Comparing The Horrors Of Hell In Dante's Inferno

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Dante’s Inferno creates an imaginative comparison between a soul’s sin on Earth and the punishment he or she receives in Hell. Christian themes in Dante’s inferno would be wisdom and knowledge of the horrors of Hell, compassion and forgiveness, and the perfection of God’s justice.

The comparison of Wisdom and knowledge of the horrors of Hell in Dante’s Inferno and in the bible are very similar. In Dante’s inferno, Dante’s vast new inside look on hell gave him knowledge that Hell is real and you will get severely punished for your crimes. In the edge of Hell is the Vestibule, where the uncommitted are punished and are to run after a dirty, blank flag for eternity, while wasps and worms torment and bite them. Then in the first circle of hell, Limbo, is where the pure non-Christians, people who died without knowing of Christ, and unbaptized Pagans are punished with an eternity of a desire to see god now. This includes Virgil as well as many of the other famous historical writers of the time. Then when crossing the border into the second circle is a monster, named Minos, condemning souls to their respective punishments. The amount of times that Minos curls his tail around himself equals to which circle of Hell the soul is sent to. Inside the second circle, Lust, Dante watches as the souls of the Lustful swirl and are brutally clash and get thrown around in a terrible storm for eternity. In the Third Circle of Hell, the Gluttonous must lie in mud and suffer through a rain of filth and excrement. And in the fourth circle is where Dante and Virgil encounter the Hoarders and the Wasters, who spend eternity charging at each other with rolling giant boulders. While in the fifth circle of Hell is where the Wrathful viciously fight each oth...

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...“You believe in that God is one; you do well. Even the demons believe—and shudder!” (James 1:27) compares to how the angels get Dante through Hell; it shows that God has power over everything. Not only is God powerful, but he also serves perfect justice.

The perfection of God’s justice is inscribed over the gates of Hell, it reads “Abandon all hope ye who enter here”. Judgment is based on our earthly lives, not on anything we do after we die. Meaning there will be no second chance for salvation beyond this life. As long as a person is alive, he has a second, third, fourth, fifth, etc., chance to accept Christ and be saved. Hell exists to punish sin. As well as the suitability of Hell’s specific punishments give evidence to the divine perfection that all sin violates. “When justice is done, it is a joy to the righteous but terror to evildoers” (Proverbs 21:15).

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