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Three Christian Views of Hell

Posted on January 1, 2026March 16, 2026 by Dr. Peter J. Carter
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Few doctrines in Christian theology provoke more discomfort, more debate, and more avoidance than the doctrine of hell. It is the teaching that modern sensibilities most want to reject and that historical Christianity has most consistently affirmed. Yet within the broad tradition of Christian thought, there is not one view of hell but three. Each claims biblical support. Each has been held by serious thinkers. And each carries profoundly different implications for how we understand the justice of God, the nature of sin, and the urgency of the gospel. Responsible theology requires that all three be understood before any one is affirmed.

In This Article

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  • View One: Eternal Conscious Torment (Continuationism)
  • View Two: Annihilationism (Conditional Immortality)
  • View Three: Universalism (Universal Reconciliation)
  • Weighing the Three Views
  • Why This Doctrine Matters
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View One: Eternal Conscious Torment (Continuationism)

The historic and majority position of the Christian church, held across Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant traditions, is that hell is a place of eternal conscious punishment for the wicked. Those who die outside of Christ face an unending experience of divine judgment, fully aware of their condition, with no possibility of escape, reprieve, or annihilation. This view has been called continuationism because it teaches that the experience of punishment continues forever.

The biblical texts cited in support of this position are numerous and direct. Jesus Himself spoke more about hell than any other figure in Scripture, and His language was unsparing:

“And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.” (Matthew 25:46, KJV)

The same Greek word, aioniosis used for both “everlasting punishment” and “eternal life.” If the life of the righteous is truly eternal, then the punishment of the wicked must be equally so. To limit the duration of one is to logically limit the duration of the other. Jesus also described hell as a place “where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched” (Mark 9:48, KJV), borrowing imagery from Isaiah 66:24 to depict a state of unending destruction.

The book of Revelation reinforces this picture. The devil, the beast, and the false prophet are cast into the lake of fire where “they shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever” (Revelation 20:10, KJV). Those whose names are not found in the book of life are likewise cast into the lake of fire (Revelation 20:15). The language of endless duration is repeated and emphatic.

Theologians throughout church history have defended this position. Augustine argued that the severity of hell reflects the infinite gravity of sin committed against an infinitely holy God. The Reformers, including Luther and Calvin, affirmed eternal conscious punishment as the clear teaching of Scripture. The Westminster Confession of Faith, the Second London Baptist Confession, and virtually every major Reformed confession include it as a matter of orthodoxy.

The logic of this position rests on several theological convictions: that sin against an infinite God deserves infinite punishment, that the justice of God requires full satisfaction that finite punishment cannot provide, and that the clear language of Scripture must be taken at face value. It is not a comfortable doctrine. But the question is not whether it is comfortable. The question is whether it is true.

View Two: Annihilationism (Conditional Immortality)

Annihilationism, also called conditional immortality, teaches that the wicked will ultimately cease to exist. Rather than suffering eternally, those who reject Christ will be destroyed, consumed, or extinguished after a period of judgment. In this view, immortality is not inherent to the human soul but is a gift granted only to those who are in Christ. The unsaved do not live forever in torment. They perish permanently.

Advocates of this position point to biblical language that speaks of destruction rather than eternal torment:

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16, KJV)

The contrast, annihilationists argue, is between perishing and everlasting life, not between everlasting torment and everlasting life. The wicked perish. They are destroyed. They cease. Other texts are marshalled in support: “The soul that sinneth, it shall die” (Ezekiel 18:20, KJV); “Fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matthew 10:28, KJV); “The wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23, KJV). In each case, the emphasis is on death and destruction rather than ongoing conscious experience.

Annihilationism has been held by a number of respected evangelical thinkers, including John Stott, who cautiously endorsed it, and Edward Fudge, who argued for it at length. Its proponents contend that eternal conscious torment is inconsistent with the character of a loving God and that the traditional view owes more to Greek philosophical assumptions about the inherent immortality of the soul than to the biblical text itself.

Critics of annihilationism respond that the destruction language in Scripture does not require cessation of existence. In biblical usage, “destruction” often means ruin, devastation, or loss of well-being rather than obliteration. They also argue that the parallel between “everlasting punishment” and “eternal life” in Matthew 25:46 is decisive: if the life is conscious and unending, so is the punishment. Furthermore, the imagery of Revelation 20:10, with its explicit reference to torment “for ever and ever,” is difficult to reconcile with the annihilationist reading.

