Rob Bell, the pastor who wrote Love Wins, is the only evangelical religious leader to make it on this year's Time top 100 list, released on Thursday. In past years, Pastor Rick Warren and evangelical leader Richard Cizik have been included among the most influential people of the year.
Former Newsweek editor Jon Meacham, who wrote Time Magazine's Easter special cover story "Is Hell Dead?", describes Bell as "a master of social media" and an "evangelical pastor with a huge and growing young following" in a brief blurb about Bell.
"Wielding music, videos and a Starbucks sensibility, Bell is at the forefront of a rethinking of Christianity in America," writes Meacham.
"Traditionalists don't like what they're seeing, for Bell's questions cut to the heart of a faith that requires what the poet Coleridge called a 'wiling suspension of disbelief'."
Since February – a month before the book was even released – evangelical leaders have been furiously debating Bell's views on hell and the idea that most if not all people will eventually make it to heaven.
Those on Bell's side, emergent church leaders and mainline Protestants, argue that a loving God would not send billions of people – many who never had a chance to hear the Gospel – to hell.
On the other hand, more conservative and Reformed Christians argue that Bell's view negates the need for a saviour if everyone can go to heaven without believing in Jesus. They have called the Love Wins author a universalist – someone who believes most if not all will go to heaven – and a heretic.
Pastor Perry Noble of the 10,000-member NewSpring Church in South Carolina took a softer approach – spending half his recent column praising Bell for his friendliness, hospitality and passion for Jesus – but concluded that Bell's theology on hell is simply wrong.
"I do think it is essential to weigh in on this issue because of the influence Rob has. Because, if a younger generation of church leaders buy into the belief that there is no hell (a place of eternal suffering and torment for those who reject Jesus) then the theological tsunami that hits the next generation of church leaders could be devastating," Noble said.
"[T]o deny that hell is not a literal place of eternal suffering and torment is wrong … and I can say that even if Rob is a nice guy."
Love Wins is currently No 2 on The New York Times best sellers list for hardcover advice.
Others who made the 2011 Time 100 list include: Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg; WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange; Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother author Amy Chua; Burma pro-democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi; First Lady Michelle Obama; teen pop sensation Justin Bieber; Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards; Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington; and House Speaker John Boehner.