No. 32— What Say the Scriptures About Hell?
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What Say The Scriptures About Hell?
An examination of every text of Scripture in which the word “hell” is found.
International Bible Students Association BROOKLYN, LONDON, MELBOURNE, BARMEN, COPENHAGEN, OREBRO, CHRISTIANIA, GENEVA
1896
A correct understanding of the subject of this booklet is almost a necessity to Christian steadfastness. For centuries it has been the teaching of “orthodoxy” of all shades that God, before creating man, had created a great abyss of fire and terrors, capable of containing all the billions of the human family which he purposed to bring into being; that this abyss he had named “hell”; and that all of the promises and threatenings of the Bible were designed to deter as many as possible (a “little flock”) from such wrong-doing as would make this awful place their perpetual home.
As knowledge increases and superstitions fade, this monstrous view of the divine arrangements and character is losing its force; and thinking people cannot but reject the Legend, which use to be illustrated on the church walls in the highest degree of art and realism, samples of which are still to be seen in Europe. Some now claim that the place is literal, but the fire symbolic, etc., etc., while others repudiate the doctrine of “hell” in every sense and degree.
While glad to see superstitions fall, and truer ideas of the great and wise, and just, and loving Creator prevail, we are alarmed to notice that the tendency with all who abandon this long revered doctrine is toward doubt, skepticism, infidelity. Why should this be the case, when the mind is merely being delivered from an error—do you ask? Because Christian people have so long been taught that the foundation for the awful blasphemy against God’s character and government is deep laid, and firmly fixed, in the Word of God— the Bible—and, consequently, to whatever degree their belief in “hell” is shaken, to the extent their faith in the Bible, as the revelation of the true God, is shaken also;—so that those who have dropped their belief in a “hell,” of some kind of endless torment, are often open infidels, and scoff at God’s Word.
Guided by the Lord’s providence to a realization that the Bible has been slandered, as well as its divine Author, and that, rightly understood, it teaches nothing on this subject, derogatory to God’s character nor to an intelligent reason, we have attempted in this booklet to lay bare the Scripture teaching on this subject, that thereby faith in God and his Word may be reestablished, on a better, a reasonable foundation. Indeed it is our opinion that whoever shall thereby find that his false view rested upon human misconceptions and misinterpretations, will at the same time, learn to trust hereafter less to his own and other men’s imaginings, and by faith, to grasp more firmly the Word of God, which is able to make wise unto salvation; and on this mission, under God’s providence, it is sent forth.
HELL IN THE OLD TESTAMENT—HELL IN THE NEW TESTAMENT—ALL TEXTS CONSIDERED— WAILING AND GNASHING OF TEETH—PARABLE OF THE RICH MAN AND LAZARUS—PARABLE OF THE SHEEP AND GOATS—EVERLASTING PUNISHMENT OF THE WICKED—THE WICKED SHALL BE TURNED INTO HELL, AND ALL THE NATIONS THAT FORGET GOD—THE LAKE OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE—JEWISH BELIEF ON TORMENT.
“To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.”—Isaiah. 8:20.
“OH,” says one, on receiving this tract, “that is a horrid theme. It has been like a night-mare to me all my life long. Do not mention it; let me forget it!” “Yes,” says another, “let me forget it and think and talk of the love of God; for when I consider how strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life and how prone we all are to sin, I exceedingly fear, and can never come to that 'full assurance of faith’ which I so much desire.”
Still another adds, “Oh, do not mention it! I have children [or a husband, or a wife, or a friend] yet unsaved, and my soul is overwhelmed with a burden of fear and anxiety for them.” And another, with streaming eyes and faltering voice, adds, “O sir, if that doctrine be true—and it must be, else all Christendom would not teach it—then some of my dear ones are past all hope, and are now amidst the agonies of that awful place.”
Yes, we admit that the theme as generally represented and accepted is a horrid one, shutting out to a very large extent the glorious vision of the love and power and wisdom of God, which his holy Word presents. But, nevertheless, let us hear what say the Scriptures; for “therein is the righteousness of God revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness” (verse 18), and “though hand join in hand [saying, ‘In union there is strength], the wicked shall not be punished” (Prov.11:21); but the wrath of God is always just, and tempered with mercy.— “His mercy endureth forever.”—Psa.106:1; 107:1; 118:1-4; 136.
That there is something radically wrong with the generally accepted view of the doctrine of the punishment of the wicked is very manifest from the standpoint of reason, in that, instead of revealing the righteousness of God, it greatly misrepresents his glorious character of love and justice, wisdom and power. And from a Scriptural standpoint we have no hesitancy in affirming what we are abundantly prepared to prove, that it is far away from the truth, and that the position of its advocate is wholly untenable.
That its advocates themselves have little or no faith in it is very manifest from the fact it has no power over their course of action. While all the denominations of Christendom prefer to believe the doctrine that eternal torment and endless, hopeless despair will constitute the punishment of the wicked, they are all quite at ease in allowing the wicked to take their course, while they pursue the even tenor of their way. Chiming bells and pealing organs, artistic choirs, and costly edifices, and upholstered pews, and polished oratory which more and more avoids any reference to this alarming theme, afford rest and entertainment to the fashionable congregations that gather on the Lord’s day and are known to the world as the churches
of Christ and the representatives of his doctrines. But they seem little concerned about the eternal welfare of the multitudes, or even of themselves and their own families, though one would naturally presume that with such awful possibilities in view they would be almost frantic in their efforts to rescue the perishing.
The plain inference is that they do not believe it. The only class of people that to any degree show their faith in it by their works is the Salvation Army; and these are the subjects of ridicule from almost all other Christians, because they are somewhat consistent with their belief. Yet their peculiar, and often absurd, methods, so strikingly in contrast with those of the Lord of whom it was written, “He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street” (Isa. 42:2), are very tame compared with what might be expected if they were fully convinced of the doctrine. We cannot imagine how sincere believers of this terrible doctrine go from day to day about ordinary affairs of life, or meet quietly in elegance every Sunday to hear an essay from the pulpit on the peculiar subjects often advertised. Could they do so while really believing all the time that fellow mortals are dying at the rate of one hundred a minute, and entering
“That lone land of deep despair,” where “No God regards their bitter prayer”?
If they really believed it few saints could complacently sit there and think of those hurrying every moment into that awful state described by that good well-meaning, but greatly deluded man, Isaac Watts (whose own heart was immeasurably warmer and larger that that he ascribed to the great Jehovah), when he wrote the hymn—
“Tempests of angry fire shall roll To blast the rebel worm, And beat upon the naked soul In one eternal storm.”
People often become frantic with grief when friends have been caught in some terrible catastrophe, as a fire, or a wreck, though they know they will soon be relieved by death; yet they pretend to believe that God is less loving than themselves, and that he can look with indifference, if not with delight, at billions of his creatures enduring an eternity of torture far more terrible, which he prepares for them and prevents any escape from forever. Not only so, but they expect that they will get literally into Abraham’s bosom, and will then look across the gulf and see and hear the agonies of the multitudes (some of whom they now love and weep over); and they imagine they will be so changed, and become so like their present idea of God, so hardened against all pity, and so barren of love and sympathy, that they will delight in such a God and in such a pain.
It is wonderful that otherwise sensible men and women, who love their fellows, and who establish hospitals, orphanages, asylums, and societies for the prevention of cruelty even to the brute creation, are so unbalanced mentally that they can believe and subscribe to such a doctrine, and yet be so indifferent about investigating the subject of “everlasting torture.”
Only one exception can we think of—those who hold the ultra-calvinistic doctrine; who believe that God has decreed it thus, that all the efforts they could put forth could not alter the results with a single person, and that all the prayers they could offer would not change one iota of the awful plan they believe God has marked out for his and their eternal pleasure. These indeed could sit still, so far as effort for their fellows is concerned, but why sing the praises of such a God and such a scheme for the damnation of their neighbors whom God has told them to love as themselves?
Why not rather begin to doubt this “doctrine of devils,” this blasphemy against the great
God, hatched in the “dark ages,” when a crafty priesthood taught that it is right to do evil that good may result?
The doctrine of eternal torment was introduced by Papacy to induce pagans to join her system and support her priesthood. It flourished at the same time that bull fights and gladiatorial contests were the public amusements most enjoyed, when the Crusades were called “holy wars,” and when men and women were often slaughtered for thinking or speaking contrary to the teachings of Papacy; at a time when the sun of gospel truth was obscure, when the Word of God had fallen into disuse and was prohibited to be read by any but the clergy, whose love of their neighbors was often shown in torturing heretics to induce them to recant and deny their faith and their Bibles—to save them, if possible, it was explained, from the more awful future of heretics—eternal torture. They did not borrow this doctrine from the heathen; for no heathen people in the world have a doctrine so cruel, so fiendish and so unjust. Find it, whoever can,
and show it up in all its blackness, that if possible it may be shown that the essence of barbarism, malice, hate and ungodliness has not been exclusively appropriated by those whom God has most highly favored with light from every quarter and to whom he has committed the only oracle—his Word. Oh! the shame and confusion that will cover the faces of many, even good men, who verily thought that they did God service while propagating this blasphemous doctrine, when they awake in the resurrection, to learn of the love and justice of God, and when they come to know that the Bible does not teach this Goddishonoring, love-extinguishing, truthbeclouding, saint-hindering, sin-hardening, “damnable heresy” of eternal torment.—2 Pet. 2:1.
But we repeat that, in the light and moral development
of this day, sensible people do not believe this doctrine. However since they think that the Bible teaches it, every step they progress in real intelligence and brotherly kindness, which
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hinders such belief, is in most cases a step away from God’s Word, which they falsely accuse of this teaching. Hence this second crop of evil fruit, which the devil’s engraftment of this error is producing. The intelligent, honest thinkers are thus driven from the Bible into vain philosophies and sciences, falsely so-called, and into skepticism. Nor do the “worldly” really believe this doctrine, and it is no restraint to crime.
“But,” says one, “did the error not do some good? Have not many brought into the churches by the preaching of “this doctrine in the past?”
No error, we answer, ever did real good, but always harm. Those whom error brings into a church, and whom the truth would not move, are an injury to the church. The thousands terrorized, but not at heart converted, whom this doctrine forced into Papacy, and who swelled her numbers and her wealth, diluted what little truth was held before, and mingled it with their unholy sentiments and errors so that, to meet the changed condition of things, the “clergy” found it needful to add error to error, and to resort to methods, forms, etc., not taught in the Scriptures and useless to the truly converted whom the truth controls. Among these were pictures, images, beads, vestments, candles, grand cathedrals, altars, etc., to help the unconverted heathen to a form of godliness more nearly corresponding to their former heathen worship, but lacking all the power of vital godliness.
The heathen were not benefited; for they were still heathen in God’s sight, but deluded into aping what they did not understand or do from the heart. They were added tares to choke the wheat, without being profited themselves. The Lord tells who sowed the seed of this enormous crop. (Matt.13:39) The same is true of those who assume the name “Christian” today, who are not really at heart converted by the truth, but merely frightened by the error or allured by promised earthly advantages of a social or business kind. Such add nothing to the true church: by their ideas and manners they become stumbling-blocks to the truly consecrated, and by their inability to digest the truth, the real food of the saints, they lead even the few true pastors to defraud the true sheep in order to satisfy the demands of these goats for something pleasing to their unconverted tastes. No: in no way has this error accomplished good except in the sense that God is able to make even the wrath of man to praise him. So also he will overrule all things eventually to serve his purposes.
Seeing, then the unreasonableness of man’s view, let us lay aside human opinions and theories and come to the Word of God, the only authority on the subject, remembering that.
“God is his own interpreter,
And he will make it plain.”
In the first place bear in mind that the Old Testament Scriptures were written in the Hebrew language, and the New Testament in the Greek. The word “hell” is an English word sometimes selected by the translators of the
English Bible to express the sense of the Hebrew word sheol and the Greek words hades, tartaroo and gehenna. These same words are also sometimes rendered “grave” and “pit.” The word “hell” in old English usage, before the Papal theologians picked it up and gave it a new special significance to suit their own purposes, simply meant to conceal, to hide, to cover; hence the concealed, hidden, or covered place. The word hell was therefore properly
used synonymously with the words “grave” and “pit,” to translate the words “sheol” and “hades,” as signifying the secret or hidden condition of death. But if the translators of the Revised Version had been thoroughly disentangled from the Papal error, and thoroughly honest, they would have done more to help the English student than merely to substitute the Hebrew word sheol and the Greek word hades, as they have done. They should have translated the words. But they were evidently afraid to tell the truth, and ashamed to tell the lie, and so gave us sheol and hades untranslated, and permitted the inference that these words mean the same as the word “hell.” Their course, while it for a time shields themselves, dishonors God and the Bible, which the people still suppose teaches a “hell” of torment in the words sheol and hades. Yet anyone can see that if it was proper to translate the word sheol thirty-one times “grave” and three times “pit,” it could not have been improper to have so translated it in every other instance.
A peculiarity to be observed in comparing these cases, as we will do shortly, is that in those texts where the torment idea would be an absurdity the King James translators have used the words “grave” or “pit”; while in all other cases they have used the word “hell”; and the reader, long schooled in the Papal idea of torment, reads the word “hell” and thinks of it as a place of torment, instead of the grave, the hidden or covered place or condition. For example, compare Job 14:13 with Psa. 86:13.— The former reads—“Oh, that thou wouldst hide me in the grave [sheol],” etc., while the latter reads, “Thou hast delivered my soul from the lowest hell [sheol].” The Hebrew word being the same in both cases, there is no reason why the same word “grave” should not be used in both.
While the translators of the Reformation times are somewhat excusable for their mental bias in this matter, as they were just breaking away from the old Papal system, our modern translators, specially those of the recent Bible, are not entitled to any such consideration. Theological professors and pastors of congregations consider that they are justified in following the course of the revisers in not explaining the meaning of either the Hebrew or Greek words sheol or hades; and by their use of the words they also give their confiding flocks to understand that they mean a place of torture, a lake of fire. While attributing to the ignorant only the best of motives, it is manifestly only duplicity and cowardice which induces educated men, who know the truth on this subject, to prefer to continue to infer the error.
