https://www.sermonaudio.com/sermons/12112554295917
The Pain Texts – A Teaching Summary
“Will we bow to His word, even when our emotions protest?”
Foundational Definitions
- Eternal Conscious Punishment: Ongoing, unending, consciously felt judgment after resurrection for those who reject Christ.
- Annihilationism: The view that the wicked are extinguished after judgment, ceasing to exist as their final punishment.
- Conditional Immortality: The belief that only the saved receive eternal existence; others are ultimately destroyed.
Key Passages and Exegetical Observations
Matthew 25:31–46
- Two groups only: sheep and goats.
- Two destinies only: eternal punishment vs. eternal life (v. 46).
- The word “eternal” (Gk: aionios) modifies both punishment and life – same duration, different ends.
- “Punishment” (Gk: kolasis) implies a conscious experience, not a passive result.
Revelation 14:9–11; 20:10–15
- Language of “torment,” “day and night,” “forever and ever”
- “No rest day or night” is active, continuous judgment.
- The same lake of fire torments Satan and is the final destination for the lost.
Mark 9:43–48 (cf. Isaiah 66:24)
- “Unquenchable fire” = fire that cannot be put out.
- “Their worm does not die” = ongoing corruption, decay, and disgrace that never reaches a point of relief or completion.
- Not images of extinction, but of perpetual ruin and judgment.
Luke 16:19–31
- The rich man is conscious, in agony, and aware of his condition – before final judgment.
- Jesus treats postmortem torment as a real category.
2 Thessalonians 1:5–10
- “Eternal destruction from the presence of the Lord.”
- Olethros = ruin, not erasure.
- One cannot be shut out from God’s presence unless they continue to exist.
Doctrinal Summary
- Scripture teaches not merely a final moment of judgment, but a continuing experience of God’s wrath.
- Historic Reformed confessions (e.g. 2LBCF 1689, Westminster, Athanasian Creed) uphold this view without hesitation.
- Church history stands unified: annihilationism is a theological novelty.
Pastoral Application
1. This Doctrine Should Humble Us – Hell is not a theory. It is real. We speak with tears and prayer, not cold logic.
2. This Doctrine Magnifies the Cross – Jesus bore in hours what would crush us for eternity. Diminishing hell diminishes grace.
3. This Doctrine Urges Evangelism – We are not inviting people to a lifestyle, but warning of eternal danger and offering eternal life.
4. This Doctrine Calls for Self-Examination – Am I in Christ? Have I turned from sin and trusted in Him alone?
The same Jesus who speaks most vividly of hell is the Jesus who says, ‘Come to Me… and I will give you rest.’
Let this doctrine drive us to prayer, compassion, urgency, and more profound gratitude for so great a salvation.