Who Goes to Hell

ebook Who Might be Closer to Heaven Than we Think · December 8 Spiritual Liberation

By Prince Karpos

cover image of Who Goes to Hell

Sign up to save your library

With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.

   Not today

Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Download Libby on the App Store Download Libby on Google Play

Search for a digital library with this title

Title found at these libraries:

Library Name Distance
Loading...

What if God is better than we've been told?


Who Goes to Hell? is not a manifesto of rebellion—it is a sacred, daring conversation. It is for the ones whose hearts ache silently at the thought of lost children, kind unbelievers, devout Muslims, and sincere atheists all sentenced to eternal fire by a theology that feels more like a threat than good news. This booklet walks boldly yet reverently into the shadowy corners of traditional Christian thought and shines a gentler, deeper light—the light of Jesus.


With compelling biblical insight, this book deconstructs the terror-inducing caricature of hell many have inherited. It reveals that what Jesus actually said—and didn't say—about hell may shock you. From Gehenna to Sheol, from Hades to the symbolic lake of fire, readers are invited to reconsider eternal judgment not through the lens of Dante or medieval fear, but through the pierced hands of Christ.


But the challenge doesn't stop there.


What about those who never heard the gospel clearly? What about children, or people born into other religions? Could there be mercy beyond the grave? Drawing from passages like 1 Peter 3:19 and 4:6—where Christ preaches to the dead—and from stories like that of Cornelius and the thief on the cross, this book explores the possibility of postmortem evangelism and salvation through Christ even in mysterious ways. Jesus is still the only way—but what if He walks into prisons, dreams, or cultures we've dismissed?


Even more provocatively, the book suggests that some who reject "God" may in fact be rejecting a false god handed to them—one of control, cruelty, and fear. If that is true, might Jesus still meet them, saying, "You didn't know it, but you were looking for Me all along"?


This is not universalism. It is not wishful thinking. It is a theology that holds truth and mercy in tension, that honors Scripture while refusing to let fear be the final word. It reclaims Jesus—not as the doorkeeper to a burning pit, but as the bridge-builder who surprises us with how far His arms can reach.


The loudest critics will ask: "What about the narrow gate?" This book answers: the narrow way is not theological correctness—it is Christ Himself. And Christ, the Good Shepherd, does not lose His sheep because they were born in the wrong place, spoke the wrong language, or were wounded by the wrong church.


With tenderness, fire, and courage, Who Goes to Hell? makes one thing clear:


Mercy does not compromise truth—it reveals it.


Read this book not to argue, but to awaken. Not to walk away from Jesus, but to run toward Him—perhaps for the first time without fear.


Who Goes to Hell