Abandon Hope: Dante, Swedenborg, and the Eternity of Hell

Abandon Hope: Dante, Swedenborg, and the Eternity of Hell April 10, 2015

585px-Gustave_Doré_-_Dante_Alighieri_-_Inferno_-_Plate_8_(Canto_III_-_Abandon_all_hope_ye_who_enter_here)I’m looking forward to reading Rod Dreher’s upcoming book How Dante Can Save Your Lifeabout Dreher’s life-changing experience reading Dante’s Divine Comedy. Inspired partly by Dreher’s blogging and partly by conversations I had last year with a congregant back in western Canada, I finally dove into the Divine Comedy a few weeks ago, and I’ve made my way with Dante down through the Inferno and on through to the base of Mount Purgatory. I may pause here at the foot of the mountain for a while; I’ve gotten too frustrated with the terrible formatting of the Kindle edition of Mark Musa’s translation, and I’ve ordered the physical copy (which will also make it easier to read alongside Dreher’s book, which I plan to read on the Kindle). This being Africa, it may be a month before the book arrives. But this gives me some time to blog on my thoughts so far.

The congregant I mentioned from Canada is a devout New Churchwoman, and after reading the Divine Comedy she was convinced that Dante had actually had some visions of heaven and hell, so close was his vision to the vision Swedenborg related as fact some 450 years later. I’m not so sure of that – Swedenborg himself suggests that there is enough in Scripture to give the basic ideas of heaven and hell that his works flesh out.  Besides this, having read the Inferno, there are plenty of aspects of Dante’s theology that I find to be very flawed. In fact on first reading it even seemed to me that his view of God’s judgment might be of a God who enjoyed punishing those who had rejected Him.

How Dante coverBut that initial reading is almost certainly too shallow. There are hints along the way that more is going on here than a story about gruesome punishments designed to instil a fear of God as Divine Torturer. Rod has a great post up today with excerpts from his book describing Dante’s vision of hell. Here’s Dreher, explaining how hell can be said to have been made by “primal love” and still offer no hope of escape for those who are bound there (the signpost above hell famously reads in part “Abandon Hope, All Ye Who Enter Here”):

 These are men and women who have no hope, because their eternal fates have already been decided. To have “lost the good of the intellect” [as Dante’s guide Virgil has said of them] means they are no longer reasoning creatures, but zombies, more or less. That is, they have become one with their sinfulness, and therefore one-dimensional. They have no hope because their condition will last forever.

What does it mean to say that “love” made this horrible place [as Dante sees written on the gates of hell]? It is the love that will not force itself upon a man, but rather one that will give him for eternity what he chooses in the temporal life. … Hell is for those who will not have God, those who made a final, remorseless choice for their own passions over unity with and submission to their Creator. Satan’s sin was to rebel against God. The root of all sin is this fundamental pride, a pride that prefers the Self, with all its disordered passions, to God. God is loving, but God is also just; in His love, He will give us what we choose.

This lines up exactly with the New Church concept of hell: a self-created (but inescapable) world that naturally arises when people who love themselves above all else are brought together. A key concept here that is not made explicit in Dante but can be glimpsed suggestively is the New Church concept of a ruling love: a person essentially is what they love above all else. According to New Church theology, the ruling loves of everyone in heaven are love of God and love of the neighbour; the ruling loves of everyone in hell are the love of self and of the world (i.e. money, pleasure, etc.). From Heaven and Hell:

The angels declare that the life of the ruling love is never changed in any one even to eternity, since everyone is his love; consequently to change that love in a spirit is to take away or extinguish his life; and for the reason that man after death is no longer capable of being reformed by instruction, as in the world, because the outmost plane, which consists of natural knowledges and affections, is then quiescent and not being spiritual cannot be opened; and upon that plane the interiors pertaining to the mind and disposition rest as a house rests on its foundation; and on this account such as the life of one’s love had been in the world such he continues to be to eternity. (HH §480)

In the past I’ve struggled with the justice of that – how could a just and merciful God take away the means a person has of repenting? How could God, in the words that Dante puts in the mouth of his guide Virgil, take away “the good of the intellect” and leave the hell-bound alone with their ruling love? But on further reading in the Doctrine of the New Church, it’s become clearer: God takes away the knowledge of goodness and truth with the evil after death because they’ve already chosen. To eternity, they would not use it for repentance – they would use it to deceive, and so taking it away is the means of protecting the innocent. So, for example, again from Heaven and Hell:

It is a great grief to the angels that learned men for the most part ascribe all things to nature, and have thereby so closed up the interiors of their minds as to be unable to see any thing of truth from the light of truth, which is the light of heaven. In consequence of this such in the other life are deprived of their ability to reason that they may not disseminate falsities among the simple good and lead them astray; and are sent away into desert places. (HH §464)

In the end, I think the only way to reconcile the idea of a just and merciful God with an eternal hell is to believe that those in hell have made a fundamental choice about who they are, a choice that they do not want to change, even if temporarily they would claim repentance in order to be free of the pain that they receive when they try to act on their evil intentions.

(Image is Gustave Doré’s illustration of Dante and Virgil at the gates of hell.)


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