Body: | What did early Christians believe about...?
(Before 400 AD)
Uninspired records of how early Christians worshipped and what doctrine
they believed!
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Hell & Eternal Punishment
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150 AD Second Clement "If we do the will of Christ, we shall obtain
rest; but if not, if we neglect his commandments, nothing will rescue us
from eternal punishment" (Second Clement 5:5).
150 AD Second Clement "But when they see how those who have sinned
and who have denied Jesus by their words or by their deeds are punished
with terrible torture in unquenchable fire, the righteous, who have done
good, and who have endured tortures and have hated the luxuries of life,
will give glory to their God saying, 'There shall be hope for him that has
served God with all his heart!'" (Second Clement , 17:7).
150 AD Justin Martyr: "No more is it possible for the evildoer, the
avaricious, and the treacherous to hide from God than it is for the
virtuous. Every man will receive the eternal punishment or reward which his
actions deserve. Indeed, if all men recognized this, no one would choose
evil even for a short time, knowing that he would incur the eternal
sentence of fire. On the contrary, he would take every means to control
himself and to adorn himself in virtue, so that he might obtain the good
gifts of God and escape the punishments" (First Apology 12).
150 AD Justin Martyr: "We have been taught that only they may aim at
immortality who have lived a holy and virtuous life near to God. We believe
that they who live wickedly and do not repent will be punished in
everlasting fire" (First Apology, 21).
150 AD Justin Martyr: "[Jesus] shall come from the heavens in glory
with his angelic host, when he shall raise the bodies of all the men who
ever lived. Then he will clothe the worthy in immortality; but the wicked,
clothed in eternal sensibility, he will commit to the eternal fire, along
with the evil demons" (First Apology, 52).
150 AD Justin Martyr: and we say that the same thing will be done,
but at the hand of Christ, and upon the wicked in the same bodies united
again to their spirits which are now to undergo everlasting punishment; and
not only, as Plato said, for a period of a thousand years. And if any one
say that this is incredible or impossible, this error of ours is one which
concerns ourselves only, and no other person, so long as you cannot convict
us of doing any harm. (The First Apology of Justin, Chap. VIII)
150 AD Justin Martyr: And hell is a place where those are to be
punished who have lived wickedly, and who do not believe that those things
which God has taught us by Christ will come to pass. (The First Apology of
Justin, Chap. XIX)
150 AD Justin Martyr: while we affirm that the souls of the wicked,
being endowed with sensation even after death, are punished, and that those
of the good being delivered from punishment spend a blessed existence, we
shall seem to say the same things as the poets and philosophers. (The First
Apology of Justin, Chap. XX)
150 AD Justin Martyr: For among us the prince of the wicked spirits
is called the serpent, and Satan, and the devil, as you can learn by
looking into our writings. And that he would be sent into the fire with his
host, and the men who follow him, and would be punished for an endless
duration, Christ foretold. (The First Apology of Justin, Chap. XXVIII)
150 AD Justin Martyr: Nor can the devils persuade men that there
will be no conflagration for the punishment of the wicked; as they were
unable to effect that Christ should be hidden after He came. But if they
believe that there is nothing after death, but declare that those who die
pass into insensibility, then they become our benefactors when they set us
free from sufferings and necessities of this life, and prove themselves to
be wicked, and inhuman, and bigoted. For they kill us with no intention of
delivering us, but cut us off that we may be deprived of life and pleasure.
(The First Apology of Justin, Chap. LVII)
150 AD Justin Martyr: the unjust and intemperate shall be punished
in eternal fire. (The Second Apology of Justin For The Christians Addressed
to the Roman Senate, Chap. I)
150 AD Justin Martyr: assuring him that there shall be punishment in
eternal fire inflicted upon those who do not live temperately and
conformably to right reason. (The Second Apology of Justin for the
Christians Addressed to the Roman Senate. Chap. II)
150 AD Justin Martyr: And they, having been shut up in eternal fire,
shall suffer their just punishment and penalty. For if they are even now
overthrown by men through the name of Jesus Christ, this is an intimation
of the punishment in eternal fire which is to be inflicted on themselves
and those who serve them. For thus did both all the prophets foretell, and
our own teacher Jesus teach. (The Second Apology of Justin for the
Christians Addressed to the Roman Senate, Chap. VIII)
150 AD Justin Martyr: And that no one may say what is said by those
who are deemed philosophers, that our assertions that the wicked are
punished in eternal fire are big words and bugbears, and that we wish men
to live virtuously through fear, and not because such a life is good and
pleasant; I will briefly reply to this, that if this be not so, God does
not exist; or, if He exists, He cares not for men, and neither virtue nor
vice is anything, and as we said before, lawgivers unjustly punish those
who transgress good commandments. (The Second Apology of Justin for the
Christians Addressed to the Roman Senate, Chap. IX)
150 AD Justin Martyr: "Trypho," says he, "I am called; and I am a
Hebrew of the circumcision,.They affirm that the same things shall always
happen; and, further, that I and you shall again live in like manner,
having become neither better men nor worse. But there are some others, who,
having supposed the soul to be immortal and immaterial, believe that though
they have committed evil they will not suffer punishment (for that which is
immaterial is insensible), and that the soul, in consequence of its
immortality, needs nothing from God." (Dialogue of Justin, Philosopher and
Martyr, with Trypho, A Jew, Chap. I)
150 AD Justin Martyr: when some are sent to be punished unceasingly
into judgment and condemnation of fire; but others shall exist in freedom
from suffering, from corruption, and from grief, and in immortality."
