Luke 16:19-31 · The Rich Man And Lazarus
Yes, Virginia, There Is a Hell!
Luke 16:19-31
Sermon
by Edward Inabinet
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Today I want to talk with you about one of the hardest subjects in all the world to talk about as a pastor. In fact, experts in church growth tell pastors and church leaders to steer away from this topic because even church people don''t want to hear about it. If you don''t want to lose your congregation, they tell us, don''t talk about this particular topic. But we are duty-bound, we are under commission to talk about this subject because the Lord talked about it so very much in his life and his ministry.The subject is hell.

You may have heard about a young woman about to get married who said to her mother, "I can''t marry him, mother. He''s an atheist and he doesn''t believe there is a hell."

Her mother responded, "That''s all right, dear, marry him and between the two of us I am sure we can convince him."

Thinking about hell is not the politically correct thing to do in today''s world. It''s sophisticated to joke about hell or to deny the existence of hell. Hell, however, is something that intelligent people aren''t even supposed to contemplate. It''s naive and old fashioned, some people will say, and many of these persons are Christians.

Recently, a nationally syndicated writer ridiculed pastors and church members who teach about and believe in hell.He said it was not very appealing to modern folk, so therefore we should put it aside and not talk about it. Well, I suggest to you that AIDS and the devastation and the death AIDS brings is not a very appealing thing to talk about or think about either. But it''s real, nevertheless, just as hell is real.

We know that Jesus believed in hell because he spoke about it many times. Jesus believed in hell and he taught about it, and we do not have a higher authority to go to refute his claims. He''s the highest authority there is.

Now, some people will sidle up to you and sweetly say, "Surely if God loves everybody, he won''t send anybody to hell." And on the surface they''re right. They are telling the truth. God does not send people to hell. God loves everybody. The cross of Jesus Christ proves that truth beyond a shadow of a doubt. But Christ died on the cross to prove to us how seriously God takes our sins. Our sins are serious enough to cause God untold suffering. The cross proves that. However, the cross also proves that God takes us seriously. He takes our freedom of will seriously. He lets us make our own choices, but we have to accept the consequences of our choices. It''s true that God will not send anyone to hell. The Bible states clearly, "He''s not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance and newness of life." God does not send us to hell. If we go to hell it''s by our own choice.

Jesus preached the final judgment of the good and the evil on the last day. He said, "The hour is coming when they that are in the tombs will come forth, those that have done good to the resurrection of life, those that have done evil to the resurrection of judgment." He spoke of the door of heaven being eternally shut, and once it''s shut no one can open it. He described hell as a place, as a state of being, as a state of existence, "Where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth." He described it as "a place of outer darkness." It is a burning heap, a garbage heap, a Gehenna. He said, "It is a place of eternal punishment where the fire is not quenched." Very clear. The New Testament speaks some 200 times or more about that agonizing state, that place we know as hell.

Hell is not a pleasant topic. God never planned hell for humankind. Hell was instead planned for the devil and his angels who revolted against God before humankind was created. But many people will go to hell because they will reject the Gospel of Jesus Christ, his love and mercy which reaches out to them from the cross.

We have many questions about hell, and the Bible doesn''t tell us everything we want to know. But in this parable, as Jesus talks about the rich man and Lazarus, we gain some understanding. He tells us enough to cause us to shutter in revulsion at what hell will be like and to resolve in our hearts to do everything that God requires so that we can escape that eternal punishment.

The Bible declares joyfully that if you will put your trust in Jesus Christ, if you''ll give your life over to his direction and control, then you will enter into a state of bliss. Joy and peace and hope, power and love will come into your soul. You''ll get a little taste of heaven right now in this world. In fact, we might say that each of us already has a taste of heaven or hell right now in this world. It all depends on how we respond to Jesus Christ and his offer of salvation. If we respond positively, we have a taste of heaven; and when we leave this world all that love and joy and bliss will be magnified immeasurably. But if we reject him in this world, we''ll experience hell here and when we leave this world. Our choice makes the difference. Jesus asks for a yes or no, an up or down, answer.

