Hell, Eternity, and the God Who Does Not Abandon
"For the Son of Man came to seek out and to save the
lost." (Luke 19:10)
Introduction
Having considered previously how grace and freedom coexist
under divine foreknowledge and how that grace is intimate, sufficient, and
suited to each soul, we must now ask about eternal damnation.
Some objections to hell arise from anger or wounded
experience. The most serious arises from love: the refusal to believe that the
God revealed in Jesus Christ could eternally abandon a creature He made and
died for. This objection is not sentimental but theological, and it has been
pressed by serious minds across the centuries.
Gregory of Nyssa envisioned a final universal restoration
(apokatastasis) in which all rational creatures would ultimately return to God
after purification. Origen had earlier proposed a more systematic universalism
that included even the restoration of demons, a position later condemned at the
Second Council of Constantinople (553). Gregory's more cautious hope was never
condemned nor formally endorsed. In modern theology, David Bentley Hart has
renewed the universalist challenge, arguing that no creature fully perceiving
the infinite good could finally refuse it. A permanent hell, on this account,
would mean the eternal defeat of infinite divine love by finite, wounded wills,
a conclusion that sits uneasily with any doctrine of divine omnipotence.
What follows attempts to show that the Church's affirmation
of hell as real and eternal is not the cruel appendix to the Gospel it is
sometimes taken to be, but the necessary consequence of taking both divine love
and human freedom seriously.
1. What the Church Teaches
The Catholic Church teaches that hell is real, that it is
eternal, and that it consists in definitive self-exclusion from communion with
God (§1033). Not divine torture, nor arbitrary abandonment, but the final
consequence of a freedom exercised against the God who is Love. The primary
suffering of hell is the loss of God, the punishment of deprivation, which is
the deepest loss possible for a creature made for communion with Him (§1035).
Two things are worth noting at the outset. First, the Church
has never declared any person to be in hell. The possibility is real; the
census is unknown. That restraint is not indifference to evil or its victims.
It is fidelity to a God whose mercy the Church trusts more than anger or
retribution. Second, Hans Urs von Balthasar argued that while hell must be
affirmed as real, Christians may legitimately hope that all may be saved. Unlike
Hart, who argues that universal salvation is a logical necessity, Balthasar
insisted that hope is not certainty and that the warnings of Scripture remain
real and serious. The Church has not condemned this, but she does not teach
universal salvation. The tension between the warning and hope is not a defect
to be resolved. It is a guardrail to be respected.
2. Two Temptations
It is worth naming two temptations that any account of hell
will provoke. Each, if pushed too far, risks distorting the doctrine it seeks
to protect.
The first temptation is to say that any relational,
freedom-centred account of hell is too soft. Scripture speaks of judgement with
urgency. Christ's warnings are stark calls to repentance. The medieval councils
did not speak the language of self-exclusion and relational tragedy; they spoke
of punishment, of eternal fire. If hell begins to feel hypothetical, the
urgency of conversion drains away, and mercy invoked too readily evacuates
judgement of its force.
The second temptation is claiming that this account
does not go far enough. If God is both omnipotent and perfectly loving, how
could His purposes be eternally frustrated? Eternal separation looks less like
respect for freedom and more like a failure of love.
Press the first too hard, and God becomes a warden whose
justice finally eclipses His mercy. Press the second too far, and human freedom
becomes provisional, its refusals ultimately meaningless. Catholic theology
stands between these temptations, not because it has solved the mystery, but
because it refuses to simplify it.
3. The Eastern Witness
Eastern Christian theology illuminates this from a different
angle. Where Western theology has often framed hell primarily in juridical
terms of punishment, satisfaction, and the demands of justice, the Eastern
tradition asks a prior question: what is God doing in relation to the creature,
and what does the creature do in return?
Heaven and hell, in this tradition, are not two separate
realms with God present in one and absent from the other. Instead, there are
two ways of experiencing the same divine presence. God is unchanging love, what
the tradition calls an eternal fire of self-giving. For those who have become
open to Him through grace and cooperation, that fire is experienced as warmth,
light, and joy. For those who have closed themselves against Him, that same
fire is experienced as burning. Isaac of Nineveh, the seventh-century Syrian
mystic, expressed it this way: the torments of hell are the pangs of love
itself, the grief of a soul that recognises, too late, what it refused.
