Of Hell
“Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.”
Mark 9:48.
1. Every truth which is revealed in the oracles of God is
undoubtedly of great importance. Yet it may be allowed that some of those which
are revealed therein are of greater importance than others, as being more
immediately conducive to the grand end of all, the eternal salvation of men. And
we may judge of their importance even from this circumstance, — that they are
not mentioned once only in the sacred writings, but are repeated over and over.
A remarkable instance of this we have with regard to the awful truth which is
now before us. Our blessed Lord, who uses no superfluous words, who makes no
“vain repetitions,” repeats it over and over in the same chapter, and as it
were, in the same breath. So, (Mark 9:43, 44, ) “If thy hand offend thee,” — if a thing or
person, as useful as a hand, be an occasion of sin, and there is no other way to
shun that sin, — “cut it off: It is better for thee to enter into life maimed,
than having two hands to go into hell, into the fire that shall never be
quenched: Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.” So again,
(Mark 9:45, 46, ) “If thy foot offend thee, cut it off: It is
better for thee to enter halt into life, than having two feet to be cast into
hell, into the fire that shall never be quenched: Where their worm dieth not,
and the fire is not quenched.” And yet again, (Mark
9:47, 48, ) “If thine eye” — a
person or thing as dear as thine eye — “offend thee,” — hinder thy running the
race which is set before thee, — “pluck it out : It is better for thee to enter
into the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast into
hell-fire: Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.”
2. And let it not be thought, that the consideration of these
terrible truths is proper only for enormous sinners. How is this supposition
consistent with what our Lord speaks to those who were then, doubtless, the
holiest men upon earth? “When innumerable multitudes were gathered together, he
said to his disciples” (the Apostles) “first of all, I say unto you, my friends,
Fear not them that can kill the body, and after that have no more that they can
do. But I say unto you, Fear him, who after he hath killed hath power to cast
into hell; yea, I say unto you, Fear him.” (Luke 12:1–5.) Yea, fear him under this very
notion, — of having power to cast into hell: That is, in effect, fear lest he
should cast you into the place of torment. And this very fear, even in the
children of God, is one excellent means of preserving them from it.
3. It behoves, therefore not only the outcasts of men, but even
you, his friends, you that fear and love God, deeply to consider what is
revealed in the oracles of God concerning the future state of punishment. How
widely distant is this from the most elaborate accounts which are given by the
heathen authors! Their accounts are (in many particulars at least) childish,
fanciful, and self-inconsistent. So that it is no wonder they did not believe
themselves, but only related the tales of the vulgar. So Virgil strongly
intimates, when, after the laboured account he had given of the shades beneath,
he sends him that had related it out at the ivory gate, through which (as he
tells us) only dreams pass; thereby giving us to know that all the
preceding account is no more than a dream. This he only insinuates; but his
brother poet, Juvenal, speaks out flat and plain, —
Esse aliquos
manes, et subterranea regna, Nec pueri credunt, nisi qui nondum aere lavantur:
“Even our children do not believe a word of the tales concerning
another world.”
4. Here, on the contrary, all is worthy of God, the Creator, the
Governor of mankind. All is awful and solemn; suitable to his wisdom and justice
by whom “Tophet was ordained of old;” although originally prepared, not for the
children of men, but “for the devil and his angels.”
The punishment of those who, in spite of all the warnings of God,
resolve to have their portion with the devil and his angels, will, according to
the ancient and not improper division, be either paena damni, — “what they lose;” or paena sensus, — “what they feel.” After considering these
separately, I shall touch on a few additional circumstances, and conclude with
two or three inferences.
I. 1. And, First, let us consider the paena damni, — “the punishment of loss.” This commences in
that very moment wherein the soul is separated from the body; in that instant,
the soul loses all those pleasures, the enjoyment of which depends on the
outward senses. The smell, the taste, the touch, delight no more: The organs
that ministered to them are spoiled, and the objects that used to gratify them
are removed far away. In the dreary regions of the dead all these things are
forgotten; or, if remembered, are only remembered with pain; seeing they are
gone for ever. All the pleasures of the imagination are at an end. There is no
grandeur in the infernal regions; there is nothing beautiful in those dark
abodes; no light but that of livid flames. And nothing new, but one unvaried
scene of horror upon horror! There is no music but that of groans and shrieks;
of weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth; of curses and blasphemies against
God, or cutting reproaches of one another. Nor is there anything to gratify the
sense of honour: No; they are the heirs of shame and everlasting contempt.
