Thread: What is Hell?
View Single Post
  #2  
Old 08-12-2004, 02:17 PM
KaosTheory's Avatar
KaosTheory KaosTheory is offline
Mental Jujitsu
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 805
What is Hell?

Apparently, this is a very deep subject. I also found this and thought that is was interesting enough to cut and paste here.



URL: www.scjfaq.org/faq/12-08.html



www.scjfaq.org/faq





Question 12.8:

What do Jews say happens when a person dies? Do

Jews believe in reincarnation? In hell or heaven?







[Note that this description is derived mostly from the Zohar, a

12th century work that evolved from the mystical writings of R'

Shim'on bar Yochai (2nd century). The Zohar is the central

writing of Kabbalah.]



In general, and in contrast to some other religions, in day-to-day

life Jews don't pay much attention to questions like this. The

focus of Jewish life is living according to G-d's will as expressed

in the Torah. What happens afterwards is up to G-d.



That said, traditional Judaism does address this question. To put

it shortly, our beliefs in resurection and afterlife vary widely.

Some believe it is part of the Messianic era. Some consider it an

era of its own, after the messianic one. It's a matter of debate in

Jewish tradition as to whether the post resurection life is

permanent, or temporary. Nachamides believes that the ultimate

reward, the "World to Come" is that post-resurrection life, and

therefore it must be eternal. Maimonides opines that the ultimate

reward is the relatively direct experience of G-d that a soul can

have when not encumbered with a body and its desires.

Therefore he understands the phrase "World to Come" to refer to

the non-physical existance after life, and that's man ultimate

reward. He returns to that reward after a second, resurrected life.

This is because Maimonides believes it's because man can only

face his judgement in the same condition as when he sinned.

Since he sinned while in a body, he is returned to that body to be

judged. R' Yosef Albo agrees with Maimonides that the post

resurrection life isn't permanent. To be specific, he believes that

the lifespan will be 1,000 years -- the length of time Adam would

have lived after eating from the forbidden fruit (had he not given

away 70 years for someone else). His reason for this second life,

though, is very different. Albo writes in the Ikkarim

(Fundamentals) that in this life, man masters the art of

self-perfection in the face of adversity -- disease, threat of

poverty, and everything else that could go wrong in life. In the

next life, the only challenges are internal, there will be no external

impediments. It's therefore a second step in personal

development, allowing for more refinement in one's ability to

enjoy the World to Come upon return. In the early 20th century,

Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook (cheif Rabbi of British Mandate

Palestine) wrote that the resurection occurs by the end of the

illusion that separates this universe from heaven.



Now, for the more mystical explanation. Keep in mind that there

are dissenting viewpoints, though this is the dominant one.



A living person consists of both body and soul. Both are complex

in structure and this short answer can't possibly address the

details. To summarize briefly, when the body dies, if the person

merits it, a small portion of the soul remains with it to keep it

connected with the soul's source, anticipating the general revival

of the dead at the time that G-d decrees. Different parts of the

remainder of the soul may go to different places. One might be

reincarnated into a new body in an attempt to rectify another of

its spiritual aspects, or for other purposes. One part might go to a

level of Paradise. Another might go to Gehinnom for a period, to

remove the sins of that life and prepare it for a future one.

Another part might join temporarily with an already living person,

to assist it with its rectification and in the process gather more

merit. The reassignments of the soul continues until the time that

G-d decrees.



Rabbinic afterlife teachings varied in different places and times,

and was never synthesized into one coherent philosophy. As

such, the different descriptions of the afterlife are not always

consistent with each other. This is especially true for the

descriptions of "Olam Haba", the world to come. In some

rabbinic works this phrase refers to the messianic era, a physical

realm right here on Earth. However, in other works this phrase

means Gan Edan, Paradise (in Heaven, so to speak), a purely

spiritual realm. At various points in the afterlife journey, the soul

is said to encounter:



Hibbut ha-kever, the pains of the grave



Dumah, the angel of silence



The angel of death



The Kaf ha-Kela, the catapult of the soul



Gehenna (purgatory) and Gan Eden (Heaven; Paradise)



A discussion of the classic rabbinic view of the afterlife, including

these topics and more, can be found in an essay by Rabbi

Zalman Schacter Shalomi called "Life in the hereafter: A tour of

what's to come", found at

http://www.elevated.fsnet.co.uk/index-page13.html.



Gehenna is fairly well defined in rabbinic literature. It is

sometimes translated as "hell", but Jews must take note that the

Christian version of hell is different from the Jewish view of

Gehenna. Some Christians believe that hell is an abode of eternal

torment where sinners go, and is also for anyone who does not

accept Jesus as their messiah and G-d. Other Christians believe

Hell is a place of separation from G-d (which, for Christians, is

torture enough), from which believers are eventually saved by

Jesus. Roman Catholics believe that Hell is a place of eternal

suffering—physical, mental and spiritual suffering. In the Roman

Catholic view of Hell, the physical pain is constant and severe;

but the worst torture of Hell is the knowledge that they will never

see G-d and that they will remain in Hell for eternity. For Roman

Catholics, Hell is permanent and eternal. For Roman Catholics,

the soul that has deliberately and knowingly disobeyed G-d's

commandments in life and that remains in a state of mortal sin

upon death has through it's own free will damned itself to Hell for

all eternity. Roman Catholics also have the notion of Purgatory,

which is for souls that are truly repentant, but not in the state of

grace upon death. Purgatory is similar to Hell in that there is

physical suffering, the Roman Catholic belief is that the soul will

return to G-d when it is purged of its sins. Purgatory can last a

day or thousands of years depending on the amount of purging

the individual soul requires.



