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[ACTS 17: 22-31] |
"When I die, I shall rot, and nothing of my ego will survive," said the late British philosopher, Bertrand Russell, who died in 1970.[2] We can hardly argue with his statement. It is obviously true concerning the physical body. Three years after he published that statement, Russell died. But is it the whole truth? Does the real "me" disappear? Epicurus, the Greek pleasure-loving philosopher, said long ago, "What men fear is not that death is annihilation (complete destruction), but that it is not." [3]
Bertrand Russell said
more than when he dies he rots. He sailed into Jesus
when he said: "There is one very serious defect to my mind in Christ's
moral
character, and that is that He believed in hell. I do not myself feel
that
any person who is really profoundly humane can believe in everlasting
punishment."
[4]
I read a fascinating poem by John Betjeman where he described his thoughts before a surgical procedure in the operating theatre. He was lying in a hospital in Oxford, England, listening to the tolling of St Giles' bells. A few lines of the poem are:
"Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it." (Matt 7:13,14)
Christ made many statements that there is such a thing as judgment
to come. Hebrews 9:27 gets right to the point: "Just as man is destined
to
die once, and after that to face judgment."
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It is important that we approach this matter of judgment with the right attitude of mind.
1. IT'S TOO SERIOUS TO LEAVE IT UP TO GUESSES. |
The safest way to approach any subject that threatens to be serious and personally challenging is to laugh at it. I guess people laughed at and mocked Noah as he preached about God's impending judgment.
What did others think of Christ when he wept over Jerusalem because they were blind to their need of him and to the judgment to come. Rather emotional! Trying to frighten us into faith, hey? It was no idle speculation. Jerusalem was besieged and utterly destroyed in AD 70.
Christ also said this about judgment, "Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell" (Matt 10:28).
Judgment is not a matter for idle speculations.
2. JUDGMENT IS NOT AN EMPTY THREAT |
And when Christ repeatedly warns us of the extremely serious consequences of rejecting him, or of neglecting his offer of salvation, because of the judgment to come, is that an empty threat? It's a realistic warning; it could happen.
| 3. HELL IS NOT A SUBJECT THAT CAN BE IGNORED |
Many dismiss the Christian faith because they say they want to be rational and realistic about life. Yet, at the same time, they are being utterly irrational and unrealistic about the only fact of life we can be sure of: One day we must die. (There will be some exceptions: those who are alive at the second coming of Jesus Christ.)
What will happen at death? When I die do I rot, or does life continue?
I can never understand why people find the subject of judgment difficult. The idea of accountability is built into all of life. Society would collapse without it. Everywhere, we must give account of our work, time, or money to someone.
Why should it then be unreasonable that a created being must give an account of his/her life to his or her Creator. It is plain common sense.
Paul, the apostle, when he was preaching on Mars Hill, Athens, was speaking to intelligent people. He noticed an inscription on one of their altars, "To an unknown god." Those people believed in the probable existence of some god, although they didn't know him from experience.
So, to this intelligent, sincere audience, Paul spoke about Christ, the Judge (Acts 17:22-31).
We must have the right approach to judgment. It is:
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Judgment is inescapable because it is universal. This idea of judgment is not very popular today. However, our gospel is deficient if we miss it out. Usually, there are a number of objections. Let's consider a few of them briefly:
1. WHAT ABOUT THOSE WHO HAVE NEVER HEARD OF CHRIST? |
If a person has a Bible, has access to a Bible, then he/she has heard or could find out. And the Bible is very clear, then, about his/her position. The discussion of the destiny of those who have never heard, by those who have heard, is academic.
Each of us has to give an account of his/her own life according to his/her own opportunities.
Another objection against hell and judgment is:
2. I DON'T DESERVE GOD'S JUDGMENT |
We can't dispute that. By human standards, it is no doubt true that some unbelievers outshine believers by the thoughtfulness and kindness of their lives. The only basic difference between the Christian and the non-Christian is that the Christian knows that he needs a Saviour, and has asked Christ personally to be the Saviour that he needs.
The basic sin is that we usurp -- take over -- God's place at the centre of our lives.
Most people, by being the centre of reference of their own lives, are saying in effect to Christ: "Depart from me. I want you to leave me alone. I do not want you God, to interfere with my life. I want to be king of my own castle. Theefore, depart from me."
If a person says that now, and goes on saying that, surely it is fair that Christ should say to that person on the Day of Judgment, "Depart from Me." It was surely the person's own decision.
Another objection is:
| 3. JUDGMENT SEEMS TOO OLD FASHIONED FOR MODERN PEOPLE. TRENDIES WANT TO RELEGATE IT TO OUT-OF-DATE, MEDIEVAL IDEAS OF CENTURIES AGO. |
J.I. Packer explains some of the terms which Jesus used when he taught, soberly and deliberately, about hell:
This partly answers the next (and last) objection:
| 4. HOW CAN A GOD OF LOVE POSSIBLY TALK OF HELL OR JUDGMENT FOR ANYONE? GOD IS TOO LOVING & MERCIFUL TO CONDEMN ANYONE. |
What is possibly the greatest 'love' verse in the whole Bible, John 3:16, clearly implies the possibility of appalling judgment: "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." The astonishing measure of God's love is seen only when we admit that we all deserve to perish and to be excluded from his presence. The depth of God's love is such that we need not, but can know forgiveness.
