THE SALVATION CONSPIRACY:
How Hell Became Eternal
by Dr. Ken R. Vincent
Universal Salvation is
the theological position that ALL people will be saved. This concept,
present from the earliest days of Christianity, is supported by numerous
verses in the Bible , second in number only to those advocating
Salvation by Good Works. Universalists do not reject the undeniable fact
that Hell is in the Bible but contend that the function of Hell
is for purification. Much later in the Christian story, when some claimed
that Hell was a place for everlasting punishment, Universalists countered
with their conviction that God was too good to condemn anyone to Eternal
Hell! Today's world news is saturated with the tragedies resulting from
religions that insist on their own "exclusive" path to God, and
Universalists are reasserting the relevance of that loving doctrine known
to the earliest Christians - Salvation for ALL.
In this paper, I will
attempt to make the following points clear: 1) For the first 500 years of
Christianity, Christians and Christian theologians were broadly
Universalist, 2) Translation/Mistranslation of the Scriptures from Greek
to Latin contributed the reinterpretation of the nature of Hell, 3)
Merging of Church and State fostered the corruption of Universalist
thought, 4) Modern archeological findings and Biblical scholarship confirm
Universalist thought among early Christians, and 5) Contemporary Christian
scholars find Universalist theology most authentic to Jesus.
To examine Universal
Salvation during the first 500 years of Christianity, the works of three
scholars are indisputably the finest: Hosea Ballou II's Ancient History of Universalism
(1842), Edward Beecher's History of Opinions
on the Scriptural Doctrine of Retribution (1878), and John Wesley
Hanson's Universalism, the Prevailing Doctrine of the Church for its
First 500 Years (1899). I have used all these resources but have
broadened Universalist history to include 20 th Century discoveries and
scholarship pertinent to Universalist Christianity.
IN THE BEGINNING
At its beginning,
Christianity was a hopeful religion. In the words of St. Paul, "There is
no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no
longer male or female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus" (Gal 3:28).
Communal meals, a culture of sharing and a tradition of helping others
were the hallmarks of the early church. Despite a paternalistic culture,
women were Apostles (Lk 8:2-3) and ministers (Rom 16: 1).
One of the best clues to
early Christian theology is in artwork discovered at the Catacombs in Rome
. Graves of common people were adorned with drawings of Jesus as the Good
Shepherd - beardless and virtually indistinguishable from the Greco-Roman
savior figure Orpheus. Other popular images there were the Last Supper and
the Magi at the birth of Jesus. Occasionally in early Christian art, Jesus
is shown working miracles using a magic wand! Significantly, the crucifix
is noticeably absent from early art, as is any depiction of judgment
scenes or Hell.
As we move into the
middle of the 2 nd Century, a shift takes place from writing works
considered "Holy Scripture" to interpretations of it. The first writer on
the theology on Christian Universalism whose works survive is St. Clement
of Alexandria (150 - 215CE). He was the head of the theology school at
Alexandria which, until it closed at the end of the 4 th Century, was a
bastion of Universalist thought. His pupil, Origen (185 - 254 CE), wrote
the first complete presentation of Christianity as a system, and
Universalism was at its core. Origen was the first to produce a parallel
Old Testament that included Hebrew, a Greek transliteration of
the Hebrew, the Septuagint, and three other Greek translations. He was
also the first to recognize that some parts of the Bible should
be taken literally and others metaphorically. He wrote a defense of
Christianity in response to a pagan writer's denigration of it.
Prior to the Roman
Catholic Church's condemnation of all of Universalist thought in the 6 th
Century, Church authority had already reached back in time to pick out
several of Origen's ideas they deemed unacceptable. Some that found
disfavor were his insistence that the Devil would be saved at the end of
time, the pre-existence of human souls, the reincarnation of the wicked,
and his claim that the purification of souls could go on for many eons.
Finally, he was condemned by the Church because his concept of the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit did not agree with the "official" Doctrine of the
Trinity formulated a century after his death! After the 6 th Century, much
of his work was destroyed; fortunately, some of it survived.
