Sunday, October 25, 2020

DEATH--- THEN WHAT? #4

 Death, Hell and Immortality


What the Bible teaches on the subject of what happens to us at death


   From the book "Life and Immortality" by Basil Atkinson



    Part Four



    The Grave


     "The last division of this section is perhaps the most

important of all. When the Scriptures speak of death they often

couple it with the grave. The significant original words are

sh'ol in Hebrew and haidees in Greek. As they occur in the Bible

they correspond exactly in meaning. Haidees was the word used in

Greek mythology for the underworld or abode of the dead and it is

quite likely as a result of this that so many have sought to

retain this meaning for it in the New Testament and to transfer

the meaning back to Hebrew sh'ol. The Greek word however the New

Testament is as always governed by the meaning of the in Hebrew

in the Old. Both mean in fact the abode of the dead, but not at

all in the sense of heathen mythology. Hebrew sh'ol occurs

sixty-five times in the Old Testament. It is translated 'grave'

thirty-one times in the text and twice in the margin, three times

and 'hell' thirty-one times. 'Grave' and 'hell' inconsistent

translations and this fact shows that the translators were in

some confusion over the meaning of the word. In the New 

Testament haidees occurs eleven times, ten times translated 'hell' 

with 'grave'  once in the margin and 'grave' once with 'hell' in the

in the margin. The translation 'hell' is confusing, especially in

the New Testament. There is there a competing word geenna

occurring eight times, seven times in the Gospels and once in the

Epistle of James. It is invariably translated 'hell' and rightly

so, as it refers to the lake of fire, the place of the doom of

the lost.....Here we shall look carefully at the occurrences of

she’ol and haidees and shall discover that their true meaning is

'the grave,'  where the dead lie buried in the earth in deep

unconscious- ness until the day of resurrection.

     The two words occur about forty-one times meaning 'the

grave' without any special emphasis. Thus we have Jacob saying

that he would join his son in the grave (Gen. 37. 35). Again he

says that if Benjamin came to any harm it would bring him down to

the grave (Gen.42. 38). The words of Jacob are repeated by Judah

to Joseph (Gen. 44.29,31). In I Kings 2.6 and 9 David instructs

his son Solomon not to let Joab go down to the grave in peace and

to bring Shimei down to it with blood.         

     In Isaiah 5. 14 the prophet speaks poetically of sh'ol

(hell) enlarging itself and the people of the Lord going down

into it. In Isaiah 14. 11 the pomp of the king of Babylon is

brought down to the grave (sh'ol), and in verse 15 the king himself 

is brought down to it. The eight occurrences that we have  had

hitherto do not tell us whether we are to think of sh'ol as the

grave or an underworld of ghosts, but here in the context of

Isaiah 14. 15 we have 'the sides of the pit,' the kings lying in

glory in their own tombs (ver. 18), 'thy grave' and 'the stones

of the pit,' 'a carcase' (ver. 19), 'burial' (ver. 20). All this

points strongly to 'the grave' where the dead lie buried as the

meaning of sh'ol. In Isaiah 28. 15, 18 we find death and hell

(sh'ol) as parallels. Our study of the words muth and maveth

earlier in this section have shown us that death means the

cessation of life, and unconscious sleep without remembrance 

and without the possibility of praising God. The parallelism here

thus again tends to 'the  grave' as the meaning of sh'ol. In

Isaiah 38. 10 king Hezekiah says that he had thought that in his

illness he would go to the gates of the grave (sh'ol). By itself

this reference is inconclusive as to the meaning of sh'ol, but

its connection with verse 18, we shall look at later, brings out

the meaning well.

     In Ezekiel 31. 15, 16 and 17 there are three references to

the king of Assyria,  and the great kings with him going down 

to sh'ol. In verse 15 it is called 'the grave' and in verses 16 and

17 'hell' and described as 'the nether parts of the earth.' This

means underneath the earth, where the dead lie buried. Few

Bible-believing Christians will believe, as the heathen did, that

there is a world of spirits or shades in 'the nether parts of the

earth.' Ezekiel 32. 27 is a text that shows conclusively that

sh'ol is the grave where the dead lie buried. It speaks of those

who have gone down to hell (sh'ol) 'with their weapons of war:

and they had laid their swords under their heads.' They are said

to be lying there. These are the great warriors and generals

buried with their weapons.


