Questions on Hell
Lesson 12
1. What will God rain upon the wicked?
Psalm 11:6
2. From where will the fire come?
Revelation 20:9
3. When will this happen?
Revelation 20:7
For information on the thousand years see lesson 5.
4. The Lord is reserving the unjust until when to be
punished?
2 Peter 2:9
5. As the tares are gathered and burned in the fire,
so shall it be when?
Matthew 13:40
6. How does the Bible describe the agony the wicked
will experience?
Matthew 13:42
7. All the wicked shall have their part in the lake
that burns with fire
and brimstone which is what?
Revelation 21:8
8. How do we know that the place of torment is not
underground?
Revelation 20:9
9. What all will be burned on the day of judgment and
perdition of
ungodly men?
2 Peter 3:7
10. How does God feel about the punishment of the
wicked?
Ezekiel 33:11
11. Has God willed for certain ones to perish?
2 Peter 3:9
12. For whom is the fire prepared?
Matthew 25:41
13. Who will be cast into the lake of fire and
brimstone with the beast
and false prophet?
Revelation 20:10
14. What will the Lord do to all the wicked?
Psalm 145:20
15. It is better to lose an eye or a hand, instead of
having how much of
our body cast into hell?
Matthew 5:29, 30
16. Is one’s physical body the only thing that hell
will destroy?
Matthew 10:28
17. God will punish according to what?
Jeremiah 21:14
18. Who will receive many stripes?
Luke 12:47
19. Who will receive few stripes?
Luke 12:48
20. When the day comes that shall burn as an oven, all
that do wickedly
shall be what?
Malachi 4:1
21. How thoroughly will the day that cometh burn them?
And what will be
left on them?
Malachi 4:1
22. Ye shall tread down the wicked; for they shall be
what?
Malachi 4:3
23. The flames will devour them as what?
Nahum 1:10
“The candle of the wicked shall be put out.” Proverbs
24:20.
24. They shall be as though what?
Obadiah 16
25. How completely will the fire burn Satan?
Ezekiel 28:18
26. Will Satan ever be any more?
Ezekiel 28:19
27. What may we conclude about ultimate justice and
about God?
Psalm 58:11
For further study on this subject see TLD Information
Booklet “C”
entitled, Biblical Expressions, Biblical Explanations.
In the Light of God’s Word....(Please respond YES or
NO)
I understand that the punishment of the wicked will
take place at the end
of the 1000 years.
I understand that the flames will inflict the second
death, forever
extinguishing the life of the sinner.
I understand that that fire will also burn up the
heavens and the earth
which are now, and that God will create new heavens
and a new
earth wherein dwelleth righteousness.
Additional Comments:
Name:
Next Lesson: The Mystery of Godliness
These Last Days Information Booklet C
Supplement to Lesson 12
Biblical Expressions, Biblical Explanations
Will Sinners Burn Forever?
Everlasting Fire
The Word "Hell" in the Bible
The Rich Man and Lazarus
Will Sinners Burn Forever?
The doctrine of endless burning of sinners is not
taught anywhere in the
Bible. Nowhere does it say that God will sustain the
lives of those who
transgress His law.
So what do you do when you find an occasional
expression in the Bible
that initially seems to contradict the clearest
Biblical passages on a
subject? There is only one safe course to follow:
Always let the Bible
explain its own terms. By examining the Bible's own
use of a particular
expression, you discover the perfect agreement that
exists throughout the
Bible on the subject.
Some people are misled by the expression "unquenchable
fire." This term
is used in Matthew 3:12; Mark 9:43-48; and Luke 3:17.
Does the fact that
the fire is unquenchable mean that sinners will burn
forever?
Let's ask the Bible to show us an actual example of
this kind of fire.
Through Jeremiah, God prophesied that if His people
would not hallow the
Sabbath, Jerusalem would be burned with fire which
"shall not be
quenched" (Jeremiah 17:27). That prophecy was
fulfilled (2 Chronicles
36:19-21; Jeremiah 52:12, 13). But notice that
although fire could not
be quenched the fuel was consumed!
In Isaiah we read that the wicked will "burn together,
and none shall
quench them" (Isaiah 1:31). Yet the same chapter
explains that they
"shall be consumed" (Isaiah 1:28)!
