John Bunyan's heaven and hell
John Bunyan was a 17th century English preacher who spent
twelve years in prison for his Christian faith and wrote over 40 books. His
best known writing is Pilgrim’s Progress, one of the most famous and popular
books in all of world history.
John Bunyan wrote the following Divine Revelation Of Heaven And Hell when he was a young
man, of how an angel was sent by the Lord to take him to see heaven and hell.
It is a true story, not an allegory or fictional book. While all visions must
be judged by the Bible, these seem very scriptural and were used by the Lord to
help transform young John into a mighty man of God.
Chapter 1.
PLANNING SUICIDE
When evil persons have gone in a life of sin, and find that they have
reason to fear the just judgment of God, they begin at first to wish
there were no God to punish them. Then little by little they persuade
themselves that there is no God, and look for arguments to back their
opinion. I had the unhappiness to know someone like this, who would
always be telling me there was neither God nor devil, and no heaven or
hell.
It was with fear and trembling that I first heard him speak about these
topics, but he spoke of them so often that I felt I must consider what
he said. From this time I found my mind so confused that I could not
remember the truths about God which had appeared so clear to me before.
I could not think there was no God but with the greatest horror, yet I
questioned the truth of His being. I would not have parted with my hope
of heaven for all the riches of the world, yet now I was not sure
whether there was any such place.
In my confusion I went to my false friend to see what comfort he could
give me. He only laughed at my fears and pretended to pity my weakness.
His talks only made me more confused, until life became a burden to me.
It is impossible to tell you the agonies I felt, until I was pushed to the edge of desperation. I thought, "Why should I linger between despair and hope? Would it not be better to end my life and find out what is the truth?" So I decided to kill myself.
One morning I went out into a nearby woods, where I had planned to kill
myself. But before I tried to use the knife I heard a secret whisper
say, "Do not fall into everlasting misery to gratify the enemy of
your soul. The fatal stroke you are about to give yourself will seal
your own damnation. For if there is a God, as surely as there is, how
can you hope for mercy from Him if you willfully destroy yourself who
were made in His image?"
Where this secret whisper came from, I do not know, but I believe it
came from God; for it came with so much power it made me throw away my
knife, and it showed me the great evil of suicide. The horror of what I
had almost done made me shake so much that I could hardly stand. I
recognized my deliverance to have come from the Lord, and in gratitude. I
returned thanks.
I knelt down on the ground and worshipped Him, asking that He would take
away the blackness in my soul so that I would never again question His
being or great power which I had just experienced.
Suddenly I was surrounded with a glorious light, brighter than anything I
had ever seen before. I saw coming toward me a glorious person like a
man, but circled with beams of light and glory which shined from him as
he came nearer. I tried to stand up, but had no strength left in me, so I
fell flat on my face. As he lifted me up and I was given new strength, I
said to him, "O my shining deliverer, how shall I acknowledge my
thankfulness, and in what manner should I adore you?"
With majesty and mildness he replied, "Pay your adoration to God, and
not to me who am your fellow-creature. I am sent from Him Whose being
you have so lately denied, to stop you from falling into eternal ruin."
This touched my heart with such a sense of my own unworthiness that I
could only cry out, "Oh, how utterly unworthy I am of all this grace and
mercy!" To this the heavenly messenger replied, "When God decided to
show mercy He did not consult your unworthiness, but His own unbounded
goodness and vast love.
He saw how the grand enemy of souls desired your ruin, but He upheld you
by His secret power. Through this, when Satan thought that you were
destroyed, the snare was broken and you have escaped." These words made
me break forth into song, and I praised my Savior and declared that He
is God alone.
Chapter 2.
BEYOND THE SUN AND STARS
The heavenly messenger then said, "That you may never doubt the reality
of eternal things, I have come to show you the truth of them: not by
faith only but also by sight. I will show you things never yet seen by
mortal eye, and to that end your eyes shall be strengthened and made
able to behold heavenly things."
At these words of the angel I was very surprised, and doubted I would be
able to bear it. I said to him, "Who is able to bear such a sight?" To
this he replied, "The joy of the Lord shall be your strength." When
he had said this, he took hold of me and said, "Fear not, for I am sent
to show the things you have not seen." Then before I was aware I found
myself far above the earth, which seemed now to be very small.
Then I said to my bright conductor, "Please let it not offend you if I ask a question or two."
To this he replied, "Speak on. It is my work to inform you of what you
ask. For I am a ministering spirit, sent forth to minister to you and to
those that will inherit salvation."
Then I said, "Please inform me about that dark spot below, which has
grown smaller and smaller as we have mounted higher, and which appears
much darker since I have come into this region of light." My conductor
replied, "That little spot that now looks so dark and despised is the
world which you have lived on.
To obtain one small part of that spot of earth so many men have risked
and lost their immortal souls; which are so precious that the Prince of
Peace has told us that though a man could gain the whole world, it would
not equal so great a loss. As you have ascended higher towards heaven,
the world has appeared still smaller and more insignificant; and it will
appear the same to all who can by faith get their hearts above it.
If the sons of men below could but see the world as it is, they would
not covet it as they do now, but alas, they are in a state of darkness.
And what is worse, they love to walk in this darkness. For although the
prince of Light came down among them and showed them the true light of
life, yet they go on in darkness and will not bring themselves to the
light, because their deeds are evil."
Then I asked him, "What are those multitudes of black and horrible forms
that hover in the air above the world? I would have been much afraid of
them, but I saw that as you passed by, they fled; perhaps not being
able to abide your brightness."
To this he answered me, "They are the fallen angels which for their
pride and rebellion were cast down from heaven. They wander in the air
by decree of the Almighty, being bound in chains of darkness and kept
unto the judgment of the great day. They are permitted to descend into
the world, both for the trial of the elect, and for the condemnation of
the wicked.
And although you see that they now have black and horrible forms, yet
they were once the sons of Light. They once were clothed in robes of
glorious brightness, like what you see me wear. But the loss of this,
although it was the result of their own willful sin, fills them with
anger and hatred against the ever blessed God Whose power and majesty
they fear and hate.
"Tell me," I said, "O blessed conductor, have they no hopes of being
reconciled to God again, after some term of time, or at least some of
them?"
"No, not at all. They are lost forever. They were the first that sinned,
and had no tempter; and they were all at once cast down from heaven.
Besides, the Son of God, the blessed Messiah by Whom alone salvation can
be gained, did not take upon Himself the angelic nature.
He left the apostate angels all to perish, and took upon Himself only
the seed of Abraham. For this reason they have so much hatred against
the sons of men, because it is a torment for them to see men made the
heirs of heaven while they are doomed to hell."
By this time we were above the sun. My conductor told me this mighty
globe of fire was one of the great works of God. Yet all the stars were
not less wonderful; whose great distance away makes them appear like
candles in our sight. They hang in their appointed places without any
support. Nothing but His word that first created them could keep them in
their station.