     The enormous capacity of sh'ol and death to devour men is

mentioned by the prophet Habakkuk (2. 5). The passage couples

sh'ol with death, but in isolation throws no light on the

question of the nature of sh'ol.


     There is an important passage in Psalm 49. 14. The psalmist

is encouraging the godly not to be afraid or envious of the

wicked. Twice he says that man's fall has made him like the

beasts that perish. Twice in verse 14 he mentions the grave

(sh'ol). He says that men are laid in it like sheep. So sheep lie

in sh'ol. This is proof positive that it cannot be a world of

shades or spirits. There in the grave man's beauty consumes away,

but on the resurrection morning the righteous will have dominion

over the wicked. There is another reference in verse 15 which we

shall deal with shortly. Another proof of the meaning of sh ol is

found in Psalm 88. 3, where the psalmist Heman says that his life

draws nigh to the grave (sh'ol). In verse 5 he compares himself

to the slain that lie in the grave. The word here is kever

meaning a tomb. To be in sh'ol is thus to be buried in a tomb.

The 'pit' in verse 4 is Hebrew bor which we shall look at

shortly. The psalmist Ethan in Psalm 89. 48 tells us that no man

can prevent himself dying nor can he deliver his soul from

sh'ol. In Psalm 141. 7 David says 'Our bones are scattered at the

grave's mouth.' The grave here is sh'ol. It normally receives

bones (not ghosts), but here they lie unburied.


     There are seven references in the book of Proverbs: I. 12;

5. 5; 7.27; 15. 11; 23. 14; 27.20; 30.16. The only one that needs

comment is 15. 11. There we are told that sh'ol is before

the Lord. If we are inclined to conclude from this fact that

sh'ol is a place of departed spirits all of whom are known to the

Lord, we are prevented from doing so by the addition to sh'ol of

the word 'destruction.' The Lord knows all the living and all the

dead as well. All will appear one day before His throne of

judgment.


     In the book of Job there are six references, most of which

are important. In Job 7. 9 Job tells us, 'As the cloud is

consumed and vanisheth away; so he that goeth down to the grave

(sh'ol) shall come up no more.' Thus the man that goes down to sh

&ll is like a vanishing cloud which disappears into nothing. This

does not give the impression of a surviving spirit. Job also

says that no one will come up from sh'ol. He does not mean to

deny the final resurrection of which he himself elsewhere speaks.

He means that the dead will never return to their houses and

their old life, as the following verse shows. We have already

noticed the important passage Job 14. 10-15. There is a reference

in it to sh'ol (verse 13). It is a place in which man lies down

and sleeps  (verse 12). In Job 17. 13 Job again refers to sh'ol.

It is a place of darkness, corruption and the worm (ver. 14). It

is again mentioned  in Job 17. 16 and translated 'the pit.' There

in sh'ol men rest together in the dust. These references are

proof positive that sh'ol means the grave. 'Departed spirits' do

not rest  in the dust. In Job 21. 13 there is what we might call

a neutral reference. In isolation sh'ol might here be a lower

world of ghosts  or shades. We have however noted several

passages in which sh'ol could not have this meaning, but must

mean the grave. This  shows how hasty conclusions from isolated

texts can lead into error. All that Scripture says on a given

subject must be taken together and compared. In Job 26. 6 there

is a reference which is practically identical with that in

Proverbs 15. 11.  In Song of  Solomon 8. 6 Solomon tells us that

'love is strong as death; jealousy is cruel as the grave.' For

'cruel' the Hebrew word means 'hard.'  The king means that the

grave goes on obstinately receiving men. 


     When we come to the New Testament there are three references

the Apocalypse which we should notice here. In Revelation 6. 8 we

have death and haidees mentioned together, the reference probably

being to Hosea 13. 14. A very interesting and informative

reference in Revelation 20. 13. The verse is speaking of the

general resurrection and makes a significant distinction between

the dead in the sea, in death and in haidees. Now if haidees were

a world of 'departed spirits' or shades, all the dead would be

there, whatever the circumstances of their death, but we see from

this verse that this is not so.