But remember that not all ministers know of the errors of the translators, and deliberately cover and hide those errors from the people. Many, indeed, do not know, having merely accepted, without investigation, the theories of their seminary professors. It is the professors and learned ones who are most blame-worthy. These have kept back the truth about “hell” for several reasons. First, there is evidently a sort of understanding or etiquette among them, that if they wish to maintain their standing in the “profession” they “must not tell tales out of school”; i.e., they must not divulge professional secrets to the “common people,” the “laity.” Second, they all fear that to let it be known that they have been teaching an unscriptural doctrine for years would break down the popular respect and reverence for the clergy, the denominations and the theological schools, and unsettle confidence and reverence for men, when God’s Word is so generally ignored! Third, they know that many of the members of their sect are not constrained by “the love of Christ” (2 Cor. 5:14), but merely by the fear of hell, and they see clearly therefore that to let the truth be known now would soon cut loose the names and the dollars of many in their flocks; and this, to those who desire to make a fair show in the flesh. (Gal. 6:12), would seem to be a great calamity.
But what will be the judgment of God, whose character and plan are traduced by the blasphemous doctrine which these untranslated words help to support? Will he command these unfaithful servants? Will he justify the course? Will the Christ Shepherd call these his beloved friends, and make known unto them his further plans (John 15:14), that they may misrepresent these also to preserve their own dignity and reverence? Will he continue to send forth “things new and old,” “meat in due season,” to the household of faith, by the hand of the unfaithful servants? No; such shall not continue to be his mouthpieces or to shepherd his flock. (Ezek. 34:9, 10) He will choose instead, as at the first advent, from among the laity—“the common people”— mouth-pieces, and will give them words which none of the chief priests shall be able to gainsay or resist. (Luke 21:15) And as foretold, “the wisdom of their wise men shall perish, and the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid.”—Isa. 29:919).
The word “hell” occurs thirty-one times in the Old Testament, and in every instance it is sheol in the Hebrew. It does not mean a lake of fire and brimstone, nor anything at all resembling that thought: not in the slightest degree! Quite the reverse; instead of a place of blazing fire it is described in the context as a state of “darkness” (Job 10:21); instead of a place where shrieks and groans are heard, it is described in the context as a place of “silence” (Psa. 115:17); instead of representing in any sense pain and suffering, remorse, the context describes it as one of forgetfulness. (Psa. 88:11, 12) “There is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, in the grave [sheol] whither thou goest.”—Eccles. 9:10.
The meaning of sheol is, the hidden state, as applied to man’s condition in death, in and beyond which all is hidden, except the eye of faith; hence, by proper and close association, the word was often used in the sense of grave—the tomb, the hidden place, or place beyond which only those who have the enlightened eye of the understanding can see resurrection, restitution of being. And be it particularly noted that this identical word sheol is translated “pit” and “grave” thirty-four times in our common version by the same translators—more times than it is translated “hell”; and twice where it is translated “hell,” is seemed so absurd, according to the present accepted meaning of the English word “hell” that, in the margin of modern Bibles, the publishers explain that it means grave.(Isa. 14:9) and Jonah 2:2) In the latter case the hidden state, or grave, was the belly of the fish in which Jonah was buried alive, and from which he cried to God.
(1) Amos 9:2—“Though they dig into hell, thence shall mine hand take them.” [A figurative expression; but certainly pits of the earth are the only hells men can dig into.]
(2) Psa. 16:10.— “Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.” [This refers to our Lord’s three days in the tomb.—Acts 2:31; 3:15.]
(5) Psa. 55:15.—“Let them go down quick into hell”—margin, “the grave.”
(6) Psa. 9:17.—“The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God.” This text will be treated later, under a separate heading.
(7) Psa. 86:13.—“Thou hast delivered my soul from the lowest hell”—margin, “the grave.”
(8) Psa. 116:3.—“The sorrows of death compassed me, and the pains of hell gat hold upon me.” [Sickness and trouble are the figurative hands of the grave to grasp us.]
(9) Psa. 139:8.—“If I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there.” [God’s power is unlimited: even over those in the tomb he can and will exert it and bring forth all that are in the graves.—John 5:28.]
(10) Deut. 32:22.—“For a fire is kindled in mine anger, and shall burn into the lowest hell.” [A figurative representation of the destruction, the utter ruin of Israel as a nation— “wrath to the uttermost,” as the Apostle called it, God’s anger burning that nation to the “lowest deep,” as Leeser here translates the word sheol.—1 Thes.2:16.]
(11) Job 11:8,—“It [God’s wisdom] is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? deeper than hell [than any pit;] what canst thou know?”
(12) Job 26:6.—“Hell [the tomb] is naked before him, and destruction hath no covering.”
(13) Prov. 5:5.—“Her feet go down to death; her steps take hold on hell [i.e., lead to the grave].”
(14) Prov. 7:27.—“Her house is the way to hell [the grave], going down to the chambers of death.”
(15) Prov. 9:18.—“He knoweth not that the dead are there, and that her guests are in the depths of hell.’ [Here the harlot’s guests represented as dead, diseased or dying, and many of the victims of sensuality in premature graves from diseases which also hurry off their posterity to the tomb.]
(16) Prov. 15:11.—“Hell and destruction are before the Lord.” [Here the grave is associated with destruction and not with a life of torment.]
(17) Prov. 15:24.—“The path of life (leadeth) upward for the wise, that he may depart from ‘hell beneath.” [This illustrates the hope of resurrection from the tomb.]
(18) Prov. 23:14.—“Thou shalt beat him with a rod, and shalt deliver his soul from hell” [i.e., wise correction will save a child from vicious ways which lead to premature death, and may possibly also prepare him to escape the “second death”]
(19) Prov. 27:20.—“Hell [the grave] and destruction are never full; so the eyes of man are never satisfied.
(20) Isa. 5:14.—“Therefore hell hath enlarged herself and opened her mouth without measure.]
(3, 4) Psa. 18:5 and 2 Sam. 22:6—margin .— “The cords of hell compassed me about.” [A figure in which trouble is represented as hastening one to the tomb.]
(21, 22) Isa. 14:9, 15.—“Hell [margin, grave] from beneath is moved for thee, to meet thee at thy coming.”
“Thou shalt be brought down to hell” [the grave—so rendered in verse 11].
(23) Isa. 57:9.—“And didst debase thyself even unto hell.” [Here figurative of deep degradation.]
(24, 25) Ezek. 31:15-17.—“In the day when he went down to the grave,....I made the nations shake at the sound of his fall, when I cast him down to hell with them that descend into the pit....They also went down into hell with him, unto them that be slain with the sword.” [Figurative and prophetic description of the fall of Babylon into destruction, silence, the grave.]
(26) Ezek. 32:21.—“The strong among the mighty shall speak to him out of the midst of hell with them that help him.” [A continuation of the same figure, representing Egypt’s overthrow as a nation to join Babylon in destruction.]
(27) Ezek. 32:27.—“And they shall not lie with the mighty that are fallen of the uncircumcised, which are gone down to hell with their weapons of war; and they have laid their swords under their heads; but their iniquities shall be upon their bones, though they were the terror of the mighty in the land of the living.” [The grave is the only “hell” where fallen ones are buried and lie with their weapons of war under their heads.]
(28) Hab. 2:5.—“Who enlargeth his desire as hell [the grave] and as death, and cannot be satisfied.”
(29) Jonah 2: 1, 2.—“Then Jonah prayed unto
the Lord his God out of the fish’s belly and said, I cried by reason of mine affliction unto the Lord, and he heard me; out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou heardest my voice.” [The belly of the fish was for a time his grave.]
(30, 31) Isa. 28:15-18.—“Because ye have said, We have made a covenant with death, and with [the grave] are we at agreement; when the overflowing scourge shall pass through, it shall not come unto us, for we have made lies our refuge, and under falsehood have we hid ourselves: Therefore saith the Lord, . . . Your covenant with death shall be disannulled, and your agreement with hell [the grave] shall not stand.” [God thus declares that the present prevalent idea, by which death and the grave are represented as friends rather than enemies, shall cease; and men shall learn that death is the wages of sin now that it is in Satan’s power (Rom. 6:23; Heb. 2:14), and not an angel sent by God.]
ALL OTHER TEXTS WHERE “SHEOL” OCCURS —RENDERED “GRAVE” AND PIT.”
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Gen. 37:35.—“I will go down into the grave unto my son.”
Gen. 42:38.—“Then shall ye bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave.” [See also the same expression in 44:29, 31. The translators did not like to send good old Jacob to hell simply because his sons were evil.]
1 Sam. 2:6.—“The Lord killeth, and maketh alive: he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up.”
1 Kings 2:6, 9.—“Let not his hoar head go down to the grave with peace....His hoar head bring thou down to the grave with blood.”
Job 14:13.—“Oh, that thou wouldst hide me in the grave, that thou wouldst keep me secret until thy wrath be past, that thou wouldst appoint me a set time, and remember me [resurrect me]!”
Job 17:13.—“If I wait, the grave is mine house: I have made my bed in the darkness.” [Job waits for resurrection—“in the morning.”]
Job 17:16.—“They shall go down to the bars of the pit, when our rest together is in the dust.”
Job 24:19, 20.—“Drought and heat consume the snow waters: so doth the grave those which have sinned.” [All have sinned, “death passed upon all men,” and all go down to the grave. But all have been redeemed by “the precious blood of Christ”; hence all shall be awakened and come forth again in God’s due time—“in the morning.”]
Psa. 6:5.—“In death there is no remembrance of thee; in the grave who shall give thee thanks?”
Psa. 30:3.—“Oh Lord, thou hast brought up my soul from the grave: thou hast kept me alive, that I should not go down to the pit.” [This passage expresses gratitude for recovery from danger of death.]
Psa. 31:17.—“Let the wicked be ashamed; let them be silent in the grave.”
Psa. 49:14, 15, margin.—“Like sheep they are
laid in the grave; death shall feed on them; and the upright [the saints—Dan. 7:27] shall have dominion over them in the morning [the Millennial morning]; and their beauty shall consume, the grave being in habitation to every one of them. But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave,”
Psa. 88:3.—“My life draweth nigh unto the grave.” Psa. 89:48.—Shall he deliver his soul from the hand of the grave?” Psa. 141:7.—“Our bones are scattered at the grave’s mouth.” Prov. 1:12.—“Let us swallow them up alive as the grave; and whole, as those that go down into the pit” [i.e., as of an earthquake, as in Num. 16:30-33]. Prov. 30:15, 16.—“Four things say not, It is enough: the grave,” etc. Eccl. 9:10.—“Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest.” Song of Solomon 8:6.—“Jealousy is cruel as the grave.” Isa. 14:11.—“Thy pomp is brought down to the grave.” Isa. 38:10.—“I shall go to the gates of the grave: I am deprived of the residue of my
years.” Isa. 38:18.—“The grave cannot praise thee, death cannot celebrate thee: they that go down into the pit cannot hope for thy truth.” Num. 16:30-33. — “If...they go down quick into the pit, then shall ye understand... .The ground clave asunder that was under them, and the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up, and their houses, and all the men that appertained unto Korah, and all their goods. They and all that appertained to them went down alive into the pit, and the earth closed upon them: and they perished from among the congregation.”
Ezek. 31:15.—“In the day when he went down to the grave.”
Hosea 13:14.—“I will ransom them from the power of the grave; I will redeem them from death. O death, I will be thy plagues; O grave, I will be thy destruction. Repentance shall be hid from mine eyes.” [The Lord did not ransom any from a place of fire and torment, for there is no such place; but he did ransom all mankind from the grave, from death, the penalty brought upon all by Adam’s sin, as this ~ 33 ~
verse declares.]
The above list includes every instance of the use of the English word “hell” and the Hebrew word sheol. From this examination it must be evident to all readers that the Old Testament, God’s revelation for four thousand years, contains a single hint of a “hell,” as the word is now understood.
In the New testament, the Greek words hades corresponds exactly to the Hebrew word sheol. As proof see the quotations of the apostles from the Old Testament, in which they render it hades. For instance Acts 2:27, “Thou wilt not leave my soul in hades,” is a quotation from Psa. 16:10, “Thou wilt not leave my soul in sheol.” And in 1 Cor. 15:54, 55, “Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting? O grave [hades], where is thy victory?” is an allusion to Isa. 25:8, “He will swallow up death in victory,” and to Hos. 13:14, “O Death, I will be thy plagues: O sheol, I will be thy destruction.”
Matt. 11:23.—“And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be brought down to hell”; Luke 10:15: “shalt be thrust down to hell.” [In privileges of knowledge and opportunity the city was highly favored or, figuratively, exalted to heaven; but because of misuse of God’s favors, it would be debased, or, figuratively, cast down to hades, overthrown, destroyed. It is now so thoroughly buried in oblivion that even the site where it stood is a matter of dispute. Capernaum is certainly destroyed, thrust down to hades.]
Luke 16:23.—“In hell he lifted up his eyes, being in torments.” [A parabolic figure explained further on in this pamphlet.]
Rev. 6:8.—“And behold a pale horse: and his name that sat in him was Death, and Hell followed with him.” [Symbol of destruction or the grave.]
Matt. 16:18.—“Upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” [Although bitter and relentless persecution, even unto death, should afflict the church during the Gospel age, it should never prevail to her utter extermination; and eventually, by her resurrection accomplished by her Lord the church will prevail over hades—the tomb.
CHRIST IN “HELL” (HADES) AND RESURRECTED FROM “HELL” (HADES).—
“And when the day of Pentecost was fully come.. .Peter.. .lifted up his voice and said,...Ye men of Israel, hear these words:—Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of God among you,.being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God [“He was delivered for our offenses”], ye have taken and by wicked hands have crucified and slain: whom God hath raised up, having loosed the pains [or bands] of death, because it was not possible that he should be holden of it [for the Word of Jehovah had previously declared his resurrection]; for David speaketh concerning him [personating or speaking for him], I
[Christ] foresaw the Lord [Jehovah] always before my face; for he is on my right hand, that I should not be moved. Therefore did my heart rejoice, and my tongue was glad: moreover also my flesh shall rest in hope, because thou wilt not leave my soul in hell [hades], neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption. Thou [Jehovah] hast made known to me [Christ] the ways of life.” Here our Lord, as personified by the prophet David, expresses his faith in Jehovah’s promise of a resurrection and in the full glorious accomplishment of Jehovah’s plan through him, and rejoice in the prospect.