"These words are enough," I said to my conductor, "To convince anyone of
the great power of their Creator, and to show the evil of that unbelief
which questions the being of the God who has given so many evidences of
His power and glory. If men were not like beasts still looking
downwards, they could not help but acknowledge His great power and
wisdom."
"You speak what is true," he replied. "But you will see far greater
things than these. These are but the scaffolds and outworks to that
glorious place that the blessed above inhabit. A view of it shall now be
given to you, as far as you are able to comprehend it."
In a few moments I found what my conductor had told me was true. For I
found myself transferred into heaven, where I saw things that are
impossible to describe, and heard beautiful songs that I could never
sing. Whoever has not seen that glory can speak but very imperfectly of
it, and they that have seen it cannot tell the thousandth part of what
it is.
Therefore the great apostle of the Gentiles, who tells us that he had
been caught up into paradise where he had heard unspeakable words which
are not possible for a man to utter, wrote that "Eye has not seen, nor
ear heard, nor has it entered into the heart of man to conceive the
things that God has prepared for those that love him." I will give you
the best account I can of what I saw and heard, as near as I can
remember.
Chapter 3.
ELIJAH EXPLAINS
When I was first brought near this glorious place I saw innumerable
hosts of bright attendants, who welcomed me into this blessed place of
happiness. And there I saw that perfect and unapproachable light, that
changes all things into its own nature, for even the souls of the
glorified saints are transparent. They are not illumined by the sun; but
all that light, that flows with such transparent brightness throughout
these heavenly mansions, is nothing else but the shining forth of the
Divine glory.
Compared to this glory, the light of the sun is but darkness, and the
fire of the most sparkling jewels are but dead coals. Therefore it is
called The Throne of the Glory of God, where the radiance of the divine
Majesty is revealed in the most illustrious manner.
God was too bright for me to look upon as He was exalted on the high
throne of His glory, while multitudes of angels and saints sang forth
eternal hallelujahs and praises to Him. Well may He be called the God of
Glory, for by His presence He makes heaven what it is. Rivers of
pleasure continually spring forth from the divine Presence, and radiate
cheerfulness, joy, and splendor to all the blessed inhabitants of
heaven, the seat of His eternal empire.
For my own part, I was too weak to bear the least ray of glory that shot
from that everlasting Spring of Light which sat upon the throne. I was
forced to cry out to my conductor, "The sight of so much glory is too
great for me to bear, yet it is so refreshing and delightful that I
would desire to look, though I die."
"No, no," said my conductor, "death cannot enter this blessed place, nor
sin nor sorrow can abide. It is the glory of this happy place to be
forever freed from all that is evil; and without that freedom, our
blessedness even here would be imperfect. Come along with me and I will
bring you to one who is in the body, as you are. Talk with him for a
while before I take you back again."
"O rather," I eagerly said, "let me stay here. There is no need of
building tabernacles, for the heavenly mansions are already prepared."
My shining messenger replied to this, "Here in a while you shall forever
be, but the divine will must first be obeyed."
Swift as thought he conveyed me past thousands of angels, and presented
me to that great saint, the prophet Elijah. Though he had lived in the
world many hundreds of years ago, I knew him at first sight.
"Here is one," said my conductor to Elijah, "who by the commission of
the Imperial Throne has been permitted to visit these realms of light,
and I have brought him to you, to learn from you."
"That," said the prophet, "I shall gladly do. For it is our meat and
drink in these blessed regions to do the will of God and the Lamb, to
sing His praises, and serve Him with the humblest adoration, saying,
'Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power, be unto Him that sits upon
the throne; and to the Lamb for ever and ever: for He has redeemed us to
God by His blood out of every kindred and tongue, and people and
nation, and has made us unto our God kings and priests: even so, Amen.'"
And I likewise added my "Amen" to that of the holy prophet.
The prophet then asked me why this great permission and privilege was
given to me. (By which I understand the saints in heaven are ignorant of
what is done on earth; so how can prayers be directed to them?)
I then told him the events I have already written here, at which the
holy prophet broke forth in praise, "Glory for ever be given to Him that
sits on the throne, and to the Lamb, for His unbounded goodness and
great condescension to the weakness of a poor and doubting sinner."
After this he said, "Now give attention to what I shall speak.
What you have already seen and heard I am sure you cannot make fully
understood to those not yet translated to this glorious place, who have
not yet been freed from their earthly bodies. Nor is my being here in
the body any objection to what I say; for although it has not been
subject to death, yet it has been equally changed.
It has been made spiritual, and is no longer able to suffer. Yet in this
full state of happiness I cannot utter all that I enjoy, nor do I know
what shall yet be enjoyed, for here our happiness is always new."
I then asked the blessed prophet to explain himself. I did not
understand how happiness could be complete, and yet still be added to.
The following was his reply:
"When the soul and body are both happy, as mine now are, I count it a
complete state of happiness. For throughout all the coming ages of
eternity, it is the soul and body joined together in the blessed
resurrection state that shall receive this happiness. But concerning the
object of our happiness, which is the ever- adorable and blessed God,
our vision of Him is forever new.
For as the divine perfections are infinite, nothing less than eternity
can be sufficient to display their glory. This makes our happiness
eternally added to, as well as our knowledge of Him to be eternally
progressive also.
"Therefore the apostle Paul said, 'Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor
can it enter into the heart of man to conceive what God has prepared for
those who love him.' Yet the human eye has seen many admirable things
in nature. It has seen mountains of crystal, and rocks of diamonds, it
has seen mines of gold, and coasts of pearls.
Nevertheless, the eye that has seen so many wonders in the world below
could never pry into the glories of this triumphant place. And though
the ear of man has heard many delightful and harmonious sounds, even all
that man and nature could supply him with, yet he has never heard the
heavenly melody which both saints and angels make before the throne.
The heart of man is so fine and imaginative that it can conceive almost
anything that is, or was, or ever shall be in the world below, and even
what shall never be. Man can conceive that every stone on earth shall be
turned into pearls, and every blade of grass into the brightest of
shining jewels.
He can conceive that the whole earth be turned into a mass of pure gold,
and the air turned into crystal. He can conceive every star to become
as bright as the sun, and the sun to be a thousand times larger and
brighter. But all this is infinitely short of what the eternal Majesty
has prepared for all His faithful followers."
Chapter 4
THE HAPPINESS OF HEAVEN
The prophet continued, "I will briefly tell you about our happiness
here, for ages spent on this delightful theme would only begin to
explain it. That you may have the best understanding, I will first
explain about what the redeemed souls have been delivered from, and
secondly about the happiness that they enjoy here.
"Firstly, the souls of all the blessed are forever freed from everything
that can make them miserable, which above all is sin. It was sin that
brought misery into creation. The blessed God at first made all things
happy, like Himself. Had not sin defaced the beauty of His workmanship,
angels and men would have never known what is meant by misery.
