The Pains of Hell

from the Writings of Saint Anthony Mary Claret
 The
sensation of
pain in
Hell is essentially very
dreadful. Picture yourself, my
soul, on a dark night on
the summit of a high mountain. Beneath you is a deep valley, and the earth opens
so that with your gaze you can see Hell in the cavity of it. Picture it as a
prison situated in the center of the earth, many leagues down, all full of
fire,
hemmed in so impenetrably that for all eternity not even the smoke can escape.
In this prison the damned are packed so tightly one on the other like
bricks in
a kiln ....Consider the quality of the fire in which they
burn. 1
First, the fire is all-extensive and
tortures the whole
body
and the whole soul. A
damned person lies in
hell forever in the
same spot which
he was assigned by divine justice, without being able to move, as a
prisoner in
stocks.
The fire in which he is totally enveloped, as a fish in
water, burns around him, on his left, his right, above and below. His head, his
breast, his shoulders, his arms, his hands, and his feet are all penetrated with
fire, so that he completely resembles a
glowing hot piece of iron which has just
been withdrawn from an oven. The roof beneath which the
damned person dwells is
fire; the food he takes is
fire; the drink he tastes is
fire; the air he
breathes is fire; whatever he sees and touches is all
fire....
But this fire is not merely outside him; it also passes
within the condemned person.
It penetrates his brain, his teeth, his
tongue, his
throat, his liver, his lungs, his bowels, his belly, his
heart, his veins, his
nerves, his bones, even to the marrow, and even his blood.
"In hell," according to Saint Gregory the Great, "there will be
a fire that cannot be put out, a worm which cannot die, a stench one cannot
bear, a darkness one can feel, a scourging by savage hands, with those present
despairing of anything good."
A most dreadful fact is that by the
divine power this fire
goes so far as to work on the very faculties of the soul,
burning them and
tormenting them. Suppose I were to find myself placed at the oven of a smith so
that my whole body was in the open air but for one arm placed in the
fire, and
that God were to preserve my life for a
thousand years in this position. Would
this not be an unbearable torture? What, then, would it be like to be completely
penetrated and surrounded by fire, which would affect not just an arm, but even
all the faculties of the soul?
More Dreadful than Man Can Imagine
Secondly, this fire is far more dreadful than man can
imagine. The natural fire that we see during this life has great power to
burn
and torment. Yet this is not even a shadow of the
fire of hell. There are
two
reasons why the fire of hell is more
dreadful beyond all comparison than the
fire of this life.
The first reason is the
justice of God, which the
fire serves
as an instrument in order to punish the
infinite wrong done to
His supreme
majesty, Which has been despised by a
creature. Therefore justice supplies this
element with a burning power which almost reaches the
infinite....
The second reason is the
malice of sin. As
God knows that the
fire of this world is not enough to punish
sin as it deserves,
He has given the
fire of hell a power so strong that
it can never be comprehended by any human
mind. Now, how powerfully does this fire burn?
It burns so powerfully, O my
soul, that, according to the
ascetical masters, if a mere spark of
it fell on a millstone, it would reduce it
in a moment to powder. If it fell on a ball of bronze,
it would melt it in an
instant as if it were wax. If it landed on a
frozen lake, it would make it boil
in an instant.
Pause here briefly, my soul, and answer a few questions I
will put. First, I ask you: If a special furnace were fired up as was
customarily done to torment the holy martyrs, and then men placed before you all
kinds of good things that the human heart might want, and added the offer of a
prosperous kingdom ? if all this were promised you on condition that for just a
half-hour you enclose yourself within the furnace, what would you choose?
A Hundred Kingdoms
"Ah!", you would say, "If you offered me a hundred kingdoms I
would never be so foolish as to accept your brutal terms, regardless of how
grand your offer might be, even if I were sure that God would preserve my life
during those moments of suffering."
Second, I ask you: If you already had possession of a great
kingdom and were swimming in a sea of wealth so that nothing was wanting to you,
and then you were attacked by an
enemy, were imprisoned and put in chains and
obliged to either renounce your kingdom or else spend a
half-hour in a hot
furnace, what would you choose? "Ah!", you would say, "I would prefer to spend
my whole life in extreme poverty and submit to any other hardship and
misfortune, than suffer such a great torment!"
