Whatever happened to Hell?
Columnist Virgil Walker makes a call to action for churches to preach on Hell in this week’s column.

One wonders why the church stopped warning and started whispering about eternal judgment. Let me give you an example: A young man pulled me aside after a recent sermon.
“I’ve been in church my whole life,” he said, “But I’ve never heard a sermon on hell. Not once.”
He wasn’t bitter. He was broken.”I didn’t even know what I was being saved from until I read it in Scripture for myself.” Let that sink in.
A generation is growing up in churches that preach salvation without judgment, grace without wrath, heaven without hell. And the silence is deadly.
Jesus spoke about hell more than anyone else in the Bible.
- He warned of weeping and gnashing of teeth (Matthew 8:12).
- He described it as a place of unquenchable fire (Mark 9:43).
- He told of a great chasm fixed between the righteous and the damned (Luke 16:26).
- He spoke of outer darkness and eternal punishment (Matthew 25:30, 46).
- He said plainly: “Fear Him who can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matthew 10:28).
Jesus didn’t whisper about hell. He warned. Because love always warns.
The silence from modern pulpits is deafening!
Today, many pastors won’t even use the word.
We’ve replaced hell with “brokenness.” Rebellion with “struggle.” Sin with “mistakes.” Judgment with “God’s best for your life.” But here’s the truth: If your pastor never mentions hell, they’re not preaching like Jesus. They’re performing like Judas—kissing the culture while betraying the truth.
Let me explain why this matters. Gospel without wrath is not the Gospel. If people don’t believe they’re under judgment, they won’t see the need for a Savior. The absence of hell in our preaching leads to apathy in our pews.
Romans 1:18 doesn’t speak of future wrath. It says:
“For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men…”
That wrath is not just something we’ll face someday. It’s already unfolding.
Evangelicals must recover the fear of the Lord. Proverbs 1:7 says the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. But modern sermons start with self-esteem and end with self-help. Christianity must recover the urgency of repentance. If hell is real—and it is—then tomorrow isn’t promised. We must call people to repentance today (2 Corinthians 6:2).
Pulpits must recover the full counsel of God. Paul declared in Acts 20:26–27 that he was innocent of their blood because he did not shrink from declaring the whole counsel of God. Many today are shrinking—and blood is on their hands.
I don’t write this from a place of pride, but repentance. There were seasons I soft-pedaled truth for the sake of influence. I preached what was safe. But then I remembered the faces. The names. The souls. And I made a vow: I’ll never withhold truth just to be liked again.
So here is my call to action … If your church hasn’t preached on hell in the past year, ask why. If your pastor avoids judgment, ask what gospel he’s preaching. If your friends think hell is an outdated scare tactic, ask where they think Jesus was wrong.
Because here’s the thing: You don’t have to believe in gravity for it to pull you down. And you don’t have to believe in hell to wake up there.
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