2. Thus are they totally separated from all the things they were
fond of in the present world. At the same instant will commence another loss, —
that of all the persons whom they loved. They are torn away from their
nearest and dearest relations; their wives, husbands, parents, children; and
(what to some will be worse than all this) the friend which was as their own
soul. All the pleasure they ever enjoyed in these is lost, gone, vanished away:
For there is no friendship in hell. Even the poet who affirms, (though I know
not on what authority,)
Devil with devil damn’d Firm concord
holds,
does not affirm that there is any concord among the human fiends
that inhabit the great abyss.
3. But they will then be sensible of a greater loss than that of
all they enjoyed on earth. They have lost their place in Abraham’s bosom, in the
paradise of God. Hitherto, indeed, it hath not entered into their hearts to
conceive what holy souls enjoy in the garden of God, in the society of angels,
and of the wisest and best men that have lived from the beginning of the world;
(not to mention the immense increase of knowledge which they will then
undoubtedly receive;) but they will then fully understand the value of what they
have vilely cast away.
4. But as happy as the souls in paradise are, they are preparing
for far greater happiness. For paradise is only the porch of heaven; and it is
there the spirits of just men are made perfect. It is in heaven only that there
is the fulness of joy; the pleasures that are at God’s right hand for evermore.
The loss of this, by those unhappy spirits, will be the completion of their
misery. They will then know and feel, that God alone is the centre of all
created spirits; and, consequently, that a spirit made for God can have no rest
out of him. It seems that the Apostle had this in his view when he spoke of
those “who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of
the Lord.” Banishment from the presence of the Lord is the very essence of
destruction to a spirit that was made for God. And if that banishment lasts for
ever, it is “everlasting destruction.”
Such is the loss sustained by those miserable creatures, on whom
that awful sentence will be pronounced: “Depart from me, ye cursed!” What an
unspeakable curse, if there were no other! But, alas! this is far from being the
whole: For, to the punishment of loss, will be added the punishment of sense.
What they lose implies unspeakable misery, which yet is inferior to what they
feel. This it is which our Lord expresses in those emphatical words: “Where
their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.”
II. 1. From the time that sentence was pronounced upon man,
“Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return,” it was the custom of all
nations, so far as we can learn, to commit dust to dust: It seemed natural to
restore the bodies of the dead to the general mother, earth. But in process of
time another method obtained, chiefly among the rich and great, of burning the
bodies of their relations, and frequently in a grand magnificent manner; for
which purpose they erected huge funeral piles, with immense labour and expense.
By either of these methods the body of man was soon restored to its parent dust.
Either the worm or the fire soon consumed the well-wrought frame; after which
the worm itself quickly died, and the fire was entirely quenched. But there is,
likewise, a worm that belongs to the future state; and that is a worm that never
dieth! and there is a fire hotter than that of the funeral pile; and it is a
fire that will never be quenched!
2. The First thing intended by the worm that never dieth, seems
to be a guilty conscience; including self-condemnation, sorrow, shame, remorse,
and a sense of the wrath of God. May not we have some conception of this, by
what is sometimes felt even in the present world? Is it not of this, chiefly,
that Solomon speaks, when he says, “The spirit of a man may bear his
infirmities;” his infirmities, or griefs, of any other kind; “but a wounded
spirit who can bear?” Who can bear the anguish of an awakened conscience,
penetrated with a sense of guilt, and the arrows of the Almighty sticking in the
soul, and drinking up the spirit? How many of the stout-hearted have sunk under
it, and chose strangling rather than life! And yet what are these wounds, what
is all this anguish of a soul while in this present world, in comparison of
those they must suffer when their souls are wholly awakened to feel the wrath of
an offended God! Add to these all unholy passions; fear, horror, rage; evil
desires; desires that can never be satisfied. Add all unholy tempers; envy,
jealousy, malice, and revenge; all of which will incessantly gnaw the soul, as
the vulture was supposed to do the liver of Tityus. To these if we add hatred of
God, and all his creatures; all these united together may serve to give us some
little, imperfect idea of the worm that never dieth.