Peter then proceeds, saying, “Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried, and his sepulcher is with us unto this day [so that this prophecy could not have referred to himself personally; for his soul was left in “hell”— hades—and his flesh did see corruption]: Therefore being a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him that of the fruit of his loins, according to the flesh, he would raise up Christ to sit on his throne; he, seeing this before [prophetically], spake of the resurrection of Christ [out of “hell”— hades—to which he must go for our offenses], that his soul was not left in hell [hades—the death state], neither his flesh did see corruption.” Thus Peter presents a strong logical argument based on the words of the prophet David, showing first, that Christ, who was delivered by God for our offenses, went to “hell” the grave, the condition of death, destruction (Psa, 16:10}; and, second, that according to promise he had been delivered from “hell,” the grave, death, destruction, by a RESURRECTION—a raising up to life, being created again, the same identical being, yet more glorious, and exalted even to “the express image of the Father’s person.” (Heb. 1:3) And now “this same Jesus” (Acts 2:36}, in his subsequent revelation to the Church, declares—
Rev. 1:18.—“I am he that liveth, and was dead, and, behold, I am alive forevermore.
Amen; and have the keys of hell [hades, the grave] and of death.” Amen! Amen! our hearts respond; for in his resurrection we see the glorious outcome of the whole plan of Jehovah, to be accomplished through the power of the Resurrected One, who now holds the keys of hell and of death, and in due time will release all the prisoners, who are, therefore, called the “prisoners of hope.” (Zech. 9:12) No craft or cunning can by any possible device wrest these Scriptures entire and pervert them to the support of the monstrous and blasphemous Papal tradition of eternal torment. Had that been our penalty, Christ, to be our vicarious sacrifice, must still, and to all eternity endure it, which is not the case, as these Scriptures affirm. But death was our penalty, and “he died for our sins,” and “also for the sins of the whole world.”—1 Cor. 15:3; 1 John 2:2.
Rev. 20:13, 14.—“And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were judged, every man, according to their works. And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire: this is the second death.” [The lake of fire is the symbol of final and everlasting destruction. Death and hell both go in it. There shall be no more death.—Rev. 21:4.]
Having examined the word sheol, the original and only word in the Old Testament for “hell,” and the word hades, most frequently in the New Testament rendered “hell,” we now notice every remaining instance in Scripture of the English word “hell.” In the New Testament two other words are rendered “hell”; namely, gehenna and tartaroo, which we will consider in the order named.
This word occurs in the following passages— in all twelve times:—Matt. 5:22, 29, 30; 10:128; 18:9; 23:15, 33; Mark 9:43-47; Luke 12:5; Jas.3:6. It is the Grecian mode of spelling Hebrew words which are translated “the Valley of Hinnom.” This valley lay just outside the city of Jerusalem, and served the purpose of sewer and garbage burner to that city. The offal, garbage, etc., were emptied there and fires were kept continually burning to consume utterly all things deposited therein, brimstone being added to assist combustion and insure complete destruction. But a living thing was never cast into gehenna. The Jews were not permitted to torture any creature.
When we consider that in the people of Israel God was giving us object lessons illustrating his dealings and plans, present and future, we should expect that this Valley of Hinnom, or gehenna, would also play its part in illustrating things future. We know that Israel’s priesthood and temple illustrated the royal priesthood, the Christian church as it will be, the true temple of God; and we know that their chief city was a figure of the New Jerusalem, the seat of kingdom power and centre of authority, the city (government) of the great King, Immanuel. We remember, too, that Christ’s government is represented in the book of Revelation (Rev. 21:10-27} under the figure of a city class permitted to enter the privileges and blessings of that kingdom—the honorable and glorious, and all who have the right to the trees of life— we find it also declared that there shall not enter into it anything that defileth, or that worketh abomination, or maketh a lie; but only such as a Lamb shall write as worthy of life. This city, representing the redeemed world in the end of the Millennium, was typified or represented in the earthly city, Jerusalem; and the defiling, the abominable, etc,. the class unworthy of life, who do not enter in, were represented by the refuse and the filthy, lifeless carcasses cast into gehenna outside the city, for utter destruction. Accordingly, we find it stated that those not found worthy of life are to be cast into the “lake of fire” (Rev.20:15)—fire here, as everywhere, being used as a symbol of destruction, and the symbol, lake of fire, being drawn from this same gehenna, or Valley of Hinnom.
Therefore, while gehenna served a useful purpose to the city of Jerusalem as a place for garbage burning, it, like the city itself, was typical, and illustrated the future dealings of
God in refusing and committing to destruction all the impure elements, thus preventing them from defiling the holy city, the New Jerusalem, after the trial of the Millennial age of judgment shall have fully proved them and separated with unerring accuracy the “sheep” from the “goats.”
So then, gehenna was a type or illustration of the second death—final and complete destruction, from which there can be no recovery; for after that, “there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins,” but only “fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries.”— Heb.10:26.
But remember that Israel, for the purpose of being as types of God’s future dealing with the race, was typically treated as though the ransom had been given before they left Egypt, though only a typical lamb had been slain. When Jerusalem was built, and the Temple— representative of the true temple, the church, and the true kingdom as it will be established by Christ in the Millennium—that people typified the world in the Millennial age. Their priests represented the glorified royal priesthood; and their law and its demands of perfect obedience represented the law and conditions under the New Covenant, to be brought into operation for the blessing of all the obedient, and for the condemnation of all who, when granted fullest opportunity, will not heartily submit to the righteous ruling and laws of the great King.
Seeing then, that Israel’s polity, condition, etc., prefigured those of the world in the coming age, how appropriate that we should find the valley of abyss, gehenna, a figure of the second death, the utter destruction in the coming age of all that is unworthy of preservation; and how aptly, too, is the symbol, “lake of fire burning with brimstone.” (Rev. 19:20), drawn from this same gehenna, or Valley of Hinnom, burning continually with brimstone, The expression, “burning with brimstone,” adds force to the symbol, “fire,: to express the utter and irrevocable destructiveness of the second death; for the latest deductions of scientists are that burning brimstone is the most deadly agent known. How reasonable too, to expect that Israel would have courts and judges resembling or prefiguring such courts and judges in the next age; and that the sentence of those (figurative) courts of that (figurative) people under those (figurative) laws, to that (figurative) abyss, outside that (figurative) city, would largely correspond to the (real) sentences of the (real) court and judges in the next age. If these points are kept in mind, they will greatly assist us in understanding the words of our Lord in reference to gehenna; for though the literal valley just at hand was named and referred to, yet his words carry with them lessons concerning the future age and the antitypical gehenna—the second death.
“Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not kill; and whosoever shall kill shall be amenable to the judges: But I say unto you, that whosoever is angry with his brother [without a cause] shall [future—under the regulations of the real kingdom] be amenable to the judges; and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca [villain], shall be in danger of the high council; but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell [gehenna] fire.”
To understand these references to council and judges and gehenna, all should know something of Jewish regulations. The “Court of Judges” consisted of seven men (or twenty-three—the number is in dispute) and had power to judge some classes of crimes. The High Council, or Sanhedrim, consisted of seventy-one men of recognized learning and ability. This constituted the highest court of the Jews, and its supervision was over the gravest offenses. The most serious sentence was death; but certain very obnoxious criminals were subjected to an indignity after death, being refused burial and cast with the carcasses of dogs, the city refuse, etc., into gehenna, there to be consumed. The object of this burning in gehenna was to make the crime and the criminal detestable in the eyes of the people, and signified that the culprit was a hopeless case. It must be remembered that Israel hoped for a resurrection from the tomb, and hence they were particular in caring for the corpses of their dead. Not realizing the fulness of God’s power, they apparently thought he needed their assistance to that extent. (Exod. 13:19; Heb. 11:22; Acts 7:15, 16) Hence the destruction of the body in gehenna after death implied to them the loss of hope of future life by a destruction. Thus it represented the second death in the same figurative way that they as a people represented or illustrated a future order of things under the New Covenant.
Now notice that our Lord, in the above words, pointed out to them that their construction of the law, severe though it was, was far below the real import of that law, as it shall be interpreted under the real kingdom and judges, which theirs only typified. He shows that the command of their law, “Thou shalt not kill,” reached much farther than they supposed; and malicious anger and vituperation “shall be” considered a violation of God’s law, under the New Covenant; and that such as, will not reform so thoroughly as to fully observe God’s law would be counted worthy of that which the gehenna near them typified— the second death. However, the strict severity of that law will be enforced only in proportion as the discipline, advantages and assistance of that age, enabling each to comply with its laws, shall be disregarded.
The same thought is continued in
“Ye have heard,” etc., but I say unto you . . . .it is better for thee to lose one of thy members than that thy whole body should be cast into gehenna.”
Here again the operation of God’s law under the New Covenant is contrasted with its operation under the Old or Jewish Covenant; and the lesson of self-control is urged by the statement that it is far more profitable that men should refuse to gratify depraved desires (though they be dear to them as a right eye, and apparently indispensable, as a right hand) than that they should gratify these, and lose in the second death the future life provided through the atonement for all who will return to perfection, holiness and God.
These expressions of our Lord not only serve to show us the perfection (Rom 7:12} of God’s law, and how fully it will be defined and enforced in the Millennium, but they served as a lesson to the Jews also, who previously saw through Moses’ commands only the crude exterior of the law of God. Since they found it difficult in their fallen state to keep inviolate even the surface significance of the law, they must now see the impossibility of their keeping the finer meaning of the law revealed by Christ. Had they understood and received his teaching fully, they would have cried out, “Alas! if God judges us thus, by the very thoughts and intents of the heart, we are all unclean, all undone, and can hope for naught but condemnation to gehenna (to utter destruction, as brute beasts).” They would have cried, “Show us a greater priesthood than that of Aaron, a priest and teacher able fully to appreciate the law, and able fully to appreciate and sympathize with our fallen state and inherited weaknesses, and let him offer for us better sacrifices, and apply to us the needed greater foregiveness of sin, and let him as a great physician heal us and restore us, so that we can obey the perfect law of God from our hearts.” Then they would have found Christ.
But this lesson they did not learn, for the ears of their understanding were “dull of hearing”; hence they knew not that God had already prepared the very priest and sacrifice and teacher and physician they needed, who in due time redeemed those under the typical law, as well as all not under it, and who also “in due time,” shortly, will begin his restoring work, restoring sight to the blind eyes of their understanding, and hearing to their deaf ears. Then the “vail shall be taken away”—the vail of ignorance, pride and human wisdom which Satan now uses to blind the world to God’s true law and true plan of salvation in Christ.
And not only did our Lord’s teaching here show the law of the New Covenant and teach the Jew a lesson, but it is of benefit to the
Gospel church also. In proportion as we learn the exactness of God’s law, and what would constitute perfection under its requirements we see that our Redeemer was perfect, and that we, totally unable to command ourselves to God as keepers of that law, can find acceptance with the Father only in the merit of our Redeemer, while none can be of that “body,” covered by the robe of his righteousness, except the consecrated who endeavor to do only those things well pleasing to God, which includes the avoiding of sin to the extent of ability. Yet their acceptability with God rests not in their perfection, but upon the perfection of Christ, so long as they abide in him. These, nevertheless, are benefited by a clear insight into the perfect law of God, even though they are not dependent on the perfect keeping of it. They delight to do God’s will to the extent of their ability; and the better they know his perfect law, the better they are able to rule themselves and to conform to it. So, then, to us also the Lord’s words have a lesson of value.
The point, however, to be specially noticed here is that the gehenna which the Jews knew, and of which our Lord spoke to them, was not a lake of fire to be kept burning to all eternity, into which all would be cast who get “angry with a brother” and call him a “fool.” No; the Jews gathered no such extreme idea from the Lord’s words. The eternal torment theory was unknown to them, as well as to all the heathen nations. It had no place in their theology, as will be shown. It is a comparatively modern invention, coming down, as we have shown, from Papacy—the great apostasy. The point is that gehenna symbolizes the second death— utter, complete and everlasting destruction. This is clearly shown by its being contrasted with life as its opposite. “It is better for thee to enter into life halt or maimed than otherwise to be cast into gehenna.” It is better that you should deny yourselves sinful gratifications than that you should lose all future life, and perish in the second death.
“Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell [gehenna].” See also another account of the same discourse by Luke 12:4, 5.
Here our Lord pointed out to his followers the great cause they had for courage and bravery under the most trying circumstances. They were to expect persecution, and to have all manner of evil spoken against them falsely, for his sake, and for the sake of the “good tidings” of which he made them the ministers and heralds; yea, the time would come, that whosoever would kill them would think that he did God a service. Their consolation or reward for this was to be received, not in the present life, but in the life to come. They were assured, and they believed, that he had come to give his life a ransom for many, and that all in their graves must in consequence, in due time, hear the Deliverer’s voice and come forth, either to reward (if their trial was passed in this life successfully), or to trial, as it must be to the great majority who had not, in this present life, come to the necessary knowledge and opportunity essential to a fair trial.
Under divine arrangement men are able to kill our bodies, but nothing that they can do will affect our beings (souls),* which God has promised shall be revived or restored by his power in the resurrection day—the Millennial age. Our revived souls will have new bodies (spiritual or natural—“to each seed his own [kind of] body); and then none will have liberty to kill. God alone has power to destroy us utterly—soul and body. He alone, therefore, should be feared, if thereby we gain divine approval. Our Lord’s bidding then is, Fear not them which can terminate the present (dying) life in these poor dying bodies. Care little for it, its food, its clothing, its pleasures, in comparison with that future existence or being which God has provided for you and which, if secured, may be your portion forever. Fear not the threats, or looks, or acts of men, whose power can extend no farther than the present existence; who can harm and kill these bodies, but can do no more. Rather have respect and deference to God, with whom are the issues of
*—THE WATCH TOWER, OCTOBER 15,1895. life everlasting—fear him who is able to destroy in gehenna, the second death, both the present dying existence and all hope of the future existence.
