Luke 15:1-7 · The Parable of the Lost Sheep
To Hell and Back
Luke 15:1-7
Sermon
by Donald B. Strobe
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Visitors to Michigan never fail to be amused when they discover that our state contains both a Hell and a Paradise, Michigan.  Paradise is in the Upper Peninsula, and Hell is not too far from Ann Arbor.  I have no idea what that means.  The first week I arrived in Ann Arbor, I recall reading a startling headline in the Ann Arbor News.  I kid you not, this is what it said: “Dam water recedes; Hell out of danger.” In this sermon I would suggest that, Biblically speaking, Hell is never out of danger as long as Jesus Christ is abroad and at work in the universe.  But I am getting ahead of myself.  It used to be that when Methodists heard the Apostles’ Creed recited in other churches, they got an inferiority complex.  They became aware that our version had something missing.  Other churches had something in their creed that we did not have.  Most other Christians insert the words, “He descended into hell,” in the Apostles’ Creed.  Try as I might, I cannot seem to discover just when and where Methodists dropped the phrase from their rituals, but I surmise that it happened sometime during the early part of our century during the heyday of Theological Liberalism.  It must have been a neat trick: getting some General Conference to abolish hell.  Oh, well.  Our new United Methodist hymnal (which we will get to see in a few weeks), remedies the deficiency by putting the phrase back in, but in a slightly altered fashion.  The new Ecumenical Version of the Apostles’ Creed has the phrase, speaking of Jesus: “He descended to the dead.”

I.  THAT WAS THE ORIGINAL MEANING OF THE PHRASE. 

At the time of Christ, people believed that souls after death went to Hades (Greek) or Sheol (Hebrew), the abode of departed spirits.  Hades or Sheol was believed to be a place somewhere beneath the earth, where people lived shadowy existences.  Throughout most of the Old Testament period it was believed that the dead continue to exist in the underworld, a region of shadows and futility; they lived on as unreal, half-material shades in a land of silence and forget-ting.  Note: It was not necessarily a place of torment.  That notion of hell was to come later, as a whole theology developed concerning rewards and punish-ments in the next life for what people did or did not do in this life.  In the beginning, Sheol was merely the abode of the dead.  It was not good or bad, just there.  The one primary characteristic of Sheol was that it was WHERE GOD WAS NOT.  The real pain of Sheol was that it meant that the departed were cut off from the joy of worshiping and serving God.  That is why the author of Psalm 139 was really making a very shocking statement and taking a giant leap forward when he wrote that even though I make my bed in Sheol, THOU ART THERE! 

The New Testament word which comes closest to our traditional notions of hell is “Gehenna.” It is a word Jesus used which referred to the Valley of Hinnom, the smoldering garbage dump just south and west of the city of Jerusalem.  Child sacrifices were offered there to the pagan god Moloch, and from ancient times it was considered to be a spooky place.  The notion that hell may be the garbage dump of the universe is a provocative one.  Hell may be the place which God has designed, out of His infinite love, for those who wish to ignore Him, so that they may keep on ignoring Him for all eternity, if they wish!  Leslie Weatherhead, in his book The Christian Agnostic, suggested that there may well be encouragement to be found in the imagery of fire burning in hell.  He wrote: “There is a compliment in the very use of the word fire.  Wood, hay, and stubble are destroyed by fire.  Gold is refined by it.  Since destruction cannot be God’s plan, his use of a discipline comparable with fire points to man’s character being of the nature of gold which benefits by it.” (p.  286) Perhaps there is hope, then, even in hell!  I want to talk more about that later; but there are many of us who simply cannot conceive of the God of infinite love described by Jesus, in the role of commandant of an eternal concentration camp!  But originally the phrase in the Creed meant simply that Jesus really and truly died.  This not only made His resurrection even more remarkable, but it demonstrated the lengths to which God was willing to go to show His love for us.  What is it that St.  Paul said: “God shows His love for us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us!” (Romans 5:8)

II.  THE NEXT STEP IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THIS PHRASE IN THE CREED was seen as an attempt to answer two questions which have troubled sensitive Christians from the beginning. 