It was sin that threw the apostate angels down into hell, and spoiled
the beauty of the lower world. It was sin that defaced God's image in
man's soul, and made the ones who were to be the lords of creation into
slaves of their own lust. It is sin which can also plunge them into an
ocean of eternal misery from which is no redemption.
It is an invaluable mercy that in this happy place all the saints are
forever freed from sin through the blood of our Redeemer. In the earth
below, the best and holiest of souls groan under the burden of
corruption. Sin tries to cling to all that they do, and often leads them
captive against their will. "Who shall deliver me?" has been the cry of
many of God's faithful servants, who at the same time have been dear to
Jesus.
Sin is the heavy weight upon the saints while they live in their
corrupted flesh. Therefore when they lay their bodies down, their souls
are like a bird loosed from its cage, and with a heavenly joy they rise
up to heaven. But here their warfare is at an end, and 'death is
swallowed up in victory.' Below their souls were deformed and stained by
sin, but here their bright souls by the ever-blessed Jesus are
presented to the Father 'without spot or wrinkle.'
"Not only are the saints here free from sin, but also from any
temptation to sin. When Adam was in paradise, though he was innocent and
free from sin, yet he was not free from temptation. Satan got into
paradise and Adam fatally yielded to his temptations. Like a disease,
sin has eaten into the human nature and corrupted all mankind.
"Here each soul is freed from this. Nothing but what is pure and holy
can find admission here. That roaring lion who roams back and forth
throughout the earth seeking whom he may devour, in respect to the
saints in heaven, is bound fast in everlasting chains.
The temptations of the world shall never again allure those who through
faith and patience have overcome it and safely arrived here. In heaven
we look with contempt on all earthly enjoyments. There is nothing here
that can disturb our peace, but an eternal calm crowns all our
happiness.
"Since we are freed from all sin and its effects, we are also rescued
from punishment. After death, hell confines the sinner to eternal
misery. Yet the blessed are delivered from all these things.
"However, these things are but the least part of the happiness of
heaven. Our joys are positive, more than just the negative that we have
been redeemed from. What these are I shall try to show you.
"Here we enjoy the sight of God, the blessed spring and eternal source
of all our happiness. But what this is, I can no more fully explain than
can finite creatures comprehend infinity. Yet the sight of God
continually fills our souls with joy unspeakable and full of glory, and
with a love so flaming that nothing but the blessed author of it can
satisfy, nor eternity itself can end.
It is that which makes us live, love, sing, and praise forever while it
also transforms us into His blessed likeness. Beholding God's face, we
enjoy His love. His blessed smiles make glad our souls, and in His favor
we rejoice continually, 'for in His favor is life.' And by this blessed
vision of God, we come to know Him far above how any had known Him in
the world below.
For the sight of Him opens our understandings, and 'gives us the light
of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.' Here
we all enjoy Him face to face. Below the saints enjoy God in a measure,
but here we enjoy Him without measure. There they have some sips of His
goodness, but here we drink largely and swim in the boundless ocean of
happiness.
Below the saints have their communion with God broken off many times, but here it is uninterrupted. Below love is mixed with fear, and fear has torment;
but here love is perfect, and perfect love casts out fear. In heaven we
love God more than ourselves, and one another like ourselves. Here we
enjoy the perfection of all grace.
"In heaven our understanding and knowledge is enlarged according to the
greatness of what we can observe and think. In the world below light
could only shine into our minds through the windows of our senses, so
God had to condescend to our limited capacities when revealing His
Majesty.
Our purest ideas of God were very imperfect, but here the gold is
separated from the dross and we can conceive the simplicity and purity
of God. We understand about His decrees and counsels, His providence and
dispensations. We clearly see here that from eternity God was sole
existing, but not solitary, that the Godhead is neither confused in
unity, nor divided in number.
We see that there is a priority of order but no superiority among the
persons of the Trinity, but that they equally have the same excellency
and power, and equally are adored. Those ways of God that in the world
below seemed unsearchable and beyond our comprehension, we understand so
clearly here by His divine wisdom that the truth could not be made more
simple.
"These are some of the things that make our souls happy. However, the
happiness of the saints in heaven will not be complete until their
bodies are resurrected and united with their souls. I will therefore
show you what the resurrection body shall be like:
"First, the resurrection bodies of the blessed will be spiritual bodies,
like mine. You may better understand this not only by seeing but by
touch. (After saying this, the holy prophet was pleased to give me his
hand.) They will be bodies that are purified from all corruption, yet
will have substance. They will not be like wind or air, as people on
earth sometimes foolishly imagine."
Then I said to him that I always understood spiritual as the opposite of
material, so I thought that a spiritual body must be immaterial, and
not capable of being touched or felt as I found his hand was.
To this the prophet replied that their bodies were spiritual, not only
because they were purified from all corruption, but as they were
sustained by the enjoyment of God without needing food, drink, or sleep.
Beholding the Lord is what supports both their souls and their bodies,
and is what they live upon forever. “Have you not read,” said the
prophet, “that the blessed Jesus, after His resurrection, appeared in
His body to His disciples when they were met together in a chamber and
the doors shut about them?
John 20:27-29
"Then saith he to Thomas, Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands;
and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side: and be not
faithless, but believing. And Thomas answered and said unto him, My Lord
and my God. Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me,
thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have
believed.
And yet He called to Thomas to come and reach forth his hand and thrust
it into His side, which shows it had substance. “Our bodies in the
resurrection shall be immortal, and incapable of dying. Below their
bodies are all mortal, perishing, and subject to crumbling into dust at
any time. But here our bodies will be incorruptible and freed from death
forever, for our corruption here shall put on incorruption, and our
mortality will be swallowed up of life."
Here I desired the prophet to bear with me a little, while I gave him an
account of my own ideas about these matter. “Speak, for I am ready to
remove your doubt,” he said. “I have learned,” I said, “in the holy
Scriptures that immortality belongs to God only, and not to men. Daily
experience tells us that bodies of men are mortal, and die. Therefore
Paul told Timothy that God only has immortality.”
“When I say that the bodies of the blessed here are immortal, I am
speaking about the bodies in their resurrected state, that then they are
subject to death no more. Man in his corruptible state is mortal and
subject to death. And there is nothing more evident to all that dwell in
the world below
1 Timothy 6:16 "Who
only hath immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can approach
unto; whom no man hath seen, nor can see: to whom be honour and power
everlasting. Amen..
Even the bodies of all those glorified souls that are here in heaven are
at this time still kept under the power of death. At the resurrection
day, when they shall be raised up again, they shall then be immortal.
And as to what you say from the Scripture, that the blessed God has only
immortality, it is very true.
He is most essentially so in His own being and nature; there is no angel
or man that can, in that strict sense, be said to be so. We are
immortal through His grace and favor; but God is immortal in His essence
and has been so from all eternity. In that sense He may well be said
only to have immortality. Whatever the blessed God is, He is essentially
so in His own being. It can likewise be said that He only is holy, and
there is none good but God, none righteous, nor none merciful but He.”
