Still reading but my take on this so far is that although Bell thinks of hell as a state both during this life and after death, he also gets into what 'eternal' may or may not mean. He tends towards 'eternal' as not relating to 'time without end'. So, most people will likely leave a state of hell as for them time is up (they came to their senses).I don't see him however, making the leap that others accuse him of, of stating that hell will not be an eternal condition of anyone.
It seems that Bell leaves the door open for salvation much longer than most traditional views (death closes the door). I think this has lead some to consider a possible form of re-incarnation so that everyone will have a fair choice to make in a life exposed to the Gospel. But Bell doesn't really go that route either but rather states that scripture says that the gates of heaven are never shut.
It seems Bell emphasizes God's ability to achieve what God desires (all to be saved) but still leaves freedom to chose with the individual. One area where the traditional views on choice are suspect, to me, is when the outcome of a choice is not clearly revealed. In other words, would a person ever ultimately chose never ending torment if they clearly understood what this means ? If it is not made absolutely clear to everyone, then is God just and truly loving ? And when we consider the OT people, eternal torment is not anything we read about in scripture that is shared in their chosing to follow God or not.
True. Some do exactly what they have often blamed the RCs in telling us what we must believe.Those who have already reconciled in their minds these conflicts to nail down their soteriology look at Bell and scream that asking the questions and just raising doubts without then stepping in and explaining and reconciling it all, is a gross disservice to his readers. That's how they approach it. Leaders are to lead their followers and explain all these things. Bell seems to be advocation that there's a dialog to have, not just a monologue to be given. If you want to tick off some elements of evangelical and reformed tradition, that's enough of an affront right there.
Whoops, I guess I got back into some of my own questions on eternal torment and I don't mean to turn this back into this topic. Back to this book some time today.
So far, I like seeing these questions and lines of reasoning brought out into the open. I hope it gets people thinking about what they really believe and what scriptures support these beliefs. I hope the understanding of why 'good news' is good news is discussed as I believe the importance of it's present affect on a person is the most important issue that causes us to be most like Christ and to reflect in our lives a glimpse of what heaven on earth will ultimately be like.