell Is Actually an Expression of Dignity — Not Cruelty
Here is the argument most people don’t expect: the doctrine of hell is, in a strange but real sense, the doctrine that takes human beings most seriously.
A universe without final judgment is a universe in which nothing you do ultimately matters. The man who spent his life in service to others and the man who spent his life in predatory cruelty end up in the same place — not existing, or existing in identical bliss. The courage, the sacrifice, the long fidelity of ordinary people in hard circumstances counts for nothing. The wickedness of tyrants, of men who raped and murdered and walked away, is washed away by the same indifferent universe that washed away everything else.
That vision is intolerable — and most people know it is intolerable, even if they can’t articulate why. The demand for justice is not a primitive tribal instinct to be evolved past. It is the recognition that actions have real moral weight, that persons have real dignity, and that a universe in which evil is never finally answered is not a moral universe at all.
Hell is the doctrine that says: it matters. What you did matters. What was done to you matters. The man who tortured children does not get to simply cease existing and call it even. The universe is not morally neutral. The Judge of all the earth will do right.
And the flip side of that coin is the cross. The same God who requires that evil be finally answered also provided, at enormous cost, the means by which any person who turns to him can receive that judgment in the person of his Son rather than in themselves. Hell is not God’s desire — 2 Peter 3:9 says he is “not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.” The door to the alternative stands open. The urgency of the gospel is precisely that it won’t always.
C.S. Lewis and the Door Locked from the Inside
C.S. Lewis’s treatment of hell in The Great Divorce and The Problem of Pain is among the most honest and carefully reasoned in popular Christian writing. His central insight deserves full quotation:
“I willingly believe that the damned are, in one sense, successful rebels to the end; that the doors of hell are locked on the inside. I do not mean that the ghosts may not wish to come out of hell, in the vague fashion wherein an envious man ‘wishes’ to be happy: but they certainly do not will even the first preliminary stages of that self-abandonment through which alone the soul can reach any good. They enjoy forever the horrible freedom they have demanded, and are therefore self-enslaved.”
— C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain
Lewis’s insight is that hell is not primarily a punishment God inflicts on unwilling people. It is the permanent, respected consequence of what certain people have finally and definitively chosen. A person who has spent a lifetime building an identity around the rejection of God — who has made that rejection central to who they are — does not, at death, suddenly become someone who would want the thing they have spent their whole life refusing.
This does not make hell painless or acceptable. It makes it comprehensible — and it preserves the dignity of human choice in a way that a universe without consequences never could.
The doctrine of hell is not designed to make you afraid of God in the sense of cowering terror. It is designed to make you take seriously what is at stake — to understand that the choices made in this life carry weight beyond the social consequences you can see.
Most men have a functioning instinct for justice. They know that some things matter, that some things are genuinely wrong, that the universe should not be morally indifferent. The doctrine of hell is Christianity’s answer to that instinct — not a threat wielded by power-hungry priests, but the logical consequence of a universe in which persons are real, choices are real, and justice is real.
The good news — the actual gospel — is that the same God who requires that evil be answered has provided, at the cost of his own Son, the means by which any man can stand before that judgment covered rather than exposed. That offer is standing. It has a closing date that no one knows. Taking it seriously is the most rational thing a man can do.
Key Takeaways
- Jesus talked about hell more than almost anyone else in the New Testament. It is not a marginal teaching imposed by later theologians — it is woven through the Gospels in parables, direct warnings, and descriptions of final judgment. Any honest reading of Jesus has to account for it.
- The biblical language uses multiple images that point at a single reality. Gehenna, the lake of fire, outer darkness, weeping and gnashing of teeth — these are not literal maps of a place. They are the Bible’s attempt to communicate in human terms something that has no human analogue: permanent, irreversible separation from God and all that is good.
- Three main positions exist within Christianity. Eternal conscious torment (the majority historic position), annihilationism/conditional immortality (an evangelical minority position held by serious scholars), and universalism (generally outside orthodoxy because it requires overriding human freedom and reinterpreting the plain language of multiple judgment passages).
- Hell is not God overriding human freedom — it is God honoring it permanently. Lewis’s image of the door locked from the inside captures something important: hell is the permanent, respected consequence of choices made by those who have finally and definitively refused God. This preserves human dignity rather than violating it.
- A universe without final judgment is not more merciful — it is less moral. If nothing is finally answered, nothing finally matters. The demand for justice is not a primitive impulse. It is the recognition that persons have real dignity, actions have real weight, and the universe is not morally neutral.
- The hard questions deserve honest engagement, not evasion. The proportionality question, the question of those who never heard, the question of heaven and grief — none of these are fully resolved in Scripture, and pretending otherwise is dishonest. What Scripture does give is enough confidence in God’s justice and mercy to trust him with the cases we cannot resolve.
- The doctrine of hell gives the gospel its urgency. God is not willing that any should perish. The cross is the answer to judgment, freely offered. The door is open. The weight of the doctrine is precisely what makes the grace extraordinary — and what makes taking it seriously the most important thing a man can do.
The Weight Is Real — So Is the Way Out
Hell is not a doctrine to be used as a threat or wielded as a weapon. It is a doctrine to be held with gravity — as a measure of how seriously God takes evil, how real human choices are, and how much is at stake in what a man does with the gospel.
If you’re a veteran who’s been around enough evil to know that justice matters — that some things shouldn’t just be forgotten — you’re closer to understanding this doctrine than you might think. And if the weight of it makes you want to understand the way out, Mountain Veteran Ministries is here for that conversation.
The offer stands. Reach out.
Key Scriptures: Matthew 10:28 · Matthew 25:41–46 · Luke 16:23–26 · Mark 9:43–48 · John 5:24 · Romans 2:12–16 · Romans 8:1 · 2 Peter 3:9 · Revelation 20:14–15 · Revelation 21:4 · Genesis 18:25 · Hebrews 12:29