Chapter 5.
WE SHALL KNEW EACH OTHER
I remarked, “As I was brought here, I saw among the saints some that
appeared to shine with greater brightness than the others. Are there
among the blessed different degrees of glory?”
“The happiness and glory which all the blessed here enjoy is the result
of their communion with and love to the ever blessed God. The more we
see Him, the more we love Him; and love changes our souls into His
nature, and from this results our glory.
This makes a difference in the degrees of glory. Nor is there any
murmuring in one to see another’s glory much greater than his own. The
ever blessed God is an unbounded ocean of light and life, and joy and
happiness, still filling every vessel that is put therein, till it can
hold no more. And though the vessels are of several sizes, while each is
filled there is none that can complain.
My answer therefore to your question is that those who have the most
enlarged capacity do love God most, and are thereby changed most into
His likeness. This is the highest glory heaven can give. Nor let this
seem strange to you, for even among God’s flaming angels there are
diversities of order and different degrees of glory.
While I was talking with the prophet a shining form drew near. It was
one of the redeemed. He told me he had left his body below resting in
hope until the resurrection; and that though he was still a substance
yet it was an immaterial one, not to be touched by mortal.
He said, “We here behold a sight worth dying for- the blessed Lamb of
God, the glorious Savior. Here we see Him in His kingly office, on
account of which He is called King of kings and Lord of lords. But all
the glorious greatness of our blessed Redeemer does not make His
kindness seem distant, but only more precious.
It makes heaven more than heaven to me to find Him reigning here, Who
suffered so much for me in the world below. And our Redeemer’s great
happiness increases our own, as He invites each faithful servant to
enter into his Master’s joy.
“Here we see not only our elder Brother, Christ, but also our friends
and relatives. Although Elijah lived in the world below long before your
time, you no sooner saw him than you knew him. And so you will also
know Adam when you see him.
Here we communicate the purest pleasure to each other, a sincere ardent
love uniting our society. And oh, how happy is that state of love! Where
there is love like this, all are filled with delight. How can it be
otherwise, since in this blessed society there is a continual receiving
and returning of love and joy.
“But besides all the happiness that comes to us by our communion with
God and with each other, it is to me a mighty happiness to understand
all the deep mysteries of religion which the wisest in the world below
could not fully understand.
Here we discern a perfect harmony between those scripture texts that in
the world below seemed to oppose each other. And here we are especially
filled with wonder and gratitude at discovering the divine goodness
towards each one of us in particular. In respect to my former life on
earth, I have seen the mercifulness of those very afflictions that I
once (when upon earth) thought to show His anger.
I am now fully convinced that no affliction that I met with in the world
below (and I met with many) either came sooner or fell heavier or
continued longer than was needful. My hopes were not disappointed, but
God used all things to prepare me for a better eternal reward than what I
had hoped for.
“But I remember that you are still in the body, and may be tired with
hearing what I could forever tell, so great is the happiness that I
possess. I shall only add one other thing about our happiness: though a
vast multitude of blessed souls partakes of this joy and glory, this
does not make less of what each receives.
For this ocean of happiness is so bottomless that the innumerable
company of all the saints and angels never can exhaust it. Nor is this
strange, for in the world below everyone equally enjoys the benefit of
light. There is no one that can complain that they enjoy it less,
because another enjoys it also.
All enjoy the benefit of light as fully as if no one else enjoyed it but
themselves. If a multitude of persons drink of the same river none of
them is able to exhaust it, even though each of them has the liberty of
drinking as much as he can. So whoever enjoys God enjoys Him as much as
he can contain, according to his capacity.
“Thus I have given you a brief account of our heavenly Canaan. It is not
the thousandth part of that which might be said, yet it is enough to
let you see it is a land flowing with milk and honey." In this happy
place worldly relations cease. Nor is there male and female here, but
all are like the angels. For souls cannot be distinguished into sexes,
and therefore all relations are here swallowed up in God.”
He had no sooner spoken than he took me by the hand. Then, far swifter
than an arrow from a bow, we passed by several shining forms clothed in
robes of immortality, who looked at me as I passed them. He said, to me, “Farewell, my friend, your guardian angel will shortly come and bring you back to the world below.”
I drew near the shining form of a redeemed one that stood before me, who
appeared extremely glorious, encircled with rays of dazzling luster. I
hardly could behold her for the exceeding brightness of her face. She
said to me, “For what I am, to Him that is on the throne be all the
praise and glory. The robe of glory which you see me wear is only the
reflection of His own bright beams!”
“You appear to be one who feels the mighty joys that you speak of.” She
replied, “You should not think this strange. The mighty wonders of
divine love and grace will be the subject of our song forever. Here all
human relations cease and are swallowed up in God Who is alone the great
Father of all this heavenly family.
As for the members of the family that I left behind in the world below, I
have committed them to God. I shall be glad to see them all heirs of
this blessed inheritance. But if they should join with the grand enemy
of souls and refuse the grace offered them, and thereby perish in their
unbelief, God will be glorified in His justice, and in His glory I shall
still rejoice.”
Then I desired to know whether the saints in heaven understood and were
concerned for what was happening in the world below. To this she
replied, “As to the affairs of particular persons, we are not concerned
with them and are ignorant of them.
Only God is present in all places and sees all things. But the struggles
and the victories of the church below is told to us by the angels, who
are ministering spirits sent forth to minister to those that shall be
heirs of salvation. From what they report we are excited to renew our
praises to Him that sits upon the throne.”
Chapter 6.
CONDUCTED TO HELL
Then the bright messenger who had brought me to heaven returned. “I
have,” said the angel, “a commission to return you to the earth from
where I took you, after first visiting the regions of the prince of
darkness. There you will see the reward of sin, and what Justice has
prepared as the judgment of those who would exalt themselves above the
throne of the Most High. ”
To leave heaven for earth was extremely disappointing. But to leave
heaven for hell turned my very heart within me! However, when I knew
that it was God's good pleasure, I was a little comforted. So I said to
my bright conductor, “That which God has ordered I shall always be
willing to obey. Even in hell I will not be afraid if I may have His
presence with me there.” To this my shining guardian replied, “Wherever
the blessed God grants His presence, there is heaven, and while we are
in hell He will be with us.”
Then bowing low before the Almighty’s throne, swifter than thought my
guardian angel carried me on a speedy journey down through the heavens.
When I saw the stars I told my conductor that I had heard on earth that
each one of these stars had their own worlds. “But I would ask you to
tell me the truth of this matter.”
To this my shining guardian answered, “To Him Who is Almighty there is
nothing impossible. But from knowing that it is in His power to do this,
to argue that it is His will, is no good logic in the school of heaven.
We know what He pleases to reveal to us, and what He has not revealed
are secrets locked up in His own eternal counsel.