     It easy to understand how the dead can be in the sea, but

what is the difference between death and haidees? It is quite

easy to understand if we remember that, as so many occurrences

of sh'ol have shown,  sh'ol (haidees) is the grave where the dead

lie buried. Obviously it is different from the sea. Death

therefore, in this verse the abode or condition of those dead

neither in the sea nor buried in the grave, must refer to those

who are burnt, blown to bits or eaten by wild beasts etc. The

purpose of this threefold distinction in this verse is to

emphasize that ALL the dead, whatever their condition or

position, will rise in the resurrection on the day of judgment.

In the next verse (Revelation 20. 14) we find death and haidees

cast into the lake of fire. This means that at the end of the

world they are consigned to final and utter destruction and

will never appear or function again.


                      Rest in the Grave


     Before we go on to look at certain uses of sh'ol and haidees

which show emphases there are three points which it would be well

to We sometimes hear the phrase spoken of someone who has 'He has

passed to his rest.' This phrase is unscriptural if we take it to

mean rest in heaven  or paradise, but it is quite Scriptural if

take it to mean in the grave. The word 'rest' is used of the

grave in Job 3. 17, 18. In that chapter (verses 11-19) Job asks

why he did not die at birth. Had he done so, he would have lain

still, been quiet, slept and been at rest (ver. 13). There is no world 

of living ghosts here. 

     He would have been as unconscious as an unformed foetus born

untimely (ver. 16). There in death or in sh'ol 'the wicked cease

from troubling; and there the weary be at rest' (ver. 17).

'There the prisoners rest together; they hear not the voice of

the oppressor.' So that death and the grave can come as a relief

to sufferers such as Job was. How could these inspired words of

Job be true if the spirits of the ungodly are suffering in hell

after their death?


                All Men together in the Grave


     It is important to notice that in no reference to sh'ol is

any distinction made between the godly and the ungodly. Sometimes

the one are spoken of and sometimes the other. All are together

in the grave. Efforts to overcome what is a difficulty to those

who believe in survival have resulted in such theories as that of

two divisions in sh'ol or haidees. Even paradise has been

placed in haidees. For such theories there is no biblical

foundation whatever. But if we understand that haidees is the

grave, all difficulty vanishes. There is no distinction between

the godly and ungodly in death. The great difference comes in

resurrection.

   

                    The Ancient Creeds  

                                     

     All who know the Apostles' Creed and the Nicene Creed will

realize that they follow Scripture in omitting reference to

survival after death and emphasizing 'the resurrection of the

body, and the life everlasting' and 'the resurrection of the

dead, and the life of the world to come.' Various theories have

been built on the statement in the Apostles' Greed of Christ that

'He descended into hell,' which is commonly connected with the

idea of the survival of His soul or spirit while His body lay in

the tomb. In fact this statement was originally an alternative to

the statement that He was buried. The latter was the usual

expression. The former appeared in the Creed as used in a few

churches. When the superstitious ages began to set in, the

descent into hell was completely misunderstood and the statement

was combined with that of the burial. The fact that it originally

meant the same thing is confirmed by its absence from the Nicene

Creed, the two Creeds being parallel in their phraseology.

     In the same way the phrase 'the communion of saints' is

sometimes taken to imply an active fellowship between the church

on earth and the 'departed' in heaven. Again the absence

of this phrase or its equivalent in the Nicene Creed shows that

it is a part of the preceding phrase. It is simply a definition

of 'the holy catholic church.'


                  Passing Alive into Sh'ol


     There are two passages in Scripture which speak of men going

down quick, that is, alive, into sh'ol. They are (1). Numbers 16.

30-34. Moses declares that the proof that Korah, Dathan and

Abiram had provoked the Lord would be their descent alive into

sh'ol. In the sense in which many understand sh'ol, a land of

living spirits, everyone descends alive into it. But it is

obvious from this passage that to do so is a strange and

exceptional thing. Immediately the ground split beneath them and

swallowed them up and they went down alive into sh'ol (translated

'the pit') and the earth closed over them. This shows

conclusively that sh'ol is the grave where the bodies of the dead

lie buried under the earth. (2). Another passage is to be found

in Psalm 55. 15,    where David prays that his enemies may go

down alive into sh'ol 

                    

                     The Depth of Sh'ol


     There are nine passages in which the DEPTH of sh'ol is

emphasized. It is down below us. Few would believe today that

there is a world of living ghosts below the surface of the earth,

but it is exactly there that the dead lie buried. Some of these

passages contrast the depth of sh'ol with the height of heaven

(or the sky, there being no distinction between the two in the

language of the Bible).............


