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Movie questions hell as place of eternal torment

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But Miller seeks to show that the view is not out of line with Christian tradition.

Catholic apologist Peter Kreeft says the Catholic church leaves the question somewhat open.

“That there is a hell and that anyone can go there by their free choice, that’s dogma,” he says. “That there’s anybody in it and how many people are in it, nobody knows.”

Orthodox Archbishop Lazar Puhalo emphatically asserts, “God doesn’t send anybody to hell. God doesn’t punish anybody, either in this world or the world to come.”

In his view, “hell is a condition, not a place. The malice we feel is the fire that burns.”

Miller bookends the film around the 9/11 tragedy, saying events like the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center are the reason people need to believe in hell as a place of punishment for bad people, like Osama bin Laden or Adolf Hitler.

But Christian author Brad Jersak reminds the audience that common Christian belief teaches that Hitler isn’t the only one going to hell.

“If we’re strict infernalists, the victims of Auschwitz who didn’t have their names written in the book of life go right from Hitler’s flames into God’s flames, forever and ever and ever,” he says.

Miller is from Canada, but his religious upbringing probably would be more common for an American. He calls himself a recovering fundamentalist, although he said he has great respect for the “ladies who put their heart and soul” into teaching him about the Bible.

He grew up in the mainline United Church of Canada but joined the Mennonite church as teenager. He went to a Mennonite Bible college and spent some time in an interdenominational seminary. He attended several nondenominational evangelical churches before becoming an Anglican.

Miller said he considers himself a sophisticated reader of the Bible but never gave much thought to hell before he edited a book on the subject several years ago.

The controversy surrounding Bell’s “Love Wins” helped him frame the debate for the movie and some of the interview subjects are Bell’s most significant critics and supporters.

Miller says his film is primarily aimed at a religious audience.


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