3. We may observe a remarkable difference in the manner wherein
our Lord speaks concerning the two parts of the future punishment. He says,
“Where their worm dieth not,” of the one; “where
the fire is not
quenched,” of the other. This cannot be by chance. What then is the reason for
this variation of the expression?
Does it not seem to be this? The fire will be the same,
essentially the same, to all that are tormented therein; only perhaps more
intense to some than others, according to their degree of guilt; but
their
worm will not, cannot be the same. It will be infinitely varied, according
to the various kinds, as well as degrees, of wickedness. This variety will arise
partly from the just judgment of God, “rewarding every man according to his
works:” For we cannot doubt but this rule will take place no less in hell than
in heaven. As in heaven “every man will receive his own reward,” incommunicably
his, according to his own labours, — that is, the whole tenor of his tempers,
thoughts, words, and actions; — so undoubtedly, every man, in fact, will receive
his own bad reward, according to his own bad labour. And this, likewise, will be
incommunicably his own, even as his labour was. Variety of punishment will
likewise arise from the very nature of the thing. As they that bring most
holiness to heaven will find most happiness there; so, on the other hand, it is
not only true, that the more wickedness a man brings to hell the more misery he
will find there; but that this misery will be infinitely varied according to the
various kinds of his wickedness. It was therefore proper to say,
the
fire, in general; but their worm, in particular.
4. But it has been questioned by some, whether there be any fire
in hell; that is, any material fire. Nay, if there be any fire, it is
unquestionably material. For what is immaterial fire? The same as immaterial
water or earth! Both the one and the other is absolute nonsense, a contradiction
in terms. Either, therefore, we must affirm it to be material, or we deny its
existence. But if we granted them, there is no fire at all there, what would
they gain thereby? seeing this is allowed, on all hands, that it is either fire
or something worse. And consider this: Does not our Lord speak as if it were
real fire? No one can deny or doubt of this. Is it possible then to suppose that
the God of truth would speak in this manner if it were not so? Does he design to
fright his poor creatures? What, with scarecrows? with vain shadows of things
that have no being? O let not anyone think so! Impute not such folly to the Most
High!
5. But others aver, “It is not possible that fire should burn
always. For by the immutable law of nature, it consumes whatever is thrown into
it. And by the same law, as soon as it has consumed its fuel, it is itself
consumed; it goes out.”
It is most true, that in the present constitution of things,
during the present laws of nature, the element of fire does dissolve and consume
whatever is thrown into it. But here is the mistake: The present laws of nature
are not immutable. When the heavens and the earth shall flee away, the present
scene will be totally changed; and, with the present constitution of things, the
present laws of nature will cease. After this great change, nothing will be
dissolved, nothing will be consumed any more. Therefore, if it were true that
fire consumes all things now, it would not follow that it would do the same
after the whole frame of nature has undergone that vast, universal change.
6. I say, If it were true that “fire consumes all things now.”
But, indeed, it is not true. Has it not pleased God to give us already some
proof of what will be hereafter? Is not the Linum
Asbestum, the incombustible flax, known in most parts of Europe? If you
take a towel or handkerchief made of this, (one of which may now be seen in the
British Museum,) you may throw it into the hottest fire, and when it is taken
out again, it will be observed, upon the nicest experiment, not to have lost one
grain of its weight. Here, therefore, is a substance before our eyes, which,
even in the present constitution of things, (as if it were an emblem of things
to come,) may remain in fire without being consumed.
7. Many writers have spoken of other bodily torments, added to
the being cast into the lake of fire. One of these, even pious Kempis, supposes
that misers, for instance, have melted gold poured down their throats; and he
supposes many other particular torments to be suited to men’s particular sins.
