About six in ten American adults believe in hell (Pew Research, 2023), and roughly one in three say they have carried the wounds of religious trauma (GCRR, 2023). For millions, the fear of eternal torment is not an abstract debate. It is a private dread that shapes how they pray, how they grieve, and how they sleep at night.
Maybe you feel it too. Maybe you are deconstructing a faith you once held, or have left it altogether, and still cannot shake the worry that you might be among the damned. Or maybe you simply wonder: Does the Bible actually teach there is a place of eternal suffering? Is hell a real place, a metaphor, or something else entirely? And did Jesus himself ever teach that it exists?
Here is the question at the heart of this free course. People have suffered for centuries under the weight of this doctrine, but what if it is not what Jesus taught at all? Reading the texts in their original Hebrew and Greek, Bart Ehrman shows where our idea of hell really came from: not from the Hebrew Bible, not from the lips of Jesus, but from a wider world of ideas the church absorbed only generations after his death. Whether the idea of hell terrifies you, puzzles you, or simply fascinates you, the history is told from the ground up.