GEHENNA
(Ge·henʹna) [Gr. form of the Heb. Geh Hin·nomʹ, “Valley of Hinnom”].
This
name appears 12 times in the Christian Greek Scriptures, and whereas
many translators take the liberty to render it by the word “hell,” a
number of modern translations transliterate the word from the Greek
geʹen·na.—Mt 5:22, Ro, Mo, ED, NW, BC (Spanish), NC (Spanish), also the
footnotes of Da and RS.
The
deep, narrow Valley of Hinnom, later known by this Greek name, lay to
the S and SW of ancient Jerusalem and is the modern-day Wadi er-Rababi
(Ge Ben Hinnom). (Jos 15:8; 18:16; Jer 19:2, 6; see HINNOM, VALLEY OF.)
Judean Kings Ahaz and Manasseh engaged in idolatrous worship there,
which included the making of human sacrifices by fire to Baal. (2Ch
28:1, 3; 33:1, 6; Jer 7:31, 32; 32:35) Later, to prevent such activities
there in the future, faithful King Josiah had the place of idolatrous
worship polluted, particularly the section called Topheth.—2Ki 23:10.
No
Symbol of Everlasting Torment. Jesus Christ associated fire with
Gehenna (Mt 5:22; 18:9; Mr 9:47, 48), as did the disciple James, the
only Biblical writer besides Matthew, Mark, and Luke to use the word.
(Jas 3:6) Some commentators endeavor to link such fiery characteristic
of Gehenna with the burning of human sacrifices that was carried on
prior to Josiah’s reign and, on this basis, hold that Gehenna was used
by Jesus as a symbol of everlasting torment. However, since Jehovah God
expressed repugnance for such practice, saying that it was “a thing that
I had not commanded and that had not come up into my heart” (Jer 7:31;
32:35), it seems most unlikely that God’s Son, in discussing divine
judgment, would make such idolatrous practice the basis for the symbolic
meaning of Gehenna. It may be noted that God prophetically decreed that
the Valley of Hinnom would serve as a place for mass disposal of dead
bodies rather than for the torture of live victims. (Jer 7:32, 33; 19:2,
6, 7, 10, 11) Thus, at Jeremiah 31:40 the reference to “the low plain
of the carcasses and of the fatty ashes” is generally accepted as
designating the Valley of Hinnom, and a gate known as “the Gate of the
Ash-heaps” evidently opened out onto the eastern extremity of the valley
at its juncture with the ravine of the Kidron.—Ne 3:13, 14.
Therefore,
the Biblical evidence concerning Gehenna generally parallels the
traditional view presented by rabbinic and other sources. That view is
that the Valley of Hinnom was used as a place for the disposal of waste
matter from the city of Jerusalem. (At Mt 5:30 Ph renders geʹen·na as
“rubbish heap.”) Concerning “Gehinnom,” the Jewish commentator David
Kimhi (1160?-1235?), in his comment on Psalm 27:13, gives the following
historical information: “And it is a place in the land adjoining
Jerusalem, and it is a loathsome place, and they throw there unclean
things and carcasses. Also there was a continual fire there to burn the
unclean things and the bones of the carcasses. Hence, the judgment of
the wicked ones is called parabolically Gehinnom.”
Symbolic
of Complete Destruction. It is evident that Jesus used Gehenna as
representative of utter destruction resulting from adverse judgment by
God, hence with no resurrection to life as a soul being possible. (Mt
10:28; Lu 12:4, 5) The scribes and Pharisees as a wicked class were
denounced as ‘subjects for Gehenna.’ (Mt 23:13-15, 33) To avoid such
destruction, Jesus’ followers were to get rid of anything causing
spiritual stumbling, the ‘cutting off of a hand or foot’ and the
‘tearing out of an eye’ figuratively representing their deadening of
these body members with reference to sin.—Mt 18:9; Mr 9:43-47; Col 3:5;
compare Mt 5:27-30.
Jesus
also apparently alluded to Isaiah 66:24 in describing Gehenna as a
place “where their maggot does not die and the fire is not put out.” (Mr
9:47, 48) That the symbolic picture here is not one of torture but,
rather, of complete destruction is evident from the fact that the Isaiah
text dealt, not with persons who were alive, but with “the carcasses of
the men that were transgressing” against God. If, as the available
evidence indicates, the Valley of Hinnom was a place for the disposal of
garbage and carcasses, fire, perhaps increased in intensity by the
addition of sulfur (compare Isa 30:33), would be the only suitable means
to eliminate such refuse. Where the fire did not reach, worms, or
maggots, would breed, consuming anything not destroyed by the fire. On
this basis, Jesus’ words would mean that the destructive effect of God’s
adverse judgment would not cease until complete destruction was
attained.
Figurative
Use. The disciple James’ use of the word “Gehenna” shows that an unruly
tongue is itself a world of unrighteousness and that one’s whole round
of living can be affected by fiery words that defile the speaker’s body.
The tongue of such a one, “full of death-dealing poison” and so giving
evidence of a bad heart condition, can cause the user to be sentenced by
God to go to the symbolic Gehenna.—Jas 3:6, 8; compare Mt 12:37; Ps
5:9; 140:3; Ro 3:13.
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