Are we still serious about hell?
Issue 381: June, 2010 |
A bit afraid of hell
The bow of God's wrath is bent, and the arrow made ready on the string, and justice bends the arrow at your heart, and strains the bow, and it is nothing but the mere pleasure of God, and that of an angry God, without any promise or obligations at all, that keeps the arrow one moment from being made drunk with your blood.1
Heard anything like that from the pulpit recently? It's a sentence from one of the most famous sermons in history: ‘Sinners in the hands of an angry God’ by the 18th-century American preacher-scholar, Jonathan Edwards. It's by no means the most frightening sentence in the sermon; Edwards holds absolutely nothing back in painting a vivid picture of the dreadful predicament of sinners, who are suspended by a thread above the fiery pit of hell—a thread being held by a fiercely angry God who is incensed at their wickedness and rebellion against him.
I read Edwards's sermon again recently, and it unnerved me. It wasn't just the florid language and the out-sized metaphors (which sound over-the-top to our ears). And it wasn't the relentlessness of the logic, which marches on and on, leaving you gasping for a drop of cool gospel water.
What bothered me was the realization that this was a sermon I would never be game to preach—even allowing for some cultural transposition and differences in communication style. And it occurred to me that the reason for this was not high-minded and theological, but very carnal. I am more frightened of being thought of as a redneck ‘fire and brimstone’ preacher than I am of God's awful wrath. I care more about the high opinion of others than their eternal damnation in the fires of hell.
If all this ‘hell’ talk also makes you feel uncomfortable, Jonny Gibson's feature article might be just what you need. It certainly challenged me. TP
Endnote
1 Jonathan Edwards, ‘Sinners in the hands of an angry God’, sermon preached in Enfield, Connecticut, 8 July 1741.
Up front
- The problem with pre-evangelism
- It is not death to die
- Too much cross of Christ?
- Ministry-minded ageism
Features
- Are we still serious about hell?—Jonathan Gibson explores several alternative views of hell as well as what the Bible says to form a picture of what hell is and why it matters. (Read an expanded version of the first half of this article in The Longing. Jonathan Gibson's theological and pastoral reflections can also be found there.)
- Marketing 101—Braddon Upex eavesdrops on a diabolical lecture about the lies that precipitated the Fall of mankind.
- Keep the Sabbath—David M Moore presents a fresh take on what the Sabbath is about and what Christians are to do (and not do) on it that we hope will get you thinking.
Departments
Pastor's brief
- Some reflections on team leadership—Bruce Hall outlines nine points on the nature of team ministry.
Bookshelf
- Unpacking Forgiveness by Chris Brauns—Peter Collier wrestles with the topic of forgiveness.
Resource talk
- Basic black—Tony Payne introduces us to a new series for young people by Scott Petty.
Bible brief
- Daily readings on 1 Kings 12-22—by Jason Ramsay.
Interchange
Keith Barnett of Kings Langley, NSW, AUS (04/08/2010)
Dave Leaf of UK (04/08/2010)
Rev Peter Williamson of NSW, AUS (04/08/2010)
David Moore of NSW, AUS (04/08/2010)
Rev G. Kip' Chelashaw of Alsagers Bank, Staffordshire, UK (24/08/2010)
David Moore's article on the Sabbath was stimulating and helpful. In particular, the emphases on the Sabbath being primarily a spiritual day (it belongs to the Lord; it is the day when we 'do church') and eschatological in its thrust (it points to our ultimate rest in that we 'recapture a taste of Eden before the Fall', and Christ has fulfilled it) were refreshing. The suggestions on how the Sabbath may be spent were also very helpful.
In fact I could agree with so much of the article that it seemed incongruous to read at least three times, in slightly different words, the conviction that the Sabbath is not binding on us because we are 'not under law but under grace'. I know that this is more or less 'Briefing orthodoxy', and seems to be becoming orthodoxy in much of modern western evangelicalism, but it really should not go unchallenged.
There is no space here to rehearse the arguments for the continuity of the Ten Commandments and the Sabbath in particular, but perhaps I could take up a point or two starting with David Moore's article?
First - the nature of the day. Yes, primarily spiritual and eschatological in thrust. But is there not a danger of an over-realised eschatology? Is it logical to say that because Jesus has fulfilled the Sabbath it no longer binds us as law? We are not in heaven yet. We are still sinners.The truly consummated Sabbath rest is yet to come. Is it illogical to have a special day in God's law for God's people? It would seem more logical in fact to have a special day until the End comes.
Second - the authority for the day. Intriguingly David Moore seems to spend the Sabbath much as many people who, like me, believe it is an abiding divine commandment. I guess he does so on a Sunday too - as most of us do, despite all the talk about the First Day of the week not being a Sabbath or mandatory.
So the question I ask is - why? What is the authority for spending the Sabbath as the Sabbath? If it is not divine law it could be, as far as I can see, (i) convenience - it suits us; (ii) convention - we've always done it that way; (iii) consensus - agreement universally, nationally or locally that that will be the day; (iv) calculation - it pays to use that day - that is, 'it works'; or (v) commandment of men - some human authority, church or otherwise, determines that Sunday will be the day.
In what way, though, are any of these an improvement as a motive on God telling us to keep the Sabbath? I think I would prefer a Sabbath Day commanded by God to a 'Sabbath-type' day subject to the vagaries of man. The Reformers after all delighted in liberating us from the commandments of men.What I detect behind the repeated refrain 'not under law but under grace' (which in context has of course a very rich new covenant meaning) is (a) the idea that law and grace are somehow antithetical. Now sometimes they are; I am not under the covenant or curse or condemnation of law, for example; but I am under it as a rule of life. Why should I not include God's authority over my week as part of that? and (b) forgetting that the spiritual person delights in the law (Psalms19:7-11; 119:97,113). Does not the heart that loves God love a duty simply because it is from God? And to obey because we love him and because he is God - is that not the essence of the spiritual life - which Adam and Eve got spectacularly wrong because they could see no evident reason for God's command?
Jesus, not we, is Lord of the Sabbath. He claimed Lordship over it; was that only for three years? Was it to abolish it? Would something good, that was made for man (Mark 2:27) be struck out of the law - quite apart from the fact that Jesus after all did say the law would abide (Matthew 5:17-21)?
These comments do not of course in themselves make the case for the First Day Sabbath, but they are important features of the debate.
Mostyn Roberts of Welwyn, Hertfordshire, UK (24/08/2010)
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Philip Cooney of Wentworth Falls (29/06/2010)