Part4
Bible and Afterlife
What, then, does the Bible teach about hell and the afterlife? You may be familiar with some of the important scriptures on this topic. You may even have read right over them, taking for granted what your church taught you, or what your parents taught you as a child. Notice one very basic, yet fundamental, scripture: "For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 6:23).
Notice the sobering contrast Paul describes in this verse. Sinners earn death, not eternal life. By contrast, GodÂ’s gift is eternal life through Christ, our Savior.
The wages of sin is what? Death! Not "eternal life in torment." Your Bible makes this plain. Yet some Bible teachers try to confuse this simple truth. They want you to believe that up means down, right means wrong, and death means eternal life. But you do not have to believe their confusing tales. You can find the truth for yourself, in the pages of your own Bible.
Another much-misunderstood verse was written by the Apostle John. It is a famous verse; so famous that it is sometimes called the "golden verse" or the most precious verse in your Bible. What is it? "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life" (John 3:16).
Could John’s words be more plain? Without Jesus’ sacrifice, mankind would perish—not live eternally. To "perish" means to be destroyed, or "to come to nothing." But Jesus came so that we might not be destroyed forever. If we already had immortal life, He could not give it to us as a gift!
The book of Ezekiel also confirms the truth of what John wrote. Here, God is speaking through the prophet Ezekiel. "Behold, all souls are Mine; the soul of the father as well as the soul of the son is Mine; the soul who sins shall die" (Ezekiel 18:4). God repeats this truth a few verses later, "The soul who sins shall die" (v. 20).
The books of Ezekiel and John agree: the soul that sins shall die.
Many professing Christians have been unable to reconcile God’s mercy with the idea of an ever-burning hell fire for those who never heard the message of Jesus Christ. As a result, even some evangelicals have come to believe the truth that God will destroy the wicked forever. For example, a Christianity Today magazine article, "Is Hell Forever?", states the following: "Since 1960, several prominent British evangelicals, as well as Canadian theologian Clark Pinnock, have embraced this [annihilationist] view. John Stott has likewise expressed sympathy for annihilationism while choosing to remain ‘agnostic’ on the question" (October 5, 199
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The Evangelical Alliance UK sponsored an extensively researched report titled "The Nature of Hell." Christianity Today magazine wrote: "the report, The Nature of Hell, produced by five experts, also acknowledges a growing belief among evangelicals in ‘conditionalism,’ according to which, after judgment, sinners will be annihilated—something that is seen as a more merciful fate than the pit of unending torment" (April 17, 2000).