This insight preserves something the Western juridical
tradition can obscure. God does not switch modes at death. He does not become
punitive. He does not abandon. The tragedy of hell is not that love withdraws,
but that love itself becomes unbearable to the one who has refused it, like
light to eyes that have chosen darkness, or music to ears that have learned to
hate the song.
The Catholic and Orthodox traditions differ in their
metaphysical framing. The West speaks of deprivation and punishment; the East
of presence experienced as torment. But they converge on something essential:
hell is relational, not simply penal. It is not primarily a place to which God
sends those who have failed a transaction. It is the condition of a person who
has, through persistent refusal, made themselves unable to receive what they
were made for.
4. Grace Before Any Refusal
Before the question of resistance, there is grace. No one
arrives at refusal unaided, and no one awakens to repentance without it (John
6:44). In the parable of the Prodigal Son, the moment of clarity in the far
country, the painful capacity to see his situation without illusion, to want
what he could not want before, is itself a gift. The Father's love was already
reaching him, making a return possible before the son had taken a single step
toward home.
Grace is prior, both as a sanctifying gift that transforms
the soul and as the moment-by-moment help that illumines the mind and
strengthens the will in each struggle. God does not encounter a soul at birth
and improvise. He knows each person with an intimacy that is before and
constitutive of their entire existence. The grace offered across a lifetime is
addressed to this soul, in this life, with this history. A final refusal, if it
exists, would be the refusal of a love this thorough and this personal. That is
what makes it tragic beyond ordinary reckoning.
The struggling sinner who keeps turning back, however
haltingly, however repeatedly, is not moving toward damnation. He is responding
to grace. Hell, if real, is not the destiny of the weak, the wounded, or the
doubting, but of those definitively and finally closed to the offer of grace.
5. The Self-Exclusion of the Garmentless Man
The parable of the Great Banquet offers the clearest
scriptural image of hell as self-exclusion (Matthew 22:1-14). A king hosts a
wedding feast and sends servants to the highways and byways in an act of
radical, unmerited inclusion. In the culture of the time, kings provided
wedding garments for guests who could not afford their own. The garment was
offered at the door, freely, to everyone.
One man at the feast is found without it. The king asks how
he entered without a wedding robe. The man is speechless and cast out. That
silence is the key. There is no explanation for refusing what was freely
available. He is not cast out for lacking something unattainable. He declined
what was offered. His silence is the image of a freedom that has closed itself
against grace it could have accepted, and finds no justification for having
done so.
6. Eternity, Freedom, and the Universalist Challenge
The sharpest objection to hell is not its existence but its
permanence. Why would freedom be locked in at death? Why would the Father ever
cease to entreat?
In earthly life, we are creatures of becoming, of
deliberation, repentance, reconsideration, and growth. Our loves are unstable,
divided, and often contradictory. We change our minds. We turn back. This is
what it means to be a free creature living in time.
What follows death is not simply more time. Aquinas,
reflecting on the angels, argued that purely spiritual beings do not deliberate
over time as we do. Their knowledge is immediate, and their fundamental choice
expresses the whole of what they are in a single act. Death brings the human
soul into something analogous: not more time for reconsideration, but the
moment when a lifetime of becoming stands revealed as what it has chosen to be.
The soul that dies oriented toward God enters purification; the soul that dies
oriented finally away from Him has already made its choice complete. This is
also why purgatory is not a second chance for those who refused every chance:
it heals and perfects a will already turned toward God (§§1030-1032), but
cannot reverse a fundamental closing of the will against Him.
Hart's argument goes deeper. He is not simply saying that
confused or wounded people will eventually see clearly. He is making a claim
about what creatures are: that we are constituted by our nature to be oriented
toward God as our end, and that a permanent hell would mean a creature existing
forever against the grain of its own deepest nature, which Hart finds
ontologically incoherent. Infinite love, drawing on a nature made for it, must
eventually prevail.
The Catholic response accepts part of this and then presses
what it leaves unexamined. Yes, a soul in hell would be a soul in permanent
contradiction with what it was made for. The Eastern tradition already says as
much: hell is not God's absence but love experienced as burning. Hart does not
sufficiently reckon with what freedom can do to nature. Freedom does not merely
express the self; over time, it forms one. A person who has consistently
preferred self-possession to gift, autonomy to dependence, the position of the
earner to the position of the receiver, may have become someone for whom grace
is not only undesirable but constitutively intolerable. Not from blindness, for
the elder brother sees perfectly well, but from a self that has been shaped,
through long habit, into something that experiences the feast itself as an
affront.
Hart assumes that nature must finally overpower such a self.
Catholic theology is not so sure, because it takes seriously what freedom can
make of a person. The contradiction Hart identifies is real. What remains
genuinely open is whether a sufficiently habituated will can entrench itself
within that contradiction permanently, clinging to its own self-consistency
against the very nature it has disfigured.
This is where the Church draws her line: not against
Gregory's hope, not against Balthasar's permission to hope that all may finally
say yes, but against the conclusion that love's victory is guaranteed, because
a guarantee is precisely what removes the freedom that makes love's reception
real.
7. The Cross
None of this is abstract. It turns on the Cross. Catholic
theology understands Christ's descent into the realm of the dead as a real
entry into the furthest reaches of human alienation (§§632-637). He undergoes
it. He cries out from within it: "My God, my God, why have you forsaken
me?" (Mark 15:34). No human darkness lies beyond His solidarity. And yet
the crucified Christ does not compel. The Cross persuades; it does not
overpower. He invites the thief; He does not override his freedom. The Cross
reveals a God who persuades unto death, who gives Himself without reserve.
If eternal separation is possible, it is not because God
ceases to love, nor because the Cross was insufficient. It would be because
love, by its very nature, cannot finally coerce what it most desires to receive
freely.
Conclusion
The Catholic position holds two things in permanent tension:
a Love that will not give up, and a freedom that can finally refuse. Neither
can be dissolved without losing something essential. Deny eternal hell
entirely, and freedom becomes theatre. Assert it crudely, and the face of God
becomes unrecognisable.
The Church prays for all. She canonises saints but damns no
one by name. She holds both warning and hope, because both are true, and
because a God who is Love cannot be less than either. She kneels before the
mystery where justice and mercy meet.
Whatever eternity holds, it will not be less loving than
Calvary. And if hell exists, it is not a doctrine to wield triumphantly, but
one to weep over.
Epilogue: The Door That Stands Open
The parable of the Prodigal Son ends without telling us
whether the elder brother enters the feast. The Father goes out and entreats
him. The light spills from the open door. The parable falls silent. That
silence is not evasion. It is honesty about what freedom means and what love
endures.
The elder brother's danger is not dramatic rebellion. It is
hardened resentment, a refusal to celebrate the Father's mercy that has
calcified into something that finds the feast intolerable. What began as
faithful service had become a claim. The greatest danger the parable names is
the insistence on being the source of one's own goodness, clinging to one's
virtue as a possession rather than a gift. Pride experiences grace as an
affront. The very gift that could save becomes unbearable to a heart determined
to possess rather than receive. C.S. Lewis called hell the door locked on the
inside. The elder brother is the image given a human face.
And yet the Father is still outside, still entreating. The
parable does not say he gives up. It does not say the door closes. It simply
ends, leaving the question and the freedom exactly where they belong: in the
hands of the one who must choose whether to go in.
Some have reflected that Christ met Judas with open arms on
the threshold between life and death. Whether or not that reflection has firm
roots, it is coherent with everything this essay has suggested: that the arms
are open to the last, that grace pursues to the furthest point, that even at
the threshold between life and death, the offer is not withdrawn.
The Church does not teach a second probation, more time
after death in which to reconsider. The soul's departure from the body is known
fully only to God. What meets the soul at that boundary is not more time. It is
the fullness of what time was always moving toward: a single, total encounter
with the One it has spent a lifetime approaching or evading. Not an extension
of earthly life, but the collapse of all time into a single moment of
recognition in which the soul sees, truly and completely, what it has done and
Who it has approached or refused, and responds with a freedom that is, for the
first time, its own.
This is not a new offer. It is the same offer, finally
encountered without the distortions that obscured it throughout life. Few of us
ever chose with truly unconditioned freedom. We were shaped by what we did not
ask for, wounded by what we did not deserve. What is "completely its
own" in that moment is not something new. It is what was always most truly
the person, finally met by a grace that knows every wound that distorted it.
