Episodes
Sunday Nov 24, 2013
Why I Believe Hell will be Empty: A sermon on Christian Universalism
Sunday Nov 24, 2013
Sunday Nov 24, 2013
Rev. Dean Snyder
Psalm 139:1-12
Just a word about the trial of Pastor Frank Schaefer: I hope you have seen the excellent statement our leaders have written about the trial. Our office sent it out in an email blast this week and it is on our website. I also sent out a pastoral letter. We are in a phase of the struggle for full inclusion right now which will include a number of trials of pastors who perform same-sex weddings and pastors who are openly gay. At least four more trials are in the pipeline. There will probably be more.
As public opinion changes in our society and pews and people increasingly come to see that anti-LGBTQ attitudes are based on a prejudice, I believe this is one last desperate attempt to repress change in the United Methodist Church.
Foundry church, you are such an important sign to the denomination and world that reconciling, inclusive congregations can be vital, growing, passionate, spiritual, strong congregations. So I am asking you to stay strong. Support the work of our LGBTQ Advocacy Team. Help with the letter writing campaign upstairs today. Help our Sunday school and youth ministry and fellowship groups and small groups and missions continue to be strong and vital.
Hang on. Over 1,500 United Methodist pastors and many, many congregations have made a commitment to practice marriage equality. We will not be afraid. We will not stop. We will not disappear.
Now, let us pray for each other.
Some of you have heard me mention in passing from time to time over the years that I am a universalist, and I want to take a few minutes to explain this morning what I mean by this and to make my case for Christian universalism.
I am not arguing that universalism is the consensus view of the Bible. I do argue that universalism is one voice that we find in the conversation between generations and people that we call the Bible.
I am not going to argue that universalism has been the majority opinion of the Christian church during its 2000 year history. I do argue that many Christians throughout the centuries have come to a universalist conclusion, and they did so for good reason … because the Christian gospel points us in this direction.
The way I have chosen to phrase my understanding of universalism is the statement that ultimately hell will be empty.
Let us forget for a few minutes all of the metaphorical descriptions that are used to describe heaven and hell … that heaven will have streets of gold and pearly gates … that hell is a place of flames and sulfur.
Theologically, heaven or the kingdom of heaven means to live in the presence of God according to God’s will and desires and hopes for us. Theologically hell means to live in the absence of God in rebellion against God’s will and desires and hopes for us.
If we believe in human freedom, hell is a necessary theological proposition. If we believe that human beings have the freedom to accept or reject God, a place or state where we can choose to be godless is a logical necessity.
And I believe fully in human freedom. God is never coercive, God never forces us into relationship, God never bullies us.
God is not coercive but God is infinitely and eternally invitational. This is the revelation we have seen in Jesus Christ. God never closes the door on any one of us … not even if our name is Judas or Hitler.
There are some images in the New Testament on this topic I find very compelling. Ephesians 4: 9-10 describe a Jesus who descends into " into the lower parts of the earth” to bring good news to those who are captive there. 1 Peter 3:19 says that Jesus when he was put to death in the flesh went in the spirit to proclaim good news to those who are imprisoned.
The historic Apostle’s Creed says Jesus Christ “was crucified, dead, and buried; he descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead…”
I am less concerned about the specific technology of these texts but the spirit of them. Jesus is so commitment to never closing the door on anyone of us that he will willing to go to hell to communicate the good news of God’s love and welcome.
My conviction that hell will eventually be empty is not because I think that all of us are good and do not deserve the consequences of the harmful and destructive things we have done. It is because I think that God’s love is eternal. I think ultimately, because it is barren and empty, we will all come to the end of our rebellion and when we turn back home God will be there waiting for us, even if we’ve been to hell and back. [1]
The strongest argument, in my opinion, against universalism is that if no one is in hell where is the justice in the universe. If Judas and Hitler are not in hell, isn’t the universe ultimately an unjust place? Isn’t God unfair?
So I have to say that I do believe in judgment. In Revelations 14:13 Bishop John hears a voice from heaven and it says:
“Blessed are the dead who from now on die in the Lord." "Yes," says the Spirit, "they will rest from their labors, for their deeds follow them."
Our deeds do follow us out of this life.
