So do I but that is irrelevant to the point being made.
Don't get defensive. You posted a statement stating "....
Jesus spoke more about a literal and eternal hell for the lost more [than] he did on heaven."
Jesus did speak more about hell than heaven but that is not the specific point with which I disagree, It's the use of the word "
literal."
There is no such thing as a literal hell.
The word "
hell" is a Norse term, not a Hebrew term. Hades is a Greek term. Hel and Hades were pagan gods. They were NOT the God of the Bible. They were not the God Jesus served. Jesus spoke Aramaic (and Hebrew). The word Jesus used would have been "
Sheol," or "
the grave."
The grave is literal.
A realm ruled by lesser gods, pagan gods, lesser pagan gods ruling an underworld full of dead people is
NOT what Jesus taught. What Jesus taught is even different than the old-line teaching of Sadducean Judaism. Jewish theology held that the grave was the end. There was
nothing after a person died. Their view was nihilistic. You died and you were dead. Your body rotted in the grave and that was it. The Pharisees arose during the inter-testamental period and said, "No! That is not correct! There is a resurrection! There is life after the grave." and that disagreement between the Sadducees and the Pharisees persisted all the way up to the incarnation.
Jesus set the record straight.
Jesus corrected BOTH the Sadducees
and the Pharisees
and he also corrected all of the pagan views, too. The Sadducees were wrong: there is life after death. "That is, in fact, the reason I (Jesus) have come. I have come to defeat sin and death." The Sadducees scoffed. No one can defeat death. Jesus rose from the grave and proved himself true and every single Sadducee a liar. Jesus also proved the Pharisees wrong because while there is life after death not everyone reaps eternal life. Not only is eternal life on the other side of the grave not an automatic given, but it is not the sole privilege of Jews, either. "
A person must believe in me (Jesus)
to reap eternal life." And most Pharisees did not believe. They did not receive what they taught. They did not receive what they hoped for. The died in sin, just like all the pagan Gentiles. That very notion was reprehensible to every Jews who had ever lived. Jesus also corrected the pagans. There are no gods beside God. Zeus is a myth. Jupiter is a myth. Ra, Odin, and all the other god of the gods are myths. They are lies. Not only is there no Zeus, Jupiter, Odin, or Ra, but there are no lesser gods, either. No one goes to live under the rule of Pluto or Hades. Those gods are myths. What happens is you pagan Gentiles go to stand before God, the Creator of al that exists and you stand before Him to be judged. Every single human ever made stands before the Creator to be judged and there are only two outcomes: a person either believed Jesus defeated sin and death and placed his/her existence in the work of God's only Anointed One, covered in his propitiatory blood, OR a person denied God's Anointed One and all the work the Anointed One had done and received destruction. There was no wandering around in conscious misery in the underworld.
That is what Jesus taught.
So when you use the word "
literal" in reference to "
Hell," you're contradicting yourself. Yes, I know the convention in Christian vernacular is to speak that way, but the convention is not accurate. The word "hell" is a Greek word the New Testament writers used to communicate to pagan converts. Or, the word "hell" is a Greek addition because our Bibles are based on Greek manuscripts, not the original writings of the apostles. Matthew's gospel was most likely written in Aramaic. Matthew knew Greek because he was a tax collector. It's assumed Mark's gospel was written in Greek but there's no proof of that. Luke was a Gentile, and an educated Gentile, so it's quite likely he wrote in Greek. John is perhaps the most informative because his Koine Greek improves as time passes. The indication is he learned Greek after Christ died, or his knowledge of Greek was rudimentary until he began having a need for it. Any way it is considered, Matthew, Mark, and John were Jews. So was Jesus. They were not Greek or Roman. They spoke (and wrote) Aramaic and Hebrew. The words "
Hell," "
Hades," and "
Tartarus" were not normal or natural to them. Those were not real places for those Jewish men. Those places were not
literal places.
If Jesus ever did use those words, then he did so as figurative references to the reality that is God's reality. He used those words as references understandable by the audience members from other cultures and lands. Jesus was nnot teaching Greek, Roman, or Norse mythology. He wasn't teaching Mesopotamian, Assyrian, or Egyptian mythology.
He taught the truth.
And he often taught the truth using imagery, figures, or speech, and symbols understood by his audiences because the reality is incomprehensible. No one can stand before God and live.
Unless s/he is covered in Christ's blood.
They tried to stone Jesus for saying that.
A fiery furnace is imagery, not the actual thing. A fiery lake is not literal. It's a figurative reference to agonizing destruction. The judgment is literal. The furnace and lake are not.
So be careful when using the word "
literal."
That is my point.
If you want people to believe you then use the word "
literal" correctly and wisely. It's important because we all want people to escape the final judgment alive in Christ and entering eternal life, not dead in sin headed for destruction.
And destruction is what literally happens when objects are literally thrown into literal fire. Literally.
Most of what scripture teaches about the grave got mucked up by Roman Catholicism and was carried over centuries later into the Protestant denominations.
.