According to Edward
Beecher, a Congregationalist theologian, there were six theology schools
in Christendom during its early years - four were Universalist (
Alexandria , Cesarea, Antioch , and Edessa ). One advocated annihilation (
Ephesus ) and one advocated Eternal Hell (the Latin Church of North
Africa). Most of the Universalists throughout Christendom followed the
teachings of Origen. Later, Theodore of Mopsuestia had a different
theological basis for Universal Salvation, and his view continued in the
break-away Church of the East (Nestorian) where his Universalist ideas
still exist in its liturgy today.
"HARROWING OF HELL" IN
CANON AND APOCRYPHA
One of the primary
beliefs of the early Christians was that Jesus descended into Sheol/Hades
in order to preach to the dead and rescue all of those, as it clearly says
in I Peter 3:20, "who in former times did not obey." This terminology is
familiar to anyone who has recited the Apostle's Creed which states that
Jesus descended to Hell after his death, before his resurrection. Known as
the "Harrowing of Hell," this is a major theme in Universalism because it
underscores the early belief that judgment at the end of life is not final
and that all souls can be saved after death. Interestingly, in the early
Church there were not only prayers for the dead, but St. Paul notes there
were also baptisms for the dead (I Cor 15: 29).
In later times, the
church attempted to reinterpret the text to narrow the categories of
people saved from Hell to the Jewish prophets and the righteous pagans.
Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan take this approach in their latest
book, The Last Week. (Curiously, they omit the key verse "those
who in former times did not obey.") However, in his earlier book, The
Cross That Spoke , John Dominic Crossan is more favorable to the
Universalist view. For example, he relates a story from the non-canonical
Gospel of Peter in which two angels come down from Heaven to get
Jesus out of the tomb on Easter morning. As they are carrying him out and
are about to ascend to Heaven, a voice from Heaven asks them, "Hast thou
preached to them that sleep?" The wooden cross that is somehow following
them out of the tomb speaks and says, "Yes!" In discussing Jesus' decent
into Hell, Crossan also sites another classic Universalist text, I Peter
4:6 which says, "For this is why the Gospel was preached even to the dead,
that though they were judged in flesh like men they might live in the
spirit like God." He also notes that in Colossians 2:15, Jesus, "disarmed
the principalities and powers and made a public example of them," and in
Ephesians 4:8-9:
Therefore it is said,
"When he ascended on high, he made captivity itself a captive; he gave
gifts to his people." (When it says, "He ascended," what does it mean but
that he also descended into the lower parts of the earth? He who descended
is the same one who ascended far above all heavens, so that he might fill
all things.")
Understanding the role of
the "Harrowing of Hell" has been expanded by recent archeological findings
and modern Biblical scholarship. Among the discoveries over the past 100
years is the Apocalypse of Peter , written about 135 C.E. (not to
be confused with the Gnostic Apocalypse of Peter discovered at
Nag Hammadi in 1947). For a time, it was considered for inclusion into the
New Testament instead of the Revelation to John . It is
referred to in the Muratorian Canon of the early Church, as well as in the
writings of St. Clement of Alexandria . (It should be noted that the
Universalist passage from the Apocalypse of Peter is found in the
Ethiopian text but is not part of the fragment text found at Akhmim ,
Egypt .) In the Ethiopic copy, Peter asks Jesus to have pity on the people
in Hell, and Jesus says they will eventually all be saved. Later, Peter
(who is writing to Clement) says to keep that knowledge a secret so that
foolish men may not see it. This same theme is repeated in the Second
Book of the Sibyline Oracles in which the saved behold the sinners in
Hell and ask that mercy be shown them. Here, the sinners are saved by the
prayers of the righteous.
Another 2 nd Century
work, The Epistle to the Apostles , also states that our prayers
for the dead can affect their forgiveness by God. The 2 nd Century
Odes of Solomon , which was discovered in the early 20 th
Century, was for a time considered to be Jewish, then Gnostic, and more
recently, early Christian. Its theme is that Jesus saves the dead when
they come to him in Hell and cry out, "Son of God, have pity on us!" In
the 4 th /6 th Century Syriac Book of the Cave of Treasures ,
Jesus "preached the resurrection to those who were lying in the dust" and
"pardoned those who had sinned against the Law." In the Gospel of
Nicodemus (a.k.a. Acts of Pilate ), a 4 th /5 th Century
apocryphal gospel, Jesus saves everyone in the Greek version but rescues
only the righteous pre-Christians in the Latin translation. In What is
Gnosticism? , Karen King identifies the Nag Hammadi Gospel of
Truth as teaching Universal Salvation; she states that The
Apocryphon of John (a.k.a. The Secret Book of John )
declares all will be saved except apostates. In the Coptic Book of the
Resurrection , all but Satan and his ministers are pardoned.
