Articles>
Hell

June 18, 2006

Copyright Rev. Dr. Curtis I. Crenshaw 
 
(The following are just summary notes, not an in depth 
study.) 
 
Introduction 
 
Some say it is not nice to teach on hell, yet Jesus taught 
more on hell than all the rest of the Bible combined. We 
could wish hell were not true, but we must not apologize 
for God’s truth. Every fiber of my being could wish it were 
not true, but every fiber of my being tells me it is true 
if God has righteousness — and He does. 
 
Every fiber of our being should seek Christ, the only 
deliverer from infinite punishment. 
 
Most cults and all liberals deny hell, for they think of 
man as not so bad and God without justice. 
 
Soul sleep (that one is unconscious, extinct, after death) 
and annihilationism almost always go together. 
 
One of the issues regarding eternal punishment is what 
“death” means in Scripture. “Death” in Scripture usually 
means “separation,” not annihilation. Physical death is the 
separation of the spirit from the body (James 2:26), and 
spiritual death is the separation of the soul from the 
favor of God (Eph. 2:1ff; Rev. 20:11-15; 21:8).“She who 
lives in pleasure is dead while she lives” (1 Tim. 5:6). 
How can there be a second death unless “death” does not 
mean annihilation? (Rev. 20:14). 
 
Time never ceases to exist for creatures, for only God 
“inhabits eternity.” 
 
I. History of the Doctrine 
 
The early fathers taught the immortality of the soul and 
the doctrine of hell, meaning eternal punishment.[1] Most 
also held to degrees of punishment and that the fire was 
material, not just figurative. 
 
The protestant reformers universally taught the everlasting 
punishment of the wicked as have all Reformed churches 
since then. Some Anabaptists taught restorationism and some 
Socinians[2] the annihilation of the wicked. 
 
Treatises by Reformed theologians on hell are by William G. 
T. Shedd in his Dogmatic Theology and Jonathan Edwards in 
his writings. John H. Gerstner has written an able defense 
(Repent or Perish) against annihilationism, especially 
against Fudge’s The Fire That Consumes. The last two 
centuries have seen a number of people espouse the errant 
teaching of annihilation. A popular preacher around the 
time of the Civil War, Henry Ward Beecher,[3] was going to 
debate Shedd on eternal punishment. When Beecher read an 
advanced copy of Shedd’s defense, however, he wired: 
“Cancel engagement, Shedd is too much for me. I half 
believe in eternal punishment now myself. Get somebody 
else.”[4] 
 
In this century such heavy weights as Philip E. Hughes and 
others have adopted the annihilation view. Denying this 
doctrine, however, severely compromises evangelicalism, as 
we shall see. 
 
II. How the Non-Orthodox Argue Against Hell 
 
1. The soul is tied to the body so that when it ceases, the 
soul ceases. In other words, the soul is not immortal. 
Fudge, for example, in The Fire that Consumes argues that 
it is Platonic to argue for the natural immortality of the 
soul. But this is a straw man, for the Bible does not teach 
the natural immortality of the soul but the supernatural 
immortality of the soul, for it is only in God that “we 
live, move and have our being” (Acts 17:28). There is no 
being but God who is “naturally” immortal (1 Tim. 6:13-16); 
all others depend on Him moment by moment for their 
existence. He is the only One who has life in Himself (John 
1:4; 5:26[5]). 
 
2. They argue that to perish or be destroyed implies 
annihilation, but we shall see that this is not true nor 
did the early church fathers, who were close to the 
Apostles and knew Greek as their first language, understand 
the words in their contexts this way. 
 
3. They argue that the opposite of life is death, assuming 
that death means cessation of existence, which is not the 
Bible’s definition. In Scripture, “death” means 
separation. 
 
4. They challenge that those whom the Lord raised from the 
dead while He was on earth must have been non-existent, or 
else the Lord took them from heaven only to die again and 
be subject to losing their salvation (Lazarus in John 11).  
But it is not certain that one loses his salvation, though 
we cannot go into that here. They did die again, but what 
may have been the special circumstances surrounding their 
deaths and resurrections, the Bible does not say. But if 
one is glorified at death as the Bible apparently teaches 
(1 John 3:1ff), how could the Lord bring one back to this 
sinful world, back to an earlier point of his 
sanctification, they argue? Part of the answer is that 
until the Lord’s Ascension, most saints had not gone to 
heaven but were in sheol/hades. It was at His Ascension 
that “He led captivity captive,” that the saints were 
glorified. Now after His Ascension, saints are not 
resurrected. Glorification is still in the future (1 John 
3:1-2). 
 