Nay, our great poet himself supposes the inhabitants of hell to undergo a
variety of tortures; not to continue always in the lake of fire, but to be
frequently,
By harpy-footed furies, haled
into regions of ice; and then back again through extremes, by
change more fierce: But I find no word, no tittle of this, not the least hint of
it in all the Bible. And surely this is too awful a subject to admit of such
play of imagination. Let us keep to the written word. It is torment enough to
dwell with everlasting burnings.
8. This is strongly illustrated by a fabulous story, taken from
one of the eastern writers, concerning a Turkish King, who, after he had been
guilty of all manner of wickedness, once did a good thing: For seeing a poor man
falling into a pit, wherein he must have inevitably perished, and kicking him
from it, he saved his life. The story adds, that when, for his enormous
wickedness, he was cast into hell, that foot wherewith he had saved the man’s
life was permitted to lie out of the flames. But allowing this to be a real
case, what a poor comfort would it be! What, if both feet were permitted to lie
out of the flames, yea, and both hands, how little would it avail! Nay, if all
the body were taken out, and placed where no fire touched it, and only one hand
or one foot kept in a burning fiery furnace; would the man, meantime, be much at
ease? Nay, quite the contrary. Is it not common to say to a child, “Put your
finger into that candle: Can you bear it even for one minute? How then will you
bear hell-fire?” Surely it would be torment enough to have the flesh burnt off
from only one finger. What then will it be, to have the whole body plunged into
a lake of fire burning with brimstone!
III. It remains now only to consider two or three circumstances
attending the never-dying worm and the unquenchable fire.
1. And, First, consider the company wherewith everyone is
surrounded in that place of torment. It is not uncommon to hear even condemned
criminals, in our public prisons, say, “O I wish I was hanged out of the way,
rather than to be plagued with these wretches that are round about me!” But what
are the most abandoned wretches upon earth, compared to the inhabitants of hell?
None of these are, as yet, perfectly wicked, emptied of every spark of good;
certainly not till this life is at an end; probably not till the day of
judgment. Nor can any of these exert, without control, their whole wickedness on
their fellow-creatures. Sometimes they are restrained by good men; sometimes
even by bad. So even the tortures in the Romish Inquisition are restrained by
those that employ them, when they suppose the sufferer cannot endure any more.
They then order the executioners to forbear; because it is contrary to the rules
of the house that a man should die upon the rack. And very frequently, when
there is no human help, they are restrained by God, who hath set them their
bounds which they cannot pass, and saith, “Hitherto shall ye come, and no
farther.” Yea, so mercifully hath God ordained, that the very extremity of pain
causes a suspension of it. The sufferer faints away; and so, for a time at
least, sinks into insensibility. But the inhabitants of hell are perfectly
wicked, having no spark of goodness remaining. And they are restrained by none
from exerting to the uttermost their total wickedness. Not by
men; none
will be restrained from evil by his companions in damnation: And not by
God; for He hath forgotten them, hath delivered them over to the
tormentors. And the devils need not fear, like their instruments upon earth,
lest they should expire under the torture. They can die no more: They are strong
to sustain whatever the united malice, skill, and strength of angels can inflict
upon them. And their angelic tormentors have time sufficient to vary their
torments a thousand ways. How infinitely may they vary one single torment, —
horrible appearances! Whereby, there is no doubt, an evil spirit, if permitted,
could terrify the stoutest man upon earth to death.
2. Consider, Secondly, that all these torments of body and soul
are without intermission. They have no respite from pain; but “the smoke of
their torment ascendeth up day and night.” Day and night! that is,
speaking according to the constitution of the present world; wherein God has
wisely and graciously ordained that day and night should succeed each other: So
that in every four and twenty hours there comes a
Daily sabbath,
made to rest Toiling man and weary beast.
Hence we seldom undergo much labour, or suffer much pain,
before
Tired nature’s sweet restorer, balmy sleep,
steals upon us by insensible degrees, and brings an interval of
ease. But although the damned have uninterrupted night, it brings no
interruption of their pain. No sleep accompanies that darkness: Whatever either
ancient or modern poets, either Homer or Milton, dream, there is no sleep either
in hell or heaven. And be their suffering ever so extreme, be their pain ever so
intense, there is no possibility of their fainting away; no, not for a
moment.