A Prison of Eternal Fire
Now turn your thoughts from the temporal to the
eternal. To
avoid the torment of a hot furnace, which would last but a
half-hour, you would
forgo all your property, even things you are most fond of, you would
suffer any
other temporal loss, however burdensome. Then why do you not think the same way
when you are dealing of eternal torments?
God threatens you not just with a
half-hour in a furnace, but with a
prison of eternal fire. To escape
it, should
you not forgo whatever He has forbidden, not matter how pleasant it can be for
you, and gladly embrace whatever He commands, even if it be
extremely
unpleasant?
A most terrible thing about hell is
its duration. The
condemned person loses God and
loses
Him for all eternity. Now, what is
eternity? O my soul, up to now there has not been any
angel who has been able to
comprehend what eternity is. So how can you comprehend it? Yet, to for some idea
of it, consider the following
truths:
Eternity never ends. This is the
truth that has made even the
great saints tremble. The final judgment will come, the world will be
destroyed,
the earth will swallow up those who are damned, and
they will be cast into
Hell.
Then, with His almighty hand,
God will shut them up in that most
unhappy prison.
From then on, as many years will pass as there are leaves on
the trees and plants on all the earth, as many thousands of years as there are
drops of water in all seas and rivers, as many thousands of years as there are
atoms in the air, as there are grains of sand on all the shores of all seas.
Then, after the passage of this countless number of years, what will
eternity
be? Up to then there will not even have been a hundredth part of
it, nor a
thousandth ? nothing. It then begins again and will last as long again, even
after this has been repeated a thousand times, and a
thousand million times
again. And then, after so long a period, not even a half will have passed, not
even a hundredth part nor a
thousandth, not even any part of
eternity. For all
this time there is no interruption in the burnings of those who are
damned, and
it begins all over again.
Oh, a deep mystery indeed! A
terror above all terrors! O
eternity! Who can comprehend
thee?
The Tears of Cain
Suppose that, in the case of unhappy Cain,
weeping in Hell,
he shed in every thousand years just
one tear. Now, O my
soul, recollect your
thoughts and suppose this case: For six thousand years at least
Cain has been in
Hell and shed only six
tears, which God miraculously
preserves. How many years
would pass for his tears to fill all the valleys of the earth and flood all the
cities and towns and villages and cover all the mountains so as to flood the
whole earth? We understand the distance from the earth to the sun is
thirty-four
million leagues. How many years would be necessary for
Cain's tears to fill that
immense space? From the earth to the firmament is, let us suppose, a distance of
a hundred and sixty million leagues.
O God! What number of
years might one imagine to be
sufficient to fill with these tears this immense space? And yet ? O
truth so
incomprehensible ? be sure of it as that God cannot
lie ? a time will arrive
in which these tears of Cain would be sufficient to flood the world, to reach
even the sun, to touch the firmament, and fill all the space between earth and
the highest heaven. But that is not all.
If God dried up all these
tears to the last drop and Cain
began again to weep, he would again fill the same entire space with them and
fill it a thousands times and a million times in succession, and after all those
countless years, not even half of eternity would have passed, not even a
fraction. After all that time burning in Hell,
Cain's sufferings will be just
beginning.
This eternity is also without relief. It would indeed be a
small consolation and of little benefit for the condemned persons to be able to
receive a brief respite once every
thousand years.
No Relief
 |
|
Agony and Despair of Hell, Last Judgment detail -
by MICHELANGELO Buonarroti -
from Cappella Sistina, Vatican |
|
Picture in Hell a place where there are
three reprobates. The
first is plunged in a lake of sulphuric fire, the
second is chained to a large
rock and is being tormented by
two devils,
one of whom continually pours molten
lead down his throat while the other spills it all over his body, covering him
from head to foot. The third
reprobate is being tortured by
two serpents,
one of
which wraps around the man's body and cruelly gnaws on it, while the other
enters within the body and attacks the heart. Suppose God is moved to
pity and
grants a short respite.
The first man, after the passage of a
thousand years is drawn
from the lake and receives the relief of a drink of cool water, and at the end
of an hour is cast again into the lake. The
second, after a thousand years, is
released from his place and allowed to rest; but after an
hour is again returned
to the same torment. The
third, after a thousand years, is delivered from the
serpents; but after an hour of relief, is again
abused and tormented by them.
