FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 01-24-2005, 08:22 PM   #11
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Williamsport, PA
Posts: 484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
That is very true in some cases but not this one. There is only one meaning for Gehenna and it doesn't mean "Hell." No 1st century Palestinan Jew had ever heard of Christian "Hell." It hadn't been invented yet.
Here’s three more passages from the New Testament that might describe hell in the traditional way:

Quote:
MT 5:22 But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment: and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council: but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire.

MK 9:43 And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched…

LK 16:24 And he cried and said, Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue; for I am tormented in this flame.
So here we have Jesus describing hell as an eternal fire into which sinners are cast. As we both know, throughout most of the history of Christianity hell has been seen as a place of eternal torture or “torment� into which sinners are to be thrown. Are you saying that these Christians have been misinterpreting their own religious beliefs all along because they could not read or understand the Greek?

And we need not stick with the Bible. Here’s what Thomas Aquinas had to say about hell:

Quote:
That the saints may enjoy their beatitude and the grace of God more abundantly, they are permitted to see the punishment of the damned in hell.
I agree that the dogma of hell started with the concept of death and the grave, but the early Christians took it a step further and made it a horrific punishment for sinners after death.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
So what? What does that have to do with the meaning of Gehenna as it is used in Matthew?
Based on the quotations I posted above, I find your argument hard to believe.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Sure it can. It's a mistranslation. It can be proven wrong just by understanding the Greek that it was written in. "Hell" is nowhere to be found in the Bible.
Sure it is. Just look at the passages from the Bible I posted above that describe the traditional concept of hell as a place of fiery torment.

If you wish to make an argument that “hell is nowhere to be found in the Bible,� then you’ll need to do better than to simply insist that the word "hell" is mistranslated.

Jagella
Jagella is offline  
Old 01-24-2005, 08:26 PM   #12
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Williamsport, PA
Posts: 484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheOpenMind
Jagella, I love you. I have been on a lifelong search for the one true love. I have found it at last -snif- -snif-...

:notworthy :notworthy :notworthy :notworthy :notworthy :notworthy

:thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
Really? Sorry to disappoint you, but your "one true love" is an aging, bald, overweight guy that listens to Black Sabbath and spends a lot of time playing computer games (when he's not arguing with Christians in forums).

Jagella
Jagella is offline  
Old 01-24-2005, 08:27 PM   #13
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Williamsport, PA
Posts: 484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Javaman
The "Lake of Fire" is a very common Christian concept. It is taught in many denominations so I can understand the questioning. See This page but perhaps don't see it for long as there are inaccuracies.
Of course it's a common Christian concept with its roots in the New Testament. It's strange the things that people will argue in these forums.

Jagella
Jagella is offline  
Old 01-24-2005, 08:55 PM   #14
Moderator -
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota
Posts: 4,639
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jagella
Here’s three more passages from Matthew that might describe hell in the traditional way:
Nope. Your first two quotes both say Gehenna. Gehenna wasn't Hell. Sorry. There was nothing "traditional" about an eternal hell in the 1st century. It hadn't been invented yet. It was the flames that were "eternal," btw, not the torment. Talking about casting somebody into Gehenna was a figurative way to talk about consigning them to an ignoble death and depriving them of eternal life. They were seen as being annihilated in the flames, not tortured.


Your parable from Luke actually says Hades, not Hell, but the flames indicate that the saying probably originally referred to Gehenna. Once again, it was about annihilation, not eternal torture.
Quote:
So here we have Jesus describing hell
Correction. Jesus never says the word "hell" in the NT.
Quote:
as an eternal fire into which sinners are cast.
An eternal FIRE, not eternal torture. Once again, there was a belief that bad people would be annihilated in Gehenna on judgement day.
Quote:
As we both know, throughout most of the history of Christianity hell has been seen as a place of eternal torture or “torment� into which sinners are to be thrown. Are you saying that these Christians have been misinterpreting their own religious beliefs all along because they could not read or understand the Greek?
They didn't know what Gehenna was and they conflated it with non-Judaic conceptions of hells later on.
Quote:
And we need not stick with the Bible. Here’s what Thomas Aquinas had to say about hell:
How is Aquinas remotely relevant?