Let''s look for a few minutes now at this parable''s perspective on hell. Hell, first of all, is to live without love. It is to know abject loneliness and alienation. God''s love is the greatest joy, the greatest satisfaction any of us can ever know. It''s the answer to the deepest yearnings and longings of our heart. It''s the fulfillment of all of our dreams if we''ll simply respond to it. Love is the essence of God''s life in us both now and in eternity. The opposite of love, this lovelessness, is the greatest sorrow that anyone will ever experience. A home without love is hell. Wealth, riches without love is hell. Life in general without love is hell. Does it seem strange then to imagine that eternity without love will be hell?

The Bible tells us very plainly God is love. Hell is separation from God; hence hell is loneliness. A poet put it this way: "He that shuts out love in turn will be shut out from love, and on her threshold will lie howling in outer darkness." The poet is talking about that terrific sense of isolation and loneliness which describes loveless hell.

The Bible tells us in I John 3, verses 14 and 17, "He who does not love abides in death . . . If anyone has this world''s goods and sees his brother in need and yet closes his heart against him, how does the love of God abide in him?" That''s a very penetrating question. And was that not the sin of the rich man here? He had no love for God and therefore he had no love for his fellow man. Jesus said that this rich man lounged around all day in his fine clothes, in his linen and his purple. He feasted sumptuously at his table every day, and all the while he was ignoring this destitute, sore-ridden, starving beggar, Lazarus, there on his doorstep. He lived in selfishness, he lived in lovelessness and he died and was buried. And he entered into the full and final consequences of his selfish choices not to love and to serve God and not to love his fellow man.

Multitudes live lives of lovelessness today. Teenagers cry out for love. They get into all kinds of trouble, they get on drugs, they become sexually active, they destroy property, they do all they can to embarrass their mother and dad because they want love. They cry out to their parents: "Mom and dad, notice me, love me!" And the mothers and dads are caught up in their own lives, centered on accumulating things or achieving status in life. Of course, they''re giving their children all kinds of things-- "See how much I love you, take this and be gone--take that--be happy." And then they wonder why the child does what the child does. The parent scolds and says, "After all I''ve done for you, you ungrateful child."

Wives cry out for love from husbands who get busy with their own lives. They concentrate on some hobby, they''re down at some club or some tavern, and they refuse to love their wives. Then they wonder why their wives take to drink and why they become so wretched and so miserable.

Wives sometimes don''t love their husbands. They develop distorted priorities. Sometimes it is something as simple as keeping a perfect house, and they don''t want their husband around because he messes up that house.Fault-finding becomes incessant. Compliments are few and far between.Then they wonder why he turns to other women for companionship. "I never cheated on him," they say, but they did not love him. They did not meet that need for love that he has and every one of us has.

Someone described hell this way: "Hell is where loveless people are always dying but never die. It''s where persons are critical and never compassionate, where persons are always complaining, yet never consoling, where persons are hard and never helpful, where they''re greedy but never gracious. Hell is what we are without love and without God in our lives, but that magnified immeasurably throughout eternity. It''s the misery of eternal loneliness and lostness and lovelessness."

Christ died to save us from a life of hell here and hereafter. If we enter into hell it will not be his doing, it will be our doing, because we chose to reject him and his gracious offer of salvation. Hell is the only place where those who do not love can be, because heaven is pure love. If you are miserable in the presence of love, hell is the only place you can go in God''s universe.

So hell is lovelessness and supreme loneliness and alienation. Hell is also memory and regret. It''s the memory of lost opportunities to do good and to love God and to love others. Menotti, a contemporary composer, wrote these words about his understanding of hell. He says, "Hell begins on the day when God grants us a clear vision of all that we might have done that we did not do. For me, the conception of hell lies in the words too late." Too late. Hell is coming to see that we''ve missed the whole point of life, that we have lived our little lives and done those things that pleased us, ignoring God''s will and his purposes. Hell is going our own way, devoted supremely to ourselves and our concerns, and then coming to the end of life and realizing, "I''ve missed the whole point. I was put here to love God and serve him and to love others and serve them and I didn''t do it. I missed the whole point and it''s too late to remedy the situation."

You may remember from your school days the words of one poet who wrote, "Of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: It might have been." It might have been, had I made different choices, had I done things differently, had I been responsive to the leading of God''s spirit, had I lived the way he wants me to live with his help. It might have been different, but it''s too late and I can''t go back and change. I can''t remedy the situation. It''s over.