Interestingly, belief in
the "Harrowing of Hell" has had some validation by modern day near-death
experiencers (people who have been resuscitated following a period of
clinical death). While most near-death experiencers report a "heavenly"
experience of Light and overwhelming love, many of those whose experience
begins in "hellish" turmoil and darkness say that their descent was
reversed when they called out to God or Jesus.
THE CHURCH-STATE
CONUNDRUM
Many think that
Christianity was at its best during its first 300 years - a time of
immense diversity of opinion, creativity, and expectation. Although the
official sanction of governments provided the Church with some very
critical benefits (like not feeding Christians to lions!), some of the
vitality of the young Church was inevitably compromised. Its
legitimization in the 4 th Century, first by the king of Armenia , then by
Constantine of Rome, and finally by the king of Ethiopia , led to a new
era for Christianity. Constantine , being a military man, wanted
standardization in all things. The Emperor called the Counsel of Nicea
because at the time, the Bishop of Rome was not yet Pope (in the way we
think of him today). According to Roman Catholic scholar Jean-Guy
Vaillancourt, the Pope did not become the head of the Roman Church until
752 CE. At that time, Charlemagne recognized the Bishop of Rome as the
singular Pope, and Pope Leo III reciprocated by legitimizing Charlemagne
as the Holy Roman Emperor. It should be noted that the 6 th Century
Emperor Justinian - NOT the Bishop of Rome - called the Church counsel
where Universalism was condemned.
JESUS SEMINAR "ENDORSES"
CHRISTIAN UNIVERSALISM
Of all modern Biblical
scholars, none have gained so much publicity and been so readily
accessible to the lay reader than a group called the Jesus Seminar. Over
150 Biblical scholars pooled their knowledge for the express purpose of
analyzing the Gospels to determine which words and deeds were authentic to
Jesus. Their resulting "Scholars' Editions" of the Gospels were remarkable
for the few passages that were thought to be original to Jesus. For
Universalists, the most significant result of the Seminar's scrutiny was
their inadvertent highlighting of many Universalist passages. By far,
verses advocating Universal Salvation received the most endorsement from
the Jesus Seminar as authentic to Jesus. While they rejected some of the
"zingers" (e.g., Jn 12:32), virtually all Jesus' classic parables that
have been interpreted as Universalist since the beginning of Christian
theology were judged by the Jesus Seminar to be genuine to him, including:
The Parable of the Lost Sheep (Matt 18:12-13; Lk 15:4-6), The Workers in
the Vineyard (Matt 20:1-15), The Parable of the Lost Coin (Lk 15:8-9), and
the Parable of the Prodigal Son (Lk 15:11-32). Also, the verses relating
to the fact that Hell is not permanent and used only for
rehabilitation/purification were determined authentic by the Jesus
Seminar. They are: Settle with Your Opponent (Matt 5:25 -26; Lk 12:58 -59)
and the Parable of the Wicked Servant (Matt 18:23 -34). Finally, although
it was mutilated in part by the Jesus Seminar scholars, Jesus' teaching to
be like God and love our enemies as God is good to the just and the unjust
(Matt 5:44-46) was voted genuine to Jesus.
It is noteworthy that the
Seminar rejected all of the verses relating to the "Jesus Saves" theology
as original to Jesus. John Calvin's Predestination fared only slightly
better with only two verses seen as original to Jesus (Matt 6:10 , 10:29
). Some classic sayings of Jesus on Good Works were deemed authentic, such
as Parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:30 -35), Jesus on forgiveness
(Matt 6:12 ), and the Parable of the Sower (Mk 4:3-8; Matt 13:3-8; Lk
8:5-8). (Tentmaker Ministries does NOT endorse Jesus Seminar.)
MISTRANSLATIONS AND
MISANTHROPES
One of the essential
tenants of Universalism is that all punishment in Hell is remedial,
curative, and purifying. As long as Western Christianity was mainly Greek
- the language of the New Testament - it was Universalist.
