Our own Alan Gomes probably has an answer. His is鈥攇et this鈥攊t鈥檚 clear talk about eschatology. Yes, it鈥檚 possible to talk clearly and sensibly, on the basis of the Bible, about what we can and cannot know about heaven and hell.   

40 Questions about Heaven and Hell

Gomes follows a semi-socratic, question-and-answer format. This is an outstanding teaching tool. It has worked in everything from Thomas Aquinas鈥檚 ginormous to Martin Luther鈥檚 . (If you wanted, you could even write a in question-and-answer format鈥攁s did the Spanish Protestant theologian (and Oxford professor) (1527-91).)   

So if you have a specific question about heaven or hell, look it up in Gomes. He鈥檒l give you arguments, responses and a clear survey of important passages of Scripture.

What happens right when we die? What happens to infants who die? What will the resurrection body be like? What will we do in heaven? How long does hell last? Can heaven be heaven if we know there are people in hell? Can animals go to heaven?  

Gomes isn鈥檛 writing just-so stories. He鈥檚 doing responsible teaching based on Scripture. There鈥檚 plenty of stuff we can鈥檛 know about heaven and hell, and it can be a little disappointing to realize this. But it鈥檚 actually really helpful to know what we can鈥檛 know. The flip side of this is that there鈥檚 plenty we can know, and know with confidence, because God has revealed it to us in his word.