32 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
32 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
The word **Hades** (Greek: _ᾅδης_) appears in the original New Testament Greek, and it simply means **the realm of the dead** — the place where all souls went after death, both righteous and unrighteous. It was a _neutral_ holding place, not a place of punishment.
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When the Bible says Jesus descended into **Hades**, it does **not** mean the lake of fire or the place of eternal punishment. It means he entered the realm of the dead — he truly and fully died.
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The early church writers weren't endorsing Greek mythology by using _Hades_. They were doing what all translators do: **using the best available word in the target language**. The Greek word happened to carry the right concept (realm of the dead), even if the mythology around it was pagan.
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This is why modern translations like the **ESV, NASB, and CSB** now render _Hades_ as "Hades" rather than "hell" — to restore the precision the original language had.
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## What Is the Theological Significance?
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The descent into Hades is significant for several reasons:
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1. **Jesus truly died** — He didn't just appear to die. He entered the realm of the dead like all humans do, confirming the reality of the Incarnation and death.
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2. **He conquered death on its own turf** — By descending and then rising, Jesus demonstrated authority _over_ death and Hades, not just after them (hence Revelation 1:18 — he holds the _keys_).
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3. **Proclamation to the dead** — 1 Peter 3 suggests Jesus proclaimed his victory to those who had died, though theologians debate exactly what this means — was it an offer of salvation, or a declaration of triumph?
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4. **He is Lord of all realms** — His descent and ascent (Ephesians 4) show his lordship extends over _every_ domain — earth, death, and heaven.
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## The Word «Դժոխք»
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Unlike Greek, which had the very specific pre-existing word _Hades_, Classical Armenian didn't have a neutral, purely clinical term for "realm of the dead" the way Greek did. **Դժոխք** carried connotations closer to a dark, gloomy underworld — somewhat similar to how English "hell" was originally used before it narrowed in meaning to the place of punishment.
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So the Armenian translation faces the **same challenge English does** — the single word _Դժոխք_ gets used where the Greek has more precise distinctions between Hades, Gehenna, and Tartarus.
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## Interestingly
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Because Armenian Christianity is extraordinarily ancient — Armenia adopted Christianity as the **state religion in 301 AD**, making it the first Christian nation — the Armenian theological tradition developed its understanding of these concepts _very early_, often closer to the Greek patristic sources than Western Latin theology was. So Armenian theologians and clergy have historically understood _Դժոխք_ in context, knowing that in the Creed (_«Իջաւ ի դժոխս»_ — "He descended into Dzhokh'k") it refers to the realm of the dead, not the place of final punishment. |