For anyone to inquire into these secrets would be but bold and
presumptuous curiosity. There is no doubt that He can make as many
worlds as He wants, but He has not yet revealed it to us, and it is not
our duty to inquire.”
By this time we had come down to the lowest regions of the air. There I
saw multitudes of horrible forms and dismal dark appearances which fled
from the shining presence of my bright conductor. I said, “These surely
are some of the vanguard of hell, so black and so frightening are their
forms.”
My conductor replied, “Now we are upon the borders of hell, and these
are some of the apostate spirits that wander around like roaring lions.”
Soon we were surrounded with a darkness much more black than night, and
with a stink far more suffocating than that of burning sulfur. My ears
were likewise filled with the horrible yelling of the damned spirits,
which in comparison with, would make the most discordant notes on earth
sound like beautiful music.
“Now,” said my guardian angel, “you are on the edge of hell, but do not
fear the power of the destroyer. My commission from the Imperial Throne
secures you from all danger. Here you may hear from devils and damned
souls the cursed causes of their endless ruin. What you ask them about,
they will answer. The devils cannot hurt you, though they would want to,
for they are bound by Him that has commissioned me.”
We then came within hell’s territories, placed in the caverns of the
infernal deep in the center of the earth. There, in a sulfurous lake of
liquid fire, sat Lucifer upon a burning throne. His horrid eyes sparkled
with hellish fury, as full of rage as his strong anger could make him.
I saw that the demons that had fled from us as we approached from heaven
had given notice of our coming. This had put all hell in an uproar, and
made Lucifer release horrid blasphemies against the blessed God with an
air of arrogance and pride.
“What would the Thunderer have?” said he. “He has my heaven already,
whose radiant scepter this bold hand should bear. Instead of those never
fading fields of light, He confines me here in this dark house of
death, sorrow, and woe!
What, would He take hell away from me too, that He insults me here?
Ah! Could I but obtain another day to try it, I would make heaven shake
and His bright throne to totter. Nor would I fear the utmost of His
power, though He had fiercer flames than these to throw me in.
Although I lost the battle that day, the fault was not mine! No
winged spirit in heaven strove better for the victory than I did. But,
ah!” he continued with a changed voice, “that day is lost, and I am
forever doomed to these dark territories!
But it is still at least some comfort to me that mankind’s sorrow
waits upon me. And since I cannot fight against the Thunderer, I will
make the utmost of my anger to fall on them.”
I was amazed to hear his ungodly speech, and felt compelled to say to my conductor, “How justly are his blasphemies rewarded!” “What
you have heard from this apostate spirit is both his sin and
punishment; for every blasphemy he belches against heaven, makes hell
the hotter to him.”
We then passed on to see more sorrowful scenes. I saw two wretched souls
being tormented by a demon. He was continually plunging them in liquid
fire and burning brimstone, while at the same time they accused and
cursed each other.
One of them said to his tormented fellow sufferer, “O cursed be your
face, that ever I set eyes upon you! My misery is due to you; I may
thank you for this, for it was your persuasions that brought me here.
You enticed me, it was you who ensnared me into this. It was your
covetousness, cheating, and oppression of the poor that brought me here.
If you had been as good an example as you had been a bad one, I might
now be in heaven. O what a fool I was! When I followed your steps you
ruined me forever. O that I never had seen your face, or that you had
never been born!”
The other wretch replied, “And may I not as well blame you? Don't you
remember how at such a time and place you enticed me to go along with
you? I was minding my own business when you called me away, so you are
as guilty as I. Though I was covetous, you were proud.
Though you learned how to cheat from me, yet you taught me to lust, to
lie, to get drunk and to scoff at goodness. So although I stumbled you
in some things, you stumbled me as much in others. Therefore if you
blame me, I can blame you as much. I wish you never had come here, the
very sight of you wounds my soul, by bringing sin afresh into my mind.
It was with you, with you that I sinned. O grief to my soul! Since I
could not avoid your companionship on earth, O that I could be without
it here!”
From this sad conversation I learned that those who are companions in
sin upon earth shall also be punished together in hell. I believe that
this was the true reason why the rich man seemed so charitable to his
brethren (Luke 16:27-28). The reason he did not want them to join him in hell was because they would have increased his torments.
Chapter 7.
THE TORTURES OF HELL
There were yet more tragic scenes of sorrow that we saw as we left these
two cursed wretches accusing each other. One woman had flaming sulfur
continually forced down her throat by a tormenting spirit. He did this
with such horrible cruelty and insolence that I said to him, “Why should you so delight in tormenting that cursed wretch, and be pouring that flaming, infernal liquid down her throat?”
ALSO READ; A Letter From Hell To A Friend.
“This is a more than just reward,” replied the demon. “This woman in her
life time was such a greedy wretch that though she had plenty of gold,
she could never be satisfied. Therefore I now pour it down her throat.
She cared not who she ruined as long as she could get their gold. And
when she had gathered together a greater treasure than she could ever
spend, her love of money would not let her spend enough of it to supply
herself with her basic living needs.
She often went with an empty stomach, though her money bags were full.
She kept no house because she would not be taxed, and would not keep her
treasure in her hands for fear she should be robbed. She would not put
her money in bonds and mortgages for fear of being cheated; although she
always cheated everyone that she could.
She was so great a cheat that she cheated her own body of its food, and
her own soul of mercy. Since gold was her god on earth, is it not a just
reward that she should have her belly full of it in hell?” When her
tormentor had done speaking, I asked her whether this was all true. To
this she answered me, “No; to my grief it is not.”
“Why is this not true,” I said, “and why are you grieved that it is not
true?” “Because if what my tormentor told you is true,” she said, “I
would be satisfied. He tells you that he pours gold down my throat; but
he is a lying devil and speaks falsely.
If it was gold I would never complain. But he mocks me, and instead of
gold he only gives me this horrid, stinking sulfur. If I had my gold I
would be happy still, for I value it so much that if I had it, I would
not part with it even if an entrance to heaven could be bought.”
I told my angelic conductor that I was amazed to hear a wretch in hell
itself so greedy for riches while forever being tormented. “This,” he
said, “may convince you that it is sin which is the greatest of all
evils. Whenever the love of sin controls a soul, it is the greatest of
all punishments for them to be abandoned to that evil love. The love of
gold which this cursed soul is consumed by, is a more fatal punishment
than what the demons can inflict upon her here.”
“O!” said I, “if only wicked men on earth could for one moment hear the
horrid shrieks of those damned souls, they could not be in love with sin
again.” “Eternal Truth has told us otherwise, for those who will not
fear His ministers, nor have regard to what His Word contains, will not
be warned though one should come from hell.”
We had not gone much farther before we saw a wretched soul lying on a
bed of burning steel, almost choked with brimstone. He cried out with
such dreadful anguish and desperation, that I asked my conductor to
wait. I heard him speak as follows:
“Ah, miserable wretch! Undone forever, forever! Oh, this killing word,
'forever!' Will not a million years be long enough to bear that pain,
which if I could avoid it, I would not endure for even one moment for
the sake of being offered one million worlds?
