Hell is one of the most powerful ideas ever invented.
Across civilizations and centuries, human societies have imagined realms of punishment beyond death-places of fire, darkness, judgment, and despair. But hell was never a single revelation. It was constructed gradually, shaped by cultural exchange, political power, theological debate, and psychological need.
In The Creation of Hell, S.K. Nordstromberg delivers a sweeping, comparative investigation into the origins, evolution, and functions of hell across world religions. Drawing on ancient mythology, Jewish apocalyptic literature, Christian theology, Islamic scripture, Eastern traditions, and modern psychology, this book traces how a vague underworld became a terrifying instrument of eternal punishment.
This book explores:
Early underworlds in Mesopotamia, Egypt, Persia, Greece, India, and China
The transformation of Sheol into Gehenna in Jewish thought
How Christianity intensified hell into eternal conscious torment
The development of Jahannam in Islamic theology
The role of hell as a tool of fear, obedience, and social control
Moral, logical, and philosophical critiques of eternal punishment
Why belief in hell is declining in the modern world-and why its psychological impact persists
Neither devotional nor polemical, The Creation of Hell treats hell as a human idea with a traceable history. It asks not whether hell is real, but why humanity needed it-and what that need reveals about justice, power, fear, and morality.
Essential reading for believers, skeptics, and anyone seeking to understand one of the most enduring and disturbing concepts in religious history.