Dan Conway’s The Good Steward

Dan Conway’s The Good Steward
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Sunday, April 8, 2018

Does Hell exist? What about Heaven? And who inhabits these two places (or states of being) in the afterlife?

It’s a mystery. Our faith tells us that being in Heaven is being with God for all eternity. Hell is the opposite—being cut off from God forever. Our faith also tells us that God’s love and mercy are available to everyone in spite of our sins if only we turn to God and seek the divine mercy. No sinner, regardless of the evil that he or she has done, will be denied God’s forgiveness, which is the gateway to Heaven, if only we repent. 

So who has been, or will be, condemned to Hell? And what will that be like? 

Catholic teaching says that those who absolutely refuse to repent and accept God’s forgiveness end up forever damned. “The fires of Hell” (an image, not an actual description of what Hell is like) are therefore occupied by those who have resisted God’s every attempt to reach out to them in love and offer them the transformative experience of conversion and reconciliation with God. 

Are there people who refuse God’s love to the bitter end? We must admit the possibility—maybe even the likelihood—based on our human experience. But we must also acknowledge that there is a chance (maybe even a good chance) that God’s love, which we know is stronger than death, is also strong enough to overcome (by persuasion, not by force) the stubborn resistance of the most recalcitrant sinner. 

This is what Divine Mercy Sunday celebrates: the amazing grace of God that can save every wretched human being (like me) from the powers of Hell. 

Why are people so threatened by the idea that Hell may, in fact, be empty—a place of everlasting misery that no one inhabits because, in the end, every sinner ultimately chooses to repent and be saved?

We have no idea who—if anyone—is in Hell. We have only the vaguest ideas about what the experience of eternal damanation might be like. To be cut off from God’s love forever is the unthinkable consequence of the ultimate sin unto death— refusing God’s every attempt to offer divine mercy. Surely this ultimate sin is not easy to commit or, once committed, to sustain. The saving grace of God surrounds us at every moment of our lives here on earth and beyond. Who’s to say that  anyone, including the evilest people in human history and Satan himself, will continue to resist the persistent, powerful overtures of divine mercy culminating in the Day of Judgment?

I believe in the existence of Heaven and Hell. But I couldn’t begin to say who inhabits these two “places” of everlasting joy and eternal damnation. Who am I to judge? 

My job is not to judge but to pray. So, I pray that every man, woman and child will open their hearts to the grace of God—sooner or later—and accept the amazing gift of divine mercy which frees us from the consequences of our selfishness and sin, and which ensures us a place in the heavenly homeland forever. 




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