„Not many”, or the Salvation Historical “pessimism” of Jesus Christ
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59914/SF.28.2024.2.9Keywords:
apokatastatsis pantón, universal salvation, damnation, sons of light, sons of darknessAbstract
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, a
kind of „happy-endism” is gaining ground in
theological thought, in which the assumption
of universal salvation and the questioned
possibility of damnation (e.g. the „empty hell”
theory) are gradually becoming more and more
widespread. Theologians such as Karl Rahner
and Hans Urs von Balthasar are among those
who are prominent examples of this. One of
the most frequently cited dictum probantium
in 1 Timothy 2:4 emphasizes God’s universal
saving will. In my study, I will show that the
arguments based on it proceed from the a priori
assumption of the singularity of the divine will.
At the same time, there is a tendency to defend
almost always only those New Testament verses
that seem to be weak points of the thesis, such as
Jesus’ statements on the Gehenenna. In my study,
I will examine three examples - mostly sliding
under the radar of those arguing for universal
salvation - where the problem is not the threat
of damnation, but rather Jesus’ assumption of
a positive outcome for the ‚few’ (oligoi). These
include the image of the narrow gate and the
hard way, the motif of the many called but few
chosen, and the distinction between the sons of
this world and the sons of light.
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