View Three: Universalism (Universal Reconciliation)

Universalism teaches that all human beings, and in some versions all created beings, will ultimately be saved. Hell, in this view, is not a permanent destination but a temporary, remedial state through which the wicked pass on their way to eventual reconciliation with God. The fires of judgment are purifying, not punitive. In the end, every knee will bow and every tongue will confess not under compulsion but in genuine faith and love.

Universalists appeal to texts that speak of God’s universal saving will and the cosmic scope of Christ’s redemptive work:

“For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.” (1 Corinthians 15:22, KJV)

They also cite Colossians 1:19-20, where Paul writes that God was pleased to reconcile “all things” to Himself through the blood of the cross, and 1 Timothy 2:4, where God is said to desire “all men to be saved.” The universalist argues that if God truly wills the salvation of all, and if God is sovereign, then all must eventually be saved. A God of infinite love and infinite power, they contend, cannot ultimately fail to redeem His creation.

Universalism has appeared at various points in church history. Origen, the third-century Alexandrian theologian, taught a version of universal restoration (apokatastasis), though his views were later condemned at the Fifth Ecumenical Council in AD 553. In the modern period, universalism has been advocated by figures such as Friedrich Schleiermacher, Karl Barth (debatedly), and more recently by popular writers who have brought the idea into mainstream evangelical conversation.

The objections to universalism are substantial. First, it requires reading the many passages about eternal judgment as hyperbolic or metaphorical, a move that undermines the plain sense of Scripture. Second, it renders the urgency of evangelism meaningless. If all will be saved regardless, the Great Commission loses its force. Third, it diminishes the gravity of human choice. If rejection of Christ has no permanent consequences, then the decision to believe or disbelieve carries no ultimate weight. Fourth, and most seriously, universalism was rejected by the early church councils, by the Reformers, and by the overwhelming consensus of Christian orthodoxy throughout history. It represents a departure from the faith once delivered to the saints, however compassionate its motivations may be.

Weighing the Three Views

Each of these three positions attempts to grapple with one of the most difficult realities in all of Christian theology. Continuationism takes the biblical language of eternal punishment at face value and affirms the infinite seriousness of sin against an infinite God. Annihilationism seeks to honor the destruction language of Scripture while questioning Greek philosophical assumptions about the soul’s inherent immortality. Universalism emphasizes God’s love and redemptive power but does so at the expense of clear biblical warnings about final judgment.

The traditional Reformed and Baptist position, and the position that best accounts for the full weight of the biblical evidence, is eternal conscious torment. This is not because it is the most palatable option. It is, by any measure, the most severe. But theology must be governed by Scripture, not by sentiment. And the testimony of Scripture, read in its plain sense and affirmed by the historic church, is that the consequences of rejecting Christ are real, conscious, and unending.

“And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night.” (Revelation 14:11, KJV)

Why This Doctrine Matters

The doctrine of hell is not a peripheral issue. It stands at the intersection of God’s justice, human responsibility, and the urgency of the gospel. If hell is real, then the stakes of faith and unbelief are infinite. If hell is real, then the cross of Christ was not a gesture of goodwill but an act of desperate rescue. If hell is real, then every sermon, every conversation about the faith, and every act of evangelism carries eternal weight.

The proper response to the doctrine of hell is not to soften it, explain it away, or avoid it. The proper response is to proclaim the gospel with greater urgency, knowing that the love of God has provided a way of escape through the death and resurrection of His Son. Christ endured the cross so that sinners would not have to endure the judgment they deserve. That is the measure of His love. And that is why the gospel is not merely good advice. It is good news, the best news the world has ever heard, spoken against the darkest backdrop imaginable.


Dr. Peter J. Carter is a theologian, author, and the founder of Theology in Focus. He holds a D.Min. with a concentration in theology and apologetics and has spent over two decades teaching, preaching, and writing to make theology accessible to every believer.

What are your thoughts? I would love to hear from you, share your reflections in the comments below.

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  • 1 thought on “Three Christian Views of Hell”

    1. Laura Simmons says:
      February 15, 2026 at 4:50 pm

      As difficult as this topic is, I appreciate you laying out all three views with their biblical support rather than just asserting one position. The observation about ‘aionios’ describing both eternal life and eternal punishment is a point that both sides of the debate need to take seriously. You can’t redefine it for punishment without also redefining it for life. Thoughtful and honest treatment of a hard subject.

    Comments are closed.

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    Dr. Peter J. Carter

    Dr. Peter J. Carter is a theologian, author, and the founder of Theology in Focus. He holds a D.Min. with a concentration in theology and apologetics and has spent over two decades teaching, preaching, and writing to make theology accessible to every believer.

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