There will have to be a correction of the injustices of this world. Some of us are born privileged. Some of us born to die of starvation before they have hardly lived. Some of us slave owners; some of us slaves. Some of us abusers; some abused. I don’t need to go on and on. This is a horribly unjust world not because of a Creator’s intention but because of the creation’s radical freedom.
This is why I believe in something like purgatory, not in the crude sense that it is sometimes talked about but in the sense spoken of by the theologian Jurgen Moltmann.
Moltmann says:
An intermediate state of this kind is presupposed by the doctrines of purgatory and reincarnation, but the idea of a great divine judgment also gives a name to something between our death and eternal life. ... For me, God’s judgment means the final putting to rights of the injustice that has been done and suffered, and the final raising up of those who have been bowed down. So I conceive of that intermediate state as a wide space for living, in which God’s history with a human being can come to its flowering and consummation. I imagine that we then come close to that well of life from which we could already here and now draw the power to live and the affirmation of life that was meant for them, for which they were born, and which was taken from them. ...
Those whom we call the dead are not lost. But they are not yet fully saved either. Together with us who are still alive, they are hidden, sheltered, in the same hope, and are hence together with us on the way to God's future. They "watch" with us, and we "watch" with them. That is the community of hope shared by the dead with the living, and by the living with the dead.
This is what I think divine judgment will be like. We will all have to experience our lives from the perspective of others. We are going to have to experience what it was like for those we ignored, those we treated badly, those who suffered and we didn’t care. And it will be hell.
Frankly, I’ve had some of these experiences already without being dead yet … the experience of seeing yourself as you must seem through the eyes of another who has experienced injustice or suffering. It is hell.
But in the end we will all have the opportunity to be part of the kingdom of heaven where the will of God is truly done and we all are loved and included and fulfilled.
I am not a universalist because I think God is required to include all of us in heaven. I am not a universalist because I am trying to tell God what God has to do. If humans are free, so is God.
I am a universalist because I believe including all of us is what God wants to do. And I have ultimate confidence in God being able to accomplish what God want to get done ... not by power or might but by the spirit.
There is so much scripture about God’s passionate love for us and God’s refusal to give up on us that I could quote. But I particularly love this passage form Hosea Chapter 11. God is speaking:
When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son. The more I called them, the more they went from me; they kept sacrificing to the Baals, and offering incense to idols. Yet it was I who taught Ephraim to walk, I took them up in my arms; but they did not know that I healed them. I led them with cords of human kindness, with bands of love. I was to them like those who lift infants to their cheeks. I bent down to them and fed them. … My people are bent on turning away from me. … [But] How can I give you up, Ephraim? How can I hand you over, O Israel? … My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender. I will not execute my fierce anger; I will not again destroy Ephraim; for I am God and no mortal, the Holy One in your midst, and I will not come in wrath.
This is the God of Israel and Jesus. No matter how much we try to turn away, this God who love us and calls us her child will not come in wrath.
Finally, I think that believing that God will ultimately be successful in including all of us in heaven is important for the way we live together now. It means there is no one we can write off. There is no one we can consign to hell.
Sitting and watching Pastor Frank Schaefer’s trial this week was so painful. Frank is without guile. He is just so sincere and he so clearly wants to love everyone.
And on the other side were these men (and they were men) theologically kicking him.
I wanted to hate, but I kept thinking of this sermon I had committed to preach today.
I believe I will be in heaven with those folk someday.
They can condemn and exile Frank but they will be in heaven with Frank and us someday. So we must treat them as fellow citizens of heaven here and now.
It is hard to write somebody off if you believe you will spend eternity in the same place as they are.
In order to persecute others, I suspect we have to convince ourselves that they will spend eternity in a different place than we will be. Perhaps the reason we call people godless or bound for hell is so that our hate is justified in this life.
So the closing words belong to the Psalmist.
Where can I go from your spirit? Or where can I flee from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there; if I make my bed in Sheol, you are there. If I take the wings of the morning and settle at the farthest limits of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me fast. (Psalm 139:7-10)
The closing words belong to the Apostle Paul:
For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 8:38-39)
The closing words belong to Jesus:
… on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it. (Matt. 16:18)
The gates of hell will not prevail. The infinite love of the divine and holy One will.
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