Catholic Teaching on
Hell
The Inscription on the Gate
of Hell in Dante's Inferno.
"I
AM THE WAY INTO THE DOLEFUL CITY
I AM THE WAY INTO ETERNAL GRIEF,
I AM THE WAY TO A FORSKAEN RACE....
ABANDON ALL HOPE, ALL YOU WHO ENTER HERE."
- Today, people often assume that most
folks will go to heaven. They assume that those who live a
"normal" style of life without many truely evil acts or attitudes
are safe. Protestants often believe that if you have accepted
Christ you are safe, but this is not Catholic teaching. Jesus
himself tells us we need to be very careful because "Many are
invited, but few are chosen." Matthew
22:14 compare NIV.
God says regarding the sinner:" 'Bind his hands and feet, and cast
him into the darkness outside, where there will be wailing and
grinding of teeth.' (Matt. 22:13.) See, footnote
7 on this passage and Matt.
8:11-12.
-
- "CCC 1033 To die in mortal
sin without repenting and
accepting God's merciful love means remaining separated from him
for ever by our own free choice. This state of definitive
self-exclusion from communion with God and the blessed is called
"hell."
-
Traditonal Catholic Teaching on
hell.
-
- The
Athanasian Creed: "He ascended into Heaven, He sits on
the Right hand of the FATHER, GOD Almighty: from whence He shall
come to judge the quick and the dead. At Whose coming all men
shall rise again with their bodies: and shall give account of
their own works. And they that have done good shall go into life
everlasting: and they that have done evil into everlasting
fire."
-
"Hell, then, here signifies those secret abodes in which are
detained the souls that have not obtained the happiness of heaven.
In this sense the word is frequently used in Scripture. Thus the
Apostle says: At the name of Jesus every knee shall bow, of those
that are in heaven, on earth, and in hell; and in the Acts of the
Apostles St. Peter says that Christ the Lord is again risen,
having loosed the sorrows of hell.
-
- Different Abodes Called Hell
-
- These abodes are not all of the same nature, for among them is
that most loathsome and dark prison in which the souls of the
damned are tormented with the unclean spirits in eternal and
inextinguishable fire. This place is called gehenna, the
bottomless pit, and is hell strictly so-called.
-
- Among them is also the fire of purgatory,
in which the souls of just men are cleansed by a temporary
punishment, in order to be admitted into their eternal country,
into which nothing defiled enters. The truth of this doctrine,
founded, as holy Councils declare,' on Scripture, and confirmed by
Apostolic tradition, demands exposition from the pastor, all the
more diligent and frequent, because we live in times when men
endure not sound doctrine.
-
- Lastly, the third kind of abode is that into which the souls
of the just before the coming of Christ the Lord, were received,
and where, without experiencing any sort of pain, but supported by
the blessed hope of redemption, they enjoyed peaceful repose. To
liberate these holy souls, who, in the bosom of Abraham were
expecting the Savior, Christ the Lord descended into hell. " The
Council of Trent.
(This place of separation without pain has also been called
"Limbo".)
-
-
- "'Deprived of the sight of God,' This is called the
pain of loss, while the other sufferings the damned endure are
called the pain of sense--that is, of the senses. The pain of loss
causes the unfortunate souls more torment than all their other
sufferings; for as we are created for God alone, the loss of
Him--our last end--is the most dreadful evil that can befall us.
This the damned realize, and know that their souls will be
tortured by a perpetual yearning never to be satisfied. This is
aggravated by the thought of how easily they might have been
saved, and how foolishly they threw away their happiness and lost
all for some miserable pleasure or gratification, so quickly
ended.

-
- Besides this remorse, they suffer most frightful torments in
all their senses. The worst sufferings you could imagine would not
be as bad as the sufferings of the damned really are; for Hell
must be the opposite of Heaven, and since we cannot, as St. Paul
says, imagine the happiness of Heaven, neither can we imagine the
misery of Hell.... We know that the damned will never see God and
there will never be an end to their torments. Now, all this is
contained in the following: Hell is the absence of everything good
and the presence of everything evil, and it will last
forever....
- If, then, you bear in mind that there is nothing good in Hell
and it will last forever, and often think of these two points, you
will have a holy fear of the woeful place and a deep sorrow for
your sins which expose you to the danger of suffering its
torments.
-
- It should be enough, therefore, for you to remember: there is
nothing good in Hell, and it will last forever. Think of anything
good you please and it cannot be found in Hell. Is light good?