In hell, the rich man lifts up his eyes in torment to see Lazarus there in the bosom of father Abraham, and he pleads with father Abraham: "Let Lazarus put the tip of his finger in the water and come and touch my burning tongue that I might have some relief from this agony. Oh, father Abraham, please let him do that." And Abraham with love (I think he represents God here) says to him, "Son, remember that you in your lifetime received good things and Lazarus in his manner evil things. Now he is comforted and you are in anguish." Then this rich man realizes that he is doomed to remember and to regret forever his lack of love for God and his lack of love for his fellowman. He''s lost the opportunity forever to be what God made him to be, to know the kind of life he could have had if he had listened to the voice of God.

The great writer, Thomas Carlisle, was haunted by the memory of his neglect of his sick wife. She had been confined for some months with a lingering illness, and this great writer was so consumed with his own work and his writing that he neglected her. She was upstairs in the bedroom, but he spent most of his time downstairs consumed with his writing.

Sometimes in the afternoon he would get up and go upstairs and spend a little time with her, but never enough. Just a little time, and then he got back to what was consuming him downstairs.

And then came that dreary day when Thomas Carlyle followed, through dripping rain, the coffin of his wife. And when the funeral was over, he turned around and went back to his house in despair. He climbed up those steps to her bedroom to weep and to remember her.

While he was there he saw her diary lying on her bedside table. He reached over and picked it up almost idly and began to flip through it. Some of the notations on the pages caught his attention. He read on one page, "He spent an hour with me today." And "Oh," she said, "it was like heaven." On another page he read, "I wonder if he will come this afternoon." And then on another, "It''s dark. I don''t guess he''s coming today."

He could sense through those words the yearning loneliness of this wife who loved him so and whom he had neglected all those months, and perhaps all of their married life, consumed with his own concerns, his own desires. And all the sorrow he felt could not change what might have been. He lived with that regret every waking moment of his life on this earth. His biographer and friend wrote later, "For many years after she had left him, whenever we passed the spot in our walks where she was last seen alive, he would bare his gray head in the wind and the rain, his features wrung with unavailing sorrow. Regret ate his heart out, the missed opportunity, the memory and regret of what might have been."

The greater part of hell will be the memory, the regret of those who have rejected Christ. They failed to love and trust him in this world. They chose to ignore his pleas, his invitation to come and to find rest, refreshment, find newness of life in him and supreme joy. They lived selfishly, never fulfilled their potential in this world or God''s intention for them. The light and the joy in the rejoicing of heaven which could have been theirs will be forever taken from them. Just as the rich man in his torment experienced that impossible gulf between Lazarus in his joy and he in his misery, so they too will experience that impossible gulf between God and all his love, and hell and its loneliness.The picture of Christ with outstretched arms as he reaches out to them, pleading with them to come to him and find his life, find his rest, find his salvation--that memory will be indelibly printed upon their hearts. Again and again, flashing before their eyes will be that picture of that figure with arms outstretched and that pleading voice as he says, "How often I would have gathered you as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings and yet you would not; and now your house, your life is desolate and forsaken."

Hell is a memory of the lost opportunity to do good to others, to serve and love God; it''s understanding that, "I missed out on the big thing, the major thing, the thing I was created for in the first place." Hell is to live without love, to live in abject loneliness and alienation for eternity. And hell is guilt.

The word guilt is not mentioned in this parable per se, but I believe the rich man experienced guilt gnawing at his soul. I believe it was partially out of a sense of guilt that he wants to have his brothers warned so they won''t come into that place of torment where he is. So he pleads with Abraham to send somebody back from the dead to warn his brothers.

Guilt is an amazing phenomenon. Guilt can cause us to seek to justify ourselves. We look for a scapegoat to blame for our sins. An alcoholic will blame his boss, he''ll blame his job, he''ll blame his wife, he''ll blame life in general, he''ll blame God for his drinking. "It''s their fault, not mine."

The youth hooked on drugs will blame his family or somebody else for his choices; the thief will blame society-- "I didn''t have what I wanted and therefore I had to take it. It''s their fault." We can always find a scapegoat to blame for our sin and wrongdoing.

