review of rudel's book: "who really goes
TRANSCRIPT
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7/30/2019 REVIEW of Rudel's Book: "Who REALLY Goes
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Rudel's Book Entitled, "Who REALLY Goes to Hell?"
So begins a bookby David Rudel entitled, Who REALLY Goes to Hell? The Gospel You
NeverHeard Preached.
People think a lot of things are taught in the Bible that aren't taught at all. "God helps
those who help themselves." "What goes around, comes around." "This, too, shall
pass.""Cleanliness is next to godliness." "God works in mysterious ways." "Money is the
root of all evil." "Confession is good for the soul." "Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow
we will die"None of these are in the Bible. And many, many more.
Since I know a lot of what people think the Bible teaches isn't really true, I was curious to
learn if David Rudel had some honest and new insights to reveal to me that could shine
light on any wrong teachings I might still be holding. When it comes to teachings about
God holding sinners over the fires of Hell, slowly roasting them, I'm more than ready to beproven wrong!
Yet when Rudel begins his argument by claiming hell show that what Paul preached
contradicted what Jesus preached, I sit up and take notice. It raises my expectation not
that I assume at the outset that he has to be wrong. I have no vested interest in maintaining
false teaching only because its familiar to me. But in my years of study of both Jesus and
Pauls teachings, I've seen no contradictions only people claiming to see
contradictions based on some disappointingly inaccurate misreading of the Word. Excited
by this authors new challenge, I hoped he would show me something new, somethingmore than Id ever seen previously. Of which I was yet again disappointed.
Near the start of his book, Rudel makes an odd request. He explains that hes used so
many Bible verses that he wants the reader to skim rapidly through his book at least once
withoutpausing to closely examine any of the verses he uses, saving that closer
examination for a second perusal. Why? Rudel explains: I use over 2,700 verses and
youll never get through the book if you stop and examine each passage. To begin with,
theres a touch of arrogance in assuming his readers are going to read his book twice, as
IMAO most readers will not.
But theres also a hint of theological sleight-of-hand in his saying, in essence, Dont look
at any of the verses too closely just go with whatever interpretive spin I put on them as I
build my persuasive argument. If an author is presenting truth that is rooting out older
misinterpretations and misunderstandings of Scripture, it seems the reader instead ought to
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be encouraged to look closely at the Scriptures used in order in order to agree that this
authors re- interpretation (or re-envisioning) of them is in fact accurate.
In a few places I rebelled and looked up his interpretation of Scriptures anyway. Several
times I discovered hed either taken a verse out of context (giving it a meaning it didnt
really have) or he'd gavin an explanation (especially, as he typically claims, of the
Greek) that I couldnt find supported in any other scholastic commentaries. One brief
example: He relates a sermon given by Norm Koop (son of the famous Surgeon General)
explaining the word eternal in John 17.3: This is life eternal, that they might know thee
the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. Koop said that in the
Greek (which phrase always needs to be taken with a grain of salt), eternal doesnt refer
to a chronological span of time but its quality. Rudel apparently feels free, with that little
expository tidbit, to dismiss all normal interpretations of eternal life and exchange it
instead for what he defends as (what he labels) a truly Jewish idea of the World to
Come. But as many sources as I checked, none of them gave even the least hint of thisinterpretation of eternal life. Rudel, I suppose, might claim I looked at the wrong sources
sources which are biased toward traditional interpretations. Which, in that case, would
make his argument irrefutable.
Yet what drew me to Rudels book was the hope that (at the very least) he would ask some
questions andpose some problems that would prove challenging to the religious status quo
in Christendom in general and in me specifically. Along the way, I came across a number
of lovely observations hed made about Scripture passages that I hurriedly adopted as my
own. (Thanks, David!) One precious little insight referred to Jesus story of the Good
Samaritan.
Rudel observed that though most translations say that the Samaritan was a "good
neighbor," the Greek verb tense is better translated "became" meaning that prior to
stopping to help the Jew, they were not neighbors. But after seeing the Jews need and
stopping to render aid, he then "became" neighbor to the Jew.
Absolutely lovely! And upon checking it out in a Greek dictionary [Strong's] and other
sources, they confirmed his observation.
Many chapters and sections of chapters are wonderful. In one, for example, he lists seven
things "Jesus never preached" including any sermons about trusting in His atoning work on
the Cross. Heres an example of how Rudels reasonings can challenge conservative
Christian thought: Since Jesus never preached to the Jews about His atoning work on the
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Cross, yet He went everywhere preaching the Gospel then the Gospel doesnt include
people understanding (and trusting) His work on the Cross. (!!!) Give that a moment and
reflect: did Jesus preach the Gospel or not? His Gospel had neither Cross nor Blood, so is
He a Modernist or even a heretic? Or is the common understanding of what makes up the
Gospel inadequate? Whether Rudel is right or wrong, the question itself should rattle
the cages of those who have an overly simplistic idea of what is the Gospel.