Did you know that the Bible has also recorded for us
an example of a time
when "eternal fire" was used? Jude 7 says that "Sodom
and Gomorrha, and
the cities about them...are set forth for an example,
suffering the
vengeance of eternal fire." The story is recorded in
Genesis 19.
According to this example, how thoroughly does eternal
fire burn things?
The answer is found in 2 Peter 2:6, "Turning the
cities of Sodom and
Gomorrha into ashes...making them an ensample unto
those that after
should live ungodly."
The Bible indicates that those involved in the final
conflict against God
will be tormented day and night "for ever and ever"
(Revelation 14:11;
20:10). How long, in the Biblical sense of the word,
is "for ever and
ever?" Are there any Biblical examples of this
measurement of time?
Here is one. In the Jewish economy, all Hebrew
servants were released
every seventh year. But if one should choose not to
leave his master,
"his master shall bore his ear through with an aul;
and he shall serve
him for ever" (Exodus 21:6). Obviously "for ever"
only means "as long as
he lives."
Here is another example. Hannah dedicated her child
Samuel to the Lord
and took him to the house of the Lord that he might
"there abide for
ever" (1 Samuel 1:22). She clarified the meaning of
her words in verse
28 by saying, "as long as he liveth."
The term "eternal punishing" is not found in the
Bible. However, Jesus
did speak of "everlasting punishment" (Matthew 25:46).
Do you know the
difference? What is the punishment for sin? "The
wages of sin is death"
(Romans 6:23). Everlasting death. The Scriptures
clearly foretell the
fate of the wicked "whose end is destruction"
(Philippians 3:19).
"Everlasting destruction" (2 Thessalonians 1:9).
"Thou hast destroyed
the wicked, thou hast put out their name for ever and
ever. O thou
enemy, destructions are come to a perpetual end:
and...their memorial is
perished with them" (Psalm 9:5, 6). "This is the
second death"
(Revelation 20:14). The Bible is very clear on this
subject. (See Job
8:22; 20:4-9; Psalm 1:6; 21:9; 37:38; Proverbs 2:22;
Isaiah 65:17;
Zephaniah 1:18).
Everlasting Fire
Follow the Bible's teaching on this important subject:
Q: What kind of fire will be used to destroy the
wicked?
A: "Unquenchable fire." Matthew 3:12. "Fire that
never shall be
quenched." Mark 9:43-48. "Fire unquenchable." Luke
3:17. "Everlasting
fire." Matthew 25:41.
Q: What is the source of this never-ending fire?
A: "Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah
brimstone and fire
from the Lord out of heaven." Genesis 19:24. "From
God out of heaven."
Revelation 20:9.
Q: What do we know about the nature of the eternal
God?
A: "Our God is a consuming fire." Hebrews 12:29. "His
throne was like
the fiery flame, and his wheels as burning fire. A
fiery stream issued
and came forth before him." Daniel 7:9,10. "And the
sight of the glory
of the Lord was like devouring fire." Exodus 24:17.
Q: What ingredient accompanies the fire which is
continually in the
presence of God?
A: "And mount Sinai was altogether on a smoke, because
the Lord descended
upon it in fire: and the smoke thereof ascended as the
smoke of a
furnace." Exodus 19:18. "There went up a smoke out of
his nostrils, and
fire out of his mouth devoured: coals were kindled by
it." 2 Samuel 22:9.
"I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and
lifted up, and his
train filled the temple...and the house was filled
with smoke." Isaiah
6:1-4. "And the temple was filled with smoke from the
glory of God, and
from his power." Revelation 15:8.
Q: What happens to the wicked in the divine presence?
A: "And he said, Thou canst not see my face: for there
shall no man see
me, and live." Exodus 33:20. "He shall be tormented
with fire and
brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in
the presence of the
Lamb." Revelation 14:10.
Q: What is the effect of the fire upon the wicked?
A: "And there went out fire from the Lord, and
devoured them, and they
died before the Lord." Leviticus 10:2. "And there
came out a fire from
the Lord and consumed the two hundred and fifty men."
Numbers 16:35.
Q: Only what kind of people can survive in the midst
of God's everlasting
fire?
A: "Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire?
who among us shall
dwell with everlasting burnings? He that walketh
righteously, and
speaketh uprightly." Isaiah 33:14, 15.
Q: Will the righteous be able to dwell in the actual
presence of God?
A: "He will dwell with them, and they shall be his
people, and God
himself shall be with them, and be their God."