Aquinas spouted a lot of crap that wasn't in the Bible.
Quote:
I agree that the dogma of hell started with the concept of death and the grave, but the early Christians took it a step further and made it a horrific punishment for sinners after death.
Not quite so early, though. Not in the first century and not in Palestine. It's not in the NT.
[quote]Based on the quotations I posted above, I find your argument hard to believe.[quote]
Because your quotations are mistranslations and you are reading them with preconceived. enculturated ideas about what they mean.
Quote:
Sure it is. Just look at the passages from the Bible I posted above that describe the traditional concept of hell as a place of fiery torment.
No. You cited passages that describe the Valley of Hinnon as a symbol of eternal death and place where sinners were expected to be annihilated on judgement day.
Quote:
If you wish to make an argument that “hell is nowhere to be found in the Bible,� then you’ll need to do better than to simply insist that the word "hell" is mistranslated.
If you want to assert that Hell is in the Bible you're actually going to have to show an example of it rather than quoting mistranslations that you don't understand.
Diogenes the Cynic is offline  
Old 01-25-2005, 08:40 AM   #15
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: France
Posts: 5,839
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jagella
I suppose the violence in Luke 19:27 and other passages was meant to use a certain amount of intimidation to get people to believe and obey. In other words, if nice talk about heaven and love doesn’t snag people, then try hate and violence.
There are 2 Jesuses in the NT : the good one (love your enemies, share with the needy,...) and the "evil" one (slay non-Christians, beat your slaves,...). Assuming there was a historical Jesus whose life inspired the authors of the NT, there's no a priori reason why we should think he was the good one while the bad things ascribed to him were made up. It may have been the other way round.
French Prometheus is offline  
Old 01-25-2005, 12:03 PM   #16
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Williamsport, PA
Posts: 484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Nope. Your first two quotes both say Gehenna. Gehenna wasn't Hell. Sorry. There was nothing "traditional" about an eternal hell in the 1st century. It hadn't been invented yet.
You are evidently not able to read. All the Bible quotations I cited describe hell. Although the Greek word for hell may be Gehenna, which I do not dispute, the English translation is describing hell as anybody can see from the context.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Talking about casting somebody into Gehenna was a figurative way to talk about consigning them to an ignoble death and depriving them of eternal life. They were seen as being annihilated in the flames, not tortured.
Not true. Consider the passage from Matt. 25:46:

Quote:
And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life…
Hell is an eternal punishment (according to the New Testament), it appears in many places in the New Testament, and it isn’t just an annihilation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Correction. Jesus never says the word "hell" in the NT.
Of course he didn’t say “hell�—he didn’t speak English.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
An eternal FIRE, not eternal torture. Once again, there was a belief that bad people would be annihilated in Gehenna on judgement day.
This claim is easy to refute by considering the following passage:

Quote:
REV 14:11 And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
How is Aquinas remotely relevant?
Aquinas, as you evidently are unaware, is perhaps the most important theologian in the history of Christendom. If anybody knew the teachings of the New Testament, that person was Aquinas. He believed in an eternal punishment in hell for sinners, and he derived this belief from the New Testament.

Let’s take a look at a definition for Gehenna courtesy of www.Google.com:

Quote:
Originally, a location southwest of Jerusalem where children were burned as sacrifices to the god Molech. It later became a garbage dump with a continuous burning of trash. Therefore, it was used biblically, to illustrate the abode of the damned in Christian and Jewish theology. Gehenna is mentioned in Mark 9:43ff and Matt. 10:28 as the place of punishment of unquenchable fire where both the body and soul of the wicked go after death. It is apparently the future abode of Satan and his angels (Matt. 25:41).
(Emphasis added)

As I hope you can see, Gehenna originally referred to a burning garbage dump. However, you seem to be missing the fact that it was later used in the New Testament as a place of eternal punishment for sinners. So hell does indeed often appear in the New Testament.

