Dante's Inferno: A Christian View Of Hell

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The majority of argument comes from the people that say Hell is an actual physical place. After what the pope had to say about Hell many critics voiced out to say that he undermined a historical biblical doctrine and surrendered an important theological weapon of the church’s struggle with evil. "Scripture clearly speaks of hell as a physical place of fiery torment and warns us we should fear," says R. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky. (Jeffery L. Sheler) Along with this argument, Prof. Douglas Groothuis of the evangelical Denver Seminary adds, “separation from God may seem like freedom from a domineering spouse or parent. Why fear that?" (Douglas Groothuis) There is also a recently adopted …show more content…

But before diving into that era of history, the significant gap between the time of Jesus and Dante must be analyzed. Christianity and Catholicism were not the deep, rich, prominent religions they are today before the renaissance. They were both fairly new and did not have the same historical culture that Judaism had. Therefore there was not much of a Christian view of Hell. Hell had not been completely recognized or criticized just yet. The closest theme to Hell before the renaissance was Sheol of the Jewish belief. Sheol, or the underworld, was similar to Greco/Roman idea of Hades, where the dead went and was neither good or bad. (Emil G. …show more content…

Dante wrote the Divine Comedy, an epic poem that explores the imaginative journey of the afterlife. The poem is divided into three parts, the first being The Inferno which is the one that pertains to the subject of Hell. Dante introduced a Hell full of torment, pain and punishment. Thus creating a new shift in the theme of Hell and afterlife, where sinful souls were sentenced to eternal punishment in a fiery underworld. (Elder, Gregory) Dante’s portrayal of Hell was adopted by the Western Church in the 14th century. This struck fear into those who desired to have a peaceful afterlife, and strengthened the church 's fight struggle with

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