Do you agree with Sproul that God is present in hell?
If no, why not?
Normally, I love the late and beloved R. C. Sproul. Nearly everything that I believe, from soteriology to eschatology, has been shaped or in some way influenced by him. In fact, he was instrumental in pulling me out of Particular Baptist theology into fully Reformed covenant theology. But on this point I think he is mistaken, or at least imprecise.
The problem is that Sproul’s formulation presupposes the traditional doctrine of hell as eternal conscious torment, so in this statement he is blurring the distinction between the intermediate state and final state. Did anyone else notice that he is importing into the present intermediate state features belonging properly to final punishment?
For example, he says the wicked “are” in hell, using the present tense for hell as divine judgment and punitive wrath. But Scripture nowhere says that the wicked are presently experiencing final hell (γέεννα,
géenna or
gehenna). If they are anywhere, it is the intermediate state (ᾅδης,
hadēs), corresponding broadly to
Sheol (שְׁאוֹל,
šeʾôl) in the Old Testament, the realm of the dead, which the LXX translates as
hadēs.
That is where Psalm 139:8 comes in. Although the realm of the dead is not outside God’s sovereign presence or jurisdiction (e.g., Job 26:6), that’s not the same thing as saying the dead either enjoy or despise communion with him there. The Old Testament commonly portrays the realm of the dead in terms of darkness, silence, and deprivation, a “land of oblivion” cut off from the embodied praise and historical covenant life of the land of the living (Ps. 88:10-12; Job 14:21; Eccl 9:5, 10). Yet the OT does not leave God’s people there without hope. Precisely because
šeʾôl /
hadēs is not beyond his reach, Scripture begins to voice the hope that God will redeem his people from its power (Ps. 49:15; Hos. 13:14), a hope that comes to fuller expression in the NT doctrine of resurrection.
So I cannot follow Sproul here. His statement imports into the present intermediate state features that belong properly to the final state. No matter how one resolves all the details, Scripture does not teach that the wicked are presently experiencing final hell.