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“[A] provocative, informative treatise . . . [Hartâ€s] resounding challenge to orthodox

Christian views on hell and his defense of Godâ€s ultimate goodness will prove convincing and

inspiring to the open-minded.―—Publishers Weekly (starred review)“An important book . . . a

timely, and at times quite personal, reflection on a critical topic, replete with incisive theological

and metaphysical insights and astringent polemic . . . Hart is a formida­ble thinker.― —Fr Aidan

(Alvin) Kimel, Eclectic Orthodoxy“Simultaneously wide-sweeping and combative . . . Hartâ€s

argument is forceful, analytically clear, and compelling . . . Hart has written another provocative

work which should rightly be taken up, read, debated, and prayed through.―—Myles Werntz, In

All Things“A wonderful gift . . . Hart challenges Christians to consider the ways we've yielded

to self-absorption or failed to display empathy when conceptualizing eternity. In exploring these

questions, we have an opportunity to become a little more like Christ.―—Jon Carlson,

Evangelicals for Social Action“[Hart] has established himself as one of the best theologians

writing in English today and as hands down the best writer among contemporary Anglophone

theologians.―—Nicholas Frankovich, National Review“Extraordinary and important―—Bill

Tammeus, Faith Matters blog“[A] stunningly strong attack on the idea of eternal torment . . .

Bracing in the extreme—a sturdy assault on an unappealing doctrine using vivid language and

wide learning.―—Dwight A. Moody, The Meetinghouse“David Bentley Hart, the most

eminent living anglophone theologian, asks the fundamental question: Is it possible that anyone is

damned? Hartâ€s answer is no, and that negative is gorgeously elaborated in this book, with

unmatched force and brio.―—Paul Griffiths, author of Christian Flesh“David Bentley Hart

never disappoints. Three years ago he published a translation of the New Testament; now comes

a “companion― to take up a question that vexes many Christians. Does the New Testament

teach that hell is everlasting? Hart is convinced, having wrestled with the language of the New

Testament and plumbed early Christian thought, that it does not. In this original and lively book,

Hart shows, why most Christian thinking about eternal damnation is unbiblical.―—Robert Louis

Wilken, author of Liberty in the Things of God“Hart shows with great clarity why the idea that

our ultimate freedom lies in accepting or rejecting God as one option amongst others is profoundly

mistaken. This is some of the most exacting, perspicuous and powerful theological writing I have

read in recent years.―—Simon Oliver, Durham University“If everything and everyone are not

finally restored, then God is not God. This is the simple core of Hartâ€s unanswerable

argument, masterfully developed. He calls us back to real orthodoxy, perhaps just in

time.―—John Milbank, University of Nottingham'At last! A brilliant treatment—exegetically,


theologically, and philosophically— of the pr

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