A distasteful subject...
... especially during Christmastime, when we celebrate the birth of our savior. It is made only slightly more palatable by the though of Hitch decking the Korean pot-bellied pig upon the face to face encounter, while Saint Peter busily checks the rolls in front of the pearly gates.
I do not enjoy such speculation. I have my own salvation to work out "in fear and trembling," but Bill Bennett started it by going out of his way and off topic during a CBS interview, to say this...
"He was left and I was right. We had great debates, great drinking bouts... And I hope that, being the big atheist that he was, he's in for a big surprise."Pretty ungracious for a man who extols the Socratic virtues of intelligence, candor and goodwill.
Granted, Christians have a duty to rage against the slouching, pablum-powered It's-all-good-universalism that completely ignores The Bible, but that statement was particularly harsh.
Bennett's apparently premeditated outburst sparked Allahpundit to explore three possible fates for our beloved writer:
1) He's damned.
2) He secretly converted, which he pegs as an insult to a man of strong and clear atheistic convictions who made his deathbed and unblinkingly laid down upon it.
3) “well, maybe God will cut him a break.”
Allahpundit marvels at how many Christians who loved Hitch's work fall into the third category. He concludes...
"... he’ll go down in history as a blasphemer of world-beating vehemence — and yet there are still millions of believers who so love and admire him for his art that, in spite of it all, they’re straining to somehow get him off the hook with God anyway. Now that’s a legacy." (Allahpundit)Ross Douthat explores the third possibility in Hitchens and Hell, giving us a thumbnail sketch of theological thought that supports the salvation of Christopher Hitchens, concluding...
Rather, the point is that we just don’t know. As Henry James had it: “Never say you know the last word about any human heart.” Or in the words of Saint Paul: “For now we see through a glass, darkly, but then face to face.” Both the goats and the sheep are surprised by God’s judgment. And even for the most confident believer, the plain words of the New Testament suggest that Christopher Hitchens’ ultimate fate will count among the least of the next life’s many surprises. (Douthat)Doctoral candidate in theology Kevin Considine asks a provocative question about the eternal fate of Kim Jong Il, a rapist dictator responsible for the death of millions. It could just as easily be asked about the fate of Christopher Hitchens, or any one of us...
So, we are forced to live in ambiguity. We have no way of knowing. So maybe the better question to ponder is this: should we want there to be salvation for such a brutal man, even if justice is somehow achieved as a prerequisite? And what does it say about me (and us) if I prefer a “pound of bloody flesh” to trump God’s ridiculous love for all human beings? I’m not sure I want to answer that question. (Considine)If that statement intrigues you, follow the link and read the short article. Also, read the comment threat; it contains some thoughtful responses.
But more importantly, what do you think?
Link: Considine - Is there salvation for Kim Jong Il?