(1) Where was Jesus between Good Friday and Easter Sunday?  and (2) What happens to those persons who died before Christ, and therefore never had the opportunity to hear about Him? 

During the early centuries of the Christian Church, it came to be believed that after His crucifixion, and before His resurrection, Christ went into hell to offer salvation to all those who were lost and perishing there.  In I Peter 3:19 we read: “He went and preached to the spirits in prison who formerly did not obey, when God’s patience waited in the days of Noah.” And in I Peter 4:6 the ancient writer says: “The gospel was preached even to the dead, that though judged in the flesh like men, they might live in the spirit like God.” In the early centuries of the Church this was understood as a literal statement of what Jesus did during that three day period between Good Friday and Easter.  He descended into hell.  The faith of the primitive Church was that God had not left anyone outside the possibility of salvation but sent Jesus into hell to redeem those who had never had the chance to hear His message of God’s love while He lived on earth.  It sounds just like something Jesus would do, doesn’t it!  The great Swiss theologian Emil Brunner, in one of his writings, used this homely illustration.  He said: “Jesus Christ went into hell to get us out of there.  Just as a troubled wife goes into a bar late one Saturday night knowing she will meet her husband in there who is spending the whole pay check in drinking, so he has come to rescue us.  The wife does not go to drink herself, but to get him out of there before he is ruined.  Much more our Lord enters hell in order to get us out from all that would destroy us and cause us no end of suffering.” You see, according to the New Testament, Christ not only descended into hell, He invaded it.  Indeed, He raided it.  And if He would have His way, He would empty it!   The writer of the Letter to the Ephesians, drawing upon the imagery of Psalm 68, put it this way: “When he ascended on high he led a host of captives, and he gave gifts to men.” (Ephesians 4:8)

III.  WHAT DOES ALL OF THIS MEAN FOR US? 

I would suggest that it means that no one is ever beyond the reach of God’s love, in this life or in the next.  While we may no longer wish to take this language about ascending and descending literally (we know that Hades or Sheol is not just below the earth’s surface), let us take the language seriously.  Let’s look at it theologically, rather than geographically.  To say He descended into hell means simply: God’s love will never let any of us go.  What the author of Psalm 139 faintly glimpsed—even in Sheol, God is there!--the Christian Gospel proclaims with exuberance: There is no hell into which you or I can ever descend, but that Christ is already there, with arms outstretched to help us. 

This is not to say that you or I will never know despair, or sorrow, or pain.  It is to say that even in our times of despair, sorrow, and pain, Jesus Christ is still with us.  And because Christ has endured every hell that it is possible for us to endure, we do not have to endure it alone.  While we may have to walk through the valley of the shadow of death we need fear no evil for Thou art with me!  Lo, I am with you always, Jesus promised (Matthew 28:30).  And St.  Paul, counting on that promise, said that “nothing can separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:38-39)

In a little book titled The Apostles Creed for Everyman, that great Scots Biblical commentator William Barclay said: “Whatever other world there is and whatever life there is, surely belong to God; the whole universe in time and eternity, here and hereafter is the Lords.  In this doctrine we may at least glimpse the truth that the sphere of operation of the grace of God is illimitable: that God has not only time but eternity to win (us) to himself!” (p.132)

Does this mean that there is a chance for redemption even after death?  Most Christians over the centuries have believed so.  Some have called it purgatory.  Others have merely said that the gates of Hell have swinging doors on them, but most Christians have recoiled from the notion that God ever stops giving second chances to people.  He who admonished Simon Peter not only to forgive seven times, but seventy times seven times (Matthew 18:22) can surely do no less Himself.  But doesn’t this cut the nerve of evangelism?  people ask.  Why would people repent of their sins and live the Christian life if they knew they were going to get another chance.  .  .  perhaps even after they die?  Do you see what such a question implies?  It implies that being a Christian is such a drag, such a bummer, that no one in his or her right mind would ever want it, except as a form of fire insurance.  I simply don’t buy that.  Jesus did not say that being with God is a bummer.  He said that it was like a banquet.  How often the Bible uses the banquet as a symbol for the Kingdom of God.  For banquet, read party.  Those who say, Why don’t I wait to the very last minute to decide to become a Christian?  fail to realize that what they are saying is: I’ve been invited to a wonderful party.  I guess I’ll wait until the party’s almost over and then come just in time to be part of the cleanup crew!  It just doesn’t make sense!  Think of the fun you will miss! 