5. They say that the traditionalists do not have an 
explanation of the body of those resurrected who are 
damned, which is not true and irrelevant. We believe that 
their bodies will not be glorified as the bodies of the 
righteous but nevertheless will be raised and joined with 
their souls in hell. The Bible does not describe such 
bodies as it does the elect, so we go no further. It is 
irrelevant because it has nothing to do with how long one 
stays in hell. 
 
6. Hades and sheol, they maintain, only mean the grave, not 
some place after death where people are still conscious. 
This is emphatically not true, the words meaning either 
grave or hell, depending on context, and the vast majority 
of time they mean the place of departed spirits. The 
fathers almost universally understood sheol/hades as the 
place of departed spirits, not the grave. 
 
III. Particular Passages that Teach Eternal Punishment 
 
1. Jesus taught more on hell than all the rest of the Bible 
combined. 
 
2. In Matthew 11:21-22, the Lord taught degrees of torment: 
“Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the 
mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre 
and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth 
and ashes. But I say to you, it will be more tolerable for 
Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you.” If it 
will be “more tolerable,” then their punishment will be 
less than others. Some will be beaten with many stripes and 
others with few (Luke 12:48). There can be no degrees of 
punishment if annihilationism is true, for there are no 
degrees of non-existence. 
 
3. “And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill 
the soul. But rather fear Him who is able to destroy both 
soul and body in hell” (Matt. 10:28). It is a sin to fear 
man and a sin not to fear God, but if God could do no more 
than man, namely, bring about extinction, what is the point 
of the Lord? Annihilationism teaches us not to fear God, 
for He terminates all suffering in annihilation. 
 
4. Body and soul can be separately killed, thus indicating 
that the soul may not “die” with the body (Matt. 10:28).  
If man can kill the body and the soul cannot be separated 
from it, then Christ’s statement has no meaning, for man 
can indeed kill the soul as well as the body, resulting in 
extinction. Furthermore, if the soul is destroyed “in 
hell,” it would indicate that the soul survives after 
death. 
 
5. Luke 16:19ff (read it!). Luke is so clear that it would 
take a theologian to weasel out of it. In this passage of 
Lazarus and the rich man, we have separation of body and 
soul (Lazarus died “and was carried by the angles to 
Abraham’s bosom”), fire and punishment (“I am tormented in 
this flame”), thirst because of the heat (“send Lazarus 
that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my 
tongue”), and no annihilation (Abraham and the rich man 
converse after death). We must observe several other things 
about the passage. First, some try to avoid the force of 
the passage by saying it is a parable. But the passage 
itself does not say it is a parable as Jesus often does 
with His other parables. Furthermore, Jesus never told a 
parable with a specific name (Lazarus) in it. “Abraham’s 
bosom” was a common figure for being in God’s favor, not 
something to excuse one to take a whole passage as 
figurative. Finally, Jesus’ parables were not weird 
fantasies but were true to life. 
 
Some object by that this passage must be figurative since 
we would not expect the righteous (Abraham) and the wicked 
(rich man) to have contact after death as they do here. But 
God makes an exception here, as He did when He allowed Saul 
to call up Samuel from death. The contact they allegedly 
had after death was only some form of communication, not 
personal contact. Indeed, it is personal contact that the 
rich man wants from Lazarus, but Abraham says it is not 
possible. Furthermore, God can do what He pleases, and we 
must accept what He tells us, not make rules to “bind” Him 
with we think He can and cannot do. 
 
Finally, the rich man wants Abraham to rise from the dead 
and go tell his five brothers about hell. But we see that 
what prevents one from going to hell is the Gospel as 
revealed in the Holy Scriptures (“They have Moses and the 
prophets; let them hear them”), not miracles or even a 
resurrection.[6] 
 
6. The fire is everlasting and the punishment forever: 
 
Then He will also say to those on the left hand, “Depart 
from Me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for 
the devil and his angels” (Matt. 25:41). And these will go 
away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous into 
eternal life (Matt. 25:46). 
 
If God punishes the impenitent, then it must be forever 
since the impenitent never repents. One must reap what he 
sows as long as he sows it, which is forever. In addition, 
why would the punishment be everlasting with no one to 
punish? 
 