This is what the open arms tradition is really pointing
toward. Christ does not meet Judas in some chronological extension beyond
death. He meets him at the threshold, offering in that single encounter what He
had been offering across an entire lifetime. We do not know whether Judas, in
that moment of clarity, finally said yes. That the offer was made, we may hope.
And what may be true for Judas may also be true for every soul. The
universalist hope remains possible, but it is not guaranteed. It is trusted to
mercy.
This is the Eastern tradition's most searching intuition,
and it presses the question with almost devastating simplicity. The soul that
sees Love clearly sees itself clearly, and the two sights are the same sight.
In that moment of final clarity, illusion is stripped away. What remains is the
truth of what the soul has become.
And here the Catholic response to Hart finds its sharpest
edge. Hart is right that clarity changes everything. He is wrong that clarity
guarantees acceptance. Because what the soul sees at the threshold is not only
Love. It sees itself, perhaps for the first time, without distortion: sees what
it has made itself through a lifetime of choosing. A will so curved in upon
itself that it has come to experience gift as a slight, dependence as
humiliation, and grace as an intolerable claim upon its self-sufficiency, may,
even standing before unveiled Love, prefer to remain what it has become rather
than surrender it. This is not ignorance or confusion. It is the act of a
freedom that has formed itself, through long habit, into something that recoils
from the very light it was made for. Not madness, but a terrible
self-consistency. Not blindness, but a will that sees and still turns away.
The tradition does not shrink from this. The damned know
precisely what they have lost and know that God is good. That knowledge does
not release them. It torments them. This is not incomplete clarity. It is
clarity without the capacity for reception, recognition without openness, sight
without the ability to receive what is seen. The disease Hart identifies is
real. What he does not reckon with is that freedom, exercised long enough in
one direction, can make that disease the self's own chosen identity, and that
an omnipotent God who overrode it would not be healing a person but replacing
one.
The Church teaches that freedom can refuse God and that hell
is real. But she has never said that any soul has made that final refusal. And
she has never said that the moment of ultimate clarity, that last grace offered
in the act of dying, while the soul still stands between time and eternity, might
not itself be the very thing that heals a lifetime of resistance.
We do not know. The universalist hope remains possible, not
because Hart's logic compels it, but because infinite love and infinite wisdom
may have ordered things such that no soul, finally seeing clearly, chooses to
remain what it has become. That hope is not guaranteed. It is trusted to mercy.
Gregory of Nyssa hoped that no soul would hold out against Love
forever. The Church does not require us to share that hope. But she does not
forbid it. And if that hope extends to every soul, it extends most tenderly to
those whose freedom was most damaged before it was ever truly their own. Few,
if any of us, have chosen with fully unconditioned freedom. We have all been
shaped by what we did not ask for, wounded by what we did not deserve, limited
by what we could not control. Grace, the Catholic tradition insists, can
overcome every obstacle, however deeply embedded, however early the damage was
done. The God who wills all to be saved knows each soul's wounds with the same
completeness with which He knows its capacity.
That is not a footnote to the Gospel. It is the Gospel.
And the most honest place to end is here. Not with a
verdict, but with the Father still standing at the threshold, the light still
spilling from the open door, and with Christ, His arms open, the invitation
still available.
Notes
Catechism of the Catholic Church: On hell §§1033-1037 / On
purgatory §§1030-1032 / On Christ's descent §§632-637 https://www.catechism.cc/catechisms/catechism.htm
Gregory of Nyssa, On the Soul and the Resurrection https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/2915.htm
Origen's universalism and The Second Council of
Constantinople (553) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origenist_crises
Hans Urs von Balthasar, Dare We Hope "That All Men Be
Saved"? https://archive.org/details/darewehopethatal0000balt
David Bentley Hart, That All Shall Be Saved (Yale University
Press, 2019) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/That_All_Shall_Be_Saved
Isaac of Nineveh, Ascetical Homilies, Homily 27 https://orthodoxwiki.org/Isaac_of_Syria
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae (I, q.64, a.2) https://www.ccel.org/ccel/aquinas/summa.toc.html

Thank you for all these thoughtful pieces on a difficult subject. Just a couple of observations, without repeating everything I've already said on the subject:
ReplyDeleteYou are correct that, in the Eastern tradition, all souls experience the pure and unadulterated love of God. For souls attuned to God, this is bliss; to those who are not, it's torment. Our own experience shows us that even exposure to intense, temporal human love can be painful, and icons of the Theotokos and child reflect the severity of this love: the Virgin doesn't appear joyous in many of them. How much more painful is exposure to divine love, particularly for the impure soul. This makes more sense than 'hell' being the absence of God. The idea of a place where God 'is not' is metaphysically problematic: God created the universe from nothing, therefore there is nothing that is outside of God and there can logically be no place where God is not. To be outside of God would be to not exist. God may 'hide his face', but cannot be absent.
