Disclaimer:
I am going to say some things that may challenge you. If you have been with me in Christian Conversations, in the Monday Bible Study, or in our Lenten Book Study, you will have heard me say these things before. As always, I view every sermon as an invitation to further conversation. If you have questions, complaints, comments, or would just like to discuss these issues further, I will be happy to join you at lunch, to make an appointment for coffee or a meal, or to sit with you at the time and place of your choosing.
I saw a clip this week
of an interview with a young man
describing his experience of coming out.
The experience was very painful,
because it meant that he would have to leave his religion,
Mormonism,
and as a result,
it likely also meant
leaving his family.
When he didn’t hear from his mother for a few weeks,
he assumed that he’d been correct.
But then his mom reached out
to say she was also leaving Mormonism.
He was stunned,
and when he called her
to hear how she had come to this conclusion,
she said that she couldn’t be a part of a church
where her children weren’t welcome.
In this young man’s retelling of the conversation
his mother had said to him,
“If you’re going to hell,
we’re coming with you.”
The fear of Hell has long been a tool
of many religions,
Christianity among them.
Teachers and preachers of Hell
have used this doctrine
to scare folks into good behavior,
or at the very least,
into submission to the authority of the institution.
Mothers don’t have to be taught
to love their children.
Mothers do have to be taught
to reject their children
in order to keep their good standing
within a religious community.
We kept folks in line
by keeping them worried
that if they don’t think like us,
don’t live like us,
don’t worship and pray like us,
then they cannot be saved—
or, even worse,
that we will withhold salvation from them.
That word,
‘saved,’
sort of begs the question,
“From what?
Or, for what?”
And we have often answered that question
in ways that preserved our power.
We said
God is coming to judge the living and the dead,
sending the righteous into everlasting peace
and consigning the unrighteous
to everlasting damnation,
conscious eternal torment,
separation from God—
in a word,
Hell.
We have heard preachers and teachers of Hell
tell us that verses like Acts 4:12,
There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among mortals by which we must be saved—
we have heard them explain
that we have to make some kind of a decision,
that we have to opt into salvation
or opt out of Hell,
like we are signing up for some kind
of spiritual insurance policy
instead of being invited into a relationship
with the Living God.
We heard them warn us
that only the church has the truth,
and only the church
can forgive your sins,
and outside the church
there is no way to be saved.
But I have good news.
The Hell you fear
does not exist.
Hell does not exist in the scriptures,
except by mistranslation.
It did not exist in the imagination
of the authors of the New Testament,
except by our misunderstanding.
It does not now,
nor did it then,
exist in Jewish theology.
And it does not exist in reality,
except by our own making—
that is,
if there is a Hell to be feared,
it is the conditions we create or accept
for our neighbors and ourselves.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is in the Gaza strip,
where children survive a war
only to be starved to death.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is in Ukraine
where tens of thousands of children
have been shipped off to foster care
in Russia;
it is in Tigray
where rape and starvation are weapons of war,
it is in Sudan
where civilians are caught in the crossfire
between two warring generals.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is in churches
where mothers have to choose
between loving God
and loving their children.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is watching your child suffer through an addiction,
or weather a divorce,
or fight cancer,
or anything else you’re powerless to stop.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is sitting in a cafeteria hungry,
the air thick with food and the laughter of peers,
while your stomach growls
because you have unpaid lunch debt.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is miscarrying the child you very much wanted
in the bathroom of the ER
because it is illegal to treat you
until you’re almost dead.
If there is a Hell to be feared,
it is sleeping in the car with two kids,
because you job can’t pay for both
childcare and a place to sleep at night.
So, if we are being saved,
what are we being saved from
and what are we being saved for?
Well,
instead of ‘saved’
that word is probably better translated as
“liberated” or “delivered.
The term does not imply
an individual inner sense of spiritual freedom,
nor is it the promise of heaven hereafter.
Rather it is a real, lived experience of liberation
from oppressive and repressive circumstances.
Those who would use the name of Jesus
to promise you a sense of spiritual freedom
in the great by and by
while allowing you to remain
in oppressive circumstances
in the here and now,
has taken the name of God in vain.
Those who would use the Name of Jesus
to promise you individual atonement
and absolve you of any responsibility
for the hell in which you allow others to live
has blasphemed the name of Christ
and distorted the Gospel.
These preachers and teachers of Hell
are hired hands and wolves in sheep’s clothing.
No doubt some of the preachers and teachers
have preached and taught this bad theology
in good faith.
But that has not blunted the impact
of the doctrine of Hell
teaching us,
as one preacher put it,
that we could “pray our way out of a problem
we have behaved ourselves into.”
Beloved,
if the church wants to preach salvation,
we have got to get the message right.
Jesus has come to save us,
not from some future Hell,
but from all the hell we create or endure
in the present.
God in Christ has already secured the future,
already won the victory over sin, death, and the devil,
already redeemed all our pain and suffering.
God has already saved us from
an uncertain and terrifying future.
And God has saved us for
life and love and community in the present.
God has saved us for
preaching and teaching the good news
of God’s universal, liberating love.
God has saved us for
the work of deliverance and liberation
in solidarity with those going through hell
in this life.
Peter is in the hot seat in Acts
precisely because he has saved a man from his illness
in the name of Jesus
and his response when questioned
by the very people profiting from
a system of domination
was to declare that in the name of Jesus
he had been sent to proclaim and enact
liberation from systems of domination.
First John teaches us
that Love is our common calling,
asking,
How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help?
Little Children let us love, not in words or speech, but in truth and action.
And the Good Shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.
The Good Shepherd has descended to the dead,
has robbed any idea of Hell of its power,
and gives us the power and authority in his name
to do the same here and now.
The Good Shepherd
has seen what the world has done to us,
the Hell we have created for each other,
and says to us,
“If you’re going through Hell,
I’m coming with you.”
This is what we are being saved for,
to love our neighbors,
not in words or speech,
but in reality and in liberation.
Let us love
in Hospitality, in Generosity, and in Solidarity.
The Good News the church should proclaim
is not an individual insurance policy
against eternal damnation.
Let the message of the Church be this;
If you’re going through Hell,
in Jesus’ name,
we’re coming with you.
We are coming to rob hell of its power,
to liberate you in this life,
and to call you toward the next.
We are laying down our bad theology,
we are laying down our claim to power,
we are laying down any doctrines rooted in fear,
we are laying down any need to choose
between family and faith;
we are laying down our lives as individuals
to take up our life as a community.
We are taking up the name of Jesus
to not only preach deliverance
but to make deliverance a reality.
We are giving up
on every version of church
where any of God’s children are not welcome.
In a word,
we have come to love.
Love is the beating heart of the gospel.
Love is the very nature of God
revealed to us in Christ.
Love is our origin
and love is our destination.
The hell we have feared
does not exist.
But if you’re going through hell
in the here and now,
we’re coming with you.
Amen.