Finally, allow me to quote Encarta Encyclopedia:

Quote:
Gehenna (Greek Geenna; Hebrew Ge Hinnom), Valley of Hinnom, near Jerusalem. Because some of the Israelites are supposed to have sacrificed their children to Moloch there (see 2 Kings 23:10), the valley came to be regarded as a place of abomination. In a later period it was made a refuse dump, and perpetual fires were maintained there to prevent pestilence. Thus, in the New Testament, Gehenna became synonymous with hell.

Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 2003. © 1993-2002 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
(Emphasis added.)

Again, Gehenna is not different from the Christian hell when it’s used in the New Testament. The two words mean the same thing in the gospels. They are synonyms.

I hope you can now understand where you are going wrong, and I suggest that you correct you error.

Good day,
Jagella
Jagella is offline  
Old 01-25-2005, 12:07 PM   #17
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Williamsport, PA
Posts: 484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Prometheus_fr
There are 2 Jesuses in the NT : the good one (love your enemies, share with the needy,...) and the "evil" one (slay non-Christians, beat your slaves,...). Assuming there was a historical Jesus whose life inspired the authors of the NT, there's no a priori reason why we should think he was the good one while the bad things ascribed to him were made up. It may have been the other way round.
It appears that we'll never know for sure. Jesus, in my opinion, was not a historical, real person. The "Jesus" referred to in the New Testament was probably based on the apocalypse-obsessed preachers of that time, many of whom were believed to be healers and miracle workers.

Jagella
Jagella is offline  
Old 01-25-2005, 03:52 PM   #18
Moderator -
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota
Posts: 4,639
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jagella
You are evidently not able to read. All the Bible quotations I cited describe hell. Although the Greek word for hell may be Gehenna, which I do not dispute, the English translation is describing hell as anybody can see from the context.
Gehenna is Hebrew, not Greek. The NT just transliterates it into Greek and it has nothing to do with Christian :"hell." Hell had not been invented at the time of Jesus. The passages you quote describe annihilation and eternal deat, not torture.
Quote:
Not true. Consider the passage from Matt. 25:46:



Hell is an eternal punishment (according to the New Testament), it appears in many places in the New Testament, and it isn’t just an annihilation.
It's eternal death. The "punishment" is death.

<insult deleted>
Quote:
Of course he didn’t say “hell�—he didn’t speak English.
He didn't say anything which could reasonably be translated as hell either. Gehenna has only one meaning- the Valley of Hinnon.
Quote:
This claim is easy to refute by considering the following passage:
You're quoting a second century gentile apocalypse now. It has no bearing on anything the character of Jesus said in the gospels, it's a highly symbolic book and even with all that it still says the "lake of fire" is only for "Satan and his demons."
Quote:
Aquinas, as you evidently are unaware, is perhaps the most important theologian in the history of Christendom. If anybody knew the teachings of the New Testament, that person was Aquinas. He believed in an eternal punishment in hell for sinners, and he derived this belief from the New Testament.
I know who Aquinas is, my point is that his opinion means jack shit. He didn't know what he was talking about either. He was a medievel Christian fanatic who knew nothing of the hisrorical or cultural context of the NT and nothing about its authorship. As I said before, Aquinas based a lot of his bullshit on non-Biblical assumptions. He has nothing to add to this conversation.
Quote:
Let’s take a look at a definition for Gehenna courtesy of www.Google.com:



(Emphasis added)

As I hope you can see, Gehenna originally referred to a burning garbage dump. However, you seem to be missing the fact that it was later used in the New Testament as a place of eternal punishment for sinners. So hell does indeed often appear in the New Testament.
That definition is wrong. It is a popular misconception that "Gehenna" as used in the Bible refers to Christian "Hell." It does not.
Quote:
Finally, allow me to quote Encarta Encyclopedia:



(Emphasis added.)