Revelation 21:3. "Thou
wast upon the holy mountain of God; thou hast walked
up and down in the
midst of the stones of fire." Ezekiel 28:14.
Q: So the righteous will dwell and prosper in the very
fire that consumes
the wicked?
A: "For, behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an
oven; and all the
proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be
stubble: and the day that
cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts,
that it shall leave
them neither root nor branch. But unto you that fear
my name shall the
Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings;
and ye shall go
forth, and grow up as calves of the stall. And ye
shall tread down the
wicked; for they shall be ashes under the soles of
your feet in the day
that I shall do this, saith the Lord of hosts."
Malachi 4:1-3.
Q: How has this contrasting effect been illustrated in
the Bible?
A: "The flame of the fire slew those men that took up
Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abednego." "He answered and said, Lo, I see four
men loose, walking
in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and
the form of the
fourth is like the Son of God." Daniel 3:22, 25.
Q: When the Lord appears, from what will the wicked
seek to hide?
A: "Hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the
throne, and from the
wrath of the Lamb." Revelation 6:16.
Q: What is the important question?
A: "For the great day of his wrath is come; and who
shall be able to
stand?" Revelation 6:17.
Q: What is the answer?
A: "These are they which...have washed their robes,
and made them white
in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore are they before
the throne of God,
and serve him day and night in his temple: and he that
sitteth on the
throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no
more, neither shall
the sun light on them, nor any heat." Revelation
7:14-16.
Conclusion:
The everlasting fire of which the Bible speaks is the
fire of the
presence of God. In it sinners cannot exist. Only
those who have been
cleansed from all unrighteousness will dwell in the
presence of the holy
God forever.
The Word "Hell" in the Bible
Many people do not realize that there are actually
four different
original words which are translated "hell" in the
Bible. The confusing
part is that the four original words do not all have
the same meaning.
If one attempts to combine the meanings of all four
words into one
composite concept, he not only emerges with a very
confusing picture of
the fate of the wicked, but he also does injustice to
the Bible's intent.
The word "hell" is used 54 times in the Bible: 31
times in the Old
Testament, and 23 times in the New Testament.
Every time you see the word "hell" in the Old
Testament, you can know
that the Hebrew word used there is sheol, which means
"the grave" (See
Jonah 2:2, margin). In half of the instances in which
sheol is used, the
translators rendered it "hell." In half, they used
the word "grave."
Nowhere in Scripture does sheol denote a place of
torment in which
bodiless beings suffer.
The Bible makes it clear that all people, both
righteous and wicked, go
to sheol when they die! The patriarch Jacob said he
would go to sheol
when he died, and his son Joseph would go to sheol
also (Genesis 37:35)!
Righteous Job used the word sheol when speaking of his
own resting place
(Job 17:13). There everyone unconsciously awaits the
resurrection.
The New Testament contains three Greek words which are
translated "hell."
And they each mean something different.
Ten of the 23 New Testament references are translated
from the word
hades, which is simply the Greek equivalent of sheol,
and means "the
grave." (Matthew 11:23; 16:18; Luke 10:15; 16:23;
Acts 2:27, 31;
Revelation 1:18; 6:8; 20:13, 14.) Hades is not
associated with
conscious torment anywhere in the Bible except in a
parable found in Luke
16:23 (See separate discussion of this parable.)
In 12 instances the Greek word gehenna is translated
"hell." (Matthew
5:22, 29, 30; 10:28; 18:9; 23:15, 33; Mark 9:43, 45,
47; Luke 12:5; James
3:6.) Gehenna, or "Valley of Hinnom," is mentioned
repeatedly in the Old
Testament (Joshua 15:8; 2 Kings 23:10; 2 Chronicles
33:6; Jeremiah 7:31).
It is a gorge near Jerusalem in which idolatrous
kings burned their
children as a sacrifice to the heathen god Molech (2
Chronicles 28:3;
33:1, 6). Because of this abomination, the Lord
declared that He would
make it a "valley of slaughter" for His rebellious
people where the fowls
of heaven would eat the corpses which could not be
buried for lack of
room (Jeremiah 7:32, 33; 19:6, 7).
The same valley was later used as a refuse dump where
animal carcasses
and rubbish were continually burned. Such places are
generally infested
with maggots which help decompose the refuse (Mark
9:44). Thus gehenna
became associated in Jewish thought with the place of
final punishment.