I think we have to be careful with parables: they were intended to teach specific answers to specific people in specific circumstances, and there is a danger in extrapolating from them. As Bankei-zenji said, drawing universal applications from specific teachings is like a man in a boat who loses his sword overboard, paints an X on the side of the boat to mark the place where he dropped it, and then rows back to the shore for a net to retrieve it. The Wedding Garment parable is not a description of the afterlife. Rather, it's an explicit illustration that, since Christ 'came to His own, and His own did not receive Him', the Kingdom is thrown open to 'as many as did receive Him'. This discourse begins in Mat.21, where Christ enters Jerusalem as King, but is rejected by the chief priests. Christ rebukes them, and tells a series of parables against them - the Two Sons, the Tenants in the Vineyard, the Wedding Garment. These all assert that God gives preference to the 'outsiders' (i.e., the Gentiles and those excluded from Temple worship (21:32)) who follow his teachings, over those who assume that the Kingdom is theirs by right (i.e., the Jewish religious establishment etc.). This is a constant theme throughout St. Matthew's Gospel: that it is insufficient 'to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father' (cf. St. Paul's warning about 'confidence in the flesh' in Phil. 3). Even so, one must still be 'clothed with Christ' to enter the Kingdom - it requires a human response. But the imagery here is of entering a kingdom which Matthew emphasises is immanent (Mat 3:2, cf. Lk 17:20-21), not eschatological. In short, I don't think that we can draw eternal conclusions from it.
I still don't see an argument for why death locks the soul into a certain state, only a rationale for how it does so, which feels like working backwards from an assumed outcome. It also seems to me that both the doctrines of fallen angelic beings and of purgatory require something like time in the non-material world: souls in purgatory transition from impure to purified, and Satan and the fallen angels were created good, but rebelled and fell. Even accounting for the shortfall of language when describing these things, they are transitional events that require sequential non-identical states of change (which we would call 'time'). If angels are allowed to fall, and souls are allowed to be purified, then it seems a (particularly unmerciful) omission that other souls aren't allowed to change their minds.
雲水,
DeleteDeath seems to be conceptualised in a variety of ways in the Bible... Gadjo has a mind to look for a book about it. He ventures to say, however, that death can be a process but that it always must have an end-point, which might be what then "locks the soul into a certain state," a state of non-being.
Are we speaking of death as the decay and cessation of life in an organic organism, or as our state afterwards, or as life in the 'next age'? If the first, then yes - death is a process that culminates in the expiration of the organism. If either of the other two, then I'm not convinced that they 'must' have an end-point. They may have a culmination in the 'new heaven and new earth' of Rev. 21, when all things are 'made new', but I don't see any indication there that this is a point of stasis. Logically, eternity is defined by its lack of an end point.
DeleteGadjo's preferred (Protestant) theologians on the subject of soteriology and the after-life tend to dwell on the same two parables considered here. 1) The ill-dressed guest at the banquet chooses what happens to him (though it is not stated whether that is his eternal fate or whether he can be rescued from there). 2) The Prodigal's father was not required to accept his son back, but his love for him trumped justice and never faltered; similarly, we understand that God's desire for none to perish is real and continuing.
ReplyDeleteMay we all eventually turn towards the "light still spilling from the open door" and to Christ and His open arms.
A belated St. Patrick's Day greeting to all!
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/d2WKHDea-k4?si=JVTI8QzPxAe3V6mL