Religion News Service
 
 
   
3 reasons we’re afraid to talk about  hell
_Jonathan Merritt_ 
(http://jonathanmerritt.religionnews.com/author/jonathanmerritt/)  _Follow 
@jonathanmerritt_ (https://twitter.com/jonathanmerritt)  
| Apr 24, 2014 
 
 
Have you seen that new movie “Hell Is for Real?” Of course, you haven’t.  
Because it doesn’t exist. It’s heavenly counterpart, however, _earned_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/sites/scottmendelson/2014/04/20/weekend-box-office-transce
ndence-flops-heaven-is-for-real-soars/)  $21.5 million in ticket sales in 
its opening  weekend. 
Sixty-four percent of Americans believe in the survival of the soul after  
death, and a majority believes in both heaven and hell, according to _a 
Harris Poll released in December 2013_ 
(http://www.harrisinteractive.com/NewsRoom/HarrisPolls/tabid/447/ctl/ReadCustom%20Default/mid/1508/ArticleId/1353/Defa
ult.aspx) . But while most are  comfortable discussing the afterlife and 
heaven, talk of hell can scatter the  masses. 
So why are Americans afraid to talk about hell? 
Rebecca Price Janney, a cultural historian and author of “_Who Goes There? 
A Cultural History  of Heaven and Hell_ (http://amzn.to/1lC09XY) ,” traces 
the shift back about 70 decades to World War II.  During this time, many 
asserted that American soldiers couldn’t possibly go to  hell because they’d 
already served their time having “been through hell” on the  battlefield. The 
idea offered great comfort to those at home who were grieving  lost loved 
ones. 
“This [idea] caught on and persisted over the decades,” Janney says, “and 
we  saw it re-emerge strongly during the September 11, 2001 terrorist 
attacks: ‘How  could these dear people who died so tragically possibly go to 
hell?
’” 
Resisting the idea of a literal hell may offer comfort, but the reasons 
many  today shy away from it may be more simplistic and pragmatic. I spoke to 
several  people who have studied the issue and they listed at least three 
reasons we  shrink back from hell-talk: 
Hell Doesn’t Feel  Fair
Some Americans’ theology of hell begins with arithmetic. The  average 
American’s_ life expectancy_ (http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/deaths.htm)  is 
just shy of 79 years. How many  years of punishment in what the Bible 
_describes_ (http://www.biblestudytools.com/gnt/revelation/21-8.html)  as “a 
lake 
burning with fire and sulfur” would be  justified for eight decades of sin? 
“Many Americans quantify their sins and then weigh it against not just  
punishment, but eternal punishment,” says Brian Jones, a pastor and author of  “
_Hell is Real (But I Hate to  Admit It)_ (http://amzn.to/1eX2Ws9) .”  “In 
their 80 years, maybe they cheated on their  taxes or even on their wife. 
When their sense of fairness is projected on God,  they have a hard time 
thinking God would prescribe such a thing.” 
These Americans seem to feel like Admiral Fitzwallace advising President  
Bartlett to avoid a disproportionate response to Syrian aggression on “The 
West  Wing”: “You’ll have dolled out 5,000 dollars of punishment for a 50 
buck crime,  sir.” 
But what about those we think have committed a $5,000 crime? When it  comes 
to Pol Pot or Joseph Kony or even one’s unfaithful ex-spouse, there seems  
to be less resistance to hell. 
“Most people don’t believe they are bad enough to go to hell. Sure, we all 
 mess up. But at least we’re not as bad as that guy,” says Preston  
Sprinkle, co-author with Francis Chan of “_Erasing Hell: What God Said About 
Eternity, and the Things We Made  Up_ (http://amzn.to/1eX4t1q) ” and professor 
at 
Eternity Bible College. “Hell, it seems, may be fitting  for the Hitlers 
and Stalins of the world, but God–we assume–would never send  mediocre 
sinners to hell.” 
Hell Sounds  Harsh
Another reason people are hesitant to discuss hell, Jones  says, is because 
the only people who talk about it are hateful Christians like  those 
associated with Westboro Baptist Church and “creepy Christians that no one  
wants 
to hang out with.” By contrast, he says, most modern believers want to be  
perceived as kind, loving, and gracious. 
“There aren’t very many models out there for how to talk about hell  
winsomely, so Christians are frozen in their tracks. It’s hard to do something  
when you haven’t seen it modeled well,” says Jones. 
Jason Boyett, author of “_Pocket Guide to the Afterlife_ 
(http://amzn.to/1mwZg2C) .” Echoes Jones’s  sentiment: “I think some people 
hesitate to talk 
about hell because they don’t  want to continue to deliver only bad news 
instead of something that is  encouraging and inspiring. The existence of hell 
is difficult and a challenging  part of Christian theology. If you think too 
much about it, it is really kind of  frightening.” 
Hell Scares Off Spiritual  Seekers
As Christianity continues to lose steam in the West, many  Christians have 
begun to refine their message to attract new followers and not  repel 
skeptics. Those I spoke with all said they felt this impulse is a driver  
behind 
why pastors today speak about hell with less frequency and force. 
“When you look at some of the old puritan pastors—people like Jonathan  
Edwards—and their gleeful sermons on hell, those guys were really preaching  
about it,” says Boyett. “I always read those and think, ‘How did anyone come 
 back to a church like that?’” 
Added Sprinkle, “All in all, I think preachers are more skittish about  
talking about many things that could be a turn-off to the seeker. Hell is  
probably just one of those topics.” 
Jones and Boyett both noted that in addition to numerical growth, concerns  
about financial giving have influenced the way pastors speak about it. 
Don’t Be Shy
Most  people I spoke with said they believed perspectives on hell were 
shifting among  Millennials. Sprinkle says he thinks among many young people 
today the doctrine  has been downgraded from a fundamental belief to a 
secondary one. Boyett says a  new generation is more “willing to at least 
entertain 
uncertainty about  hell.” 
Americans, it seems, believe hell exists but they aren’t as sure as they 
once  were. And many question whether it will last forever. They can’t fathom 
hell for  themselves but are okay with others going there—particularly those 
they consider  really nasty sinners. 
As moral people, hell is often difficult to justify. As rational people, 
hell  is difficult to understand. As emotional people, hell is difficult to 
fully  accept. But the fact remains that the Bible and Jesus talk an awful lot 
about  hell. But our reticence to discuss it doesn’t make it any less real, 
and our  resistance to imagine that we are “bad enough” to go there doesn’
t mean we  won’t. 
Christians mustn’t burn with excitement at the thought of souls being  
punished in the afterlife. But neither should we run from the issue like our  
hair is on fire. As Kirsten Powers concluded in her USA Today  column on _hell 
this week_ 
(http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2014/04/22/heaven-hell-movie-book-god-religion-column/8026521/)
 , “forever is a mighty long  time.”

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