Again, Gehenna is not different from the Christian hell when it’s used in the New Testament. The two words mean the same thing in the gospels. They are synonyms.
Your other definition is wrong as well. They are not synonyms. Sorry. They aren't. If you want to argue that they are, then show me a single 1st century or BCE reference to Gehenna as a place of eternal torment outside of the NT (which does NOT identify Gehenna as such a place either, btw). Gehenna symbolized eternal DEATH, not torment.
Quote:
I hope you can now understand where you are going wrong, and I suggest that you correct you error.
It's been my pleasure to educate you. Your misconceptions are extremely common, so don't feel bad. You should know, however, that I actually know what I'm talking about, I'm not just talking out of my ass. <insult removed>
Diogenes the Cynic is offline  
Old 01-25-2005, 04:02 PM   #19
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

So who invented Hell? What is the earliest usage of the term Hell to mean something like what Christians now believe?
Toto is offline  
Old 01-25-2005, 04:23 PM   #20
Moderator -
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota
Posts: 4,639
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
So who invented Hell? What is the earliest usage of the term Hell to mean something like what Christians now believe?
The word itself comes from a Norse word, Hel, (a Goddess of the Norse Underworld) but I'm not sure, lingustically, when it first became used to describe the Christian place of torment.

The idea of a place of eternal torture grew out of NT descriptions of Gehenna which were conflated with the lake of fire in Revelation as well as ideas (probably) like the Greek "Tartarus," which was sort of the basement of Hades where bad people were tormented.

To put it simply, "Hell" was a gentile concept, not a Jewish one. To be honest, the popular Christian image we have now is owed almost entirely to Dante who took some vague conceptions and synthesized them into what we have now. There has never been a hell in Judaism and if a real HJ spoke of Gehenna, he was not talking about Christian hell because no such concept existed in Judaism at the time.

Here's a bit from Wikipedeia
Quote:
Hell, as it exists in the Western popular imagination, has its origins in hellenized Christianity. Judaism, at least initially, believed in Sheol, a shadowy existence to which all were sent indiscriminately. Sheol may have been little more than a poetic metaphor for death, not really an afterlife at all: see for example Sirach. In any case, the afterlife was much less important in ancient Judaism than it is for many Christian groups today; indeed, the same can be said for modern Judaism as well.

The Hebrew Sheol was translated in the Septuagint as 'Hades', the name for the underworld in Greek mythology and is still considered to be distinct from "Hell" by Eastern Orthodox Christians. The New Testament uses this word, but it also uses the word 'Gehenna', from the valley of Ge-Hinnom, a valley near Jerusalem used as a landfill. Hebrew landfills were very unsanitary and unpleasant when compared to modern landfills; these places were filled with rotting garbage and the Hebrews would periodically burn them down. However, by that point they were generally so large that they would burn for weeks or even months. In other words they were fiery mountains of garbage. The early Christian teaching was that the damned would be burnt in the valley just as the garbage was. (It is ironic to note that the valley of Ge-Hinnom is today, far from being a garbage dump, a public park.) Punishment for the damned and reward for the saved is a constant theme of early Christianity.

Gehenna is fairly well defined in rabbinic literature. It is sometimes translated as "Hell", but this doesn't effectively convey its meaning. In Judaism, Gehenna—while certainly a terribly unpleasant place — is not hell. The overwhelming majority of rabbinic thought maintains that people are not tortured in hell forever; the longest that one can be there is said to be 12 months. Some consider it a spiritual forge where the soul is purified for its eventual ascent to Gan Eden (Heaven), where all imperfections are purged.
So regardless of how Christians interpreted Gehenna, or even how the NT authors (who were gentiles) interpreted it, it is not possible that any 1st century Palestinian Jew could have been referring to any concept of Christian hell when talking about the Valley of Hinnon.
Diogenes the Cynic is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:46 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.