Interestingly, NONE of
the Greek-speaking Universalists ever felt the need to explain Greek words
such as "aion" and "aionion." In Greek, an aion (in English, usually
spelled "eon") is an indefinite period of time, usually of long duration.
When it was translated into Latin Vulgate, "aion" became "aeternam" which
means "eternal." These translation errors were the basis for much of what
was written about Eternal Hell.
The first person to write
about Eternal Hell was the Latin North African Tertullian who is
considered the Father of the Latin Church. As most people reason, Hell is
a place for people you don't like to go! Tertullian fantasized that not
only the wicked would be in Hell but also every philosopher and theologian
who ever argued with him! He envisioned a time when he would look down
from Heaven at those people in Hell and laugh with glee!
By far, the main person
responsible for making Hell eternal in the Western Church was St.
Augustine (354-430 CE). Augustine's Christian mother did not kick him out
of her house for not marrying the girlfriend he got pregnant, but she did
oust him when he became a Manichean Gnostic. Later, he renounced
Manichaeism and returned to the Roman Church where he was made Bishop of
Hippo in North Africa . He did not know Greek, had tried to study it, but
stated that he hated it. Sadly, it is his misunderstanding of Greek that
cemented the concept of Eternal Hell in the Western Church . Augustine not
only said that Hell was eternal for the wicked but also for anyone who
wasn't a Christian. So complete was his concept of God's exclusion of
non-Christians that he considered un-baptized babies as damned; when these
babies died, Augustine softened slightly to declare that they would be
sent to the "upper level" of Hell. Augustine is also the inventor the
concept of "Hell Lite", a.k.a. Purgatory, which he developed to
accommodate some of the Universalist verses in the Bible .
Augustine acknowledged the Universalists whom he called "tender-hearted,"
and included them among the "orthodox."
At this point, it should
be noted that many in the early Church who were Universalist cautioned
others to be careful whom they told about Universalism, as it might cause
some of the weaker ones to sin. This has always been a criticism of
Universalism by those who think that people will sin with abandon if there
is no threat of eternal punishment. In fact, modern psychology has
affirmed that love is a much more powerful motivator than fear, and
knowing that God loves each and every person on the planet as much as God
loves you does not promote delinquency. Conversely, it is Christian
exclusivity that leads to the marginalization of other human beings and
the thinking that war and cruelty to the "other" are justified since
they're going to Hell anyway! This kind of twisted thinking led to the
persecution of the pagans, the witch hunts, the Inquisition, and the
Holocaust.
UNIVERSALISM IN THE EAST
AND ZOROASTRIAN ROOTS
A slightly different type
of Universalist theology was taught in the Aramaic speaking Church of the
East (Nestorian). Virtually all of the Greek-speaking Universalists built
on Origen's system that emphasizes free will. Origen saw an endless round
of purification and relapse, but that in the end, God's love would draw
all back to God. According to Dr. Beecher, Theodore of Mopsuestia (350-428
CE) saw, "sin as an unavoidable part of the development and education of
man; that some carry it to a greater extent than others, but that God will
finally overrule it for their final establishment in good." Theodore of
Mopsuestia is known in the Nestorian Church as "The Interpreter." The 5 th
Century with its ongoing feuding councils saw major splits in the
Christian Church. The Coptic Church of Egypt and Ethiopia split in 451CE;
the Armenian Church left about the same time; the Church of the East
(Nestorian) left in 486 CE. At the time of the split, the Nestorian Church
was larger in numbers than the Roman Church. It included all of the
Sasanian Persian Empire (which stretched from the Euphrates to India ),
along the Silk Road through modern Kazakhstan , Turkmenistan , Uzbekistan
, through Tibet , Mongolia , and into China . Additionally, it had
established Christian churches in the south of India by the end of the 2
nd Century. While it suffered under Moslem invasion in the 7 th Century,
it continued to grow in the Far East until being virtually annihilated by
Tamerlane in the 14 th Century. Today, only a quarter-million remain. The
Nestorian Church continued to be Universalist for most of its history, and
a Universalist liturgy written by Theodore of Mopsuestia is still in use
today. Also, the Book of the Bee written in the 13 th Century by
Bishop Solomon of Basra includes the Universalist teachings of Isaac,
Diodorus, and Theodore in Chapter 60. We know from Martin Palmer in the
Jesus Sutras that the Nestorians who proselytized in China in the
early days had only two Christian books: the Gospel of Matthew
and an early Christian prayer book known as the Didache or
The Teachings of the Twelve Apostles . The appeal of Christianity
in the Far East was that Jesus could save you and take you to Paradise ,
avoiding the risk of an undesired reincarnation.