Here it is conclusively shown that gehenna, as a figure, represented the second death—the utter destruction which must ensue in the case of all who, after having fully received the opportunities of a future being or existence through our Lord’s sacrifice, prove themselves unworthy of God’s gift, and refuse to accept it, by refusing obedience to God’s just requirements. For it does not say that God will preserve soul or body in gehenna, but that in it he can and will “destroy” both. Thus we are taught that any who are condemned to the second death are hopelessly and forever blotted out of existence.
[Since two passages refer to the same discourse, we quote from Mark—suggesting that verses 44 and 46, and part of 45, are not found in the older Greek MSS., through verse
48, which reads the same, is in all manuscripts. We quote the text as found in these ancient and reliable MSS.] :If thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into gehenna, into the fire that never shall be quenched. And if thy foot offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter halt into life, than having two feet to be cast into gehenna. And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast into gehenna, where the worm dies not and the fire is not quenched.”
After reading the above, all must agree with the prophet that our Lord opened his mouth in figures and obscure sayings. (Psa. 78:2; Matt. 13:35) No one for a moment supposes that our Lord advised the people to mutilate their bodies by cutting off their limbs or gouging out their eyes. Nor does he mean us to understand that the injuries and disfigurements of the present life will continue beyond the grave, when we shall “enter into life.” The Jews, whom the Lord addressed having no conception of a place of everlasting torment, and knowing that the word gehenna referred to the valley outside their city—which was not a place of torment, nor a place where any living thing was cast, but a place for utter destruction of whatever might be cast into it—and recognizing the Lord’s expression regarding limbs and eyes to be figurative, knew that gehenna also was used in the same figurative sense to symbolize destruction.
The Lord meant simply this: ‘The future life, which God has provided for redeemed man, is of inestimable value, and it will richly pay you to make any sacrifice to receive and enjoy that life. Should it even cost an eye, a hand or a foot, so that to all eternity you would be obliges to endure the loss of these, yet life would be cheap at even such a cost. That would be better far, than to retain your members and lose all in gehenna.’ Doubtless, too, the hearers drew the lesson as applicable to all the affairs of life, and understood the Master to mean that it would richly repay them to deny themselves many comforts, pleasures and tastes, dear to them, as a right hand, precious as an eye, and serviceable as a foot, rather than by gratification to forfeit the life to come and be utterly destroyed in gehenna—the second death.
But what about the undying worms and the unquenchable fire?
We answer, In the literal gehenna, which is the basis of our Lord’s illusion, the bodies of animals, etc., frequently fell upon ledges of rocks and not in the fire kept burning below. Thus exposed, these would breed worms and be destroyed by them, as completely and as surely as those which burned. No one was allowed to disturb the contents of this valley; hence the worm and the fire together completed the work of destruction—the fire was not quenched and the worms died not. This would not imply a never-ending fire, nor everlasting worms . The thought is that the worms did not die off and leave the carcasses there, but continued and completed the work of destruction. So with the fire also; since it was not quenched, it burned on until all was consumed. Just so if a house were on fire could not be controlled or quenched, but burned until the building was destroyed, we might call it an “unquenchable fire.”
Our Lord wished to impress the thought of the completeness and finality of the second death. All who go into the second death will be thoroughly and completely and forever destroyed; no ransom will ever again be given for any (Rom. 6:9); for none worthy of life will be cast into the second death, or lake of fire, but only those who love unrighteousness after coming to the knowledge of the truth.
Not only in the above instances is the second death pointedly illustrated by gehenna, but it is evident that the same Teacher used the same figure to represent the same thing in the symbols of Revelation, though it is not called gehenna, but a “lake of fire.”
The same valley was once before used as the basis of a discourse by the Prophet Isaiah. (Isa. 66:24) Though he gives it no name, he describes it; and all should notice that he speaks, not as some with false ideas might expect, of billions alive in flames and torture, but of the carcasses of those who transgressed against the Lord, who are thus represented as utterly destroyed in the second death.
The two preceding verses show the time when this prophecy will be fulfilled, and it is in perfect harmony with the symbols of Revelation: it is in the new dispensation, of the Millennium, in the “new heavens and new earth” condition of things. Then all the righteous will see the justice as well as the wisdom of the utter destruction of the incorrigible, wilful enemies of righteousness, as it is written: “They shall be an abhorring unto the flesh.”
The class here addressed was not the heathen who had no knowledge of the truth, nor the lowest and most ignorant of the Jewish nation, but it was not the Scribes and Pharisees, outwardly the most religious, and the leaders and the teachers of the people. To these our Lord said, “How can ye escape the judgment of gehenna?” These men were hypocritical: they were not true to their convictions of the truth. Abundant testimony of the truth had been borne to them, but they refused to accept it, and endeavored to counteract its influence and to discourage the people from accepting it. And in thus resisting the holy spirit of light and truth, they were hardening their hearts against the very agency which God designed for their blessing. Hence they were wickedly resisting his grace, and such a course, if pursued, must eventually end in condemnation to the second death, gehenna. Every step in the direction of wilful blindness and opposition to the truth makes return more difficult now, as then, and makes the wrong-doer more and more of the character which God abhors, and which the second death is intended to utterly destroy. The Scribes and Pharisees were progressing rapidly in that course: hence the warning inquiry of our Lord, “How can ye escape”” etc. The sense is, Although you boast of your piety, you will surely be destroyed in
gehenna, unless you change your course.
James 3:6.—“So [important] is the tongue, among our members, that it defileth the whole body, and setteth on fire the course of nature, and [or when] it is set on fire or gehenna.”
Here, in strong symbolic language, the Apostle points out the very bad influence of an evil tongue—a tongue set on fire (figuratively) by gehenna (figurative). For a tongue to be set on fire of gehenna signifies that it is set going in evil by a perverse disposition, self-willed, selfish, hateful, malicious, the sort of disposition which, in spite of knowledge and opportunity, unless controlled and reformed, will be counted worthy to be destroyed—the class for whom the “second death” the real “lake of fire,” the real gehenna, is intended. One in that attitude may by his tongue kindle a great fire, a destructive disturbance, which wherever it has contact, will work evil in the entire course of nature. A few malicious words often arouse all the evil passions of the speaker, engender the same in others and react upon the first. And continuance is such an evil course finally corrupts the entire man, and brings him under sentence as utterly unworthy of life.
The Greek word tartaroo occurs once in the New Testament, and is translated hell. It is found in 2 Peter 2:4, which reads thus:
“God spared not the angels who sinned, but cast [them] down to hell [tartaroo], and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment.”
Having examined all other words rendered “hell,” in the Bible, and all the texts in which they occur, we conclude the examination with this text, which is the only one in which the word tartaroo occurs in the Scriptures. In the above text, all the words shown in
Italic type are translated from the one Greek word tartaroo. Evidently the translators were at a loss to know how to translate the word, but concluded they knew where the evil angels ought to be, and so they made a bold to put them into “hell,” though it took six words to
twist the idea into the shape they had predetermined it must take.
The word tartaroo, used by Peter, very closely resembles tartarus, a word used in Grecian mythology as the name for a dark abyss or prison. But the words tartaroo seems to refer more to an act than to a place. The fall of the angels who sinned was from honor and dignity, into dishonor and condemnation, and the thought seems to be: “God spared not the angels who sinned, but degraded them, and delivered them into chains of darkness.”
This certainly agrees with the facts known to us through the Scriptures; for these fallen spirits frequented the earth in the days of our Lord and the apostles. Hence they were not down in some place, but “down” in the sense of being degraded from former honor and liberty, and restrained under darkness, as by a chain. Whenever these fallen spirits, in spiritualistic seances, manifest their powers through mediums, pretending to be certain dead human beings, they must always do their work in the dark, because darkness is the chain by which they are bound until the great Millennial day of judgment. Whether this implies that in the immediate future they will be able to materialize in daylight is difficult to determine. If so, it would greatly increase Satan’s power to blind and deceive for a short season—until the Sun of Righteousness has fully risen and Satan is fully bound.
Thus we close our investigation of the Bible use of the word “hell.” Thank God, we find no such place of everlasting torture as the creeds and hymn books, and many pulpits, erroneously teach. Yet we have found a “hell,” sheol, hades, to which all our race were condemned on account of Adam’s sin, and from which all are redeemed by our Lord’s death; and that “hell” is the tomb—the death condition. And we find another “hell” (gehenna—the second death—utter destruction) brought to our attention as the final penalty upon all who, after being redeemed and brought to the full knowledge of the truth, and to full ability to obey it, shall yet choose death by choosing a course of opposition to God and righteousness. And our hearts say, “Amen. True and righteous are the ways, thou King of nations. Who shall not venerate thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? For thou art entirely holy. And all nations shall come and worship before thee, because thy righteous dealings are made manifest.”— Revelations 15:3, 4.
The great difficulty with many in reading this Scripture is that, though they regard it as a parable, they reason on it and draw conclusions from it as though it were a literal statement. To regard it as a literal statement involves several absurdities; for instance, that the rich man went to “hell” because he had enjoyed many earthly blessings and gave nothing but crumbs to Lazarus. Not a word is said about his wickedness. Again, Lazarus was blessed, not because he was a sincere child of God, full of faith and trust, not because he was good, but simply because he was poor and sick. If this be interpreted literally, the only logical lesson to be drawn from it is, that unless we are poor beggars full of sores, we shall never enter into future bliss; and that if now we wear any fine linen and purple, and have plenty to eat every day, we are sure of future torment! Again, the coveted place of favor is “Abraham’s bosom”; and if the whole statement be literal, the bosom must also be literal, and it surely would not hold very many of earth’s millions of sick and poor.
But why consider absurdities? As a parable, it is easy of interpretation. In a parable the thing said is never the thing meant. We know this from our Lord’s own explanations of his parables. When he said “wheat,” he meant “children of the kingdom”; when he said “tares,” he meant “the children of the devil”; when he said “reapers,” his servants were to be understood, etc. (Matt. 13) The same classes were represented by different symbols in different parables. Thus the “wheat” of one parable correspond to the “faithful servants” and the “wise virgins “ of others. So in this parable the “rich man” represents a class, and Lazarus represents another class.
In attempting to expound a parable such as this, an explanation of which the Lord does not furnish us, modesty in expressing our opinion regarding it is certainly appropriate. We therefore offer the following explanation without any attempt to force our views upon the reader, except so far as his own truth-enlightened judgment may commend them as in accord with God’s Word and plan. To our understanding Abraham represented God, and the “rich man” represented the Jewish nation. At the time of the utterance of the parable, and for a long time previous, the Jews had “fared sumptuously every day,” being the especial recipients of God’s favors. As Paul says: “What advantage, then, hath the Jew? Much every way: chiefly, because to them were committed the oracles of God [law and prophecy].” The promises to Abraham and David invested that people with royalty, as represented by the rich man’s “purple.” The typical sacrifices of the law constituted them, in a typical sense, a holy
(righteous) nation, represented by the rich man’s “fine linen,” symbolic of righteousness.— Rev. 19:8.
Lazarus represented the outcasts from divine favor under the law, who though sin-sick, hungered and thirsted after righteousness. Although these include “publicans and sinners” of Israel, in the main they were Gentiles—all nations of the world aside from the Israelites. These, at the time of the utterance of this parable, were entirely destitute of those special divine blessings which Israel enjoyed. They lay at the gate of the rich man. No rich promises of royalty were theirs; not even typically were they cleansed; but, in moral sickness, pollution and sin, they were companions of “dogs.” Dogs were regarded as detestable creatures in those days, and the typically clean Jew called the outsiders “heathen” and “dogs,” and would never eat with them, nor marry with them, nor have any dealings with them. (John 4:9) As to how these ate of the “crumbs” of divine favor which fell from Israel’s table of bounties, the Lord’s words to the Syro-Phoenician woman give us a key. He said to this Gentile woman—“It is not meet [proper] to take the children’s [Israelites’] bread and to cast it to dogs [Gentiles]”; and she answered, “Truth, Lord, but the dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.” (Matt. 5:26, 27) Jesus healed her daughter, thus giving the desired crumb of favor. But there came a time (when as a nation they rejected and crucified the Son of God) when their typical righteousness ceased—when the promise of royalty ceased to be theirs, and the kingdom was taken from them to be given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof—the Gospel church, “a holy nation, a peculiar people.” (Titus 2:14; 1 Pet. 2:7, 9; Matt. 21:43) The “rich man” died to all these special advantages and soon he (the Jewish nation) found himself in a cast-off condition—in tribulation and affliction. In such condition that nation has suffered from that day to this.
Lazarus also died. The condition of the humble Gentiles and the “outcasts” of Israel underwent a change, and from them many were carried by the angels (messengers— apostles, etc.) to Abraham’s bosom. Abraham is represented as the father of the faithful, and receives all the children of faith, who are thus recognized as the heirs of all the promises made to Abraham; for the children of the flesh are not the children of God, “but the children of the promise are counted for the seed” (children of Abraham); “which seed is Christ”; and “if ye be Christ’s, then are ye [believers] Abraham’s seed [children], and heirs according to the [Abrahamic] promise, (Gal, 3:29) Yes, the termination of the condition of things then existing was well illustrated by the figure, death—the dissolution of the Jewish polity and the withdrawal of the favors which Israel had so long enjoyed. There the Jews were cast off and have since been shown “no favor,” while the poor Gentiles, who before had been “aliens from the commonwealth [the polity] of Israel and strangers from the covenant of promise [up to this time given to Israel only] having no hope and without God in the world,” were then “made nigh by the blood of Christ” and reconciled to God.—Eph. 2:12, 13.