Repeatedly we are told:
Most of us disapprove of deceit, lies, theft, bribery, murder, and so on. What would you think of an absolute power in the universe who always turned a blind eye to corruption -- moral corruption? There would be complete and utter chaos. Unless God detests sin and evil with a great loathing, he cannot be a God of love.
Australian doctor, John Hercus[7], put it very shrewdly:
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The effects of universalism at a funeral service will be startling. Whether you are conducting a funeral service of a Nero or St Paul, or Eichman or Schweitzer, of Hitler or Niemoller, of an agnostic or Augustine, or an atheist or Athanasius, of Judas or James, you will be able to commit them all equally `in the sure and certain hope of the resurrection of the dead unto eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.' [8]
If the doctrines of judgment and hell are not true, then sin pays. We can be as selfish as we like, do whatever we like, steal, lie, sleep around, murder...There is no reason to have any standards at all. Why bother to consider other people if there is no day of reckoning?
Richard Wurmbrand, the Romanian pastor who spent 14 years in a communist prison, 3 of them in solitary confinement, put it this way:
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The great Scots preacher, Robert Murray McCheyne, was once preaching on the coming of Christ and the judgment to follow. He asked his elders, one by one, before the service, "Do you think that Christ will come again tonight? One by one they all replied, "No, I don't think so." Then McCheyne announced his text: "The Son of Man cometh at an hour that ye think not." [10]
Those of us who know of the suddenness of death should surely understand the suddenness of the final day of judgment. Some people with a terminal illness linger on for months and years before death arrives. Others, like my own father, kissed his wife goodbye to go off to work and he never returned. At the age of 57, he dropped dead of a fatal heart attack. Death was very sudden and unexpected for him. Because of God's grace to him through Christ, I have the assurance that I will meet him again in God's heaven.
Christ expressed the urgency and seriousness of this matter in a dramatic story: about two men, one rich and the other poor. One lived a wonderfully free and independent life, free of all those narrow restrictions of religion, free of God himself.
The other, Lazarus, was a poor, pathetic creature in comparison, but he knew and loved the Lord. Both men died: death was almost the only experience, apart from birth, which they had in common. Suddenly there was a great separation. One found himself in heaven, the other in hell.
This is how Christ described the feelings of that rich man:
Here it was at last -- the agonising awareness of God's displeasure. He, at last, saw himself as he really was. He knew how empty his life had been -- full of worldly things that he had to leave behind, but empty of God.
Christ makes it very clear that hell is a place of eternal separation from everything good, a place where a person will see that God is right and that he is wrong, and will know at last the glory of God -- but he can never experience it.
In this story in Luke 16, Christ talks of "a great chasm fixed." There
is no second chance after death!
| Where will you be one minute after you die?[11] |
Somebody who walked past the tombstone read the words and scratched his response:
Jesus said:
"I am the resurrection and the life.
He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives
and
believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?" (John 11:25, NIV)
For a more comprehensive challenge to consider your eternal destiny,
I
enthusiastically recommend, Robert A. Morey, Death and the Afterlife
[13], John Blanchard, Whatever
Happened to Hell? [14] and
Eryl
Davies, Condemned For Ever! [15].

| Endnotes: |
[1a] I am an Australian family relationships' counselling manager, doctoral student in biblical studies, an active Christian apologist, and may be contacted at: P. O. Box 3107, Hervey Bay 4655, Australia.
[2] Bertrand Russell, Why I Am Not a Christian. London: Unwin Books, 1967, 47. I am indebted to Robert A. Peterson, Hell on Trial: The Case for Eternal Punishment. Phillipsburg, New Jersey: P&R Publishing, 1995, p. 3, for directing me to the exact reference for this quote. It is in David Watson, but without bibliographical reference.
[3] In Watson, ibid.
[4] Russell, pp. 22-23, in Peterson, p. 4.
[5] In Watson.
[6] Ibid., pp. 35-36.
[7] David, IVP, 1969, in ibid., p. 37.
[8] In Watson, p. 38.
[9] Tortured for Christ. Hodder & Stoughton, 1967, in Watson, p. 38.
[10] In Watson, p. 39.
[11] See Erwin W. Lutzer, One Minute After You Die. Chicago: Moody Press, 1997.
[12] In ibid., pp. 10-11
[13] Robert A. Morey, Death and the Afterlife. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Bethany House Publishers, 1984.
[14] John Blanchard, Whatever Happened to Hell? Darlington, Co. Durham, England: Evangelical Press, 1993.
[15] Eryl Davies, Condemned
For Ever! Welwyn, Hertfordshire,
England:
Evangelical Press, 1987.
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