Yes. Then it is not in Hell. Is hope good? Yes. Then it is not in
Hell. Is true friendship good? Yes. Then it is not in Hell. There
the damned hate one another. There the poor sufferers curse
forever those who led them into sin. Hence, persons should try to
bring back to a good life everyone they may have led into sin or
scandalized by bad example. "
The Baltimore Catechism.
-
- "According to Basil, at the final cleansing of the world,
there will be a separation of the elements, whatever is pure and
noble remaining above for the glory of the blessed, and whatever
is ignoble and sordid being cast down for the punishment of the
damned: so that just as every creature will be to the blessed a
matter of joy, so will all the elements conduce to the torture of
the damned, according to Wis.
5:21, "the whole world will fight with Him against the
unwise." This is also becoming to Divine justice, that whereas
they departed from one by sin, and placed their end in material
things which are many and various, so should they be tormented in
many ways and from many sources. " St.
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica.
-
- "In what things a man has sinned, in the same shall he be the
more grievously punished. There shall the slothful be pricked
forward with burning goads, and the gluttons be tormented with
vast thirst and hunger. There shall the luxurious and lovers of
pleasures be bathed in burning pitch and stinking brimstone; and
the envious, like raging dogs, shall howl for very grief. There is
no sin but shall have its proper torment. There the proud shall be
filled with all confusion; the covetous shall be pinched with
miserable penury.
-
- There one hour of pain shall be more severe than a hundred
years of the severest penance here! There is there no quiet, no
comfort for the damned;"' yet here we have some respite of our
labours, and enjoy the comfort of our friends." Thomas a Kempis,
The
Imitation of Christ, book 1, chapter 24 § 2. (See
Mk
9:43-49; AST)
-
-
- Current Catholic Catechism on
Hell
- "CCC1034
Jesus often speaks of "Gehenna" * of "the
unquenchable fire" reserved for those who to the end of their
lives refuse to believe and be converted, where both soul and body
can be lost. [Mt
5:22, 29; Mt
10:28; 13:42,
50;
Mk
9:43-48.] Jesus solemnly proclaims that he "will send his
angels, and they will gather . . . all evil doers, and throw them
into the furnace of fire," [Matt. 13:42]
and that he will pronounce the condemnation: "Depart from me, you
cursed, into the eternal fire![Mat
24:41]" ["Gehenna see note
18, Matt 5:22].
-
- CCC1035 The teaching of the Church affirms the existence of
hell and its eternity. Immediately after death the souls of those
who die in a state of mortal
sin descend into hell, where they suffer the punishments of
hell, "eternal fire." The chief punishment of hell is eternal
separation from God, in whom alone man can possess the life and
happiness for which he was created and for which he longs."
[This refers to the particular
judgment of each soul immediately after
death. The following quote refers to the general
judgment at the end of the
world.]
- "He ascended to heaven, and He will come again, this time in
glory, to judge the living and the dead: each according to his
merits--those who have responded to the love and piety of God
going to eternal life, those who have refused them to the end
going to the fire that is not extinguished. " Pope
Paul VI, Credo of the People of God (1968).
-
Scripture
on Hell, in
the
Douay Rheims and NAB.
- See New Testament references to
hell
and hades in the NIV, and
Types
of Sin for information on who will be
sent there. See the material at the
Damned
in Michelagnelo's Last Judgement.
-
For those who wish to avoid joining the lost,
- see our pages on Virtue
and Grace
(i.e. God's help),
- Gospel
Morality: What the New Testament
says.,
Moral
Teaching of the Twelve
Apostles,
- Chief
Commandments, ie. to love and
Christian
self love.
"Gehenna
- (originally Ge bene Hinnom; i.e., "the valley of the sons of
Hinnom"), a deep, narrow glen to the south of Jerusalem, where the
idolatrous Jews offered their children in sacrifice to Molech
(2
Chr. 28:3; 33:6; Jer. 7:31; 19:2-6). This valley afterwards
became the common receptacle for all the refuse of the city. Here the
dead bodies of animals and of criminals, and all kinds of filth, were
cast and consumed by fire kept always burning. It thus in process of
time became the image of the place of everlasting destruction. In
this sense it is used by our Lord in Matt.
5:22, Mark 9:43, 45, 47; Luke 12:5. In these passages, and also
in James
3:6, the word is uniformly rendered "hell," the Revised Version
placing "Gehenna" in the margin." Easton's
Bible Dictionary (Protestant source.)
If you act as though death is never going to come for you,
take a look at
The text presented here is for religious and educational purposes
only. All rights reserved. The images are details from the Last
Judgement at Christus
Rex and Bosh.
Any copyrighted material is used in reliance on 17USC107.