If the just have eternal life and rewards that go on 
forever, then the unjust must have the opposite, eternal 
punishment. Are we to think that eternal means never ending 
for the just but ending for the unjust when the same word 
is used only a few words apart? The annihilationists argue 
that the effect of their punishment goes on forever even 
though the persons cease. But then we could conclude the 
same for the just, that the effect of their rewards go on 
forever though they personally cease. Indeed, for one to 
have eternal life must mean they exist forever and to have 
eternal punishment must mean someone exists to be punished. 
The parallel is obviously that some (persons) are rewarded 
forever and some (persons) are punished forever. 
 
The word for “punishment” (kolasiV, kolasis) is rendered by 
the New World Translation (Jehovah’s Witness Bible) as 
“cutting-off,” but this has no support from Greek. In 
Classical Greek, in the Septuagint, in the New Testament 
and in the period of the New Testament the word strictly 
meant “punishment.” Aristotle so used the word[7] and other 
classical authors; kolasis is always used of punishment. 
During the time shortly after Matthew wrote his Gospel, one 
Greek said: “for the evil-doers among men receive their 
reward not among the living only, but also await punishment 
and much torment.”[8] 
 
We may infer, as Jonathan Edwards did, that the misery of 
the damned is intensified over the millennia since they do 
not repent but only gnash out in rage against God, thereby 
increasing their culpability. Since they sin continually, 
they increase in punishment forever, thus arguing that they 
could not be annihilated. The more sin the more punishment, 
and the more punishment the more sin, and so on forever. In 
the words of Scripture, the impenitent remain wicked 
forever: “He who is unjust, let him be unjust still; he who 
is filthy, let him be filthy still; he who is righteous, 
let him be righteous still; he who is holy, let him be holy 
still” (Rev. 22:11). One cannot remain filthy and wicked if 
he does not have existence, for non-existence has nothing. 
Annihilation is not punishment of a being but the 
extinction of a being. One cannot punish what does not 
exist. 
 
Likewise, the enjoyment of the just is increased as they 
are enabled to enjoy God more and more over the millennia 
with never ending joy, ever increasing in their capacity to 
love Him as they gain in knowledge, worship, (etc) having 
already been made perfect in holiness. 
 
In Revelation 14:11 we read: “And the smoke of their 
torment ascends forever and ever; and they have no rest day 
or night, who worship the beast and his image, and whoever 
receives the mark of his name.” If they are annihilated, 
they have rest forever, but John says they do not rest. 
What is the point of having smoke ascend forever if they 
are not being punished forever? 
 
In Mark 9:43-44 we read: 
 
If your hand causes you to sin, cut it off. It is better 
for you to enter into life maimed, rather than having two 
hands, to go to hell, into the fire that shall never be 
quenched — where “Their worm does not die, and the fire is 
not quenched.” 
 
The figure is from the south of Jerusalem, a valley from 
Ge-Hinnom (Greek Gehenna), which was a place of fire and 
worms, where garbage was burned, and became a metaphor 
called Gehenna to describe the real place of final abode 
for the wicked, hell. In the literal valley outside 
Jerusalem, the fire was nearly always burning with worms 
eating the garbage. One can surmise of that valley that 
sometimes the fire did go out and the worms died, but the 
point of the Lord is that in the final Gehenna, in His 
hell, neither is true. The punishment is both external, the 
fire, and internal, the worm, and neither will ever cease. 
The fire would seem to be literal (though some good, 
orthodox men have other views) and the worm is their shame 
and internal agony, which is total despair and hopelessness 
(Ps. 22:6; Isa. 41:14; 66:24; Jonah 4:7). Are we to think 
that their “worm” is never annihilated but the person is? 
 
The Lord stated that He will cast them into “a furnace of 
fire. There will be wailing and gnashing of teeth” (Matt. 
13:42), which cannot happen to those who are annihilated. 
Jesus’ hell causes weeping and gnashing of teeth without 
end but annihilationism eliminates this. 
 
7. Paul taught the same as the Lord Jesus: 
 
 
 
We are bound to thank God always for you, brethren, as it 
is fitting, because your faith grows exceedingly, and the 
love of every one of you all abounds toward each other, so 
that we ourselves boast of you among the churches of God 
for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and 
tribulations that you endure, which is manifest evidence of 
the righteous judgment of God, that you may be counted 
worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you also suffer; 
since it is a righteous thing with God to repay with 
tribulation those who trouble you, and to give you who are 
troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus is revealed from 
heaven with His mighty angels, in flaming fire taking 
vengeance on those who do not know God, and on those who do 
not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. These shall 
be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence 
of the Lord and from the glory of His power, when He comes, 
in that Day, to be glorified in His saints and to be 
admired among all those who believe, because our testimony 
among you was believed (2 Thess. 1:3-10). 
 
