

The "House of Hades"
The notion that a mortal might actually visit hell -
Since ancient times, the abode of the dead has been viewed as lying deep underground,
with various entrances on the earth's surface through caverns, volcanoes, underground
rivers and the like. Ancient peoples -
One of the earliest accounts of such a journey is found in The Odyssey. It is an ancient epic poem by the Greek poet Homer (8th century B.C.). Homer writes of the Greek hero Odysseus (Ulysses), the lost king of Ithaca, who wandered the seas in search of his home for 10 years following the fall of Troy. In desperation, Odysseus reputedly found his way into the "abode of departed spirits" to learn from the ghost of a famous seer how he might find his home.
The underworld described by Homer was a shadowy place of dreary darkness lying beneath the secret places of the earth. Though a place of gloom, it was not pictured as one of punishment and torture as is the traditional Christian or Oriental hell.
Homer called the place of the dead the "House of Hades." Hades (the Romans called him Pluto) was the Greek king of the underworld, god of death. Eventually, Hades became the common name for the underworld itself.
The ancient classicists believed that five rivers flowed through the underworld. The principal one was the Styx, across which the aged boatman Charon ferried the souls of the dead. (The Styx was an actual stream that disappeared underground in Arcadia in Greece.)
In the Aeneid, an epic by the Roman poet Virgil, the Trojan hero Aeneas, fleeing
the burning ruins of Troy after the Greek victory, successfully besought the ferryman
Charon for passage into the infernal region to consult his dead father. (Virgil preferred
the name Tartarus to Hades for the fabled infernal region.) Aeneas entered the underworld
through a cavern at a foul-
Tartarus (or Tartaros) was a named used by the later classical writers such as Virgil as another name for Hades. Homer, on the other hand, described Tartarus as a different place, lying as far beneath Hades as Hades is beneath the earth. It was in this bottomless pit of Tartarus, according to classical mythology, that the Greek god Zeus confined those who had resisted him.
Another hero of ancient Greece, the legendary Hercules, also reputedly traveled to
the lower world. One of his famous Twelve Labors was to fetch up from Hades the triple-
Many other ancients are said to have made the fearsome journey into Hades, including Theseus of Athens, Orpheus the musician, the princess Psyche and the twin Pollux, in search of his dead brother Castor.
The Inferno
Possibly the best-
Dante is conducted through hell by the spirit of the Roman poet Virgil. The trip begins on Good Friday, A.D. 1300, in a wooded area near Jerusalem. Over the gate of hell the two travelers find a fearful and now famous inscription: ABANDON EVERY HOPE, YOU WHO ENTER HERE.
Dante then witnesses in his imagination the eternal torments of the wicked. He describes
hell as being divided into various levels, descending conically into the earth. Souls
suffer punishments appropriate to their sins. Hypocrites, for example, wear gowns
brilliant outwardly, but made of heavy lead instead of cloth. They must bear the
weight of them forever. Gluttons are doomed to forever lie like pigs in a foul-
Though Dante's primary purpose in writing the poem was to satirize persons and circumstances
of his day, the theology of his work is based firmly on the system of Thomas Aquinas
(1225-
Concentration Camp?
Dante's medieval picture of hell as a gigantic concentration camp a nightmarish place
of eternal torment, horrible beyond imagination, presided over by Satan and his demons-
The concept of a "hell" can be found in one form or another among all the world's
principal faiths. Multiple billions around the world have lived and died over the
millennia believing in -
Many today continue to wonder, "Is there really a hell?" and "Will I end up there?" Many are curious about just what hell might be like.
Three Hells!
The starting point for such an investigation can be none other than the very book
from which Christians profess to derive their doctrine of hell -
One's first surprise is that the Bible speaks of not one but of three different "hells"!
In the widely used King James Version, three totally different Greek words -
In biblical usage, the Greek word hades used only 11 times in the New Testament -
Most modern biblical translators admit that the use of the English word hell to translate hades and sheol is an unfortunate and misleading practice.
Why?
Because in seeing the word hell, many readers impute to it the traditional connotation of an ever burning inferno when this was never remotely intended in the Greek language or in Old English!
In its true biblical usage, hades does indeed refer to the state or abode of the
dead -
The Second Hell
The second hell of the Bible, tartaroo, is mentioned only once in scripture-
Following their rebellion to unseat God from His throne (Isa. 14:12-
Tartaroo, then, is a "hell" that applies only to evil, rebellious angels or demons. It is interesting that the ancient Greeks used this word to describe the place in which Zeus confined the rebellious Titans. Nowhere in the Bible is there any mention of men being put into this particular "hell."