No, no my misery never will have an end; after millions of years it will
still be for ever. Oh, what a helpless and hopeless condition I am in!
It is this 'forever' that is the hell of hell! O cursed wretch! Cursed
to all eternity! How willfully have I undone myself! Oh, what stupendous
folly am I guilty of, to choose sin’s short and momentary pleasure at
the dear price of everlasting pain! How often I was told it would be so!
How often I was encouraged to leave those paths of sin that brought me
to the chambers of eternal death! But I, like a dumb animal, would not
listen to those pleadings. Now it is too late to change it, for my
eternal state is fixed for ever. Why was I made a person, that I would
choose this fate? Why was I made with an immortal soul, and yet should
take so little care of it?
Oh how my own neglect stings me to death, and yet I know I cannot die! I
live a dying life, worse than ten thousand deaths; and yet I once could
have changed all this, but did not! Oh, that is the gnawing worm that
never dies! I might once have been happy, salvation was offered to me
and I refused it.
Had salvation been offered to me only once, it would have been an
unforgivable folly to refuse it. But salvation was offered me a thousand
times, and yet (wretch that I was) I still as often refused it. O
cursed sin, that with deluding pleasures leads mankind to eternal ruin!
God often called, but I as often refused; He stretched His hand out, but
I would not mind it. How often have I ignored His counsel!
How often have I refused His reproof! But now the scene is changed, the
case is altered. Now He laughs at my calamity, and mocks at the
destruction which is come upon me. He would have helped me once, but I
would not accept His help. Therefore those eternal miseries I am
condemned to undergo are but the just reward of my own doing.”
I could not hear this sorrowful lamentation without thinking about the
wonderful grace that God had shown to me, eternal praises to His holy
name! For my heart told me that I had deserved eternal judgment as much
as that sad wretch, but that God's grace alone had made us different. O
how unsearchable are His counsels! Who can fathom His divine decree?
After these thoughts I spoke to the sorrowful complainer, and told him I
had heard his woeful complaints. I saw that his misery was great, and
his loss irreparable, and told him I would willingly hear more about it
if this might possibly help lessen his sufferings.”
“No, not at all; my pains cannot be relieved even for one small moment.
But by your question I understand that you are a stranger here; and may
you ever be a stranger! Ah, had I but the least hope still remaining,
how I would kneel and cry and pray for ever to be redeemed from this
hell! But it is all in vain, I am lost forever. But so that you will be
warned about ending up here, I will tell you what the damned suffer.”
Chapter 8.
A LOST SOUL SPEAKS
“Our miseries in this infernal dungeon are of two kinds: what we have
lost, and what we suffer. I will first speak about what we have lost.
1. In this sad dark place of misery and sorrow, we have lost the
presence of the ever blessed God. This is what makes this dungeon hell.
Though we had lost a thousand worlds, it would not be as important as
this one greatest loss. Could we but see the least glimpse of His favor
here, we might be happy; but have lost it to our everlasting woe.
2. Here we have also lost the company of saints and angels, and instead have nothing but tormenting devils.
3. Here we have lost heaven, too, the center of blessedness.
There is a deep gulf between us and heaven, so that we are shut out from
it forever. Those everlasting gates that let the redeemed into heaven
are now for ever shut against us.
4. To make our wretchedness far worse, we have lost the hope of
ever obtaining a better condition. This makes us truly hopeless. Well
may our hearts now break, since we are both without hope and help. This
is what we have lost; and if we think of these things, it is enough to
tear and gnaw upon our miserable souls forever. Yet, oh, that this were
all that our torments were!
But we are also tormented by suffering and pain, as I will try to explain to you now.
1. First, we undergo a variety of torments. We are tormented here
a thousand, no, ten thousand different ways. Those that suffer upon the
earth seldom have more than one affliction at a time. But if they had
ulcers, gallstones, headaches, and fever all at the same time, would
they not think they were very miserable?
Yet all those together are but like the biting of a flea compared to
those intolerable, sharp pains that we endure. Here we have all the
sufferings of hell. Here is an unquenchable fire which burns us; a lake
of burning brimstone that ever chokes us; and eternal chains that bind
us. Here there is utter darkness to frighten us, and a worm of
conscience that gnaws upon us everlastingly. Any one of these is worse
to bear than all the torments that mankind ever felt on earth!
2. But our torments here are not only various, but are also
complete. They afflict every part of the body, and torment all the
powers of the soul. This makes what we suffer the worst of tortures. In
those sicknesses which men have on earth, though some members of their
bodies will suffer, yet other parts will have no pain. Here it is
different; every member of the soul and body suffers at the same time.
“Our eyes are tormented here with the sight of devils who appear in all
the horrible shapes and black appearances that sin can give them. Our
ears are continually tormented with the loud continual yelling of the
damned. Our nostrils are smothered with sulfurous flames; our tongues
with burning blisters; and the whole body is rolled in flames of liquid
fire. All the powers and faculties of our souls are also tormented here.
The imagination suffers with the thoughts of our present pain and the
memory of the heaven we have lost. Our minds are tormented as we
remember how foolishly we spent our precious time on earth. Our
understanding is tormented with the thoughts of our past pleasures,
present pains, and future sorrows, which are to last forever. And our
consciences are tormented with a continual gnawing worm.
3. Another thing that makes our misery so awful is the sharpness
of our torments. The fire that burns us is so violent that all the water
in the sea can never quench it. The pains we suffer here are so extreme
that it is impossible for anyone to know them except the damned.
4. Another part of our misery is the ceaselessness of our
torments. As various, as complete, and as extremely violent as they are,
they are also continual. We have no rest from them. If there were any
relaxation, it might be some relief. But there is no easing of our
torments, and what we suffer now we must suffer forever.
5. The society or company we have here is another part of our
misery. Tormenting devils and tormented souls are all our company.
Dreadful shrieks, howlings, and fearful cursing are our continual
conversation because of the fierceness of our pain.
6. The place we are in also increases our sufferings. It is the
completion of all misery, a prison, a dungeon, a bottomless pit, a lake
of brimstone, a furnace of fire that burns to eternity, the blackness of
darkness for ever; and lastly, hell itself. Such a wretched place as
this can only increase our wretchedness.
7. The cruelty of our tormentors is another thing that adds to
our sufferings. Our tormentors are devils in whom there is no pity.
While they are tormented themselves, they still take pleasure in
tormenting us.
8. All those sufferings that I have recounted are very grievous.
But that which makes them the most grievous is that they shall always be
forever. All of our intolerable sufferings shall last to all eternity!
‘Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire,’ is what continually
sounds in my ears. Oh, that I could reverse that fatal sentence! Oh, if
there was but a bare possibility of salvation! This is the miserable
situation we are in, and shall be in forever.”
Chapter 9.