To the symbolisms of death and burial used to illustrate the dissolution of Israel and their burial or hiding among the other nations, our Lord added a further figure: “In hell [hades, the grave] he lifted up his eyes, being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off,” etc. The dead cannot lift up their eyes, nor see either near or far, nor converse; for it is distinctly stated, “There is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave,” and the dead are described as those who “go down into silence.” (Eccl. 9:10; Psa. 115:17) But the Lord wished to show that great sufferings or “torments” would be added to the Jews as a nation after their national dissolution and burial, and that they would plead in vain for release at the hand of the formerly despised Gentiles. And history has borne out this parabolic prophecy. For eighteen hundred years the Jews have not only been in distress of mind over their casting out from the favor of God and the loss of their temple and other necessaries to the offering of their sacrifices, but they have been relentlessly persecuted by all classes, including professed Christians. It was from the latter that the Jews have expected mercy, as expressed in the parable: “Send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue.” But the great gulf fixed between them hinders that. Nevertheless, God still recognizes the relationship established in his covenant with them, and addresses them as children of the covenant. (Verse 25) These “torments” have been the penalties attached to the violation of their covenant, and were as certain to be visited upon them as the blessings promised for obedience.—Lev. 26.
The “great gulf fixed” represents the wide difference between the Gospel church and the Jew—the former enjoying free grace, joy, comfort and peace, as true sons of God, and the latter holding to the law, which condemns and torments him. Prejudice, pride and error, from the Jewish side, form the bulwarks of this gulf which hinder the Jew from coming into the condition of true sons of God by accepting Christ and the gospel of his grace. The bulwark of this gulf which hinders true sons of God from going to the Jew, under the bondage of the law, is their knowledge that by the deeds of the law none can be justified before God, and that if any man keep the law (put himself under it to try to commend himself to God by reason of obedience to it), Christ shall profit him nothing. (Gal. 5:2-4) So, then, we who are of the Lazarus class should not attempt to mix the law and the Gospel, knowing that they cannot be mixed, and that we can do no good to those who still cling to the law and reject the sacrifice for sins given by our Lord. And they not seeing the change of dispensation which took place, argue that to deny the law as power to save would be to deny all the past history of their race, and to deny all of God’s special dealings with the “fathers” (promises and dealings which through pride and selfishness they failed rightly to apprehend and use); hence they cannot come over to the bosom of Abraham, into the true rest and peace—the portion of all the true children of faith.—John 8:39; Rom. 4:16; Gal. 3:29.
True, a few Jews probably came into the
Christian faith all the way down the Gospel age, but so few as to be ignored in a parable which represented the Jewish people as a whole. As at the first, Dives represented the orthodox Jews, and not the “outcasts of Israel,” so down to the close of the parable he continues to represent a similar class, and hence does not represent such Jews as have renounced the Law Covenant and embraced the Covenant of Grace, or such as have become infidels.
The plea of the rich man for the sending of Lazarus to his five brethren we interpret as follows:
The people of Judea, at the time of our Lord’s utterance if this parable were repeatedly referred to as “Israel,” “the lost sheep of the house of Israel,” “cities of Israel,” etc., because all of the tribes were represented there; but actually the majority of the people were of the two tribes, Judah and Benjamin, the masses of the ten tribes not having returned from Babylon under Cyrus’ general permission. If the nation of the Jews (chiefly two tribes) were represented in the one “rich man,” it would be a harmony of numbers to understand the “five brethren” to represent the ten tribes chiefly scattered abroad. The request relative to them was doubtless introduced to show that all special favor of God ceased to the ten tribes, as well as to the two more directly addressed. It seems to us evident that Israel only was meant, for no other nation than Israel had “Moses and the prophets” as instructors. (Verse 29) The ten tribes had so far disregarded Moses and the prophets that they did not return to the land of promise, but preferred to dwell among idolaters, and hence it would be useless to attempt further communication with them, even by one from the dead—the figuratively dead, but now figuratively risen, Gentiles who receive Christ—Ephesians 2:5.
Though the parable mentions no abridging of this “great gulf,” other portions of the Scripture indicate that it was to be “fixed” only throughout the Gospel age, and that its close the “rich man,” having received the measure of punishment for his sins,* will walk out of the fiery troubles over the bridge of God’s mercies yet unfulfilled to that nation.
Though for centuries the Jews have been bitterly persecuted by Pagans, Mohammedans and professed Christians, they are now gradually rising to political freedom and influence; and as a people they will be very prominent among the nations in the beginning of the Millennium. The vail of prejudice still exists, but it will be gradually taken away as the light of the Millennial morning dawns; nor should we be surprised to hear a great awakening among the Jews and many coming to acknowledge Christ. They will thus leave their hadean state (national death) and torment, and come, the first of the nations, to be blessed by the true seed of Abraham, which is Christ, Head and body. Their bulwark of race prejudice and pride is falling in some places, and the humble, the poor in spirit, are beginning already to look upon him whom
*—See Isa. 40:1, 2, margin, and Scripture Studies, Vol. No. II, page 227.
they have pierced, and to inquire, Is not this the Christ? And as they look the Lord pours upon them the spirit of favor and supplication. (Zech. 12:10) Therefore, “Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her appointed time is accomplished.”—Isa. 40:1, 2, margin.
In a word, this parable seems to teach precisely what Paul explained in Rom. 11:1932. Because of unbelief the natural branches were broken off, and the wild branches grafted into the Abrahamic root-promise. The parable leaves the Jews in their trouble, and does not refer to their final restoration to favor— doubtless because it was not pertinent to the feature of the subject treated; but Paul assures us that when the fulness of the Gentiles—the full number from among the Gentiles necessary to make up the bride of Christ—is come in, “they [the Israelites] shall obtain mercy through your [the church’s] mercy.” He assures us that this is God’s covenant with fleshly Israel (who lost the higher, spiritual promises, but who are still the possessors of certain earthly promises, to become the chief nation of earth, etc.) In proof of this statement, he quotes from the prophets, saying, “The deliverer shall come out of Zion [the glorified church], and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob [the fleshly seed].” “As concerning the Gospel [high calling,] they are enemies [cast off] for your sakes; but as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers’ sakes.” “For God hath concluded them all in unbelief, that he might have mercy upon all. Oh, the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!”—Rom. 11:26-33.
“These shall go away into everlasting punishment; but the righteous into life eternal.”
While the Scriptures, as we have shown, do not teach the blasphemous doctrine of eternal torment, they do most emphatically teach the eternal punishment of the wicked, the class represented in this parable as goats. Let us examine the parable, and then the sentence pronounced at its close.
It has been truly said that “Order is heaven’s first law”; yet few, we think, have realized how emphatically this is true. In glancing back over the plan of the ages, there is nothing which gives such conclusive evidence of a Divine Director as the order observed in all its parts.
As we have seen, God has had definite and stated times and seasons for every part of his work; and in the end of each of these seasons there has been a finishing up of that work and a clearing off of the rubbish, preparatory to the beginning of the new work of the dispensation to follow. Thus in the end of the first dispensation (from creation to the flood) which, as we have seen, was placed under the control of the angels, there was a finishing work, an exhortation through Noah to forsake sin and turn to righteousness, and a warning of certain retribution, And when the end of the time allotted for that dispensation had come, there was a selection and saving of all that was worth saving, and a clean sweeping destruction of all the refuse; and with that which remained a new dispensation began.
In the end of the Jewish age the same order is observed—a harvesting and complete separation of the wheat class from the chaff, and an entire rejection of the latter class from God’s favor. With the few judged worthy in the end of that age, i.e., the Gospel age began; and now we find ourselves amidst the closing scenes (the harvest) of this age. The wheat and the tares which have grown together during this age are being separated. And with the former class, of which our Lord Jesus is the Head, a new age is about to be inaugrated, and these are to reign as kings and priests in the new dispensation, while the “tare” element is judged as utterly unworthy of that favor..
While observing this order with reference to the dispensations past and the one just closing, our Lord informs us through the parable under consideration that the same order will be observed with reference to the dispensation to follow this Gospel age.
The harvest of the Jewish age was likened to the separation of wheat from chaff; the harvest of this age to the separation of wheat from the tares; and the harvest of the Millennial age to the separation of sheep from goats.
That the parable of the sheep and goats refers to the Millennial age is clearly indicated in verses 31 and 32—“When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, THEN shall he sit upon the throne of his glory, and before him shall be gathered all nations; and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats (the church) goes to make a part of that character which, in due time, will determine the final decision of the Judge in our case, who will it be with the world (the nations”) in the age to come. As in the present age the trial of the majority of the individual members is reached, long before the end of the age (2 Tim. 4:7, 8), so under the Millennial reign the decision of some individual cases will be reached long before the end of the age (Isa. 65:20}; but in each age there is a “harvest” or general separating time in the end of the age.
In the dawn of the Millennial age, after the time or trouble, “there will be a gathering of the living nations before Christ, and, in their appointed time and order, the dead of all nations shall be called to appear before the judgment seat of Christ—not to receive an immediate sentence, but to receive a fair and impartial individual trial (Ezek. 18:2-4, 19, 20) under the most favorable circumstances of the result of which trial will be a final sentence, as worthy or unworthy of everlasting life.”
The scene of this parable therefore, is laid after the time of trouble, when the nations shall have been subdued, Satan bound (Rev. 20:1, 2} and the authority of Christ’s kingdom established. Ere this, the bride of Christ (the overcoming church} will have been seated with him in his throne, and will have taken part in executing the judgment of the great day of wrath. Then the Son of man appears (is made manifest) to the world “in his glory,” and, together Jesus and his bride “shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their father.”—Matt.
13:43.
Here is the New Jerusalem as John saw it (Rev.21), “that the holy city [symbol of government]. . . coming down from God out of heaven.” During the time of trouble it will be coming down, and before the end of the city will have touched the earth. This is the stone cut out of the mountains without hands (but by the power of God), and it will have become a great mountain (kingdom), filling the whole earth (Dan. 21:35}, its coming having broken to pieces the evil kingdoms of the prince of darkness.
Here is that glorious city (government), prepared as a bride adorned for her husband (Rev. 21:2), and early in the dawn of the Millennium the nations begin to walk in the light of it. (Verse 24) These may bring their glory and honor into it, but “there shall in no wise enter into it [or become a part of it] anything that defileth,” etc. (Verse 27) Here, from the midst of the throne, proceeds a pure river of water of life (truth unmixed with error), and the Spirit and the Bride say, Come, and take it freely. (Rev. 22:17) Here begins the world’s probation, the world’s great judgment day—a thousand years.
But even in this favored time of blessing and healing of the nations, when Satan is bound, evil restrained, when mankind is released from the grasp of death, and when the knowledge of the Lord fills the earth, two classes will be developed, which our Lord here likens to sheep and goats. These, he tells us, he will separate. The sheep class, those who are meek, teachable and willing to be led—shall—during the age be gathered at the Judge’s right hand— symbol of his approval; but the goat class, self-willed and stubborn, always climbing on the rocks—seeking prominence and approval among men—and feeding on miserable refuse, while the sheep graze in the rich pastures of the truth furnished by the Good Shepherd— these are gathered to the Judge’s left hand, opposite the position of favor, as subjects of his disfavor and condemnation.
This work of separating sheep and goats will require all of the Millennial age for its accomplishment. During that age each individual, as he comes gradually to a knowledge of God and of his will, takes his place at the right hand of favor or the left hand of disfavor, according as he improves or misimproves the opportunities of that golden age. By the end of that age, all the world of mankind will have arranged themselves, as shown in the parable, into two classes.
The end of that age will be the end of the world’s trial or judgment, and then final disposition will be made of the two classes. The reward of this sheep class will be granted them because during the age of trial and discipline, they cultivated and manifested the beautiful character of love, which Paul describes as the fulfilling of the law of God. (Rom. 13:10) They will have manifested it to each other in their times of sorest need; and what they will have done unto him, counting them all as his brethren—children of God, though they will be of the human nature, while he is of the divine.
The condemnation of the goat class is shown to be for the lack of this spirit love. Under the same favorable circumstances as the sheep, they wilfully resist the moulding influence of the Lord’s discipline, and harden their hearts. The goodness of God does not lead them to true repentance; but, like Pharaoh, they take advantage of his goodness and do evil. The goats, who will not have developed the element of love, the law of God’s being and kingdom, will be counted unworthy of life, and will be destroyed; while the sheep, who will have developed God-likeness (love) and who will have exhibited it in their characters, are to be installed as the joint-rulers of earth for future ages.
In the end of the Millennial age, in the final adjustment of human affairs, Christ thus addresses his sheep: “Come, ye blessed, . . . inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.”
It is manifest the sheep here addressed at the close of the Millennium, are not the sheep of the Gospel age, the Gospel church, but those “other sheep” to whom the Lord referred in John 10:16. And the kingdom prepared for them in the divine plan, from the foundation of the world, is not the kingdom prepared for the Gospel church. The church will have received her kingdom at the beginning of the Millennium; but this is the kingdom prepared for the sheep of the Millennial age. It is the dominion of earth which was originally given to Adam, but which was lost through sin, and which is again to be restored when man is brought to perfection, and so made fit to receive and enjoy it. The dominion was not a dominion of some of the race over others, but a joint dominion, in which every man will be a king, and all will have equal rights and privileges in appropriating and enjoying every earthly good. It will be a sovereign people—a great and grand republic on a basis of perfect righteousness, wherein the rights of every man will be conserved; for the Golden Rule will be inscribed on every heart, and every man will love his neighbor as himself. The dominion of all will be over the whole earth, and all its rich and bountiful stores of blessing. (Gen. 1:28; Psa. 8:5-8) The kingdom of the world, to be given to the perfected and worthy ones of the redeemed race at the close of the Millennium, is clearly distinguished from all others by being called the kingdom prepared for them “from the foundation of the world,” the earth having been made to be the everlasting home and kingdom of perfect men. But the kingdom bestowed upon Christ, of which the church, his “bride,” becomes joint-heir, is a spiritual kingdom, “far above angels, principalities and powers,” and it also shall “have no end”—the Millennial kingdom, which will end, being merely a beginning of Christ’s power and rule. This endless heavenly, spiritual kingdom was prepared long before the earth was founded— its inception being recognized in Christ, “the beginning of the creation of God.” It was purposed for Christ Jesus, the First-begotten; but even the church, his bride and joint-heir, was chosen or designed also, in him, before the foundation of the world.—Ephesians 1:4; 2 Thes:13.
This, then, is the kingdom that has been in preparation for mankind from the foundation of the world. It was expedient that man should suffer six thousand years under the dominion of evil, to learn its inevitable results of misery and death, in order by contrast to prove the justice, wisdom and goodness of God’s law of love. Then it will require the seventh thousandyears, under the reign of Christ, to restore him from ruin and death, to the perfect condition, thereby fitting him to inherit the kingdom prepared for him from the foundation of the world.
