rethinking hell

The Last Word on Hell

Well, okay, so maybe it's not the last word on hell, but this post represents the final remarks by both Chris Date and Jerry Shepherd. I want to extend my thanks to both contributors for their tireless attention to the biblical text and, most of all, their devotion to the Author of the text. I've learned much from this dialogue and have appreciated the cordial, yet direct, tone in which it was handled. 

The Last Word on Hell

Jerry Shepherd's Response to Chris Date: Why Annihilation Is Wrong

We continue our discussion on the duration of hell. Here's Jerry Shepherd's response to Chris Date's initial essay. My thanks to Chris for his well-articulated initial essay. I will, however, now attempt to “destroy” his arguments, though, of course,

Jerry Shepherd's Response to Chris Date: Why Annihilation Is Wrong

Conscious in Death: A Response to Jerry Shepherd

Chris Date continues our dialogue on the duration of hell by responding to Jerry Shepherd's initial post, which argued for eternal conscious torment. 

Conscious in Death: A Response to Jerry Shepherd

The Case for Conditionalism

Eternal, immortal, resurrected life—albeit in torment. This is how most Christians have thought of the final fate of the unsaved, from second-century Tatian to the Reformation’s Belgic Confession and through to today’s theologians like Wayne Grudem. This now-traditional view of hell is not one of disembodied spirits, but of resurrected, living people whom God has rendered immortal so as to endure physical and emotional torment for all eternity.

The Case for Conditionalism