Dante's Inferno Morally Analysis

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Hell: Not Enough to Act Morally
An Analysis of Dante’s The Inferno

The idea of hell is a vague concept in the minds of most people. Posing the questions, is hell real? is hell such a terrible place to be? how do I keep from ending up in hell? is surely not uncommon. The ultimate question when observing hell, more specifically Dante’s hell, is, does the threat of hell cause people to act morally? To answer this question, it is imperative that Dante’s The Inferno is analyzed, along with the thoughts of several scholars on the topic of hell. Before proceeding, a working definition of hell will be identified as, from the Merriam-Webster dictionary, “the place where the devil lives and where evil people go after they die according to some religions …show more content…

There are three major eschatological beliefs, the first is the idea that nothing happens after death, the second the idea of reincarnation, and the third being the idea of an afterlife, heaven or hell. The belief system which has the largest number of followers is the second, the idea of reincarnation, where there is no need for hell. So, for Dante’s inferno, there is simply no threat because for many, there is no belief. Joshua Matthews, who works at the University of Iowa, explains the hell in The Inferno to be a sort of finality, “ In the Inferno, for a sinner to be "whirled" by Minos or for Ulysses to be "whirled" to his death implies descent and then stasis; the sinner who has been whirled ends up permanently in a far worse position than he was in.” Dante’s vivid description of the hell he literally walks through is jaw dropping, “I am in the Third Circle of the torments. / Here to all time with neither pause nor change / the frozen rain of Hell descends in torrents. / Huge hailstones, dirty water, and black snow / pour from the dismal air to putrefy / the putrid slush that waits for them below.” On the contrary, if none of this filth is believed to be true, it is purely a form of entertainment, rather than …show more content…

Repentance is a very Christian idea, and this is what keeps people out of hell. For an elaboration on the idea of Christianity and repentance, the thing that causes Christians to be more moral is the grace and mercy offered by the Lord. Though Jonathan Edwards would disagree, claiming that hell is the mode of bringing about moral actions, citing “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” But for the Christianity the Bible teaches (the only true form), it is by grace we are saved, through faith (Ephesians 2:8-10). The talk of hell is not a major part of the Bible, rather, the emphasis is on repenting, for the glory of the Lord, not repenting for fear of hell. Fowler, a professor at Virginia tech, explains how the sinners in The Inferno, are essentially ‘unrepentant,’ “they have forfeited their hearts and their souls, though they remain, like Dante’s sinners, unrepentant and therefore irredeemable . . . . Dante envisioned hell as a tripartite region consisting of nine concentric, descending circles, each the eternal home of a particular kind of unrepentant sinner.” Dante personally understood this idea of repentance, as he portrays in the opening lines of The Inferno, “Death could scarce be more bitter than that place! / But since it came to good, I will recount / all that I found revealed there by God’s grace. / How I came to it I cannot

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