(Dialogue of Justin, Philosopher and Martyr with Trypho, A Jew, Chap. XLV)
150 AD Justin Martyr: Here Plato seems to me to have learnt from the
prophets not only the doctrine of the judgment, but also of the
resurrection, which the Greeks refuse to believe. For his saying that the
soul is judged along with the body, proves nothing more clearly than that
he believed the doctrine of the resurrection. Since how could Ardiaeus and
the rest have undergone such punishment in Hades, had they left on earth
the body, with its head, hands, feet and skin? For certainly they will
never say that the soul has a head and hands, and feet and skin. But Plato,
having fallen in with the testimonies of the prophets in Egypt, and having
accepted what they teach concerning the resurrection of the body, teaches
that the soul is judged in company with the body. (Justin's Hortatory
Address To The Greeks, Chap. XXVII)
155 AD The Martyrdom of Polycarp "Fixing their minds on the grace of
Christ, [the martyrs] despised worldly tortures and purchased eternal life
with but a single hour. To them, the fire of their cruel torturers was
cold. They kept before their eyes their escape from the eternal and
unquenchable fire" (Martyrdom of Polycarp 2:3).
160 AD Mathetes "When you know what is the true life, that of
heaven; when you despise the merely apparent death, which is temporal; when
you fear the death which is real, and which is reserved for those who will
be condemned to the everlasting fire, the fire which will punish even to
the end those who are delivered to it, then you will condemn the deceit and
error of the world" (Letter to Diognetus 10:7).
177 AD Athenagoras "[W]e [Christians] are persuaded that when we are
removed from this present life we shall live another life, better than the
present one . . . Then we shall abide near God and with God, changeless and
free from suffering in the soul . . . or if we fall with the rest [of
mankind], a worse one and in fire; for God has not made us as sheep or
beasts of burden, a mere incidental work, that we should perish and be
annihilated" (Plea for the Christians 31).
181 AD Theophilus of Antioch "Give studious attention to the
prophetic writings [the Bible] and they will lead you on a clearer path to
escape the eternal punishments and to obtain the eternal good things of
God.. [God] will examine everything and will judge justly, granting
recompense to each according to merit. To those who seek immortality by the
patient exercise of good works, he will give everlasting life, joy, peace,
rest, and all good things.. For the unbelievers and for the contemptuous,
and for those who do not submit to the truth but assent to iniquity, when
they have been involved in adulteries, and fornications, and
homosexualities, and avarice, and in lawless idolatries, there will be
wrath and indignation, tribulation and anguish; and in the end, such men as
these will be detained in everlasting fire" (To Autolycus 1:14).
189 AD Irenaeus of Lyons "[God will] send the spiritual forces of
wickedness, and the angels who transgressed and became apostates, and the
impious, unjust, lawless, and blasphemous among men into everlasting fire"
(Against Heresies 1:10:1).
189 AD Irenaeus of Lyons "The penalty increases for those who do not
believe the Word of God and despise his coming ... [I]t is not merely
temporal, but eternal. To whomsoever the Lord shall say, 'Depart from me,
accursed ones, into the everlasting fire,' they will be damned forever"
(Against Heresies, 4:28:2).
197 AD Tertullian "After the present age is ended he will judge his
worshipers for a reward of eternal life and the godless for a fire equally
perpetual and unending" (Apology 18:3).