However, for Jews, gehenna—while certainly a terribly

unpleasant place—is not hell. The 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. It is a spiritual

forge where the soul is purified for its eventual ascent to Gan

Eden [Heaven], and where all imperfections are purged. [In this

sense, it is somewhat similar to the Roman Catholic purgatory,

however the time period has a definate maximum]. Gehennom

(lit: the valley of Hinnom, in Jerusalem; i.e. hell) is the sinner's

experience in the afterlife. In other words, it's the same "place" as

gan eiden (lit: the garden of Eden; i.e. heaven) — it's the

perspective of the individual that makes it one or the other.



In some descriptions of the afterlife, we find that beyond Gan

Eden there is a little known realm called the otzar, the divine

treasury of souls; this is also called the tzror ha-hayyim, the

bundle of life. This otzar is a transcendent realm of human souls,

in the highest spheres of creation. Before souls are born they are

said to come from this treasury, and they return they at some

point after death.



Souls are said to originate in a realm called the 'guf' (Avodah

Zarah 5a, Nedarim 13b, Yevamot 62a), from which they descend

to the earthly real to animate human bodies. After death, these

souls return to the otzar, or tzror ha-hayyim. (Shabbat 152a;

Pesikta Rabbati 2:3)



According to the Kabbalah [Jewish mysticism] every human has

at least one element in their soul; with the proper study a person

can eventually develop two higher levels of the soul. A common

way of explaining the three parts of the soul is as follows:



1.Nefesh - the lower part, or animal part, of the soul. Is

linked to instincts and bodily cravings.



2.Ruach - the middle soul, the spirit. It contains the moral

virtues and the ability to distinguish between good and evil.



3.Neshamah - the higher soul, or super-soul. This separates

man from all other lifeforms. It is related to the intellect,

and allows man to enjoy and benefit from the afterlife. This

part of the soul is provided both to Jew and non-Jew alike

at birth. It allows one to have some awareness of the

existence and presence of G-d.



The "Raaya Meheimna," a later addition to the Zohar,

posits that there are in fact two more parts of the human

soul, the chayyah and yehidah. These parts were

considered to represent the sublimest levels of intuitive

cognition, and were only within the grasp of very few

individuals.



4.Chayyah - The part of the soul that allows one to have an

awareness of the divine life force itself.



5.Yehidad - the highest plane of the soul, in which one can

achieve as full a union with G-d as is possible.



According to the Zohar, after death each aspect of the soul

undergoes a different experience on the afterlife journey. The

lower levels of the soul are purified and purged of physical and

emotional attachments, while the higher levels experience

transcendental bliss. The nefesh temporarily remains with the

body in the grave, undergoing the Hibbut Ha-Kever, the suffering

of the grave. Simultaneously, the Ruach experiences Gehenna for

12 months. "Gehenna is conceived of as a purification process in

which the psychic remnants from the previous life are purged and

transformed. This purgation process lasts only twelve months and

is tormentingly painful in direct proportion to each individual's

lived life experience. [Simcha Paull-Rapahel ] After leaving

Gehenna, the ruah then permanently enters the Lower Gan Eden.



After death the Neshama, since it not subject to being tainted by

sin, goes to Gan Eden Elyon, the Upper Gan Eden, where it

experiences divine reward and bliss. The hayyah and yehidah

also return to Upper Gan Eden immediately after death, and

become as one with G-d as is possible. "Those who have

awakened these dimensions of their being are able to perceive the

infinite grandeur of the divine realms, to enter the everflowing

celestial stream - described by the Zoha as the "bundle of life".

[Paull-Rapahel]



Given all this, what happens to the soul of the nonbeliever? The

most common belief in contemporary traditional Jewish

communities is that all souls go to the after-life. Nearly all,

barring a handful or two in all of human history, eventually end

up in Gan Eden (roughly: heaven), even non-believers.

Maimonides (a medieval Jewish thinker) opined that

non-believers cease to exist upon death. His reasoning was that

the ability to exist eternally is G-d's, and is only acquired by the

soul to the extent that the soul knows of, and therefore shares

some of the form of, G-d. This opinion was more popular in the

midevil period, but no longer captures much attention, since

around the early 19th century. At that time, the Chassidic and

Mussar movements influenced Orthodox thought. The Aristotilian

influence of the medieval thinkers like Maimonides faded in favor

of other, equally old, approaches to the problem. All of these

notions have roots in the Talmud (our earliest written rabbinic

texts) and earlier. It is just a matter of which approach to G-d

from within that tradition people follow. [Note: While you may

have heard of Chassidim, there are few if any Mussarists left

post-WWII. It was an Orthodox movement based on personality

improvement and stressed the inter-personal commandments.]

--------------------
__________________
"Ignorant and free can never be" Thomas Jefferson

Click here > Free Asset Protection Crash Course
Reply With Quote