That kingdom, in which all will be kings, will be one grand, universal republic, whose stability and blessed influence will be assured by the perfection of its every citizen, a result now much desired, but an impossibility because of sin. The kingdom of Christ during the Millennium will be on the contrary, a theocracy, which will rule the world (during the period of its imperfection and restoration) without regard to its consent or approval.
But the righteous inquire why they are crowned with such glory, honor and dominion. And the Lord replies: “I was hungry, and you fed me; thirsty, and you gave me drink; I was a
stranger, and you took me in; naked, and you clothed me: I was sick, and you visited me; in prison, and you came unto me.
“Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, “Lord, when we saw thee hungry, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee? Or when saw we thee, sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.”
The brethren of the Gospel church, then, are not the only brethren of Christ. All who at that time will have been restored to perfection will be recognized as sons of God—sons in the same sense that Adam was a son of God (Luke 3:38)—human sons. And all of God’s sons, whether on the human, the angelic or the divine plane, are brethren. Our Lord’s love for these his human brethren, is here expressed. As the world now has the opportunity to minister to those who are shortly to be the divine sons ~ 91 ~
of God, and brethren of Christ, so they will have abundant opportunity during the age to come to minister to (each other) the human brethren.
The dead nations when again brought into existence will need food, raiment and shelter. However great may have been their possessions in this life, death will have brought all to a common level. The infant and the man of mature years, the millionaire and the pauper, the learned and the unlearned, the cultured and the ignorant and degraded—all will have an abundant opportunity for the exercise of benevolence, and thus they will be privileged to be co-workers with God. We are here reminded of the illustration given in the case of Lazarus: Jesus only awakened him from death, and then were the rejoicing friends permitted to loose him from his grave clothes and to clothe and feed him.
Further, these are said to be “sick and in prison” (more properly, under ward or watch). The grave is the great prison where the millions of humanity have been held in unconscious captivity; but when released from the grave, the restoration to perfection is not to be an instantaneous work. Being not yet perfect, they may properly be termed sick and under ward. They are not dead, neither are they perfect; and any condition between those two is properly called sickness. And they will continue to be under watch or ward until made well— physically, mentally and morally perfect. During that time there will be abundant opportunity for mutual helpfulness, sympathy, instruction and encouragement.
Since all mankind will not be raised at once, but gradually, during the thousand years, each new group will find an army of helpers in those who will have preceded it. The love and benevolence which men will then show to each other (the brethren of Christ) the King will count as shown to him. No great deeds are assigned as the ground for honors and favors conferred upon the righteous: they will have simply come into harmony with God’s law of love and proved it by their works. “Love is the fulfilling of the law” (Rom. 13:10), and “God is love.” So, when man is restored again to the image of God—“very good”—man also will be a living expression of love.
To the sheep it is said: “Inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.” But though God gave it to man at first, and designs restoring it to him when he has been prepared for the great trust, we are not to suppose that God intends man to rule it, except as under, or in harmony with, his supreme law. “Thy will be done in earth as in heaven,” must forever be the principle of government.
Man thenceforth will rule his dominion in harmony, with the law of heaven—delighting continually to do his will in whose favor is life, and at whose “right hand [condition of favor] there are pleasures forevermore.” (Psa. 16:11) Oh, who would not say, “Haste thee along, ages of glory,” and give glory and honor to him whose loving plans are blossoming into such fulness of blessing!
Then follows the message to those on the left” “Depart from me, ye cursed”
(condemned)— condemned as unfit vessels for the glory and honor of life, who would not yield to the moulding and shaping influences of divine love. When these my brethren, were hungry and thirsty, or naked, sick, and in prison, ye ministered not to their necessities, thus continually proving yourselves out of harmony with the heavenly city (kingdom); for “there shall in no case enter into it anything that defileth.” The decision or sentence regarding this class is— “Depart from me into everlasting fire [symbol of destruction]. prepared for the devil and his angels.” Elsewhere (Heb. 2:14) we read in plain language that Christ “will destroy, , , him that had the power of death, that is the devil.”
“And these [the goats] shall go away into everlasting [Greek, aionios—lasting].” The punishment will be as lasting as the reward. Both will be everlasting.
The everlastingness of the punishment being thus established, only one point is left open for
discussion; namely, the nature of the punishment. Take your Concordance and search out what saith the great Judge regarding the punishment of wilful sinners who despise and reject all his blessed provisions for them, through Christ. What do you find? Does God there say: “All sinners shall live in torture forever”? We do not find a single text where life in any condition is promised to that class.
God’s declaration assure us that he will have a clean universe, free from the blight of sin and from sinners.
But while we do not find one verse of the Bible saying that this class can have life in torment, or in any other condition, we do find numerous passages teaching the reverse. Of these we give a few merely as samples—“The wages of sin is death.” (Rom. 6:23) “The soul that sinneth, it shall die.” (Ezek. 18:4, 20) “All the wicked will God destroy.” (Psa. 145:20) The wicked shall “perish.” (Psa. 37:20) Thus God has told us plainly the nature of the everlasting punishment of the wicked—that it will be death, destruction, annihilation.
The false ideas of God’s plan of dealing with the incorrigible, taught ever since the great “falling away,” which culminated in Papacy, and instilled in our minds from childhood, are alone responsible for the view generally held, that the punishment provided for wilful sinners is life of torment. This view is held, notwithstanding the many clear statements of God’s Word that their punishment is to be death. Here Paul states very explicity what the punishment is to be. Speaking of the same Millennial day, and of the same class, who, despite all the favorable opportunities and the fulness of knowledge then, will not come into harmony with Christ, and hence will “know not God,” and obey not, he says: “Who shall be punished.? He tells us how; They shall be punished with everlasting destruction [a destruction from which there shall be no recovery, no redemption or resurrection—Heb. 10:26-29] from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power.” (2 Thes. 1:9) This destruction is represented in the parable as the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels: it is “the lake of fire and brimstone,”
which is the second death (Rev. 20:14), into which the goat class of this parable are sent.
Thus the meaning and reasonableness of this statement concerning everlasting punishment are readily seen when looked at from the correct standpoint. The fire of the parable, by which the punishment (destruction) is to be accomplished, will not be literal fire, for the “fire,” is as much a symbol as the “sheep” and “goats” are symbols. Fire here, as elsewhere, symbolozes destruction, and not in any sense preservation.
We might well leave this subject here, and consider that we have fully shown that the everlasting punishment of the goat class will be destruction; but we would direct attention to one other point which clinches the truth upon this subject. We refer to the Greek word kolasin, translated “punishment,” in verse 46. This word has not the remotest idea of torment in it. Its signification is to cut off, or prune, or lop off, as in the pruning of trees; and a secondary meaning is to restrain. Illustrations of the use of kolasin can easily be had from ~ 98 ~
Greek classical writings. The Greek word for “torment” is basinos, a word totally unrelated to the word kolasin.
Kolasin, the word used in Matt 25:46, occurs in the one other place in the Bible, viz., 1 John 4:18, where it is improperly rendered “torment” in the Common Version, whereas it should read, “Fear hath restraint.”
Those who possess a copy of Young’s Analytical Concordance will see from it (page 995), that the definition of the word kolasis is “pruning, restraining, restraint.” And the author of the Emphatic Diaglott, after translating kolas in Matt. 25:46 by the words “cutting off,” says in a footnote:
“The Common Version and many modern ones render kolas aionion ‘everlasting punishment,’ conveying the idea, as generally interpreted, of basinos, torment. Kolasin in its various forms occurs in only three other places in the New Testament: Acts 4:21; 2 Pet. 2:9; 1 John 4:18. It is derived from kolazoo, which signifies, 1. To cut off; as lopping off branches of trees, to prune. 2. To restrain to repress. The Greeks write; ‘The charioteer restrains [kalazei] his fiery steeds.’ 3. To chastise, to punish. To cut off an individual from life, or from society, or even to restrain, is esteemed as a punishment; hence has arisen this third metaphorical use of the word. The primary signification has been adopted [in the Diaglott]; because it agrees better with the second member of the sentence, thus preserving the force and beauty of the antithesis. The righteous go to life, the wicked to the cutting off from life—death.—2. Thes. 1:9.”
Now consider carefully the text, and note the antithesis or contrast shown between the reward of the sheep and the goats, which the correct idea of kolasin gives—the one class goes into everlasting life, while the other is everlasting cut off from life, forever restrained in death. And this exactly agrees with what the Scriptures everywhere else declare concerning the wages or penalty of wilful sin.
Consider for the moment the words of verse 41: Depart from me, ye cursed [once redeemed by Christ from the Adamic curse or condemnation of death, but now condemned or cursed, as worthy of the second death, by the One who redeemed them from the first curse], into everlasting fire [symbol of everlasting destruction], prepared for the devil and his messengers [servants].”
Remember that this is the final sentence at the close of the final trial—at the close of the Millennium. And none will then be servants of Satan ignorantly or unwillingly, as so many now are; for the great Deliverer, Christ, will remove outside temptations, and provide assistance toward self-improvement, which will enable all who will to overcome inherent weakness and to attain perfection.” These “goats,” who love evil and serve Satan, are the messengers (“angels”) of Satan. For these and Satan, and for no others, God has prepared the everlasting destruction—the second death. Fire will come from God out of heaven and consume them. Consuming fire and devouring fire all can appreciate, unless their eyes are holden by false doctrine and prejudice. No one ever knew of a preserving fire; and as fire never preserves, but always consumes, God uses it as a symbol of utter destruction.
“THE LAKE OF FIRE AND BRIMSTONE, WHICH IS THE SECOND DEATH.” —REV.
“The lake of fire and brimstone” is several times mentioned in the book of Revelation, which all Christians admit to be a book of symbols. However, they generally think and speak of this particular symbol as a literal statement, giving strong support to the torment doctrine, notwithstanding the fact that the symbol is clearly defined as meaning the second death: “And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death,” etc. (Rev. 20:14) it is sometimes spoken as “a lake of fire burning with brimstone” (Rev. 19:20), the element brimstone being mentioned to intensify the symbol of destruction, the second death, burning brimstone being one of the most deadly elements known. It is destructive to all forms of life.
The symbolism of this lake of fire is further shown by the fact that the symbolic beast and the symbolic false prophet, and death and hell [hades], as well as the devil and his followers, are destroyed in it.—Rev. 19:20; 20:10, 14, 15; 21:8.
This destruction or death is called the second death in contradistinction to the first or Adamic death, and not to signify that everything which goes into it dies a second time. For instance death (the first or Adamic death), and hades, the grave, are to be cast into it, which work will require the entire Millennium to accomplish it; and in no sense will they ever have been destroyed before. So also the devil, the beast, and the false prophet, will never have been destroyed before.
From the first, or Adamic death, a resurrection has been provided. All that are in their graves shall come forth. The Revelator prophetically declares: “The sea gave up the dead which were in it, and death and hell [hades, the grave] gave up the dead which were in them.... And I saw the dead, small
and great, stand before God, and the books were opened.” (Rev. 20:13, 12) It was in view of God’s plan for redeeming the race from that first death that in both the Old and New Testaments it is called a “sleep.” In Isarael’s history of the good and the wicked it is repeatedly stated that they “slept with their fathers.” The apostles used the same symbol, and our Lord also. But no such symbol is used in reference to the second death. On the contrary, the strongest figures of total and utter destruction are used to symbolize it; viz., “fire and brimstone”; for that will be a destruction from which there will be no recovery. Blessed thought! the Adamic death (which claimed the whole race for the sin of their progenitor) shall be forever swallowed up, and shall cease in this second death into which it is to be cast, by the great Redeemer, who bought the whole world with the sacrifice of himself. Thus God tells us through the Prophet, “I will ransom them from the power of the grave [sheol]. I will redeem them from death.... O grave [sheol]. I
will be thy destruction.” (Hos. 13:14) The first or Adamic death shall no longer have liberty or power over men, as it has had for the past six thousand years; no longer shall any die for Adam’s sin. {Rom.5:12; Jer 31:29, 30; Ezek. 18:2) Thenceforth the New Covenant, sealed with the precious blood, shall be in force, and only wilful transgressions will be counted as sin and punished with the wages of sin—death—the second death. Thus will the first death be cast into and swallowed up by the second death. And hades and sheol—the dark, secret condition, the grave, which in the present time speaks to us of a hope of future life by God’s resurrection power in Christ—shall be no more; for the second death will devour no being fit for life—none for whom there remains a shadow of hope, but such only as, by the unerring Judge, have been fully, impartially and individually found worthy of destruction. And Satan, that lying tempter who deceived and ruined us all, and who, with persistent energy and cunning, has sought continually to thwart the purpose of God for our salvation through Christ, with all who are of his spirit, “his angels,” shall be destroyed, and shall never awake from death to trouble the world again. Here he is said to be cast into “the lake of fire,” the second death; and Paul in Heb. 2:14, referring to the same thing, calls it destruction—“that he might destroy death, and him that hath the power of death, that is the devil.” And “the beast and the false prophet,” the great false systems which have long fettered and oppressed nominal Christendom, shall never escape from it. These are said to be cast “alive” (that is, while they are still organized and operative) into the lake of fire burning with brimstone. (Rev. 19:20) The great trouble, the
Lord’s judgment, which will utterly destroy them, will undoubtedly cause a great social, financial and religious difficulty and pain to all those identified with these deceived and deceiving systems, before they are utterly destroyed. These systems will be cast in, destroyed at the beginning of the Millennium, while Satan’s destruction is reserved until its close, when all the “goats” shall have been separated from the “sheep,” and they shall perish with Satan in the second death, as “his angels,” messengers or servants. None of those abominable characters among men, who, knowing the truth, yet love unrighteousness— none of “the fearful and unbelieving”—those who will not trust God after all the manifestations of his grace afforded during the Millennial reign of Christ; nor the abominable, who at heart are murderers and whoremongers and sorcerers and idolaters and liars: none of these shall ever escape the second death, to defile the earth again. All such after a full abundant opportunity for reformation, will be judged unworthy of life, and will be forever cut off in the second death, symbolized by the lake of fire and brimstone.
