The Architecture of Hell
Welcome back to Oh, You Too, a space dedicated to the deconstruction, reconstruction, and messy, continued growth of our faith. In this episode, John and Eric clear out the clutter before jumping straight into one of the most heavy, traumatizing, and heavily weaponized topics in the history of the modern church: the concept of hell.
In This Episode:
* Quoting Scripture vs. Moving Left: The guys open with a wild current-events breakdown surrounding legendary conservative theologian John Piper. After Piper simply tweeted a direct quote of Leviticus 19:34 ("love the foreigner"), a wave of backlash erupted from high-profile evangelical figures—including worship pastor Sean Feucht—labeling him a far-left, "woke" liberal. John and Eric reflect on the bizarre modern reality where simply quoting the red letters of Jesus or biblical text is treated as a partisan political weapon.
* The 4th of July Experiment: John shares a hilarious, long-running holiday tradition: posting the 27 grievances against King George from the Declaration of Independence on social media without comment. The result? Absolute internet fury from people who mistakenly assume it's a modern political attack.
* The Flowchart of Control: Transitioning into the main theme, the hosts confront how the threat of hell has historically been reduced to a high-pressure flowchart used to scare people into compliance. They dissect the toxic youth group and church camp cultures where speakers would get a visceral thrill out of describing eternal torment just to manipulate emotional responses.
* Dante, Gehenna, and the Eastern Orthodox View: John takes us on a theological tour of where our imagery of hell actually comes from. He unpacks how the Western imagination was permanently shaped by Dante’s Infernorather than strict biblical text, and explores what Jesus actually meant when referencing Gehenna (the literal, smoldering garbage dump outside Jerusalem).
* A Different Way to Think of Home: Contrastingly, John explains the beautiful Eastern Orthodox concept of the afterlife—where everyone simply goes home to the presence of God. In this framework, heaven and hell aren't two separate geographical locations; instead, those who love God experience His presence as rest, light, and love, while those who spent their lives in rebellion experience that very same pure love as overwhelming heat and torment.
* Out of the Mouth of Babes: The guys look at how people outside the insulation of the church ask the most foundational questions. John shares a profound conversation with a child who asked the ultimate riddle of substitutionary atonement: "If Jesus says we are just supposed to forgive people, and He is God, why couldn't He just do that? Why did blood have to get involved?"
* Grandma and the Bread: In a deeply personal closing segment, John shares the hilarious and moving story of his maternal grandmother, an Albanian Muslim navigating Alzheimer’s in a New York care facility. After accidentally joining a parade of elderly Roman Catholic residents, she accidentally began taking communion on Sundays, prompting an unforgettable conversation about grace, identity, and who truly belongs at the table.
If today’s raw conversation sparked something in your own journey, we would love for you to join our growing community. Hit follow on Apple Podcasts and Spotify so you never miss a weekly drop, and follow us on TikTok and Instagram to keep the conversation going!