In many forms of
Western Christian belief, damnation is what humanity deserves for its sins.
Catholic and many
Protestant denominations hold that human sin is the product of the
fall of man of Adam and Eve in the
Book of Genesis. In some Christian denominations, only the sins that the
Ten Commandments describe cause damnation, but others apply more strict terms. The reasons for being damned have varied widely through the centuries, with little consistency between different forms of Christianity (i.e., Catholic or Protestant). "Sins" ranging from murder to dancing have been said to lead to damnation. Christian denominations have differing views on
soteriology, but a mainstream view is that believers can only escape damnation by salvation through
Jesus Christ. One conception is of suffering and denial of entrance to
Heaven, often described as a
Lake of Fire. Another conception, derived from the scripture about
Gehenna, is simply that people will be discarded, due to being unworthy of preservation by God. Opinions in the
Eastern Orthodox church differ on this subject matter. Question 383 of the
Philaret Drozdov catechism asks: "What will be the lot of unbelievers and transgressors? Answer: They will be given over to everlasting deaththat is, to everlasting fire, to everlasting torment, with the devils." However some view sin in less legalistic sense, but more as a spiritual illness that needs to be cured and purged. It is seen as a state of opposition to the love of God, a state into which all humans are born but against which
Jesus Christ is the
Mediator and Redeemer. Eastern traditions have established their views on Paradise and Gehenna from theologians like
Isaac of Nineveh and
Basil of Caesarea and the Fathers of the Church. According to Orthodoxy,
Heaven and Hell are relations to or experiences of God's just and loving presence, with often used analogy being how Sun melts wax and hardens the clay, with different reactions to sunlight depending not on sun but the matter that reacts to it. Similarly, Saints enjoy the loving presence of God, while the damned are enraged by it. In the Eastern Orthodox tradition theologians can describe God by presenting
negative descriptions of what God is not, and describe Gehenna in similar ways.
Marcion of Sinope was deemed heretical for teaching that the holy figures of the Old Testament were damned to hell while sinners would receive salvation. ==Hinduism==