Again: The inhabitants of earth are frequently diverted from
attending to what is afflictive, by the cheerful light of the sun, the
vicissitudes of the seasons, “the busy hum of men,” and a thousand objects that
roll around them with endless variety. But the inhabitants of hell have nothing
to divert them from their torments, even for a moment:
Total eclipse: No
sun, no moon!
No change of seasons, or of companions. There is no business;
but one uninterrupted scene of horror, to which they must be all attention. They
have no interval of inattention or stupidity: They are all eye, all ear, all
sense. Every instant of their duration, it may be said of their whole frame,
that they are
Tremblingly alive all o’er, And smart and
agonize at every pore!
3. And of this duration there is no end! What a thought is this!
Nothing but eternity is the term of their torment! And who can count the drops
of rain, or the sands of the sea, or the days of eternity? Every suffering is
softened, if there is any hope, though distant, of deliverance from it. But
here, Hope never comes, that comes to all the inhabitants of the upper world!
What! sufferings never to end!
NEVER! — Where sinks the soul at that dread
sound? Into a
gulf how dark, and how profound!
Suppose millions of days, of years, of ages elapsed, still we
are only on the threshold of eternity! Neither the pain of body nor of soul is
any nearer an end, than it was millions of ages ago. When they are cast into
to pyr, to asbeston, (How
emphatical! “The fire, the unquenchable,”) all is concluded: “Their worm
dieth not, and the fire is not quenched!”
Such is the account which the Judge of all gives of the
punishment which he has ordained for impenitent sinners. And what a
counterbalance may the consideration of this be to the violence of any
temptation! in particular, to the fear of man; the very use to which it is
applied by our Lord himself: “Be not afraid of them that kill the body, and
after that have no more that they can do. But fear Him, who after he hath killed
hath power to cast into hell.” (Luke
12:4, 5)
What a guard may these considerations be against any temptation
from pleasure! Will you lose, for any of these poor, earthly pleasures, which
perish in the using, (to say nothing of the present substantial pleasures of
religion,) the pleasures of Paradise; such as “eye hath not seen, nor ear heard,
neither hath it entered into our hearts to conceive?” yea, the pleasures of
heaven, the society of angels, and of the spirits of just men made perfect; the
conversing face to face with God your Father, your Saviour, your Sanctifier; and
the drinking of those rivers of pleasure that are at God’s right hand for
evermore?
Are you tempted by pain, either of body or mind? O compare
present things with future! What is the pain of body which you do or may endure,
to that of lying in a lake of fire burning with brimstone? What is any pain of
mind; any fear, anguish, sorrow, compared to the “worm that never dieth?”
That never dieth! This is the sting of all! As for our pains on earth,
blessed be God, they are not eternal. There are some intervals to relieve and
there is some period to finish them. When we ask a friend that is sick, how he
does; “I am in pain now,” says he, “but I hope to be easy soon.” This is a sweet
mitigation of the present uneasiness. But how dreadful would his case be if he
should answer, “I am all over pain, and I shall never be eased of it. I lie
under exquisite torment of body, and horror of soul; and I shall feel it
for
ever!” Such is the case of the damned sinners in hell. Suffer any pain,
then, rather than come into that place of torment!
I conclude with one more reflection, taken from Dr. Watts, — “It
demands our highest gratitude, that we who have long ago deserved this misery
are not yet plunged into it. While there are thousands who have been adjudged to
this place of punishment, before they had continued so long in sin as many of us
have done, what an instance is it of divine goodness, that we are not under this
fiery vengeance! Have we not seen many sinners, on our right and left, cut off
in their sins? And what but the tender mercy of God hath spared us week after
week, month after month, and given us space for repentance? What shall we render
unto the Lord for all his patience and longsuffering even to this day? How often
have we incurred the sentence of condemnation by our repeated rebellion against
God! And yet we are still alive in his presence, and are hearing the words of
hope and salvation. O let us look back and shudder at the thoughts of that
dreadful precipice, on the edge of which we have so long wandered! Let us fly
for refuge to the hope that is set before us, and give a thousand thanks to the
divine mercy, that we are not plunged into this perdition!”