A lot of people’s notion of what the Christian life is like might be pictured in an old story I once heard.  It seems that there was a cowboy who made a batch of home brew.  It tasted so terrible that he had to hold his gun to the head of his neighbor and force him to take a drink.  The neighbor huffed and puffed and wheezed and coughed, his eyes teared up and his hair stood on end, but it didn’t seem to kill him.  So the fellow said, “O.K., now you hold the gun on me, and I’ll take a drink!” That is the way a lot of people seem to feel about the Christian life.  Who in his right mind would choose it, unless forced to do so?  But that isn’t what Jesus said.  He didn’t say being with God was a bummer.  He said it was a ball!  Therefore, why would anyone want to wait?  God loves you!  Repent!  (which means turn around) and let God receive you now!  Does that mean that everyone will make it to heaven?  Who knows?  I don’t.  I surely hope they do.  The question is: would I be offended if they did?  I get the impression that some Christians think of heaven as an exclusive club, and their enjoyment of it depends upon how exclusive it remains.  They are sort of like Groucho Marx who said that he would never want to belong to a club which allowed people like him to be a member.  Some, it seems, wouldn’t want to go to heaven if certain people might happen to be there.  Of course I have no special, privileged information.  I am in Sales, not in Management.  Like theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, I don’t know very much about either heaven or hell: the furniture of the one or the temperature of the other.  I don’t know whether or not God will ultimately win everybody to Himself.  (That’s universalism.) I don’t know versalist.  I hope that He does.  Perhaps God never gives up.  Perhaps God’s search for us is eternal.  But perhaps our freedom to say No to God is also eternal.  I don’t think that God will carry anyone kicking and screaming into heaven against their will.  I think some people would never be comfortable in heaven.  It’s like visiting a foreign land where we don’t know the language very well.  How like a breath of fresh air it feels when we arrive back to our home country, where we can speak and understand the language!  Well, according to Jesus, Love is the language of Heaven.  A lot of folks are not too skilled in speaking it.  For them, heaven is likely to be hell. 

I had two New Testament professors in seminary who disagreed with each other on this matter.  This is not unusual for Methodists, for every time you get three Methodists you get four opinions.  .  .  on almost every subject.  In this case, I got two opinions.  I asked these two professors: Will God eventually win over all of His children—even after death?  The first replied, “Of course!  God’s sovereign love will eventually break down every barrier and win all persons to Himself.  How could God ever be content otherwise?  How could God be happy as long as there was one lost sheep outside of the fold?” The second replied, “Who says that God has to be content or happy?  Perhaps there is an eternal cross at the heart of God, as God sorrows for His lost and wayward children.” So, as another professor of mine used to say: You pays your money, and you takes your choice.  As Christians, I guess we will have to just live with the tension between God’s sovereign Love and God’s suffering Love.  Perhaps there is an eternal cross in the heart of God, as He sorrows for lost and wayward sheep who are still outside the fold.  What I want to affirm today in my sermon on this difficult clause of the Creed, is the faith that God never gives up on anybody.  Whether or not all of us will ultimately give up and surrender ourselves to God still remains to be seen.  We still have the freedom to say to God, Thanks, but no thanks!  For the life of me, I don’t see why any of us would want to do that, but I see it happening every day!  One can only hope—for where there’s life, there’s hope; and the Gospel tells us that there is life—even beyond death.  We have good reason to hope, for our Lord Himself gave us that hauntingly beautiful picture of God Himself as the Good Shepherd, out on all the roads where people get themselves lost, and not resting content with ninety-nine per cent success, but seeking after that one lost sheep until he finds it (Luke 15:4).  I have always wondered: How long is until? 

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Words, by Donald B. Strobe