 
 
Some want to say that “destruction” means annihilation.[9] 
The idea, however, in the word “destruction” is ruin with 
annihilation virtually never being the meaning, though it 
can be in rare instances. Bible study is more than just 
lexical meanings, however, and the context here and 
elsewhere defines that the “destruction” goes on forever. 
Indeed, Hendriksen accurately translates “eternal 
destruction” here as “never-ending destruction.” In other 
words, the sinner is being destroyed in hell, but it takes 
forever to do so. 
 
Often “destroy” does not mean annihilate at all. Did Paul 
mean that by eating food one can annihilate his brother 
(Rom. 14:15), or that at one time he had annihilated the 
faith (Gal. 1:23)? 
 
Notice the context of the above passage confirms that 
“destruction” is never ending. God repays with 
“tribulation” or “affliction” those who trouble His people 
(v. 6). He does this when Jesus returns (v. 7), but if the 
wicked are annihilated, then they are not punished but 
exterminated, which is the ending of punishment. 
 
Some object that they are destroyed “from the presence” of 
the Lord, which they understand to mean that if they no 
longer have His presence, they must be gone since God is 
everywhere, even in heaven and hell (Ps. 139:8). However, 
what Paul surely means is not the absolute, metaphysical 
presence of the Lord but the favorable presence of the 
Lord. God is indeed in hell, which is precisely what makes 
it hell — enduring His personal and infinite wrath. In the 
Book of Revelation, the reason men are running and wanting 
the mountains to fall on them is that they fear the wrath 
of “Him who sits on the throne and from the wrath of the 
Lamb” (Rev. 6:16). “It is a fearful thing to fall into the 
hands of the living God” (Heb. 10:31). “Being shut out from 
the presence of the Lord and from the majesty of His power 
when people are extinct is no deprivation. Nothing can’t 
miss anything. It is sillier than saying that rocks are 
shut out. . . , for they, though they are also incapable of 
apprehending the presence of the Lord, at least do 
exist.”[10] As Jonathan Edwards has stated: “‘Tis the 
almighty God that shall become the fire of the furnace.” 
“Our God is a consuming fire” (Heb. 12:29). 
 
But notice also that what makes hell so awful is that one 
is in the immediate presence of God without grace, a wicked 
person in the presence of the infinitely holy Person, who 
will not tolerate sin. On earth now, there is at least 
common grace so that people do not suffer the pains of 
hell, no matter how bad it is. But in hell, all grace is 
removed and the wicked are confronted with the fierce wrath 
of the holy God who will despise them for all eternity for 
their rebellion. He will constantly pour out His 
unmitigated punishment on them forever. 
 
Thus the idea of some that Satan is lord of hell and 
inflicts people there is not biblical. He is as much the 
subject of punishment as the rest, and the wrath of God 
burns against him as with the others. God is Lord of hell 
as He is everything else. Christ said that God would 
destroy the soul, not the devil. 
 
IV. Theological Implications of Denying Hell 
 
One cannot deny something this basic without there being 
tremendous consequences in other areas of the faith. 
 
1. Soul sleep, the teaching that man’s soul lives and dies 
with his body, usually is part of annihilationism. If soul 
sleep were true, then we would have the following problems: 
 
— The wicked would be recreated at the Last Day 
resurrection exactly as they died, as sinners, thus making 
God the creator of wickedness. 
 
— At the Last Day, God would bring the wicked to life to 
tell them they would be immediately snuffed out forever, 
which would be totally senseless since they were already 
non-existent. 
 
— Angels do not have a body like ours, and yet they are 
alive and suffer the pangs of hell forever. Why cannot God 
do such with wicked humans? Indeed, the Lord Himself stated 
that angels and humans suffer the same punishment (Matt. 
25:41). 
 
2. If the damned are not punished forever in hell, why 
should the righteous be rewarded forever in heaven? The two 
are tied together. If God’s justice requires one, it 
requires the other. 
 
3. It would not be just for someone like Hitler or Stalin 
to inflict horrible punishment on millions for decades only 
to receive the sentence of instantaneous annihilation, for 
then Stalin would have put many through years of suffering 
only to undergo no suffering himself. The only “hell” these 
people would experience would be in this world and of their 
own making. Someone may counter that it would not be just 
for one to receive punishment forever for crimes of only a 
few years, but we must remember that sin has infinite 
ramifications because God is infinite. All sin is primarily 
against God, not against man. 
 
