Definition
The End of Satan, Death, and Hell refers to the belief that these realities belonged to the Old Covenant age and were addressed within the fulfillment of that age.
Context
In biblical literature, Satan functions as an accuser within covenantal structure. Death and hell are tied to law and condemnation. Within fulfilled eschatology, these forces are understood as resolved through the completion of Christ’s work and the judgment associated with A.D. 70.
This does not deny the presence of suffering, moral evil, or mortality in the material world. It reinterprets theological categories that once governed covenantal standing before God.
Implications
If Satan as covenantal accuser is defeated, and if death no longer carries judicial condemnation, then fear-based religious control loses theological grounding. Faith becomes relational rather than defensive.
This position also removes the framework in which hell functions as a future punitive threat administered by institutional authority.
Common Misunderstanding
The phrase is often assumed to deny the existence of evil or human mortality. The Yeshuan Model distinguishes between covenantal categories and material conditions.
