Philosophy
 

Sheol

From Christianity Knowledge Base

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End Times

Sheol, is a Hebrew word in the Old Testament referring either to the abode of the wicked or to the grave or death.

The KJV renders sheol as hell 31 times, grave 31 times, and pit 3 times. "Thus Sheol can refer either specifically to the abode of the wicked (cf. Psalm 9:17; Psalm 55:15), or generally to the grave or death (cf. Isaiah 38:10; Hosea 13:14). It is even used of the belly of the fish in Jonah 2:2, or of a deep pit in Numbers 16:30, 33. Scholars generally have a difficult time deciding when to interpret as 'hell,' which is why the newer translations either transliterate the word (NASB ’95, NRSV), or translate it as grave, death, depths, destruction, or pit (NIV)." [1]

[edit] Occurrences in the Old Testament

The word sheol occurs 65 times in the Old Testament.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  • Sheol (basictheology.com)
This page uses content from Theopedia, which favors a Calvinistic/Reform POV. The original article was at Sheol. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with the Christianity Knowledge Base, the text of Theopedia is under CC-BY-SA.
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