God's Final Victoryaddresses the ongoing controversy concerning which doctrine is more defensible: the doctrine of hell or the doctrine of universal salvation.
Would the just and loving God of traditional Christianity ever cause or allow some creatures to endure hell, that is, eternal alienation from both God and the blessed? Many think the answer is yes. Some defend this answer by arguing that God is not only loving but also just, and that eternal damnation is sometimes the only way God can meet the demands of justice with respect to sin. Others argue that, out of respect for creatures, God affords them the freedom to choose their destinyand some choose eternal alienation from God.God's Final Victoryexamines the presuppositions underlying both lines of argument and finds that, once understood in their most defensible form, they offer good reason to suppose God would save all if He could and no compelling reason to suppose that He would or could not. As such, even conservative Christians should believe in universal salvation.
Chapter I: Introduction / Chapter II: Hellisms: The Species of DH / Chapter III: Universalisms: The Species of DU / Chapter IV: Universalism and the Plain Sense of Scripture / Chapter V: A Prima Facie Case for DU / Chapter VI: Hell and Justice / Chapter VII: The Argument from Efficacious Grace / Chapter VIII: Freely Chosen Universal Salvation / Chapter IX: Final Concerns / Bibliography / Index
John Kronenis Professor of Philosophy at the University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, USA. He specializes in metaphysics and the philosophy of religion and is the co-translator, with Jeremiah Reedy, ofSuarez's Metaphysical Disputation XV, On the Formal Cause of Substance(2000).
Eric Reitanis Professor of Philosophy at Oklahoma State University, USA. He specializes in ethics and the philosophy of religion and has published extensively in these areas. His book,Is God a Delusion? A Reply to Rel/