                 Sh'ol and the Resurrection


     There are twelve passages in which sh'ol and haidees appear

in special connection with resurrection. We shall be dealing with

these in detail in our next section and will only touch on

them briefly here.

     (1). 1 Samuel 2. 6: Here Hannah in inspired language tells

us that the Lord brings men down to sh'ol and brings them up in

resurrection. 

     (2. and 3). Hosea 13. 14 (twice). This is the prophet's

great prediction of victory in resurrection over the grave.

     (4). Psalm 16. 10. This is David's prediction of the

resurrection of Christ. We discussed this when dealing with the

soul (Hebrew nephesh) .

     (5). Psalm 30. 3. This is not a direct reference to

resurrection, but to prevention from descending into the grave,

as the second part of the verse shows.

     (6). Psalm 49.15. This is a prediction of resurrection. 

     (7). Psalm 86. 13. The meaning is the same as that of No. 5.

     (8). Matthew 16. 18. This is the saying of the Lord Jesus

that the gates of 'hell' shall not prevail His church. Very many

believe this to be a declaration that Satan will never overcome

the church. But 'hell' is never used in sense for the devil in

Scripture. The word is 'haidees' meaning ' the grave' and the

saying is a promise of resurrection for every true believer.

     (9 and 10). Acts 2. 27, 31. Here we have the apostle Peter's

quotation from the sixteenth Psalm, which is a prophecy of the

resurrection of Christ. We dealt with the passage when we were

studying the Hebrew word nephesh, when we found that 'my soul'

means 'me.'

     Haidees here as elsewhere means 'the grave' where the Lord

Jesus was lying.

     (11). 1 Corinthians 15. 55. It is customary now for Greek

editors to substitute thanate meaning 'death' in this passage for

haidees meaning 'the grave,' but judgment on literary grounds

might well appear to favour the latter. The passage is adapted by

the apostle from Hosea 13. 14. If haidees is the right reading,

it means 'he grave,' as it is defeated by the resurrection of the

righteous.

     No one doubts the meaning in this case, but perhaps few

realize that the Greek word is the same as is often confusedly

translated 'hell.'

     (12). Revelation 1.18. Here we find the risen Christ

declaring, 'I have the keys of death and of hell.'  'Hell' here

is haidees, meaning 'the grave.' There are no keys of hell, if we

confine the meaning, as we should do, to the lake of fire, the

place of destruction of the lost. No one will ever come out of

it. The Lord's words here mean that He will open the doors of

death and the grave and bring His people out of them in a

glorious resurrection.


                    The Sorrows of Sh'ol


     There are two passages which speak of the sorrows or pains

of sh'ol. These are to be found in 2 Samuel 22.6 and Psalm 18.5,

two recensions of the same psalm of David, where speaking in the

name of Christ he says, 'The sorrows of hell (sh'ol) compassed me

about: the snares of death prevented me.' Misled by the

translation 'hell' and by the idea of hell as a place of eternal

torment, many have supposed that the psalmist was speaking of the

torments of hell. However, had he experienced them, he would not

have been alive in this world to say so. These sorrows and pains

are those that accompany dying. They came in acute measure to the

Lord Jesus Christ on the cross. The same is true of verse 3 of

the anonymous Psalm 116: 'the sorrows of death compassed me, and

the pains of hell gat hold upon me.'


             Figurative Language about Sh'ol


     There are three passages in Scripture in which figurative,

allegorical or poetic language is used about sh'ol and one in

which the word itself is used in a figurative though easily

intelligible sense. As we approach these passages, we must bear

in mind the consistent and unmistakable language of Scripture

about sh'ol, which describes it as the grave where the dead

lie buried in the dust in profound and unconscious sleep. 