Therefore Jesus used it as an illustration of the fire
which will burn
the wicked in the final day of judgment. Nowhere does
the Bible say that
the sinner is cast into gehenna at the moment of
death. The Bible
clearly says that the fire that burns the wicked will
not touch them
until the final day of judgment.
The word "hell" is used in only one other place in
Scripture, 2 Peter
2:4. Here the Greek word tartaros is used, which
means "the deepest
abyss." Peter used this term when speaking of the
banishment of the
rebellious angels from heaven.
To summarize: Of the four words translated "hell," we
have seen that the
Bible distinguishes three separate concepts:
1. Sheol or hades: The grave where all people go at
death to
unconsciously await either the resurrection of life or
the resurrection
of damnation.
2. Gehenna: A place of burning, used as an
illustration of the fire
which will one day destroy the earth and totally
consume the wicked.
3. Tartaros: Used only one time in Scripture, but
never in reference to
the destiny of man.
The Rich Man and Lazarus
In all the Bible there is only one passage which
speaks of conscious
suffering in death Luke 16:19-31. The inspired
testimony of the rest of
Scripture teaches that death is a sleep, and
punishment is future. The
purpose of this allegory was not to describe the state
of the dead. But
the parable does teach several important points.
It definitely teaches that every person will reap what
he sows. God will
not bend the rules in order to spare those who have
consistently spurned
His grace. The parable teaches that in this life men
decide their
eternal destiny. While they are alive God's grace is
offered to all
people. But if they selfishly waste their lives, and
fail to take
eternity into consideration now, they have lost their
opportunity for
eternal life. There will be no chance to repent after
they die.
The parable also is a warning to those who trust in
their riches rather
than in God. And it tells that the time is coming
when those who are
poor in this world's goods but have trusted in God,
will be exalted.
When the parable is closely examined, it is doubtful
that anyone would
claim its details as the basis for a doctrinal
position on the subject of
life after death. The details certainly do not
present the beliefs of
those who teach the immediate torment of a bodiless
"soul" at death.
For example:
1. In the parable, there is no mention of a bodiless
soul at all. The
rich man was in hell with a body. He had eyes, a
tongue, etc. No one
believes that the bodies of the wicked go into the
flames as soon as they
die.
2. Nobody believes that Abrahams's literal bosom is
the abode of the
righteous dead. In keeping with the nature of the
allegory, this is
obviously a figure of speech. Incidently, the angels
will gather the
saints (verse 22), but according to Matthew 24:31,
that takes place at
the coming of Jesus not at death.
3. Another point is that paradise and hades are here
pictured to be so
situated that their inhabitants may hold normal
conversation with each
other across the gulf. But the Bible says that for
the redeemed, the
former earth will "not be remembered, nor come into
mind" (Isaiah 65:17).
4. The rich man's request in verse 24 is hardly
characteristic of
someone in his condition. Here he is, his body on
fire, and all he asks
for is that Lazarus dip the tip of his finger in water
and then come and
touch his tongue. How much relief could he expect to
get from that?
Especially after Lazarus has to traverse the gulf and
make his way
through the flames to get to him. How much moisture
did he think would
be left on his finger after such a journey? No one
believes that this
type of thing takes place between the righteous and
the wicked after
death.
5. In speaking of the request for Lazarus to go and
warn the rich man's
living brothers, the Bible says that Lazarus would
have had to have "rose
from the dead." (Verse 31). Far from supporting the
idea of conscious
communication or mobility in death, this gives support
to the fact that
in order for Lazarus to do anything at all he would
have to be
resurrected!
6. In the parable, Jesus points us to the source of
divine instruction:
"They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them"
(verse 29). That
is where we must look to learn the fate of the wicked.
Jesus made the details of His story so obviously
unreal that no one would
take them literally. He wanted His hearers instead to
focus on the
lessons brought out in the parable.
Apart from the intended point or moral of the story we
cannot base
doctrinal beliefs on the incidentals of an allegory.
For instance, a
thistle cannot ask for the daughter of a cedar for the
wife of its son (2
Kings 14:9). Neither can trees go forth to anoint a
king over themselves
(Judges 9:8-15). When dealing with parables, ask
yourself, "What is the
speaker trying to illustrate by this parable?" Then
if you want to know
about the nature of trees or the nature of dead
people, go to a passage
where that is the topic of discussion.