However correct Rudel is in his reflections on the Jewish perspective, he has gained
many excellent insights by merely asking this question:
Since the Jews in Jesus day were not modern, 21st century Euro-Americans, what did
they think Jesus meant in His teachings?
Rudel points the reader back to the Old Testament repeatedly, insisting that whereas many,
modern Christians have either neglected the OT completely or have picked out of it only
those verses that make them feel good, he insists that all of the Old Testament must be read
as Jesus intended: everything in it pointed prophetically to the coming of the Messiah Who
was Jesus. He even points out Jesus exasperation in Luke 24.25 with His own disciples
blindness about the OT, that the OT was a type of grand prophecy, a huge picture that...
gave clues about the coming Christ [Messiah] so that the Jews of Jesus day could
recognize Him. [Which many didnt, but many didbut still refused to accept my
observation from John 1.10f. ES]
Part of the treasure of this book are the questions Rudel asks questions that most
Christians either avoid or ignore. For example: how, exactly, is it possible for people,
beforeChrists death, to be saved. What about people who have never even heard about
Jesus but who obey within themselves the Law of God (as Paul refers to in Romans 2.)
Why is it that Jesus can say to people who have not repented(such as the paralyzed man
let down through the roof) that his sins were forgiven? Or how can He say that the people
who inherit the Kingdom are those who have given Him food and drink? [Mt. 25.33ff]
Jesus says nothing about "repentance" or "trusting" Him or "believing in His atoning work
on the Cross". What could be a more theologically heretical notion than giving someone a
glass of water is the basis of being taken into Gods Kingdom?
The question posed in the title, Who Really Goes to Hell?, isnt directly answered
anywhere in the book. He briefly refers to it on p. 84 and I wont give away his solution.
Needless to say, its in the same section in which he demonstrates that Gods intention
never was for any of us to go to Heaven at least, not in any permanent sense. [Enter,
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stage left, the city of New Jerusalem. That's a hint, folks]
Two problems I find in Rudel's presentation are most difficult for me to resolve: (1) He
goes to very great length trying to establish that there are actually two salvations referred
to in the Bible deliverance and regeneration. He acknowledges that there can be no
regeneration aside from becoming one with Jesus Christ (baptized or baptizo; i.e., Rom.
6.3ff), but deliverance can come in a much more general fashion. My problem is that there
are numerous Scriptures that show us that not only regeneration comes through the Cross,
but deliverance from sin, death and even sickness (e.g., by His stripes we are healed.)
I'm not persuaded these are to be thoroughly distinguished from each other.
The second problem (2) is the hardest for me to resolve with my own perspectives.
Throughout his book, Rudel seems to show a deep affection for the Law. He reinterprets
the Law so that there is the Law which still holds sway over us and the rabbinical Law
which nullified Gods intentions. In fact, he insists that a person can be made righteous byproperly obeying the Law. But however you cut it, it seems to me that obeying this Law
encroaches on the freedom from the Law (all the Law) that the apostle Paul insists is ours.
(e.g., "Stand firm in the freedom with which Christ made us free and do not let yourselves
be subject again with that yoke of slavery." Gal. 5.1)
The one text I expected Rudel to focus on seriously and refute (but I didn't find) was Pauls
logical explanation in Galatians 2.21 and 3.21 that if it were possible for any person ever
to be made righteous by obeying the Law, then Christ has died in vain. If a person could
become righteous by his or her own efforts in obeying the Law, then instead of dying,Jesus could have simply stood back and said, Get your act together, O Man, or go to
hell.
But since there is no righteousness that comes from obeying the Law, Jesus chose to
become unrighteousness on our behalf and in union with humankind to die and live
again. In His Resurrection are we all Resurrected from the dead into eternal life and
incorruptible, immortal bodies just as is our Lord's.
So every person who (spiritually) is unitedto Jesus shares in His death, shares in Hisburial, and shares in HisResurrection Life. This "Good News" has nothing whatsoever to
do with obeying or disobeying the Law only with trusting in this Good News about Jesus
(Or not.)
Rudel says he hopes that his book will turn upside down the worlds of a few who once
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had been "unthinking followers" of traditional dogma. In my opinion, there are ample
pages of questions, challenges and radically different perspectives on the traditional
approach to Christian teachings on salvation, hell, Heaven and other stuff. Any reader who
ventures into Rudels world can easily come out the other end with some degree of
theological discomfort and potentially some radical spiritual transformation. As Hopkins
writes in the Forward, if you love Gods Word and treasure Gods Church, this book willbe an essential, albeit annoying, challenge.
Emil Swift