     Our first passage is Isaiah 14. 9-20. The prophet is

addressing the great king of Babylon (ver. 4). When the king

comes down to the grave, the kings and leaders are pictured as

rising from their thrones on which they were seated in the grave

and taunting him with his weakness. The impossibility of this

passage being literal is proved by the fact that, if the kings

were 'departed spirits' in sh'ol, the last thing that they would

be doing would be sitting upon thrones. In verse 11 the actual

state of the great king in the grave is described: 'the worm is

spread under thee, and the worms cover thee.' Again in verses 18

and 20 we read that all the kings lie in magnificent tombs and

are buried. This is the real state of things. Of the king of

Babylon it is said (ver. 19, 20) that he is cast out of his grave

like a carcase trodden under foot and will not be joined with the

rest in burial. This language does not fit 'departed spirits,'

but it fits the buried dead.

     Similarly in Ezekiel 32. 21 we find 'the strong among the

mighty' speaking to Pharaoh 'out of the midst of hell' (sh'ol,

the grave). In verse 31 the prophet says that when Pharaoh sees

them there he is comforted over his own fate. This means that the

sight and memory of great kings of bygone days dead and buried

bring a message to Pharaoh and he is less troubled  when he

approaches defeat and death at the thought of them.


     Jonah 2. 2 needs to be mentioned at this point. Jonah called

to the Lord when he was inside the fish. He says, 'out of the

belly of hell (sh'ol) cried I.' He here confuses intentionally

in a poetic phrase the grave in which men are normally buried and

the inside of the fish in which he himself was at the time

buried. He emphasizes his burial and his helplessness by

comparing his position to one buried in the grave. He was not

actually in sh'ol, but he was in a place which in many respects

was like it. The phrase also carries the meaning that the place

in which he was was as terrible as sh'ol.........."


[Keith Hunt—Basil Atkinson next tries to answer the questions about

Lazarus and the Rich Man parable found in Luke 16.  His effort is

commendable, but serves little justice and help in the overall

subject of what the Bible teaches on death, hell, and resurrection.  

I have covered this parable of Jesus' in a separate in-depth study. 

I ask the reader and searcher for truth to study my article].


     Atkinson continues:


                  The Silence of the Grave


     "There are four passages which speak of the absence of

praise, the silence and the lack of activity in sh'ol. The first

is Hezekiah's utterance in his beautiful inspired song of

thanksgiving (Isaiah 38. 18). We have already noticed this

passage in which death is spoken of as well as sh'ol. Hezekiah

says that the grave (sh'ol) cannot praise the Lord. In Psalm 6. 5

David says the same thing: 'in the grave (sh'ol) who shall give

thee thanks?' Here too sh'ol is joined with 'death' and we have

already noticed the passage.

      The third passage shows us sh'ol as a place of silence:

'Let the wicked be ashamed, and let them be silent in the grave

(sh'ol)' (Psalm 31. 17). Finally we find absence of activity and

consciousness in the grave (sh'ol): 'there is no work, nor

device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou

goest' (Ecclesiastes 9. 10).


                 Sh'ol used for Second Death

    

     There are three passages in the Old Testament where it is

possible that the word sh'ol is used for the second death. There

is no Hebrew word in the Old Testament corresponding to the

New Testament geenna meaning 'hell,' the place of the destruction

of the lost, so that it is possible that sh'ol could be used to

express it, although we know from Revelation 20. 14 that haidees

(sh'ol) will itself be destroyed in the lake of fire. The

passages are Psalm 9. 17; 31. 17; Job 24. 19........


                           The Pit

                                     

     In a few instances the Hebrew word bor translated 'the pit'

is used as the equivalent of sh'ol. The passages are Isaiah 14.

15, 19; 38. 18; Ezekiel 26. 20 (twice); 31. 14, 16; 32. 18, 23,

24, 25, 29, 30; Zechariah 9. 11; Psalm 28. 1; 30. 3; 88. 4; 143.

7; Proverbs 1. 12; 28. 17. The only two passages that need

comment are Zechariah 9. 11 and Proverbs 1. 12. In the former the

pit without water is sh'ol, the grave. The prisoners are the

godly dead, whose Lord ('thy prisoners') has the keys of the

grave (Rev. 1. 18). With these keys He opens the pit and sends

out the prisoners as a result of His blood-shedding by which He

made a covenant with them (Matthew 26. 28). In Proverbs 1. 12 

the thief compares the damage that he intends to do to his victims to

their consumption by sh'ol, which he identifies with the pit.