Several prophetic pen pictures of the Millennial age and its work in chapters 20 and 21 of Revelation, clearly show the object and result of that age of trial, in harmony with the remainder of the Scriptures already noted.
Chapter 20, verses 2, 4, 11, with verses 1, 2, 10, 11 of chapter 21, show the beginning of the age of judgment, and the restraining of blinding errors and misleading systems. The
“beast” and the “false prophet” are the chief symbols, and represent the organizations of systems of error which together constitute Babylon. This judgment against the “thrones” of the present time, and against “the beast and the false prophet” systems, follows speedily upon the introduction of this Millennial judgment reign. The thrones of present dominion of earth will be “cast down,” and the dominion transferred to the great Prophet and judge, “whose right it is.” (Compare Dan. 7:14,22; Ezek. 21:27) And the systems of error will be speedily judged worthy of destruction, “the lake of fire,” “the second death.”—Rev. 19:20.
Thus the second destruction (or death) begins quite early in the new judgment: it begins with the false systems symbolized by the beast, false prophet, etc. But the second death will not reach the world of mankind, as individuals, until they have first had full trial, with full opportunity to choose life and live forever, Chapters 20:12, 13, and 21:3-7, indicate the blessed, favorable trial in which all, both dead and living (except the church, who with Jesus Christ are kings, priests, joint-heirs and judges), will be brought to a full knowledge of the truth, relieved from sorrow and pain, and freed from every blinding error and prejudice, and tried “according to their works,”
The grand outcome of that trial will be a clean universe. As the Revelator expresses it, “Every creature which is in heaven and on the earth. . . heard I saying, Blessing and honor and glory and power be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever.” But this result will be accomplished in harmony with all God’s dealings past and present, which have always recognized man’s freedom of will to choose good or evil, life or death.
We cannot doubt that when, in the close of the Millennial age, God will again for a “little season” permit evil to triumph, in order thereby to test his creatures (who will by that time have become thoroughly acquainted with both good and evil, and the consequences of each, and will have had his justice and love fully demonstrated to them), that those who finally prefer and choose evil will be cut off— destroyed. Thus God will for all eternity remove all who do not love righteousness and hate iniquity.
We read, regarding that testing, that Satan will endeavor to lead astray all mankind, whose numbers will then be as the sand of the sea for multitude; but that many of them will choose evil and disobedience, with past experience before them, and unhampered by present weakness and blinding influences, we do not suppose. However, when God does not tell us either the number or the proportion of these found worthy of life, and those judged worthy of death {the second death), we may not dogmatize. Of one thing we may be confident, God willeth not the death of the wicked, but would that all should turn to him and live; and no one will be destroyed in that “lake of fire and brimstone” (figurative of utter destruction, as gehenna) who is worthy of life, whose living longer would be a blessing to himself or to others in harmony with righteousness.
That utter and hopeless destruction is intended only for wilful doers, who like Satan, in pride of heart and rebellion against God, will love and do evil notwithstanding their experience with its penalties. Seemingly the goodness and love of God in the provision of a ransom, a restitution, and another opportunity of life for man, instead of leading these to an abhorrence of sin, will lead them to suppose that God is too loving to cut them off in the second death, or that if he did so he would give them other, and yet other, future opportunities. Building thus upon a supposed weakness in the divine character, these may be led to try to take advantage of the grace (favor) of God, and to use it as a license for wilful sin. But they shall go no further, for their folly shall be manifest. Their utter destruction will prove to the righteous the harmony and perfect balance of justice, wisdom, love and power in the divine Ruler, Such are called the “angels” (messengers, followers, servants) of Satan. And for such, as well as for Satan, the utter destruction (the second death) is prepared by the wise, loving and just Creator. And so, in the parable of the sheep and goats, the latter are called the messengers or servants of Satan.
The true character of the goat class is portrayed in Rev. 21:8. “The fearful and unbelieving [who will not trust God], the abominable, murderers [brother-haters], whoremongers, sorcerers, idolaters [such as misappropriate and misuse divine favors, who give to self or any other creature or thing that service and honor which belong to God], and all liars”— “whosoever loveth and maketh a lie” [in a word, all who do not love the truth and seek it, and at any cost defend and hold it] “shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone [gehenna symbol of utter destruction], which is the second death.” Such company would be repulsive to any honest, upright beings. It is hard to tolerate them now, when we can sympathize with them, knowing that such dispositions are now in great measure the result of inherited weakness of the flesh. We are moved to a measure of sympathy by the remembrance that in our own cases often, when we would do good, evil is present with us. But in the close of the Millennial judgment, when the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall have given every advantage and opportunity to knowledge and ability, this class will be an abhorrence and detestation to all in harmony with the King of Glory. And the righteous will be glad when, the trial being ended, the gift of life, of which these shall have proved themselves unworthy, shall be taken from them, and when the corrupters of the earth, and all their work and influence, shall be destroyed.
Rev. 20:9 tells of the destruction of those individuals who join with Satan in the last rebellion; and verse 15 tells of the same destruction in other words, using the symbol “lake of fire.” They are devoured or consumed in fire. This being the case, the torment of verse 10 cannot refer to these human beings who are consumed, destroyed. Hence the question narrows down to this, Will Satan and a false prophet and a beast be tortured forever? and does this verse so teach?
We answer in God’s own words, “All the wicked will he destroy.” Concerning Satan, the arch enemy of God and man, God expressly advises us that he will be destroyed and not preserved in any sense or condition.—Heb. 2:14.
The beast and the false prophet systems, which during the Gospel age have deceived and led men astray, will be cast into a great, consuming trouble in the close of this Gospel age. The torment of these systems will be aeionion; i. e., LASTING. It will continue as long as they last, until they are utterly consumed. So also the system of errors, which will suddenly manifest itself at the end of the Millennial age and lead the “goats” to destruction, will be consumed. (Rev. 20:7-10) That deceiving system (not specified as to kind, but merely called Satan, after its instigator) will be cast into the same sort of trouble and destruction, in the end of the Millennial age, as the beast and false prophet systems are now being cast into, in the end of the Gospel age.
Rev. 19:3, speaking of one of these systems, says, “Her smoke rose up forever and ever.”
That is to say, the remembrance of the destruction of these systems of deception and error will be lasting, the lesson will never be forgotten—as smoke, which continues to ascend after a destructive fire, is testimony that the fire has done its work.—See also Isa. 34:810.
Of Rev. 14:9-11 we remark, incidentally, that all will at once concede that if a literal worshiping of a beast and image were meant in verse 9, then few, if any, in civilized lands are liable to the penalty of verse 14; and if the beast and his image and worship and wine and cup are symbols, so also are the torments and smoke and fire and brimstone.
Rev. 20:14 says: “And death and hell [hades—the tomb] were cast into the lake of fire [destruction]. This is the second death, the lake of fire.” Sinaitic MS.
“Death and hell” [hades] is used several times in this book as expressive of the Adamic death. Hades is the state or condition of death, and is sometimes translated the grave. It is called a great prison house, because those who enter it, though actually extinct, are reckoned as not extinct, but merely confined for a time, and to be brought forth to liberty and a new trial for life, by him who ransomed them from the penalty of the first trial. It is in view of God’s purpose and promise of a restitution of all, and a second trial , that the tomb is spoken of as a great “prison house,” in which the captives of death (the Adamic or first death) await deliverance. Though dissolved in death, the identity of each being is preserved in the mind and power of God, and will be reproduced in due time by the resurrection power. Hades, the prison, the tomb, is referred to by the prophets, the Master himself, and the apostles. (Hos. 13:14; Isa. 61:1; Luke 4:18; John 5:28; 1 Cor. 13:55) The grave is really a memorial of hope; for we would not speak of it as a prison house were it not for our hopes of resurrection. If we believed that death ended existence forever, all hope of the release of the dead would vanish, and we would not think of them as in prison, nor indicate our hope by a mound.
Apply this thought to the verse under consideration, and it implies this: The Adamic death and the hopes of resurrection, which by God’s favor, were attached to it, will pass away, or be utterly destroyed, in the second death. Those who die the second death will not perish under the first sentence, because of Adam’s sin, nor have a hope of resurrection from it. Hades is never associated with the second death; for those who go into the second death are in no sense “prisoners of hope”; they are utterly destroyed, extinct, without hope of any deliverance by resurrection. Hence the propriety of hades being destroyed.
The destruction of the first death and hades commences with the beginning of the Millennial reign and continues to its close. It is a gradual process of casting into destruction. Hades (the grave), will be destroyed when all the dead in it have heard the Lord’s voice and come forth. (John 5:25) But “death” will still have hold upon these, since every ache and pain and every mental and moral imperfection is a part of the inherited Adamic penalty. The Lord’s words, “He that believeth [accepteth] not is condemned already” (John 3:18), will be as true then as they are now. The millions awakened will be still under condemnation, still in death; but the opportunity then given them to accept perfect life under the New Covenant of God’s grace will, if rejected, subject them to the second death as wilful sinners. In proportion as they render obedience to the terms of the New Covenant, progress will be made toward health, perfection and life. On the other hand, those who, after full knowledge, refuse to accept and personally apply the merit of the sacrifice of Christ, will remain under condemnation; because their wills consent to evil, they will make progress toward the second death. In the case of the obedient, death will be swallowed up of life. In the case of disobedient, death will be swallowed up of the second death. This is in harmony with Paul’s explanation {1 Cor. 15:54, 55) of Isaiah’s prophecy, “Then [when the little flock “we,” have been changed to the full divine nature and likeness and have begun to reign and bless the world then] shall be brought to pass saying that is written [Isa. 25:68], He will destroy [cast into destruction, or in symbol “the lake of fire”] in this mountain [symbol of the “Kingdom of God” or the “New Jerusalem”] the face of the covering cast over all people [death] and the vail [ignorance] that is spread over all nations. He will swallow up [the Adamic] death victoriously.”
So, then, the casting of death and the grave into utter destruction, the second death, during the Millennial age, is a part of the utter destruction which will include every improper, injurious and useless thing. (Isa. 11:9; Psa. 101:5-8) But the second death, the sentence of that individual trial, will be final; it will never be destroyed. And let all the lovers of righteousness say, Amen; for to destroy the second death, to remove the sentence of that just and impartial trial, would be to let loose again not only Satan, but all who love and practice wrong and deception, and who dishonor the Lord with their evil institutions— to oppose, offend and endeavor to overthrow those who love and desire to serve him and enjoy his favor. We rejoice that there is no danger of this, but that divine wisdom, love and power to bring in everlasting righteousness on a permanent basis.
“The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God.”—Psa. 9:17.
This statement of the Lord recorded by the Psalmist we find without any qualification whatever, and we must accept it as a positive fact. If the claims of “Orthodoxy” were true, this would be, indeed, a fearful thought.
But let us substitute the true meaning of the word sheol, and our text will read: “The wicked shall be turned into the condition of death, and all the nations that forget God.” This we believe; but next, who are the wicked? In one sense all men are wicked, in that all are violators of God’s law; but in this fullest sense the wicked are those who, with full knowledge of the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and the remedy provided for their recovery from its baneful effects, wilfully persist in sin.
As yet few—only consecrated believers— have come to a knowledge of God. The world knows him not, and the nations cannot forget God until they are first brought to a knowledge of him. The consecrated have been enlightened, led of the Spirit through faith to understand the deep and hidden things of God, which reveal the glory of God’s character, but which, though expressed in his Word, seem foolishness to the world.
As we have hitherto seen, this will not be so in the age to come, for then “The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.” (Isa. 11:9) Much that we now receive by faith will then be demonstrated to the world. When he who has ransomed man from the power of the grave (Hos. 13:14) begins to gather his purchased possessions back from the prison-house of death (Isa. 61:10, when the sleepers are awakened under the genial rays of the Sun of Righteousness, they will not be slow to realize the truth of the hitherto seemingly idle tale, that “Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every man.”
We have also seen that the gradual ascent of the king’s highway of holiness in that age will be possible to all, and comparatively easy, because all the stones—stumbling-blocks, errors, etc.—will have been gathered out, and straight paths made for men’s feet. It is in that age that this text applies. Those who ignore the favoring circumstances of that age, and will not be obedient to the righteous Judge or Ruler— Christ—will truly be the wicked. And every loyal subject of the kingdom of God will approve the righteous judgment which turns such a one again into sheol—the condition of death. Such a one would be unworthy of life; and were he permitted to live, his life would be a curse to himself and to the rest of mankind, and a blemish on the work of God.
This will be the second death, from which there will be no resurrection. Having been ransomed from the grave (sheol) by the sacrifice of Christ, if they die again on account of their own sin, “there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin.” (Heb. 10:26) “Christ dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him.”
(Rom. 6:9) The second death should be dreaded and shunned by all, since it is to be the end of existence to all those deemed unworthy of life. But in it there can be no suffering. Like the first death, it is the extinction of life.
It is because through sin mankind had become subject to death (sheol, hades) that Christ Jesus came to deliver us and save us from death. (1 John 3:8; Heb. 2:14) Death is a cessation of existence, the absence of LIFE. There is no difference between the conditions in the first and second death, but there is hope of a release from the first, while from the second there will be no release, no return to life. The first death sentence passed upon all on account of Adam’s sin, while the second death can be incurred only by wilful, individual sin.
That the application of our text belongs to the coming age is evident, for both saints and sinners go into sheol or hades now. This scripture indicates that, in the time when it applies only the wicked shall go there. And the nations that forget God must be nations that have known him, else they could not forget him; and never yet have the nations been brought to that knowledge, nor will they be until the coming time, when the knowledge of the Lord shall fill the whole earth, and none shall need to say unto his neighbor, Know thou the Lord, for all shall, know him, from the least to the greatest of them.—Isa. 11:9; Jer. 31:34.
The Hebrew word goi, rendered “nations” in this verse, is elsewhere used by the same writer and rendered “heathen, “Gentiles” and “people.” The thought seems to be any who are not God’s covenant people, even though they be not openly wicked. The nations (Gentiles, all who under that full knowledge do not become Israelites indeed) who are forgetful or negligent of God’s favors enjoyed, and of their duties and obligations to him, shall share the fate of the wilfully “wicked,” an be cast into the second death.
