The question is simple...did Jesus suffer hell on the Cross?
Sometimes annihilationists will claim that physical death was the only thing Jesus suffered on the Cross, therefore eternal punishment is only physical death. They will claim that the Bible does not use death in a metaphorical sense, so that it can be applied to spiritual deadness as well as physical deadness.
Often this is coupled with the belief that man is not a spirit-body composite, and that man only has a physical nature, not a spiritual nature.
I used to be an annihilationist, by the way, and have rejected this as a false teaching.
I believe that the cause of errors such as annihilationism is the failure to reason typologically. And, I believe this failure is largely the fault of dispensationalist hermeneutics which view typological reasoning with suspicion. They claim to employ literal interpretation of the Bible, which means that they largely avoid typological reasoning, even if it is clear that the Bible teaches in terms of types and shadows. They do not distinguish very well between different genres of literature within the Bible.
Well, I believe Jesus did suffer hell on the Cross. He bore, in essence, the full effect of the Curse on the Cross. Understanding this means that you need to look back to Genesis 1-3, and compare the Fall to the events on the Cross. Look for types and shadows that show up later in the crucifixion account.
As a simple example, notice that the Curse involved thistles and thorns and sweating on man's part. Notice that Jesus wore a crown of thorns, and sweated profusely during the Crucifixion. There are many such parallels..I will leave it to you to identify them.
I will base my reasoning on this short article by Colin Smith:
Six Dimension of Hell on the Cross
Colin Smith
Artists and poets have speculated over the centuries about hell (consider Dante’s “Inferno”), but the clearest revelation of hell is given at the cross. The Apostle’s Creed affirms that Christ descended into hell. While this has often been taken to refer to a journey Christ made after his death, the Reformers understood it to refer to what Christ experienced in the hours of darkness when he bore our sins and became our sacrifice.
Hell has six dimensions and Christ experienced all of them on the cross.
1. He was in conscious suffering.
Jesus experienced great physical suffering—the scourging, the nailing and the mocking—all at the hands of men. He felt in his body all the pain of torture and crucifixion. Hell is a place of “weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Luke 13:28; Matthew 13:50), and Jesus entered into all of its pains and torments when he was suffering on the cross.
2. He was in blackest darkness.
“From the sixth hour [midday] until the ninth hour [3 in the afternoon], darkness came over all the land” (Matthew 27:45). The sudden darkness tells us that something entirely new was happening. Up to this point it had all been about physical suffering. Now Jesus was entering into the heart of his atoning work as our sin-bearer, drinking the cup of God’s wrath.
3. He was surrounded by demonic powers.
Scripture speaks of these dark forces when it tells us that “having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross” (Colossians 2:15). A full picture of this conflict has not been given to us, but we can be sure that the demonic powers were present at Calvary, adding their taunts and venom to the human hatred that was poured out on Christ.
4. He was bearing sin.
1 Peter 2:24 says, “He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree.” God made him who had no sin to be sin for us (2 Corinthians 5:21). In the darkness, the Lord laid on Jesus the iniquity of us all (Isaiah 53:6). To be our sin-bearer, Christ received in himself the hell that our sins deserve. Klass Schilder says God was “directly sending the torments of hell against the Christ.” This is the deepest mystery in the darkness of the cross.
5. He was under judgment.
Jesus endured hell on the cross because hell is the punishment for sin. All that hell is, he experienced right there during these hours of darkness in which he bore our sin and endured our punishment. The wrath of God was poured out on him, and he became the propitiation for our sins (Romans 3:25, 1 John 2:2).
6. He was separated from the knowledge of God’s love of God.
This abandoning of Christ meant that the love the Son had enjoyed with his Father for all eternity was now beyond his reach. It also meant that the terrors of the Father’s judgment were poured out on the Savior. 2 Thessalonians 1:9 says that “those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus…will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might.”
That is hell.
Hell is conscious suffering in blackest darkness, surrounded by demonic powers. It is bearing the guilt of your sin and coming under the righteous judgment of God. But the hell of hell for the sinner will be to know that there is a God of love and that he or she could have known this is love, but that now it is beyond their reach.
When people talk about hell, the discussion is often about whether or not it is real. Hell is as real as the cross. Jesus entered all of hell’s dimensions on the cross, and he endured them so that you would never know what hell is like.
If someone should say, “There is no hell,” I ask, “Then what was the cross about? Why did Christ have to suffer? Why the darkness? Why the forsakenness? These things happened because there is there is Divine wrath, there is judgment and there is hell. All of this was poured out on Jesus, and he absorbed it in himself to save us from it. But as Richard Sibbes says, “Whatsoever was done to Christ…shall be done to all that are out[side] of him.” [ii]
That is as plain a statement as you can get, and it is faithful to the Scriptures. It is why every person must come to Jesus Christ and be in him, because we cannot be saved without him.
https://unlockingthebible.org/2015/04/six-dimensions-of-hell-on-the-cross/
By the way, what prompts me in this regard is the firm, dogmatic claim by someone on the site that God did not abandon Christ, even temporarily, on the Cross. I believe he did. He didn't abandon him ultimately, but in paying the penalty for the sin of the elect, God abandoned Christ on the Cross for a period of time. His resurrection proves that he did not abandoned him permanently, but there was an abandonment on the Cross as he suffered the abandonment that belonged to the sheep that God redeems from the earth for the possession of his son.