So guilt can cause us to justify ourselves, but guilt can also cause us to be concerned about others. Many good deeds are done as a means of relieving our guilty feelings. I believe this rich man may have been trying to do this as he asks for someone to go back and warn those brothers.

Yet the absolute tragedy of his guilt is that there is no relief for guilt in hell. Abraham says that men have sufficient knowledge of God''s salvation. They have sufficient knowledge in order to come to know him and to love him and to serve him. They have it through Moses and the prophets. If Jesus were here and telling this parable today, he''d say, "You have sufficient knowledge; you have it through the spread of the gospel by every means imaginable today." The gospel, the good news, the invitation of Christ, his promises and all that he stands for and all that he can provide for you is available to us today.

So Abraham says, "Not even the visitation from one who is dead, nor can any miracle change the minds of those who absolutely refuse the authority and revelation that God has already given." When we refuse that revelation of God through Jesus Christ, his loving kindness and his offer of salvation, we too will be without excuse. We''ll find no relief from that gnawing guilt in hell.

Arthur Walker transmitted classified secrets to a spy ring that was operated by his brother. Even stopping his deals after the second time didn''t relieve Arthur Walker of a gnawing guilt in his soul. He said, "I may not have survived many more years carrying that kind of guilt inside me. I didn''t want to. I don''t want to sound naive now, I knew what I was doing was wrong. I knew that. Okay?I don''t know how to put this, maybe except to put it in religious terms. Once you start sinning, you either stop or you just keep going and going, and then you carry this guilt around, subconscious perhaps, but it''s always there and there''s always tension. It''s one of those things that you push back inside you but you know that it makes you the worse for it." Arthur Walker was experiencing his little bit of hell out of the guilt that was gnawing away at his soul.

So was Kathleen Spiker. She was a young woman 26 years of age. She and another woman embezzled some $497,000 from a branch of the Royal Bank of Canada. It was not discovered right away. For some three years Kathleen Spiker spent untold thousands of dollars on clothes and jewelry and cars and her home, and she thought she was going to get away with it, but her conscience kept working on her, and it kept driving her and the guilt kept eating away at her. Finally she came to the police and she confessed. She said, "I could not go on living in this hell," and she had to get it out. She gave herself up.

Arthur Walker and Kathleen Spiker found relief for their guilt, and something of the experience of hell was removed from their lives. I don''t know if either one became believers of Jesus Christ, but some of the guilt they felt here on earth was eased by their confessions.

The rich man in our parable has no relief for his guilt. There he is in hell,in his loneliness, in his lovelessness, in that regret and memory and in that gnawing guilt, going from one degree of misery to another, all throughout eternity. Jesus who is the Lord of life uses this story to tell us, "it doesn''t have to be that way for you. For I am the way, the truth and the light. I offer you abundant life, I come that you might have life and have it more abundantly, I come that you might have heaven and not experience hell."

Jesus is able to pour his love into your heart, he''s able to remove from you that sense of regret you may have now, those bad memories you harbor. He''s able to assuage that sense of loneliness you have and bring you to joy and great peace within. He''s able to take away that gnawing guilt you feel in your soul, and when he does, it will be a glorious feeling indeed.

A man who had been a devoted pastor for 50 years died, and it was time for people to pay their last respects. It was a glorious funeral. The whole church was filled with people who had come to share in this moment of triumph for him.Part of the service talked about the promises of peace, the other part about the assurance of victory. Those who were with him in the last days and the last hours of his life said that he had praised God even on his death bed.

I have no doubt today where that man is. He''s rejoicing in the corridors of that mansion in heaven with those who''ve gone before, rejoicing in the presence of the Savior. I wonder today if you should die, do you know where you would be? Can you say with assurance, I''m going to be there with him?

Some folks are going to hell, but you don''t have to. You see, Christ has done everything possible to keep you out of hell. He poured out his life''s blood. He himself experienced hell on the Cross as he cried out, "My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me," who loved the father so. He''s done everything he can to keep you out of hell. And he promises, "him who comes to me, I will in no wise cast out." You can choose the salvation God offers you today. You can seal the bargain today and go from this place with joy in your heart and the absolute confidence that whatever takes place, you''ve got a home and a Savior waiting for you. No fear. Nothing to regret. Nothing to look forward to but joy and hope.

by Edward Inabinet