Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
2012.08.13 View 
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Jerry Walls, Purgatory: The Logic of Total Transformation, Oxford 
University Press, 2011, 211pp., $35.00 (hbk), ISBN 9780199732296.
Reviewed by Keith E. Yandell, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Having written on heaven and hell, Prof. Walls completes a trilogy with a 
book on purgatory. Historically informed, philosophically competent, and 
theologically alert, the result is an impressive book. His goal is not to prove 
that a doctrine of purgatory is true. It is to suggest that, on a given 
understanding of purgatory, the Scriptures do not conflict with it, core 
Christian doctrines are not inconsistent with it, and grace is not negated by 
it. Instead, grace is fulfilled through it. My purpose throughout this review 
is 
to present Wall's excellent discussion in a manner fair to its complexity and 
subtlety.
That the doctrine of purgatory has any biblical basis is disputed. Among 
proposed supporting texts are Matthew 12:40 (as Jonah was in the belly of the 
whale for three days and nights, the Son of Man will be in the heart of the 
earth three days and three nights), Acts 2:31 (Jesus was not abandoned in Hades 
nor did his flesh see corruption), Romans 10:7 (who will descend to the abyss 
to 
bring Christ back from the dead?), Ephesians 4:10 (and if he ascended what does 
this mean but that he descended to the lower regions of the earth?), and I 
Peter 
3:18 (Jesus (was) made alive by the Spirit, by whom he preached to the spirits 
in prison). Such texts do not demand a purgatorial reading, but they have 
suggested this reading to purgatory's supporters.
Generally, the Protestant attitude regarding the idea of purgatory has been 
less than welcoming. Purgatory has been seen as unbiblical, a denial of the 
sufficiency of the work of Christ on our behalf, a post-mortem version of 
salvation by works, and thus being wholly out of place in Christian theology. 
All of this holds, even without the sale of indulgences and the proposed role 
of 
demons as the purveyors of purgatorial pain. As Hebrews 9:27 says, it is 
appointed to man once to die, and after this (comes) the judgment. No possible 
post-mortem second chance is mentioned. No period of probation, punishment, or 
purification is specified. Were there such a period, it would have been 
mentioned. So (on the common Protestant view) purgatory is a Catholic invention 
that we do not find in scripture. Nonetheless such recent and contemporary 
Protestants as Forsyth, Moltmann, Pannenberg, and Polkinghorne have expressed 
sympathy for a doctrine of purgatory. It is important for Walls that his 
proposal regarding purgatory have ecumenical interest.
Fully aware of how widespread the negative attitude is, Walls seeks to show 
that it is unjustified. He grants that appeal to biblical exegesis will not 
suffice to justify the doctrine of purgatory as based in sacred text. He adds 
that exegesis also does not justify rejecting the doctrine. He surveys the 
history of the idea and considers the theological and philosophical merits of a 
refined version of the doctrine. This requires a nuanced view of just what 
purgatory is supposed to be.
Purgatory, Walls informs us, is sometimes viewed as purely punitive. At death 
we may have sins that have not received their due recompense. Better that we 
meet that recompense in purgatory than in hell. Purgatory is the rather less 
than delightful waiting room for heaven in which one's sins are finally 
punished 
so that entry into heaven is possible. It is this proposal that understandably 
has seemed to deny the efficacy of Christ's work and the fullness of grace.
Sometimes, particularly in its later versions, the idea either combines 
punitive and purificational elements, or is restricted to purification. The 
idea, especially of the latter, is that even the sincerest believers have not 
attained the perfection required for dwelling in heaven. Hence it seems natural 
to believe that there is a period between demise and entry into heaven such as 
that provided by purificational purgatory.
As always, there are objections. Why can't God just perfect believers upon 
their death, and then no purgatorial purification will be needed? An answer 
with 
which Walls has considerable sympathy is that purification is necessarily a 
process that the person being purified must go through rather than a quick 
event 
the person undergoes. This is reminiscent of Aristotle's 'one swallow does not 
make a summer' remark -- virtues (and vices) develop via voluntary decisions 
over time.
It seems natural to associate the notion of libertarian freedom with that of 
purificational purgatory. A believer who is not ready to enjoy fellowship in 
heaven lives in company with others in the same situation, and through proper 
free choices engages in actions that progressively reduce her evil dispositions 
and strengthen her good dispositions. These mingle with appropriate repentance 
and contrition. The process may be painful, but is so only because there is no 
rosy road to final sanctification. Finally the purgatory dweller's character 
has 
changed sufficiently that she will be at home in heaven. Heaven would be hell 
for the unrepentant and unpleasant for the unpurified.
Of course God could deterministically arrange things so that a corresponding 
process occurred in the absence of free choices. This would raise the question 
of why God does not just determine people's choices and actions so that they 
become morally perfect, as well as the question of whether 'determined virtue' 
is not a contradiction in terms. These are controversial matters, as is the 
assumption that we have libertarian freedom and must have it in order to be 
moral agents. The existence of libertarian freedom is an assumption of Wallsian 
purgatory.
Another assumption is that the imperfect cannot enter heaven. Few, if any, 
among us have reached perfection when we die. If there is a purificatory 
purgatory, it will not want for populace. As noted, there is also the view that 
purification takes time -- is a process that requires the continued willing 
participation of the person being purified.
There is also the question of whether there are 'second chances' -- whether 
one who has died an unbeliever can become a believer in a post-mortem 
existence. 
The argument for this is that a God of love will do anything short of 
overriding 
our freedom to bring us to the sort of relationship that God wishes for us all. 
This question is in one way separable from the question of purgatorial 
perfection for those who are pre-mortem believers. One could argue that God's 
love is expressed through purgatorial perfection without its also being 
expressed through second chances. Acceptance of the notion of second chances 
gives support for the idea of a purgatory whose purpose goes beyond 
purification.
Walls notes both that other cultures (Egyptian, Indian, Persian, Babylonian, 
Greek, Jewish) have ideas similar to that of purgatory and that this fact has 
at 
least two opposite interpretations. One is the old standard (and still active) 
view that this is yet another case of Christians being influenced by 
non-Christian thought that they then shape up into Christian form and suppose 
to 
be sanctioned by God. The other is that, as Lewis puts it regarding another 
topic, these are "good dreams" that constitute a part of what God's sends as 
preparation for reception of Christian truth.
Walls wants to show that the doctrine of purgatory being considered is 
compatible with retention of personal identity from various metaphysical 
perspectives. Thus one sort of materialism (offered by Corcoran), Thomism (with 
two versions considered), and dualism (both the view that a person is a 
body-soul, two-substance being and the view that the person is the immaterial 
mind), are considered. Each is held to be compatible with purgatorial doctrine 
as Walls conceives it.
It is obviously important that an account of purgatory offer clear grounds 
for thinking that, if purgatory there be, personal identity will be retained in 
it. The emphasis in the Purgatory discussion is on recognition of personal 
identity -- on the inhabitant of purgatory being able to see himself as the 
same 
person as a particular pre-mortem person. One claim Walls considers, and with 
which he has considerable sympathy, is that were someone to be instantly 
"zapped" into moral perfection, she would not recognize herself as herself, 
whereas if moral perfection were reached over the course of a process in which 
she participated self-recognition would be no problem.
This is a splendid treatment of the topic -- as careful and fair a discussion 
of the doctrine of purgatory as one is likely to 
find.
 

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