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Hellish Evangelism

By Jeremy Myers
96 Comments

Hellish Evangelism
hellish evangelism
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This is a little follow up post from yesterday where I said that Jesus did not in fact speak of hell more than heaven. Note that if what I proposed is true, then most of the passages in the Gospels that people think refer to hell, do not actually refer to hell.

If that is true, then there are very few passages in Scripture which do teach about hell! In fact, there may be only two or three.

And these rare passages use highly symbolic terminology which tells us that we basically know nothing about hell.

One Bible teacher whom I used to listen to a lot, believes that hell is in the center of the earth. His argument is that when the Bible talks about the grave, it uses terminology about people going down into the earth, and therefore, hell must be in the earth. I find this almost laughable, for it shows a complete disregard for biblical imagery and symbolic terminology. “Going down into the earth” refers to getting buried and returning to dust, not going to hell.

Anyway, the few passages which do in fact refer to a place of punishment speak of flames and a Lake of Fire. Does this mean that hell will actually be a place that is burning? I could be wrong, but I really doubt it.

Fire in Scripture, when used symbolically, always refers to judgment. Hell is simply going to be a place of judgment, and it is usually temporal in nature.

Hell will not be a place of torture or torment as depicted in the 1997 Science Fiction movie Event Horizon  (If you haven’t seen that movie, I don’t recommend it. It’s about a group of space travelers that travel to hell. And hell is very graphically depicted in the movie.)

Jonathan EdwardsSo since hell is not a place where God tortures people for eternity, I almost literally shake with anger when I read these words that Jonathan Edwards preached:

The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as one holds a spider, or some loathsome insect over the fire, abhors you, and is dreadfully provoked: his wrath towards you burns like fire; he looks upon you as worthy of nothing else, but to be cast into the fire; he is of purer eyes than to bear to have you in his sight; you are ten thousand times more abominable in his eyes, than the most hateful venomous serpent is in ours. You have offended him infinitely more than ever a stubborn rebel did his prince; and yet it is nothing but his hand that holds you from falling into the fire every moment.

Aside from his abhorrent view of hell, Edwards reveals a monstrous view of God and a despicable view of men. Forgive me for saying it, but this kind of evangelism can go to hell.

What is hell going to be like? Scripture doesn’t give us much indication.

Personally, I see a lot biblical and theological merit to the way C. S. Lewis portrayed it in his book The Great Divorce. He claimed he was not writing a theology of hell in this book, but I suspect he said that just to keep people from calling him a heretic. He pictures hell as a place where people live and exist because they want to, and where everybody gets exactly what they want. It is not torture. In that book, he wrote this:

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. Without that self-choice there could be no Hell. No soul that seriously and constantly desires joy will ever miss it. Those who seek find. Those who knock it is opened.

Lewis wrote elsewhere that the doors of hell are locked from the inside.

If you think about what life would be like if everybody got exactly what they wanted, it would be hell. Eventually, people couldn’t stand to be around each other. The longer they are there, the most disconnected they would become. In this sense, hell, ultimately, is eternal loneliness. It is eternal separation from God and others.

That, of course, is pretty hellish, but it is not the same as God torturing us for all eternity. Instead, it is God granting our desire to live apart from Him and live our lives exactly as we please.

Anyway, I will write a lot more about this when I get to the subject of hell in the current book I am writing on the violence of God, but I wanted to just give a short preview of my views on hell, and provide a follow-up from the post yesterday about whether Jesus spoke of hell more than heaven.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: CS Lewis, Discipleship, evangelism, hell

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Stop Being Heterosexual

By Jeremy Myers
68 Comments

Stop Being Heterosexual

I am a “straight” heterosexual male.

I don’t really have an opinion on whether homosexuality is genetic or a choice.

One thing I am quite sure of, however, is that since I am straight, I could never “choose” to be gay. Therefore Amy’s answer to this Christian mother about her gay son is quite good:

heterosexual

I don’t know what your opinions are about LGBT people. But let me encourage you to follow Amy’s advice. If you cannot change who you are attracted to, don’t ask LGBT people to do it either.

Of course, I think there may be a difference between having certain desires and acting up on them, but that is a different subject altogether…

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, gay, heterosexual, homosexual, lgbt

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Why I don’t pray for miracles

By Jeremy Myers
15 Comments

Why I don’t pray for miracles

It always troubles me that Christians so often seek the supernatural intervention of God in our daily affairs. You know, “miracles.”