The Third Hell
So far, we have seen that the first hell of the Bible – hades -
Surely it must be the old-
Or is it?
Did you ever notice that the Greek word used by the writers of the New Testament for this third hell is gehenna? It comes from the Hebrew Gai Hinnom, meaning "valley of Hinnom." Hinnom is a deep, narrow ravine located to the south and west of Jerusalem. But what does this valley have to do with the traditional Christian concept of "hell"? The answer may surprise you!
Gehenna
Gehenna -
Gehenna, in short, is a far cry from the hell of Dante or from what this valley was like in Jesus' day!
The valley was not always such a pleasant place. In the Old Testament it was a place of abominable pagan rites, including infant sacrifice. It was there that the apostate kings Ahaz and Manasseh made their children "pass through the fire" to the god Molech.
King Josiah of ancient Judah finally put an end to these abominations. He defiled
the valley, rendering it ceremonially unclean (II Kings 23:10). Later the valley
became the cesspool and city dump of Jerusalem -
Aceldama, the "field of blood" purchased with the money Judas received for the betrayal of Christ (Matt. 27:8), was also in part of the valley of Hinnom.
Gehenna-
What, then, does this valley called gehenna have to do with hell?
The answer may surprise you. Notice: At the end of this age, at the crisis at the
end of this world's civilization, the prophesied Beast of the book of Revelation
a Satan-
Where will this temporary lake of fire this "hell" be?
The prophet Isaiah wrote of this lake of fire prepared for the Beast: "For Tophet [in the valley of Hinnom] is ordained of old; yea, for the king it is prepared; he hath made it deep and large: the pile thereof is fire and wood; the breath of the Lord, like a stream of brimstone, doth kindle it" (Isa. 30:33).
One thousand years later, Satan himself will be cast into this rekindled fiery lake where the Beast and False Prophet were cast! (See Revelation 20:10.)
But what of the wicked who have died over the many millennia? Does the Bible say that they are now suffering fiery punishment for their sins in a lake of fire?
Absolutely not!
In the sequence of Revelation 20 -
Where Are the Wicked Now?
In the well-
When does Jesus say that the wicked will be cast into the fire? "In the end of this world"!
Where, then, are the wicked now?
Understand this: the Bible teaches that the dead all those billions who have ever
lived and died, whether righteous or wicked, of whatever creed or faith -
The majority of these buried billions are neither "lost" nor "saved." Most deceived
and misled during their lifetimes by Satan, "who deceives the whole world" (Rev.
12:9) -
The Second Death
What, then, will become of these wicked? Will they writhe in flames for eternity? Does the Bible say that the punishment of the wicked will be eternal torment?
No!
The wicked will be burned up in the intense heat of the coming gehenna fire on earth.
They will be consumed, annihilated, destroyed! This punishment will be everlasting-
The Bible does teach eternal punishment, but not eternal punishing.
As the apostle Paul declares in Romans 6:23, "The wages of sin is death" -
The prophet Malachi provides a graphic description: "For, behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an oven; and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be stubble, and the day that cometh shall burn them up"(4:1). To the righteous, God says that the wicked shall be "ashes under the soles of your feet" (Mal. 4:3).
The apostle Paul writes of the "fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries" (Heb. 10:27). Jesus Christ himself declared that God "is able to destroy both soul and body in hell" (Matt. 10:28).
Fiery Annihilation
These scriptures and many others leave no doubt! Hell fire is not a place where the
condemned live, but where they DIE -
The fire from the valley of Hinnom in which the wicked perish will ultimately engulf the whole world. It will cover the face of the entire earth, purging away the dross and refuse of ages and creating a new earth (II Pet. 3:7; Rev. 21:1). It will be a fire that cannot be quenched. It will burn until it burns itself out by melting this earth and turning to ashes the bodies of all the wicked.
Then comes the stupendous act of recreation a new heaven and earth to be man's inheritance forever. (See Revelation 21.)
Merciful Solution
This is the quick and merciful sentence of a merciful God. The torment of the wicked
-
God does not take delight seeing men suffer. He does not take vengeance on his adversaries by roasting them for eternity in a subterranean Dachau or Auschwitz. Those who claim that God, in the exercise of some sort of "mysterious" and "unfathomable" sense of justice, would ordain eternal torture simply do not know the mind of God! The false "hell" of traditional Christianity is actually a concoction of the perverted mind of Satan!
The Bible reveals a very different God than the one so often preached today. Yet
millions remain deceived-
God is not willing that any should perish. He wants all to come to repentance and
eternal life (II Pet. 3:9-
There is no need to live in fear of tortures to come!