
Why would a perfectly good and loving God consign anyone to eternal suffering in hell? In Sinners in the Presence of a Loving God, R. Zachary Manis examines in detail the various facets of the problem of hell, considers the reasons why the usual responses to the problem are unsatisfying, and suggests how an adequate solution to the problem can be constructed.Historically, there are four standard explanations of the nature and purpose of hell: traditionalism, annihilationism, the choice model, and universalism. In Manis's assessment, all are deficient in some crucial respect. The alternative view that he develops and defends, the divine presence model, stands within the tradition that understands hell to be a state of eternal conscious suffering, but, Manis contends, avoids the worst problems of its competitors. The key idea is that the suffering of hell is not the result of a divine act that aims to inflict it, but rather is the way in which a sinful creature necessarily experiences the unmitigated presence of a holy God. Heaven and hell are not two "places" to which the saved and damned are consigned, respectively, but rather are two radically different ways in which different persons will experience the same reality of God's omnipresence once the barrier of divine hiddenness is finally removed.
How can a perfectly good and loving God reconcile the existence of eternal suffering in hell with divine benevolence? R. Zachary Manis, a scholar of philosophy and religion, evaluates the logical and moral inconsistencies inherent in traditional theological frameworks regarding the afterlife. He argues that existing models fail to account for the character of God, proposing instead a 'divine presence' model that reinterprets hell as the subjective experience of God's holiness by the unrepentant.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and theologians frequently note the rigorous philosophical density of Manis's prose, which requires a foundational understanding of analytic theology. Experts highlight this work as a significant contribution to the ongoing academic discourse surrounding theodicy and the nature of divine justice.
Page Count:
434
Publication Date:
2019-07-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190929251
ISBN-13:
9780190929251
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