Can God perform miracles? Of course. Does He? Yes. Would I like to see more miracles? Without a doubt.

And yet, I sometimes think that the reason we don’t see more miracles is simply because God is performing miracles in our midst every moment of every day and they are so commonplace, we fail to see them.

The rising of the sun, the falling of the rain, a bird in flight, are all miracles of majestic glory. Oh sure, we can explain the physics and the science behind such occurrences, but even that is a miracle. Language and logic are no less a miracle than God separating light from darkness or dividing the Red Sea for His people to walk through on dry land.

Think about it! And in thinking, wonder even at your ability to think!

miracle of a sunrise

Away with this desiring after miracles, this prayer for divine intervention, and this longing for the supernatural. The “natural” is more than enough miracle for me. “It is illogical to suppose that God’s trademark is the supernatural, seeing that the natural processes are the ones he made” (Taylor, Christlike God, 217).

If anything, the greatest miracle of all is not found in the supernatural, but in the supranatural, that is, in God’s ability to enter into the “stuff” he made, and work within it, with it, and from it to accomplish His divine will.

You want a miracle? Don’t pray for a miracle. Pray instead to see the miracles that are exploding all around you every second of every day.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, miracle, prayer, supernatural

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Do you REALLY Trust Jesus?

By Jeremy Myers
10 Comments

Do you REALLY Trust Jesus?

trust JesusNo, this is not a post about whether or not you have truly believed in Jesus for eternal life, or how to tell if you have truly trusted Jesus or not.

I want to encourage you to ask yourself whether or not you truly trust Jesus for other people.

That is, do you believe Jesus is able to lead other people into the kind of life He wants for them?

Do you Trust Jesus to Lead Other People?

Do you trust Jesus enough with your friends, your neighbors, and your family members to know that He will correct them when needed, teach them what they need to know, and lead them to where He wants, when He wants?

There are, of course, place for rules and guidelines, especially for parents raising children and other similar situations, but when it comes to trusting Jesus to guide and lead others in the journey He has for them, it is difficult to trust Jesus.

It is Difficult to Trust Jesus for Other People

Instead, what usually happens is this:

We are following Jesus as best as we know how, and one day, we come across a truth, or read an idea in a book, or discover something amazing about Scripture, or learn a key to defeating a certain sin in our life, or uncover a way to become more joyful, or find some tips for having a better marriage and family life, or whatever.

We are so excited about this (and rightly so), we want everyone else to know about it to. We create a program, a system, a set of rules, a practical guideline for others to follow, so that they can learn the same things we learned, and get to do the same things we do. This too, is fine. There is no problem with teaching others what we have learned also.

really trust Jesus

But then the problems start. Some people may try to follow our steps and fail. Or they read what we have written and they disagree. Or maybe they show absolutely no interest in anything we have to say.

In these cases, we see the “problems” in their life that would get fixed if they just learned and followed the same things we did.

When this happens, we get upset at the other people who “failed.” We want them to experience what we experienced, and get frustrated when we pour our hearts out to help people, and they reject it.

It is at this point that have stopped trusting Jesus to lead other people, just as He has led us. We have tried to substitute ourselves for Jesus, or our ideas for what others need next in their life for Jesus’ ideas.

We need to learn to trust Jesus to lead the lives of others in His own way and in His own time. He knows what each person needs and when they need it.

He knows better than we do where each person is in their life with Him. Maybe He knew that we were ready for a certain truth after we had been a Christians for two months, but another person is not ready for that same truth until they have been a Christian for two decades.

This, by the way, doesn’t mean we are “further along” the path of discipleship than they are, for it is quite likely that there are things which Jesus has taught that other person which we have not yet learned and will not learn for another three decades! We need to trust God to lead people in His own way and His own time.

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, following Jesus, trust Jesus

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How to Know You Are Ready to be a Mother

By Jeremy Myers
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How to Know You Are Ready to be a Mother

Happy Mother’s Day!

If you are not a mother (I’m looking at all you men, and all you young women), here is a test you can take to see if you could be a mother.

As for all you mother’s, thank you, thank you, thank you for being such great mothers, and somehow, getting through the tough years of being a mother.

How Know if You are Ready to be a Mother

Appreciate your mother? Send this to her today using the share buttons below!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, mothers, mothers day

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