FURTHER CONVERSATION
This wretched soul had scarcely finished what he was saying when he was
tormented again by a hellish demon, who told him to stop complaining.
The demon said, “don't you know you have deserved it all? How often were
you told of this before, but would not believe it? You laughed at those
who warned you about hell.
You were even so presumptuous as to dare Almighty justice to destroy
you! How often you called on God to damn you. Do you complain that you
are answered according to your wishes? What an unreasonable thing! You
know that you had salvation offered you, and you refused it. How can you
now complain of being damned?
I have more reason to complain, for you had a long time in which
repentance was offered you; but I was cast into hell as soon as I had
sinned. If I had been offered salvation, I would never have rejected it
as you did. Who do you think should pity you now, with all that heaven
had offered to you?”
This made the wretch cry out, “Oh, do not continue to torment me; I know
that I chose destruction. Oh, that I could forget it! These thoughts
are my greatest torture. I chose to be damned, and therefore justly am
so.”
Then turning to the demon that tortured him he said, “But I also came
here through your temptations, you cursed devil. You were the one that
had tempted me to do all of my sins; and now you would reproach me? You
say you never had a Savior offered to you; but you should also remember
that you never had a tempter such as you have always been to me.”
To this the devil scornfully replied, “It was my business to lead you
here! You had often been warned of this by your preacher. You were
plainly told that we sought your ruin, and go about continually like
roaring lions, seeking whom we could devour.
I was often afraid you that would believe them, as several other souls
did, to our great disappointment. But you were willing to do what we
wanted; and since you have done our work it is but reasonable that we
should pay you wages.” Then the fiend tormented him again and caused him
to roar out so horribly that I could no longer stay to hear him, so I
passed on.
“How dismal,” I then said to my conductor, “is the condition of these
damned souls! They are the devils slaves while upon earth, and he
reproaches and then torments them for it when they come to hell.” “The
devils hate all the race of Adam,” said my conductor. “And because many
souls are ignorant of their devices, they easily succeed to bring them
to eternal ruin. You will see more how the demons treat the damned
here.”
Passing a little further we saw a multitude of damned souls together,
gnashing their teeth with extreme rage and pain, while the tormenting
fiends with hellish fury poured liquid fire and brimstone continually
upon them. In the meantime, they were cursing God and those about them,
and were blaspheming in a tremendous manner. I could not help but ask of
one demon that so tormented them, who were these souls that he
tormented so cruelly?
Said he, “These wretches well deserve their punishment. They tried to
teach others the right road to heaven, while they were so in love with
hell that they came here. These are those souls that have been our great
helpers upon the earth, and therefore they deserve our special
attention in hell.
We use our full diligence to give every one their utmost share of
torments, for they not only have their own sins to answer for, but also
all the sins of those whom they led astray both by their doctrine and
example.” “Since they have been such great helpers for you, I would
think that in gratitude you would treat them a little more kindly.”
To this the impudent friend answered me in a scoffing manner, “They that
expect gratitude among devils will find themselves mistaken. Gratitude
is a virtue, but we hate all virtue. Besides, we hate all mankind, and
were it in our power not one of them should be happy. It is true we do
not tell them so upon earth, because there it is our business to flatter
and deceive them. But when we have them here where they cannot escape,
we soon convince them of their foolishness in serving us.”
From this I could only think about what infinite grace it is that any
poor sinners are brought to heaven, considering how many traps are laid
by the enemy to ensnare them by the way. Therefore it is a ministry well
worthy of the blessed Son of God to save His people from their sins,
and to deliver them from the wrath to come. But it is also folly and
madness in men to refuse the offers of His grace, and to choose to side
with the destroyer.
ALSO READ; Eternity Is So Near Unto Us.
Going farther on, I heard a wretch complaining in a heartbreaking strain
against those men that had betrayed him and brought him here. “I was
told,” said he, ‘by those that I depended on, and that I thought could
inform me correctly, that if I said ‘Lord, have mercy on me,’
when I came to die, it would be enough to save me. But oh, now I find
myself mistaken, to my eternal sorrow! Alas, I called for mercy on my
deathbed, but found it was too late. Before that time, this cursed devil
here told me that I was safe. Then on my deathbed, he told me it was
too late. Hell must forever be my portion.”
“You see, I did tell you the truth at last,” said the devil, “and then
you would not believe me. A very fitting end, don't you think? You spend
your days enjoying sin, and wallow in your filthiness, and you want to
go to heaven when you die! Would anyone but a madman think that would be
just? No; he that sincerely wants to go to heaven when he dies, must
walk in the ways of holiness and virtue while he is alive.
You say some of your lewd companions told you that saying, ‘Lord, have
mercy on me’ when you came to die would be enough. A very fine excuse!
If you had read the Bible you would have known that ‘Without holiness,
no one shall see the Lord.” Therefore, if you were willing to live in
your sins as long as you could, you did not finally leave them because
you did not like them, but because you could follow them no longer.
And this you know to be true. How could you be so stupid to think you
could go to heaven with the love of sin in your heart? No, no, no. You
were warned often enough that you should take heed of being deceived,
for God is not mocked, but what you sow you reap. You have no reason to
complain of anything but your own folly, which you now see too late.”
“This lecture of the devil was a very cutting one to the poor tormented
wretch,” I said to my conductor, “and shows the true situation of many
now on earth as well as those in hell. But oh, what a far different
judgment do they make in this sad place from what they did on earth.”
“The reason for this,” replied my guardian angel, “is that they will not
allow themselves to think what the effect of sin will be while on
earth. Carelessness ruins many souls who do not think about what they
are doing, nor where they are going, until it is too late to help it.”
Chapter 10.
AN ATHEIST IN HELL
We had not gone much farther before I saw a vast number of tormenting
demons. They were continually lashing a large company of wretched souls
with knotted whips of ever burning steel. The tormented were roaring out
with such loud cries that I thought it might have melted even cruelty
itself into some pity. This made me say to one of the tormentors, “Oh,
stop your whipping, and do not use such cruelty on those who are your
fellow creatures, and whom you probably helped lead to all this misery.”
“No,” answered the tormentor very smoothly. “Though we are bad enough,
no devil was as bad as them, nor were we guilty of such crimes as they
were. We all know there is a God, although we hate Him; but these souls
would never admit (until they came here) that there was such a Being.”
“Then these,” I said, “were atheists. They are wretched men, and tried
to ruin me had not eternal grace prevented it.” I had no sooner spoken,
but one of the tormented wretches cried out mournfully “Surely I know
that voice. It must be John.”
I was amazed to hear my name mentioned; and therefore I answered, “Yes, I
am John; but who are you?” To this he replied, “I once knew you well
upon the earth, and had almost persuaded you to be of my opinion. I am
the author of that celebrated book entitled ‘Leviathan.’”
“What! The great Hobbs?” said I. “Are you come here?” “Alas,” replied
he, “I am that unhappy man indeed. But I am so far from being great that
I am one of the most wretched persons in all these dirty territories.
