- Feb 5, 2002
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After arguing that hell doesn’t involve “conscious eternal torment,” actor and evangelist Kirk Cameron is receiving pushback for supporting annihilationism. In the Dec. 3 episode of “The Kirk Cameron Show,” the conservative author spoke with son James Cameron about views on divine wrath. The pair focused on God’s merciful nature and a supposed lack of evidence
Annihilationism, which dates to early church fathers, holds that unbelievers are destroyed and that the human soul is immortal only if a person receives eternal life and goes to heaven. Kirk Cameron said:
Eternal judgment or eternal punishment doesn’t necessarily mean that we are being tormented and punished forever and every moment for eternity. It means that the punishment we deserve is irreversible. It’s permanent. It’s eternal. You’re dead. You’ve been destroyed. You have perished. You’re gone. And…you’re never coming back.
Continued below.
churchleaders.com
Annihilationism, which dates to early church fathers, holds that unbelievers are destroyed and that the human soul is immortal only if a person receives eternal life and goes to heaven. Kirk Cameron said:
Eternal judgment or eternal punishment doesn’t necessarily mean that we are being tormented and punished forever and every moment for eternity. It means that the punishment we deserve is irreversible. It’s permanent. It’s eternal. You’re dead. You’ve been destroyed. You have perished. You’re gone. And…you’re never coming back.
Continued below.
Kirk Cameron Takes Heat for His Annihilationist View on Hell
After arguing that hell doesn’t involve “conscious eternal torment,” actor Kirk Cameron is receiving pushback for supporting annihilationism.