4. If soul sleep is true, the humanity of Christ, according 
to annihilationism, must have been annihilated when He 
died, which is what Fudge taught in The Fire That Consumes. 
This is turn would mean that the union of God with man had 
to occur again in His resurrection, like another 
incarnation, another Virgin Birth, if you will. This is 
dangerous theology, virtually bordering on rank heresy. 
Such would also seem to be a denial of the Creed that says 
“He descended into hell,” meaning hades (maybe to lead the 
Old Testament saints to glory). The expression “He 
descended into hell” was used in the early Church to 
emphasize His true humanity, that He had a real human soul, 
contrary to those who maintained that His humanity was 
swallowed up into His deity. 
 
5. If hell is not true, the work of Christ is dreadfully 
demeaned if not nullified, not believing in the infinite 
value of His death and of sin. Sin has infinite 
implications, requiring infinite satisfaction to God’s 
infinite righteousness. Man could never satisfy this. God 
could satisfy such, but He could not shed blood. Thus Jesus 
had to be both God and Man: Man to keep the law perfectly, 
to die, and to be raised from the dead, descend into hades, 
and God to satisfy infinite righteousness. What man cannot 
do given an infinite amount of time, Jesus did in a moment 
of time since He was (is) infinite. Thus if the wicked are 
consumed in hell, sin is only finite and the death of Jesus 
is only finite. The rejection of Him would thereby only 
have the implication of few nano-seconds of punishment as 
the person is annihilated. But if sin has infinite 
requirements of punishment, then it takes infinite time to 
offer restitution to God for one’s sins. The dilemma is 
this: If sin had infinite requirements, Jesus’ death had 
infinite restitution; if sin is only a “misdemeanor,” then 
Jesus need not be infinite or the payment infinite. Or to 
restate it: if man only suffers a brief moment, then sin is 
not so bad and only has finite consequences. According to 
this view, Christ’s infinite deity would have played no 
role in the atonement. 
 
In the traditional view sin is ethical, requiring the 
removal of sin’s punishment and its pollution until the 
soul is made perfect in holiness. The resurrection of the 
body is the fruit of Jesus’ atonement. In the heretical 
view, sin is metaphysical, resulting in the extinction of 
being, and redemption primarily brings about the recreation 
of a non-being at the Last Day. Is the person recreated in 
perfect holiness at this resurrection? This turns things on 
their heads. 
 
6. It is to give the wicked rest from their sins to 
annihilate them, which is certainly easier than everlasting 
torment. Annihilationism teaches that extinction is worse 
than continual punishment, but the most they can say is 
that the momentary contemplation of annihilation is worse, 
for once annihilated, how can anyone make comparisons? 
 
7. Annihilation is not a form of punishment but a 
substitution for it, for non-existent beings, by 
definition, cannot be punished, especially forever. 
 
8. In summary, if hell is not forever, neither is heaven, 
the atonement is not infinite, the person and work of 
Christ is extremely distorted, justice is not meted out as 
some wicked caused other people to suffer for many years 
while they only suffer a second. 
 
V. Repentance and Hell 
 
1. The sins of the reprobate are the fuel for the fire of 
their own judgment, the whetstone against which God’s 
sharpens the sword of His wrath. 
 
2. Those who undergo tragedies in this life may not have 
sinned more than others, for unless we repent we shall all 
perish (Luke 13:1-5). “The suffering of some is not a call 
to condemn them but to condemn all, especially 
ourselves.”[11] “It is the goodness of God that leads to 
repentance” (Rom. 2:4). 
 
3. “The only thing that will save women and men from the 
terror of the Lord is the cross of the Lord. But it is 
usually the terror of the Lord that first brings them to 
consider the cross of the Lord. If men do not fear the 
terror of the Lord, they must experience that terror. If 
you are not afraid of hell, you are almost certainly going 
there. You will then never doubt it again.”[12] 
 
VI. Jonathan Edwards on Hell 
 
 
 
Whatever some have imagined and pretended about promises 
made to natural men’s earnest seeking and knocking, it is 
plain and manifest, that whatever pains a natural man takes 
in religion, whatever prayers he makes, till he believes in 
Christ, God is under no manner of obligation to keep him a 
moment from eternal destruction. 
 