In further proof of this, we find that the Hebrew word shub, which in our text is translated “turned,” signifies turned back, as to a previous place or condition. Those referred to in this text have been either in sheol or liable to enter it, but, being redeemed by the precious blood of Christ, will be brought out of sheol. If then they are wicked, they, and all who forget God, shall be turned back or returned to sheol.
Noting that we teach that the doctrine of everlasting torment was engrafted upon the doctrines of the Christian church during the period of the apostasy, the great falling away which culminated in Papacy, some have inquired whether it does not seem, according to the works of Josephus, that this doctrine was firmly held by the Jews; and, if so, they ask, does it not seem evident that the early Christians, being largely converts from Judaism, brought this doctrine with them, in the very outstart of Christianity?
We answer, No, the doctrine of everlasting torment sprang naturally from the doctrine of human immortality, which as a philosophic question was first promulgated in anything like the present form by the Platonic school of
Grecian philosophy. These first affirmed that each man contained a fragment of deity, and that this would prevent him from ever dying. This foundation laid, it was as easy to describe a place for evil-doers as for well-doers. But to the credit of those heathen philosophers be it recorded that they failed to develop, or at least to manifest, that depth of degradation from benevolence and reason and pity, necessary to paint, by word and pen and brush, such details of horrors and agonies as were soon incorporated into their doctrine, and a belief thereof declared “necessary to salvation” in the professed church of Christ.
To appreciate the case, it is necessary to remember that, when the Christian church was established, Greece stood at the head of intelligence and civilization. Alexander the Great had conquered the world, and had spread respect for Greece everywhere; and though, from a military point of view, Rome had taken her place, it was otherwise in literature. For centuries, Grecian philosophers and philosophies led the intellectual world, and impregnated and effected everything. It became customary for philosophers and teachers of other theories to claim that their systems and theories were nearly the same as those of the Grecians, and to endeavor to remove differences between their old theories and the popular Grecian views. And some sought to make capital by claiming that their system embraced all the good points of Platonism with orders which Plato did not see.
Of this class were the teachers in the Christian church in the second, third, and forth centuries. Conceding the popularly accepted correctness of the philosophers, they claimed that the same good features of philosophy were found in Christ’s teachings, and that he was one of the greatest philosophers, etc. Thus a bending of Platonism and Christianity took place. This became the more pronounced as kings and emperors began to scrutinize religious teachings, and to favor those most likely to awe the people and make them lawbiding. While heathen teachers were truckling to such imperial scrutiny, and teaching an
everlasting punishment for those who violated the laws of the emperors (who ruled as divinely appointed), we cannot suppose otherwise than that the ambitious characters in the church at that time, who were seeking to displace heathenism and to become the dominant and religious power instead, would make prominent such doctrines as would in the eyes of the emperors seem to have an equal hold upon the fears and prejudices of the people. And that could be more to the purpose than the doctrine of the endless torment of the refractory?
The same motives evidently operated with Josephus when writing concerning the belief of the Jews. His works should be read as apologies for Judiasm, and as efforts to exalt that nation in the eyes of Rome and the world. It should be remembered that the Jews had the reputation of being a very rebellious people, very unwilling to be ruled even by the Caesars. They were hoping, in harmony with God’s promises, to become the chief nation. Many rebellious outbreaks had occurred among them, and their peculiar religion, differing from all others, came in for its share of blame for favoring too much the spirit of liberty.
Josephus had an object in writing his two principal works, “Antiquities” and “Wars of the Jews.” He wrote them in the Greek language while living at Rome, where he was the friend and guest successively of the Roman emperors Vespasian, Titus and Domitian, and where he was in constant contact with the Grecian philosophers. These books were written for the purpose of showing off the Jewish people, their courage, laws, ethics, etc., to the best advantage before the Grecian philosophers and Roman dignitaries. This object is covertly admitted in his preface of his “Antiquities,” in which he says:
“I have undertaken the present work as thinking it will appear to all the Greeks worthy of their study.... Those that read my book
may wonder that my discourse of laws and historical facts contains so much of philosophy . . .However those that have a mind to know the reasons of everything may find here a curious philosophical theory.”
In a word, as a shrewd man who himself had become imbued with the spirit of the Grecian philosophers then prevailing, Josephus drew from the law and the prophets, and from the traditions of the elders and theories of the various sects of the Jews, all he could find that in the most remote degree would tend to show.
First, that the Jewish religion was not far behind popular Grecian philosophy; but that somewhat analogous theories had been drawn from Moses’ law, and held by some Jews, long before the Grecian philosophers broached them.
Secondly, that it was not their religious ideas which made the Jews as a people hard to control or rebellious, as all liberty-lovers were esteemed by the Caesars. Hence he attempts to prove, at a time when virtue was esteemed to consist mainly in submission, that Moses’ law “taught first of all that God is the Father and Lord of all things, and bestows a happy life upon those that follow him, but plunges such as do not walk in the paths of virtue into inevitable miseries.” And it is in support of this idea, and for such purposes, evidently, that Josephus, after saying: “There are three philosophical sects among the Jews” first, the Pharisees; second, the Sadducees, and third, the Essenes,” proceeds to give an account of their three theories, especially detailing any features which resembled Grecian philosophy. And because of the last and least, the Essenes, most resembled the doctrines of the Stoics and leading Grecian theories, Josephus devotes nearly ten times as much space of their views as to the views of both Sadducees and Pharisees combined. And yet the Essenes were so insignificant a sect that the New testament does not mention them, while Josephus himself admits they were few. Whatever views they held, therefore, on any subject cannot be claimed as having Jewish sanction, when the vast majority of Jews held contrary opinions. The very fact that our Lord and the apostles did not refer to them is good evidence that the Essenes philosophy by no means represented the Jewish ideas. This small sect probably grew up later and probably absorbed from Grecian philosophy its ideas concerning immortality and the everlasting torment of the non-virtuous. It should be remembered that Josephus was not born until three years after our Lord’s crucifixion, and that he published his “Wars” A.D. 75 and “Antiquities” A.D. 93—at a time when he and other Jews, like all the rest of the world, were eagerly swallowing Grecian philosophy and science falsely so called against which Paul warned the church.—Col. 2:8; 1 Tim. 6:20.
Josephus directed special attention to the Essenes because it suited his object to do so. He admits that the Sadducees, next to the largest body of Jewish people, did not believe in human immortality. And of the Pharisees’ views he makes a blind statement calculated to mislead, as follows: “They also believe that souls have an immortal vigor in them [This might be understood to mean that the Pharisees did not believe as the Sadducees that death ended all existence, but believed in a vigor or life beyond the grave—by a resurrection of the dead], and that under the earth there will be rewards and punishments, according as they have lived virtuously in this life; and that the latter are to be detained in an everlasting prison [not tortured], but that the former [the virtuous] shall have power to revive and live again.”
Is it not apparent that Josephus has whittled and stretched the views of the Pharisees, as much as his elastic conscience would allow, to show a harmony between them and the philosophies of Greece? Paul, who had been a Pharisee, contradicts Josephus. While Josephus says they believed “that only the virtuous would revive and live again [Does not this imply a resurrection, and imply also that the others would not live again, but remain dead, in the great prison—the tomb?],” Paul, on the contrary, says: “I have hope toward God, which they themselves also allow, that there shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust.”—Acts 24:15.
We have no hesitancy about accepting the testimony of the inspired Apostle Paul, not only in regard to what the Jews believed, but also as to what he and the early church believed; and we repeat, that the theory of the everlasting torment of the wicked, based upon the theory that the human soul cannot die, is contrary to both the Old and New Testament teachings, and was introduced among the Jews and Christians by Grecian philosophers. Thank God for the purer philosophy of the Scriptures, which teaches that the death of the soul (being) is the penalty of sin (Ezek. 18:20); that all souls condemned through Adam’s sin were redeemed by Christ’s soul (Isa. 53:10); and that only for wilful, individual sin will any die the second death—an everlasting punishment, but not an everlasting torment!
“I have set before thee this day life and good, death and evil.” “I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live.”— Deut. 30:15, 19.
We come now to the consideration of other
Scripture statements in harmony with the conclusion set forth in the preceding articles.
The words here quoted are from Moses to Israel. To appreciate them we must remember that Israel as a people, and all their covenants, sacrifices, etc., had a typical significance.
God knew that they could not obtain life by keeping the law, no matter how much they would choose to do so, because they, like all others of the fallen race, were weak, depraved through the effect of the sour grape of sin which Adam had eaten, and which his children had continued to eat. (Jer. 31:29) Thus, as Paul declares, the law given to Israel could not give them life because of the weakness or depravity of their fallen nature.—Rom. 8:3; Heb. 7:19; 10:1-10.
Nevertheless, God foresaw a benefit to them from even an unsuccessful attempt to live perfectly; namely, that it would develop them, as well as show them the need of the better sacrifice (the ransom which our Lord Jesus gave) and a greater deliverer than Moses. And with all this their trial furnished a pattern or shadow of the individual trial insured to the whole world (which Israel typified) and secured by the better sacrifices for sin, which were there prefigured; to be accomplished by the great prophet of whom Moses was but a type.
Thus seeing that the trial for life or death presented to Israel was but typical of the individual trial of the whole world, and its issues of life and death (of eternal life or the second death), may help some to see that the great thousand-year-day of trial, of which our Lord Jesus has been appointed the Judge, contains the two issues, life and death. All will then be called upon to decide, under that most favorable opportunity, for righteousness and life or sin and death, and a choice must be made. And, although there will be rewards and “stripes” according to the deeds of the present life, as well as according to their conduct under that trial (John 3:19; Matt, 10:20-24), the verdict in the end will be in harmony with the choice expressed by the conduct of each during that age of trial. Read carefully the rules of coming age—Jer. 31: 2934; Ezek. 18:20-32. They prove to us, beyond a doubt, the sincerity and reality of all God’s professions of love to men. “As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live: Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die?” (Ezek. 33:11). When the man who steals is required to refund the stolen property to its rightful owner, with the addition of twenty per cent interests, and when the man who deceives, falsely accuses or otherwise wrongs his neighbor is required to acknowledge his crimes and so far as possible to repair damages, on peril of an eternal loss of life, will not this be retributive justice? Note the clear statement of this in God’s typical dealings with “Israel, whom he made to represent the world—1 Cor. 10:11; Lev. 6:1-7. See also Tabernacle Shadows, page 82.
The second trial, its sentence and its results, are also shown in the words of Moses quoted by Peter (Acts 3:22, 23): “A Prophet shall the
Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me. Him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. And it shall come to pass that every soul [being] which will not hear [obey] that Prophet [and thus choose life] shall be destroyed from among the people.” In few words this calls attention to the world’s great trial, yet future. It shows the great Prophet or teacher raised up by God to give a new judgment or trial to the condemned race which he has redeemed from the condemnation which came upon it through it progenitor, Adam. It shows, too, the conditions of eternal life to be righteous obedience, and that with the close of that trial some will be judged worthy of that life, and some worthy of destruction—the second death.
Our Lord Jesus, having redeemed all by his perfect and precious sacrifice, is the Head of this great Prophet; and during the Gospel age God has been selecting the members of his body, who, with Christ Jesus shall be God’s agents in judging the world. Together they will be that Great Prophet or teacher promised. “Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world?”—1 Cor. 6:2.
The Lord briefly presents the same matter in Matt. 25:31-46. There he shows the trial of the world (not the church, which as members of his body are with him in glory during the Millennial reign—judging, ruling and blessing the world), and concluding the illustration of that trial, he also shows the same two classes noted above, and their opposite rewards. The one class, who obey and come into harmony, with his arrangements, enter fully into the blessing of everlasting life, and are therefore called “blessed.” The other class, who with every opportunity obey not, experience the condemnation of death, the “second death,” and are thus “cursed” or condemned again.
The first trial was of mankind only, and hence its penalty or curse, the first death, was only upon man. But the second trial is to be much more comprehensive. It will not only be the trial of fallen and imperfect mankind, but it will include every other thing and principle and being out of harmony with Jehovah. “God will bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing.”
The “judgment to come” will include the judgment in condemnation of all false systems— civil, social and religious. These will be judged, condemned and banished early in the Millennial day, the light of truth causing them to come into disrepute and therefore to pass away. This judgment comes first in order, that the trial of man may proceed unhindered by error, prejudice, etc. It will include also the trial of the angels which sinned “—those angels “which kept not their first estate” of purity and obedience to God. Thus it is written by the Apostle of the members of the body of the great Prophet and High Priest, who is to be Judge of all: “Know ye not that the saints shall judge angels?”—1 Cor. 6:3.
This being the case the condemnation of the Millennial trial (destruction, the second death) will cover a wider range of offenders than the penalty or curse for the sin of Adam, which “passed upon all men.” In a word, the destruction at the close of that trial will be the utter destruction of every being and every thing which will not glorify God and be of use and blessing to his general creation. Thus the second death will be to the perfect future age what Gehenna, the Valley of Hinnom, was to the typical city and kingdom of Israel.
Thus seen, the Second death does not mean simply to die or be destroyed a second time; for some things will be destroyed; for instance, Satan never yet died, so it could not mean death a second time to him. So, too, some of the systems of error which will be destroyed in that Gehenna, which in the second death, were never before destroyed. Hence this second death in which they will be destroyed cannot be considered as their destruction a second time. The second death, or destruction, is the name of the destruction which will come upon every evil thing as the result or verdict of the Millennial judgment, the “judgment to come.”
The mission of this booklet has been accomplished to the reader if it has led him to see that the doctrine of “eternal torment” is not taught in the Scriptures—the Bible. If his views of the divine character and government have been enlarged and ennobled, he will want to know more; and by God’s grace we are prepared to supply him with other helps in the study of God’s Word and the divine plan for human salvation therein presented to the eye of obedient faith. We offer to such, free, a copy of THE WATCH TOWER, containing a treatise on Venial and Mortal Sins, Further Retribution, etc., showing that, while there will be no “hell torment,” there will be a “just recompense” inflicted upon “every soul of man that doeth evil.
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