     The pit of destruction in Psalm 55. 23 and the pit in Psalm

69. 15 are the same thing, but the Hebrew word here is b'er,

which means literally a well, not bor, a water cistern, or pit.


                         Conclusion


     Our study of the Hebrew words for 'death' and 'the grave'

with their Greek New Testament equivalents and their usage has

shown us that men lie asleep in death till they are raised at the

last day and that the grave (sh'ol, haidees) is a place of

darkness and silence where there is no activity, no remembrance

of God and no praise of Him........ We can but conclude that

natural immortality, what is called 'the immortality of the

soul,' does not exist, and we are prepared to go on to our third

section and examine the glorious victory over death by which God

brings His children home to Him in eternal life. Death thus

emerges as the deprivation of life, the 'enemy' of mankind (1

Corinthians 15. 26), the first instalment of the penalty of Sin,

a deprivation that would have been permanent and final, as it is

in the case of the beasts, were it not turned into sleep by the

assured hope of resurrection. Only once in the Old Testament do

we find poor suffering Job speaking of the grave as a relief,

where  'he wicked cease from troubling' and 'the weary be at

rest' and his utterance is matched by that of the Holy Spirit in

Revelation 14. 13, telling us that the blessed dead rest from

their labours. This rest is not in a life of activity in

glory, but temporarily in the grave.    

     We may strengthen this conclusion by referring to the

following Hebrew and Greek words used on occasion to describe

death. We need not burden the reader with full quotations, but

urge all those who are interested or who may still doubt our

conclusions to look up the occurrences of the words in a

concordance: 

     (1). shaghath, translated. variously 'pit,' 'corruption,'

'ditch,' 'destruction,' 'grave' and used eight times directly of

death. 

     (2). shoah, translated 'desolation,' 'storm,' 'wasteness,'

'destruction,' 'to destroy,' 'desolate' and referring once

directly to death in Psalm 63. 9. 

     (3). sho, translated 'destructions' and referring to death

in Psalm 35. 17. 

     (4) mashghith, translated  'destroy,' 'corruption,' 'trap,'

'destroying,' 'utterly' (marg. 'to destruction'), 'destruction'

and referring several times to death. 

     (5). ed, translated 'calamity' and 'destruction.' 

     (6). avaddon, translated 'destruction,' used with reference

to death and sh'ol. 

     (7). avaddoh, translated 'destruction' and connected with

sh'ol in Proverbs 27. 20. 

     (8). apoleia, the Greek word meaning 'destruction,' used

once of death in Acts 25. 16, though the reading is doubtful. 

     (9). olethros, a second Greek word meaning 'destruction'

used once with the probable reference to physical death in 1

Corinthians 5. 5. 


     The usage of the following verbs will strengthen the case

still further: 

     (1). avad, meaning 'to destroy,' 'perish,' 'be lost,' used

directly of death some thirty-nine times. 

     (2). gharam, meaning to devote or utterly destroy, used some

twenty-three times directly of death. 

     (3). saphah, meaning to consume, used directly of death

seven and perhaps eight times.

     (4). shaghath, meaning to destroy, and used five times

directly of death. 

     (5). shamad, meaning to destroy and used eighteen times

directly of death. 

     (6). apollumi, the Greek word meaning to destroy, perish or

be lost, corresponding to Hebrew avad (see Revelation 9. 11),

used about twenty-eight times directly of death. 

     (7). exolothreuo, a strong word meaning to destroy utterly,

used of death in Acts 3. 23 in quotation from Leviticus 23. 29.

In all the occurrences of these words whether in the Old

Testament or the New there is no hint that death as we know it

means anything but destruction in the sense in which we speak of

an animal being destroyed........"


………………………….


     Basil Atkinson, while a short mention of Elijah and Moses

appearing with Christ on the mount of transfiguration, does not

attempt any real depth explanation of the event.

     This I do in a separate study, to which I refer the reader

(Keith Hunt).



     With this we conclude up to about half the book written by

Atkinson. We shall put most of the second half of the book under

two separate studies. One will be called "The Resurrection"

and the other "The Doom of the Lost."


           ......................................


Complied August 2000 


All articles and studies by Keith Hunt may be copied, published,

e-mailed, and distributed as led by the Spirit. Mr. Hunt trusts

nothing will be changed (except for spelling and punctuation

errors) without his consent.


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