Sometimes annihilationists will claim that physical death was the only thing Jesus suffered on the Cross, therefore eternal punishment is only physical death. They will claim that the Bible does not use death in a metaphorical sense, so that it can be applied to spiritual deadness as well as physical deadness.
Often this is coupled with the belief that man is not a spirit-body composite, and that man only has a physical nature, not a spiritual nature.
I used to be an annihilationist, by the way, and have rejected this as a false teaching.
I believe that the cause of errors such as annihilationism is the failure to reason typologically. And, I believe this failure is largely the fault of dispensationalist hermeneutics which view typological reasoning with suspicion. They claim to employ literal interpretation of the Bible, which means that they largely avoid typological reasoning, even if it is clear that the Bible teaches in terms of types and shadows. They do not distinguish very well between different genres of literature within the Bible.
Well, I believe Jesus did suffer hell on the Cross. He bore, in essence, the full effect of the Curse on the Cross. Understanding this means that you need to look back to Genesis 1-3, and compare the Fall to the events on the Cross. Look for types and shadows that show up later in the crucifixion account.
As a simple example, notice that the Curse involved thistles and thorns and sweating on man's part. Notice that Jesus wore a crown of thorns, and sweated profusely during the Crucifixion. There are many such parallels..I will leave it to you to identify them.
I will base my reasoning on this short article by Colin Smith:
Six Dimension of Hell on the Cross
Colin Smith
Artists and poets have speculated over the centuries about hell (consider Dante’s “Inferno”), but the clearest revelation of hell is given at the cross. The Apostle’s Creed affirms that Christ descended into hell. While this has often been taken to refer to a journey Christ made after his death, the Reformers understood it to refer to what Christ experienced in the hours of darkness when he bore our sins and became our sacrifice.
Hell has six dimensions and Christ experienced all of them on the cross.
1. He was in conscious suffering.
Jesus experienced great physical suffering—the scourging, the nailing and the mocking—all at the hands of men. He felt in his body all the pain of torture and crucifixion. Hell is a place of “weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Luke 13:28; Matthew 13:50), and Jesus entered into all of its pains and torments when he was suffering on the cross.
2. He was in blackest darkness.
“From the sixth hour [midday] until the ninth hour [3 in the afternoon], darkness came over all the land” (Matthew 27:45). The sudden darkness tells us that something entirely new was happening. Up to this point it had all been about physical suffering. Now Jesus was entering into the heart of his atoning work as our sin-bearer, drinking the cup of God’s wrath.
3. He was surrounded by demonic powers.
Scripture speaks of these dark forces when it tells us that “having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross” (Colossians 2:15). A full picture of this conflict has not been given to us, but we can be sure that the demonic powers were present at Calvary, adding their taunts and venom to the human hatred that was poured out on Christ.
4. He was bearing sin.
1 Peter 2:24 says, “He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree.” God made him who had no sin to be sin for us (2 Corinthians 5:21). In the darkness, the Lord laid on Jesus the iniquity of us all (Isaiah 53:6). To be our sin-bearer, Christ received in himself the hell that our sins deserve. Klass Schilder says God was “directly sending the torments of hell against the Christ.” This is the deepest mystery in the darkness of the cross.
5. He was under judgment.
Jesus endured hell on the cross because hell is the punishment for sin. All that hell is, he experienced right there during these hours of darkness in which he bore our sin and endured our punishment. The wrath of God was poured out on him, and he became the propitiation for our sins (Romans 3:25, 1 John 2:2).
6. He was separated from the knowledge of God’s love of God.
This abandoning of Christ meant that the love the Son had enjoyed with his Father for all eternity was now beyond his reach. It also meant that the terrors of the Father’s judgment were poured out on the Savior. 2 Thessalonians 1:9 says that “those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus…will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might.”
That is hell.
Hell is conscious suffering in blackest darkness, surrounded by demonic powers. It is bearing the guilt of your sin and coming under the righteous judgment of God. But the hell of hell for the sinner will be to know that there is a God of love and that he or she could have known this is love, but that now it is beyond their reach.
When people talk about hell, the discussion is often about whether or not it is real. Hell is as real as the cross. Jesus entered all of hell’s dimensions on the cross, and he endured them so that you would never know what hell is like.
If someone should say, “There is no hell,” I ask, “Then what was the cross about? Why did Christ have to suffer? Why the darkness? Why the forsakenness? These things happened because there is there is Divine wrath, there is judgment and there is hell. All of this was poured out on Jesus, and he absorbed it in himself to save us from it. But as Richard Sibbes says, “Whatsoever was done to Christ…shall be done to all that are out[side] of him.” [ii]
That is as plain a statement as you can get, and it is faithful to the Scriptures. It is why every person must come to Jesus Christ and be in him, because we cannot be saved without him.
https://unlockingthebible.org/2015/04/six-dimensions-of-hell-on-the-cross/
By the way, what prompts me in this regard is the firm, dogmatic claim by someone on the site that God did not abandon Christ, even temporarily, on the Cross. I believe he did. He didn't abandon him ultimately, but in paying the penalty for the sin of the elect, God abandoned Christ on the Cross for a period of time. His resurrection proves that he did not abandoned him permanently, but there was an abandonment on the Cross as he suffered the abandonment that belonged to the sheep that God redeems from the earth for the possession of his son.
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