Ah, how little this consolation would be ? to suffer a
thousand years and to
rest only one hour.
However, Hell does not even have that much relief. One burns
always in those dreadful flames and never receives any
relief for all
eternity.
He is forever gnawed and
stricken with remorse, and will never have a rest for
all eternity. He will
suffer always a very ardent thirst and never receive the
refreshment of a sip of water for all eternity. He will see himself always
abhorred by God and will never enjoy a single tender glance from
Him for all
eternity. He will find himself forever
cursed by Heaven and
Hell, and will never
receive a single gesture of friendship.
It is an essential misfortune of
Hell that everything will be without
relief, without
remedy, without
interruption, without
end, eternal.
The Kindness of His Mercy
Now I understand in part, O my God, what
Hell is. It is a
place of extreme pain, of
extreme despair. It is where I deserve to be for my
sins, where I would have been confined for
some years already if your immense
mercy had not delivered me. I will keep repeating a
thousand times:
The Heart of
Jesus has loved me, or else I would now be in Hell! The mercy of Jesus has
pitied me; for otherwise I would be in Hell! The Blood of Jesus has reconciled
me with the heavenly Father, or my dwelling place would be Hell. This shall be
the hymn that I want to sing to Thee, my God, for all eternity. Yes, from now on
my intention is to repeat these words as many times as there are moments that
have passed since that unhappy hour in which I first offended You.
What has been my gratitude to God for His kind mercy that He
showed me? He delivered me from Hell. O, immense
charity! O, infinite goodness!
After a benefit so great, should I not have given Him my whole heart and loved
Him with the love of the most ardent Seraphim? Should I not have directed all my
actions to Him, and in everything sought only His divine pleasure, accepting all
contradictions with joy, in order to return to Him my love? Could I do less than
that after a kindness that was so great? And yet, what is it that I have done?
Oh, ingratitude worthy of another Hell! I cast You aside, O my
God! I reacted to
Your mercy by committing new
sins and offenses. I know that I have done
evil, O
my God, and I repent with my whole heart. Ah, would that I could shed a sea of
tears for such outrageous ingratitude! O Jesus, have
mercy on me; for I now
resolve to rather suffer a thousand deaths than offend You again.
The Urgency of Hell
It is of faith that
Heaven exists for the good,and
Hell for
the wicked. Faith teaches that the
pains of Hell are
eternal, and it also warns
us that one single mortal sin suffices to
condemn a soul
forever because of the
infinite malice by which
it offends an infinite God. With these
most positive
principles in mind, how can I remain indifferent when I see the ease with which
sins are committed,
sins that occur as frequently as one takes a glass of water,
sins and offenses that are perpetrated out of
levity or diversion? How can I
rest when so many are to be seen living continually in mortal sin and rushing in
this blind manner to their eternal destruction? No indeed, I cannot rest, but
must needs run and shout a warning to them. If I saw anyone about to fall into a
pit or a fire, would I not run up to him and warn him, and do all in my power to
help him from falling in? Why should I not do this much to keep
sinners from
falling into the pit and
fires of Hell?
Neither can I understand why other priests who believe the
selfsame truths as I do, as we all must do, do not
preach or exhort their flock
so that they might avoid this unbearable eternity of Hell. It is still a source
of wonder to me how the laity - those men and women blessed with the
Faith - do
not give warning to those who need it. If a house were to catch fire in the
middle of the night, and if the inhabitants of the same house and the other
townsfolk were asleep and did not see the danger, would not the one who first
noticed it shout and run along the streets, exclaiming: "Fire! Fire! In that
house over there!" Then why should there not be a
warning of eternal fire to
waken those who are drifting in the sleep of sin in such a way that when they
open their eyes they will find themselves burning in the
eternal flames of Hell?

Remember Dear Christian:
You have but
One soul to save,
One God to love
and to serve,
One eternity to expect.
Death will come soon,
Judgment will follow
and then
Heaven or Hell forever!
Therefore,
O Child of Jesus and Mary,
Avoid sin and all dangerous occasions of sin.
Pray without ceasing.
Go frequently to Confession
and to Holy Communion.
Saint Alphonsus de Liguori |

|