So that, thus it is that natural men are held in the hand 
of God, over the pit of hell; they have deserved the fiery 
pit, and are already sentenced to it; and God is dreadfully 
provoked, his anger is as great towards them as to those 
that are actually suffering the executions of the 
fierceness of his wrath in hell, and they have done nothing 
in the least to appease or abate that anger, neither is God 
in the least bound by any promise to hold them up one 
moment; the devil is waiting for them, hell is gaping for 
them, the flames gather and flash about them, and would 
fain lay hold on them, and swallow them up; the fire bent 
up in their own hearts is struggling to get out: and they 
have no interest in any Mediator, there are no means within 
reach that can be any security to them. In short, they have 
no refuge, nothing to take hold of; all that preserves them 
every moment is the mere arbitrary will, and uncovenanted, 
unobliged forbearance of an incensed God. 
 
The wrath of God is like great waters that are damned for 
the present; they increase more and more, and rise higher 
and higher, till an outlet is given; and the longer the 
stream is stopped, the more rapid and mighty is its course, 
when once it is let loose. 
 
The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as one 
holds a spider, or some loathsome insect over the fire, 
abhors you, and is dreadfully provoked: his wrath towards 
you burns like fire; he looks upon you as worthy of nothing 
else, but to be cast into the fire; he is of purer eyes 
than to bear to have you in his sight; you are ten thousand 
times more abominable in his eyes, than the most hateful 
venomous serpent is in ours. You have offended him 
infinitely more than ever a stubborn rebel did his prince; 
and yet it is nothing but his hand that holds you from 
falling into the fire every moment. It is to be ascribed to 
nothing else, that you did not go to hell last night; that 
you were allowed to awake again in this world, after you 
closed your eyes to sleep. And there is no other reason to 
be given, why you have not dropped into hell since you 
arose in the morning, but that God’s hand has held you up. 
There is no other reason to be given why you have not gone 
to hell, since you have sat here in the house of God, 
provoking his pure eyes by your sinful wicked manner of 
attending his solemn worship. 
 
It is an everlasting wrath. It would be dreadful to suffer 
this fierceness and wrath of Almighty God one moment; but 
you must suffer it to all eternity. There will be no end to 
this exquisite horrible misery. When you look forward, you 
shall see a long forever, a boundless duration before you, 
which will swallow up your thoughts, and amaze your soul; 
and you will absolutely despair of ever having any 
deliverance, any end, any mitigation, any rest at all. You 
will know certainly that you must wear out long ages, 
millions of millions of ages, in wrestling and conflicting 
with almighty merciless vengeance; and then when you have 
so done, when so many ages have actually been spent by you 
in this manner, you will know that all is but a point to 
what remains. So that your punishment will indeed be 
infinite. (All the above from Sinners in the Hands of an 
Angry God). 
 
 
 
 
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 
[1] Origen was an exception and Augustine stated that 
Scripture was uncertain how long hell would last. See L. 
Berkhof, The History of Christian Doctrines, p. 267ff. 
 
[2] Socinians were the forerunners to the Unitarians, 
denying the deity of Christ, the atonement, hell, and were 
basically liberal. 
 
[3] Beecher, according to Rushdoony, wanted the popularity 
of the people in New England, so he was a Calvinist, an 
Arminian, and then a Unitarian, depending on what the 
people wanted. 
 
[4] Quoted in Gerstner’s Repent or Perish, p. 34. 
 
[5] Some have misunderstood that since the Father granted 
to the Son to have life in Himself that this meant that 
there was a time the Son did not have such. However, since 
the Son is eternal, being “in the beginning with the 
Father” and was God, there was never a time when this was 
not so. We have eternal truths in human language. 
 
[6] This may be a sign of things to come, for Christ rises 
from the dead and the Jews still do not believe! The 
apparent remorse of the rich man in hades is only apparent, 
for he shows his contempt of God by hating His punishment 
and by demanding a miracle for his brothers. Jesus said, 
"An evil and adulterous generation seeks after a sign, and 
no sign will be given to it except the sign of the prophet 
Jonah” (Matt. 12:39). The sign of Jonah was His 
resurrection. 
 
[7] See Abbott-Smith, p. 252 for Aristotle; Liddell & Scott 
for Plato, Intermediate Lexicon, p. 441; Thayer has a good 
discussion of the word, p. 353 as does BAG, p. 440, 2nd 
edition. 
 
[8] Moulton & Milligan from the papyri, p. 352. 
 
[9] There are two primary Greek words for “destruction” 
that are used in the New Testament (olethros, apðleia both 
nouns; the verb is apollumi)). 
 
[10] Gerstner, p. 89. 
 
[11] Gerstner, p. 7. 
 
[12] Gerstner, p. 13.

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