Christopher Buck notes in
his article, "The Universality of the Church of the East: How Persian Was
Persian Christianity?" that the success of Christian conversions in the
East may have been the affinity of Christianity with Zoroastrianism.
Unlike Manichaeism and other Gnostic Christianity, Zoroastrianism (like
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) maintains that the world was created
good and was corrupted by evil. In Zoroastrianism, the basic tenants are:
God-Satan, Good-Evil, Light-Darkness, Angels-Demons, Death-Judgment,
Heaven-Hell, and at the end of time, the resurrection of the body and life
everlasting. Zoroaster was a Universalist, as he says in his Hymns to
God , "If you understand these laws of happiness and pain which God
has ordained, O Mortals, there is a long period of punishment for the
wicked and reward for the pious, but thereafter Eternal Joy shall rein
forever " (Y 30:11 emphasis added ). In Zoroastrianism,
while God is wholly good, there is no doctrine of forgiveness; your good
deeds must always outnumber your bad deeds in order to avoid purification
in Hell. Christianity brought Jesus' message that God forgives sins for
the asking! Also, one doesn't need a priest as an intercessor or a
sacrifice to obtain God's grace. This affinity is best illustrated in a 13
th Century Christmas liturgy of the Nestorian Church which states that,
"The Magi (Zoroastrian priests) came . they opened their treasures and
offered him (Jesus) their offerings as they were commanded by their
teacher Zoroaster who prophesized to them." What is implicit in the
Gospel of Matthew is explicit in this Nestorian liturgy.
Zoroaster had predicted the coming of future saviors "from the nations"
(e.g., countries other than Persia ). If you wanted to make converts in a
Zoroastrian world, the story of the Magi at the birth of Jesus was your
entree.
UNIVERSALISM OFFICIALLY
CONDEMNED IN THE WEST
Although the Roman Church
had condemned some of Origen's other ideas, his Universalism was never
questioned, nor were the writings of any other Universalist. There were
even Universalists among the Gnostics; although Gnosticism had been
condemned heartily by the Church, Universalism had never been listed among
their errors. If Universal Salvation were heretical, how could the Church
explain all those avowed Universalists who had already been made Saints
(St. Clement of Alexandria , St. Macrina the Younger and her brother, St.
Gregory of Nyssa, and others)? As mentioned earlier, it was the Emperor
Justinian who initiated the deed.
Universalism had never
been officially condemned prior to Justinian's convening the Council of
Constantinople in 553CE, but this momentous decision was made against a
background of turmoil in the Church and Western civilization.
Latin-speaking Christians in the Church began to overshadow the
Greek-speakers, and the Nestorian Church of the East had recently split
from the Catholic West. (In all fairness, the Latin Church was doing well
to have anyone who could read Latin - much less Greek.) Less than eighty
years earlier, the Western Roman Empire had fallen to pagan barbarians.
The Roman Church had long before become the handmaiden of the State. What
could be better for control in an age of superstition and fear than to
make Hell eternal and Salvation possible only through the Church? Less
than a century later, all of Christianity (Latin, Greek, Armenian, Coptic,
as well as the Nestorian Church of the East) would be either partially or
totally overrun by Moslem conquerors.
CONCLUSION
Compare the hopeful,
positive art of the early Church in the Catacombs with the scenes of Hell
and damnation on the wall of almost every Medieval Catholic Cathedral.
These scenes were made even more terrifying by the Latin mistranslation of
Jesus' Parable of the Sheep and Goats (Matt 25:31-46). In the West,
Augustine trumped Origen, and what was an "eon" in the original Greek
became "eternal" in Latin.
While Universalism
continued in the Church of the East, in the West from the 6 th Century
forward, it was relegated to the realm of mystics until the Reformation
when the idea of Universal Salvation was resurrected. Universalism
continues today as a theological position among a fair number of
Christians in a variety of denominations. It is ripe for revival.
Ken R. Vincent, Ed.D., is
the author of: THE GOLDEN THREAD, GOD'S PROMISE OF UNIVERSAL SALVATION
.