197 AD Tertullian "Then will the entire race of men be restored to
receive its just deserts according to what it has merited in this period of
good and evil, and thereafter to have these paid out in an immeasurable and
unending eternity. Then there will be neither death again nor resurrection
again, but we shall be always the same as we are now, without changing. The
worshippers of God shall always be with God, clothed in the proper
substance of eternity. But the godless and those who have not turned wholly
to God will be punished in fire equally unending, and they shall have from
the very nature of this fire, divine as it were, a supply of
incorruptibility" (Apology , 44:12-13).
212 AD Hippolytus "Standing before [Christ's] judgment, all of them,
men, angels, and demons, crying out in one voice, shall say: 'Just if your
judgment!' And the righteousness of that cry will be apparent in the
recompense made to each. To those who have done well, everlasting enjoyment
shall be given; while to the lovers of evil shall be given eternal
punishment. The unquenchable and unending fire awaits these latter, and a
certain fiery worm which does not die and which does not waste the body but
continually bursts forth from the body with unceasing pain. No sleep will
give them rest; no night will soothe them; no death will deliver them from
punishment; no appeal of interceding friends will profit them" (Against the
Greeks 3).
226 AD Minucius Felix "I am not ignorant of the fact that many, in
the consciousness of what they deserve, would rather hope than actually
believe that there is nothing for them after death. They would prefer to be
annihilated rather than be restored for punishment. . . . Nor is there
either measure nor end to these torments. That clever fire burns the limbs
and restores them, wears them away and yet sustains them, just as fiery
thunderbolts strike bodies but do not consume them" (Octavius 34:12-5:3).
250 AD Ignatius of Antioch "Corrupters of families will not inherit
the kingdom of God. And if they who do these things according to the flesh
suffer death. how much more if a man corrupt by evil reaching the faith of
God. for the sake of which Jesus Christ was crucified? A man become so foul
will depart into unquenchable fire: and so will anyone who listens to him"
(Letter to the Ephesians 16:1-2).
252 AD Cyprian of Carthage "An ever-burning Gehenna and the
punishment of being devoured by living flames will consume the condemned;
nor will thee be any way in which the tormented can ever have respite or be
at an end. Souls along with their bodies will be preserved for suffering in
unlimited agonies. . . . The grief at punishment will then be without the
fruit of repentance; weeping will be useless, and prayer ineffectual. Too
late will they believe in eternal punishment, who would not believe in
eternal life" (To Demetrian 24).
252 AD Cyprian of Carthage "Oh, what a day that will be, and how
great when it comes, dearest brethren! When the Lord ... [will] cast into
hell evildoers and will condemn our persecutors to the eternal fire and to
punishing flame!" (Letters 58:10).
307 AD Lactantius "[T]he sacred writings inform us in what manner
the wicked are to undergo punishment. For because they have committed sins
in their bodies, they will again be clothed with flesh, that they may make
atonement in their bodies; and yet it will not be that flesh with which God
clothed man, like this our earthly body, but indestructible, and abiding
for ever, that it may be able to hold out against tortures and everlasting
fire, the nature of which is different from this fire of ours, which we use
for the necessary purposes of life, and which is extinguished unless it be
sustained by the fuel of some material. But that divine fire always lives
by itself, and flourishes without any nourishment . . . The same divine
fire, therefore, with one and the same force and power, will both burn the
wicked and will form them again, and will replace as much as it shall
consume of their bodies, and will supply itself with eternal nourishment .
. . Thus, without any wasting of bodies, which regain their substance, it
will only burn and affect them with a sense of pain. But when He shall have
judged the righteous, He will also try them with fire" (Divine Institutes
7:21).
350 AD Cyril of Jerusalem "We shall be raised therefore, all with
our bodies eternal, but not all with bodies alike: for if a man is
righteous, he will receive a heavenly body, that he may be able worthily to
hold converse with Angels; but if a man is a sinner, he shall receive an
eternal body, fitted to endure the penalties of sins, that he may burn
eternally in fire, nor ever be consumed. And righteously will God assign
this portion to either company; for we do nothing without the body. We
blaspheme with the mouth, and with the mouth we pray. With the body we
commit fornication, and with the body we keep chastity. With the hand we
rob, and by the hand we bestow alms; and the rest in like manner. Since
then the body has been our minister in all things, it shall also share with
us in the future the fruits of the past" (Catechetical Lectures 18:19).
452 AD St. Patrick "In everlasting punishment they [the soldiers who
murdered my new converts] will become slaves of hell along with him
[Coroticus], for truly whosoever commits sin is a slave, and is called a
son of the Devil" (Letter to the Soldiers of Coroticus 4).
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