
must
either be Old Testament leftovers or first-century cultural superstitions
that are not really part of the revelation of Scripture.Confronted with the reality of an unending hell,
our minds sometimes strain to ask: "If man can be damned, why did God
make us with a freedom that gave us such a capability?" The standard answer,
and a good one, is that he gave us freedom because he wanted to confer
immense dignity on us by creating us in his image. God gave us the freedom
to choose, to join him or not to join him, to accept his invitation or
to reject it even though our choice would have eternal consequences.
In this way, we will form a kingdom of free subjects who have chosen to
be with God, not beings who have been coerced into doing the right thing.
At the same time, we must always add that if God created man as he did,
then it must have been the perfect way of going about it, the perfectly
right means of giving him freedom, the perfect risk to run, even at the
expense of rejection and damnation. His ways are perfect. He is God. He
is not only fair, he is the standard of fairness; he is not only love,
he is the standard of love; he is not only just, he is the standard of
justice. All his words will come to pass; all he wills is to be accomplished.
Is Man Truly Responsible for His Actions?
With the development of depth psychology, a tendency already present in
modern thought became predominant: namely, the belief that man is so much
a product of forces beyond his control that he is truly responsible for
his actions only in a rather minimal way. Man is seen as the product of
"economic laws of history", social and cultural forces, and drives and
desires of his own psyche, such as sex and hostility and the will to power.
These attitudes have even influenced God's people and have deeply affected
prevailing understandings of sin in the Church in recent years. Many moral
theologians have so restricted the possibility of freely choosing to do
serious wrong that serious sin and hell seem to be distant possibilities,
existing mainly in the realm of memories rather than among the present
truths that shape our lives and govern our actions. Large segments within
the Church today are taking a very permissive approach toward sin. Christians
are being led to believe that the objective standards of God, as contained
in the Scriptures and taught by the Christian Church across the centuries,
might not really be applicable in their own life situations or, if they
are applicable, that their violation would incur no blame. [1]
Scripture's view of man's responsibility for his
actions is quite different from that of thinkers influenced by modem Marxist,
behaviorist, and Freudian theories. In all of its relevant parts and in
its entirety, Scripture clearly holds that man is responsible before God
for his actions and that he will be judged accordingly. Scripture, without
denying their possible relevance, does not focus on determining the degree
to which mitigating circumstances (unfortunate childhood experiences,
poverty, and so on) or other people (parents, "society") may have contributed
to a person's wrong behavior, thereby lessening his guilt. Scripture quite
clearly shows that God expects man to obey the law he has placed within
him and the law he has revealed to him, availing himself of the help provided
in and through his Son and his body, the Christian people. Not to obey
God in a serious matter these are listed clearly in Scripture,
and we have already considered them puts one in danger of judgment.
Even when Scripture does consider what we might call mitigating circumstances,
it does not give modern man much comfort: ignorance of God's will does
not eliminate punishment, even though it may lessen it. "The slave who
knew his master's wishes but did not prepare to fulfill them will get
a severe beating, whereas the one who did not know them and who nonetheless
deserved to be flogged will get off with fewer stripes. More will be asked
of a man to whom more has been entrusted" (Lk 12:47-48).
How God may judge a particular case of allegedly "mitigating circumstances"
is not our place to say, just as it is not ours to determine who will
be damned and who will be saved. God makes the judgments. At the same
time, a Christian teacher would be extremely remiss in his duty if he
did not clearly state the overall picture given in Scripture: God holds
man responsible for his actions, and the prospect of damnation for those
who violate his commands is very real.
Have They Really Heard the Gospel?
Since Scripture insists that men who hear the gospel and reject it are
liable to damnation, various questions have been raised concerning the
manner in which the gospel is presented. What constitutes an effective
communication of the gospel? When can we say that someone has truly heard
it? Sometimes this question is raised in an honest concern for effective
evangelism. Other times it stems from the repugnance of modern man regarding
clear scriptural statements about the consequences of rejecting the gospel
and from his desire to rule out the possibility that he could be punished.
Is there anything in Scripture that can throw light on this question?
Two passages can help us here. The first is in the Letter to the Romans,
where Paul is considering what in the preaching of the gospel brings people
to faith. In the course of Paul's teaching, he asks whether the Jews of
his and Jesus' generation have truly heard the gospel, given the fact
that most of them apparently rejected it. His answer is unequivocal: "Certainly
they have heard."
I ask you, have they not heard? Certainly they have, for "their voice
has sounded over the whole earth, and their words to the limits of the
world." I put the question again, did Israel really not understand? First
of all, Moses says, "I will make you jealous of those who are not even
a nation; with a senseless nation I will make you angry." Then Isaiah
says boldly, "I was found by those who were not seeking me; to those who
were not looking for me I revealed myself" But of Israel he says, "All
day long I stretched out my hand to an unbelieving and contentious people"
(Rom 10:18-21).
Paul obviously thinks the word has been adequately proclaimed to the Jews
as a whole, who were at the time dispersed throughout the known world.
He considers their rejection of it as yet another outbreak of the kind
of unbelief and contentiousness that God severely punished and judged
morally culpable in the Old Testament. It is not a question of their not
having heard or understood.
Of course, this example does not immediately put us in a position to judge
whether someone has really heard and understood the gospel in a given
situation. But it should put us on guard against assuming too quickly
that the presentation of the message of salvation is deficient. The massive
rejection of Jesus by the Jews of his day and Paul's stands as sobering
evidence that even masses of people can both hear and understand the gospel
and yet reject it, to their own condemnation.
For our part we should make every effort to present the gospel adequately
and not remain content with unnecessarily offensive or deficient presentations.
We should, of course, make every effort to ensure that our lives, actions,
and relationships reflect the truth of the gospel well. But we should
not delude ourselves into thinking that we need an advanced academic degree
in communications to communicate the gospel adequately; nor do our lives
have to be perfectly transformed before others can truly hear and understand.
The awe-inspiring truth is that people and large numbers of them
can both hear and understand and yet reject.
Another passage that throws light on this question is the ending of the
story of Dives and Lazarus. Dives finally pleads that Lazarus be allowed
to go to the rich man's brothers to prevent their ending up in hell: