SGSP S15E8 Looking into Eternity Pt 8 Justice, Free Will, and the Soverignty of God
SGSP S15E8 Looking into Eternity Pt 8 Justice, Free Will, and the Soverignty of God [https://linktr.ee/Sogreatsalvation]Justice, free will, and the sovereignty of God—these issues become especially serious when we begin discussing the doctrine of eternal conscious punishment. Few teachings in Christianity are more emotionally charged than the doctrine of Hell. Critics often argue that eternal punishment is unjust, incompatible with the love of God, or disproportional to the sins committed during a finite human life. Others claim that if God is truly sovereign, then holding men eternally accountable for their actions seems unfair. And still others insist that annihilation would be more consistent with divine mercy than an everlasting Lake of Fire.But these objections force us to confront a deeper question: who defines justice—fallen man, or God Himself?In this continuation of our discussion, we want to examine how the doctrines of free will, divine holiness, human accountability, and God’s absolute sovereignty intersect with the biblical teaching of eternal conscious torment. Because regardless of modern discomfort with the doctrine, Scripture repeatedly speaks of a final judgment that is fearful, irreversible, and eternal.Jesus Himself warned of “everlasting punishment.” He described a place “where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched.” Revelation speaks of torment “day and night for ever and ever.” The Beast and False Prophet remain in the Lake of Fire even after the thousand years, and Satan is cast into that same judgment. These are not isolated verses hidden in obscure corners of Scripture—they stand at the very center of biblical warnings about divine judgment.The modern mind often recoils at this. Many argue that eternal punishment for temporal sins cannot possibly be just. But this assumes that the seriousness of sin is measured merely by the duration of the act rather than the One against whom the sin is committed. Scripture presents sin not simply as rule-breaking, but as rebellion against an infinitely holy God—the Creator, Sustainer, and rightful King of all creation. The gravity of an offense is connected to the majesty of the One offended.We also need to address the issue of human freedom and responsibility. The Bible consistently presents mankind as morally accountable before God. Men are commanded to repent, believe, obey, and turn from wickedness. Christ lamented over those who “would not” come to Him. The final judgment assumes genuine culpability. God does not judge robots or unwilling victims of circumstance, but creatures who knowingly suppress truth, love darkness rather than light, and persist in rebellion against Him.At the same time, Scripture never compromises the sovereignty of God. The Judge of all the earth does right. His justice is perfect even when His ways transcend human understanding. Modern objections to Hell often begin by placing God beneath human moral evaluation, as though fallen creatures stand in judgment over their Creator. But Scripture reverses the equation entirely: it is man who stands before God.This discussion also forces us to wrestle with the holiness of God Himself. We live in a culture that frequently minimizes sin, sentimentalizes divine love, and treats judgment as though it were somehow beneath God’s character. Yet the cross itself demonstrates that sin is so serious, so offensive to divine holiness, that only the sacrificial death of the Son of God could atone for it. The same Bible that proclaims God’s mercy also proclaims His wrath, His justice, and His coming judgment.So join us as we continue examining the difficult but necessary doctrine of eternal punishment through the lens of Scripture, justice, free will, and the sovereignty of God. Because ultimately the question is not whether eternal conscious torment feels emotionally comfortable to modern sensibilities, but whether it is what God has revealed.