For now I know there is a God. But oh! I wish there were not, for I am
sure He will have no mercy on me. Nor is there any reason that He
should. I do confess I was His foe on earth, and now He is mine in hell.
It was that proud confidence I had in my own wisdom that has so
betrayed me.”
“Your case is miserable, and yet you admit that you suffer justly. For
how industrious were you to persuade others and try to bring them to the
same damnation. No one can know this better than I, as I was almost
taken in your snare to perish forever.”
“It is that,” said he, “that stings me to the heart, to think how many
will perish by my influence. I was afraid when I first heard your voice
that you had also been cast into hell. Not that I wish any person happy,
for it is my torment to think that anyone is happy while I am so
miserable.
But I did not want you to be cast into hell, because every soul that is
brought here through my deceptions, increases my pains in hell.” “But
tell me,” I said, “for I want to know the truth. Did you indeed believe
there was no God when you lived upon earth?
“At first I believed there was a God,” he answered, “but as I turned to
sins which would lead me to His judgment, I hoped there was no God. For
it is impossible to think there is a just God, and not also remember
that He will punish those who disobey Him.
But as I continued in my sins, and found that justice did not swiftly
come, I then began to hope there was no God. From those hopes I began to
frame ideas in my own mind that could justify what I hoped. My ideas
framed a new system of the world’s origin which excluded from it the
existence of God. At last I found myself so fond of these new theories
that I decided to believe them and convince others that they were true.
But before this, I did find several checks in my own conscience. I felt
that I could be wrong, but I ignored these warnings. Now I find that
those checking thoughts that might have helped me then, are here the
things that most of all torment me. I must confess that the love of sin
hardened my heart against my Maker, and made me hate Him first, and then
deny His being.
Sin, that I so proudly embraced, has been the cursed cause of all this
woe; it is the serpent that has stung my soul to death. For now I find,
in spite of my vain philosophy, there is a God. I have also found that
God will not be mocked, although it was my daily practice in the world
to mock at heaven and all that is sacred, for this was the means that I
found very successful to spread abroad my cursed ideas.
For anyone that I could get to ridicule the truths of God, I looked upon
as becoming one of my disciples. But now these thoughts are more
tormenting to me than the sufferings I endure from these whips of
burning steel.”
“Sad indeed,” I said. “See what Almighty Power can inflict on those that
violate His righteous law.” I was making some further comments when the
relentless fiend who had been tormenting them then interrupted me. “Now
you see what sort of men they were in the world. Do you not think they
deserve their punishment now?”
To which I answered, “Doubtless it is the just reward of sin which they
suffer, and which you will suffer also. For you, as well as they, have
sinned against the ever blessed God, and for your sin you shall suffer
the just vengeance of eternal fire. Nor is it any excuse to say you
never doubted the being of a God; for though you knew there was God, yet
you rebelled against Him. Therefore you shall be justly punished with
everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord.”
To this the fiend replied, “It is true we know we shall be punished, as
you say. But if you say that mankind should have pity showed them,
because they fell through the temptations of the devil, it is the same
case with me and all the rest of the inferior spirits.
For we were tempted by the Bright Sun of the Morning to rebel with him.
And therefore, though this multiplies the crime of Lucifer, it should
lessen that of the inferior spirits.” To this my bright conductor
replied with an angry countenance. “O you apostate, wicked, lying
spirit! Can you say those things and see me here?
You know it was your proud heart that made you rebel with Lucifer
against the blessed God who had created you with glory! But since you
proudly exalted yourself above your blessed Creator, and joined with
Lucifer, you are justly cast down to hell. Your former beauty has
changed to your present horrible form as the just punishment of your
rebellious pride.”
To this the apostate spirit replied, “Why do you invade our territories,
and come here to torment us before our time?” And when he had said
this, he slipped away as if he did not want to have an answer. After he
was gone I said to my guardian angel that I had already heard about the
fall of the apostate angels, but wanted to know more about what
happened.
To this my guide answered me, “When you have finished your earthly life
and return to heaven, you shall learn many things that you are not yet
ready to understand. In your present state do not desire to learn more
than what is written in the Scriptures. It is enough to know the angels
sinned, and for their sin were cast down to hell. But how pure spirits
could have a thought arise in their hearts against the eternal Purity
that first created them is what you are not yet capable of
understanding.”
“I have observed,” said I, “that those in hell complain most about the
torment from their own sense of guilt, which confirms the justice of
their punishment. This gloomy prison is the best place to rightly
understand sin; for were it not so evil, it would not be rewarded with
such extreme punishment.”
“What you say is very natural; but there is yet a better place to see
the just reward due to sin. That place can be seen when you behold the
blessed Son of God upon the cross. There we may see the terrible effects
of sin. There we may see all of its true evil. For all the sufferings
of the damned here are but the sufferings of created beings; but on the
cross you see a suffering God.”
“Surely,” said I, “did justice and mercy triumph and kiss each other in
that fatal hour. For justice was fully satisfied at the cross in the
just punishment of sin; and mercy triumphed and was pleased there
because salvation for poor sinners was completed.
Oh, eternal praises to His holy name for ever, that His grace has made
me willing to accept this salvation, and become an heir of glory! For I
remember that some of those lost wretches here have lamented that when
salvation had been offered to them, they had refused it. It was
therefore grace alone that helped me to accept it.”
At this point my shining guardian told me that he must bring me back to
the earth again, and leave me there until it was time for me to enter my
heavenly reward. “Come,” he said, “let us leave this place of sorrow
and horror to the possession of their black inhabitants.”
In a very little space of time I found myself on earth again. I was left
at the very place where the angel had met me, when I had been thinking
about committing suicide through the temptations of the devil who had
tried to persuade me that there was no God.
How I returned there, I do not know. But as soon as I was back there,
the bright angel who had been my conductor said, “John, I must go now. I
have another ministry to complete. Praise Him that sits upon the throne
for ever, who has all power in heaven, earth, and hell. Praise Him for
all the wonders of His love and grace that He has shown you in so short a
time.”
As I was going to reply, the shining angel disappeared and I was left
alone. I spent some time considering the amazing things I had seen and
heard, and then knelt down and prayed. When I rose up I began blessing
and praising God for all His goodness.
When I returned back to my house, my family was very surprised to see
how my countenance had so greatly changed. They looked at me as if they
scarcely knew me. I asked them what they were staring at. They answered
that it was the change in my face that caused it. I said, “How am I so
greatly changed?”
They told me, “Yesterday you looked so depressed that you seemed the
very image of despair. But now, your face appears radiantly beautiful,
and seems full of perfect joy and satisfaction.”
“If you had seen,” I said, “what I have seen today, you would not be
surprised at the change in me.” Then I went into my room, took my pen
and ink, and wrote down everything that I had heard and seen. And I hope
that those who read this will be moved in their hearts just as I have
been as I wrote everything down.
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