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Christ's Descent Into Hell
ISSUE: Every time we recite the Apostles’ Creed, we proclaim our belief that Christ descended into “hell” after His death. But isn’t hell a place of everlasting torment for the damned? Did Christ actually descend to this hell of eternal damnation, or is this another sense in which the Church understands "hell"?
RESPONSE: The English word “hell” describes two different places in the Bible. The first, referred to in the Apostle’s Creed, is “Hades” (Rev. 20:14) or “abode of the dead,” the place where Christ spoke to the spirits in prison after His death (1 Pet. 3:18-19; 4:6).[1] This first hell is also known as the “limbo of the fathers.” The more commonly known “hell of damnation”[2] (or “Gehenna”[3]) is the place where those who die in a state of mortal sin go, eternally separated by self-exclusion from God and the blessed.[4] Hades was emptied after Christ's descent, with the just going to heaven and the wicked going to the eternal hell. Hades is known today as Purgatory, where God purifies the saved sinner so that he can live in heaven with the Trinity (cf. Rev. 21:27; 1 Cor. 3:15).[5]
DISCUSSION: Before Christ’s death and resurrection, the gates of heaven were closed to all those who had died, for redemption had not yet come into the world to atone for Adam’s original sin. Instead, all the dead went to “hell” or the “abode of the dead”¾ “Sheol” in Hebrew or “Hades” in Greek. All souls, whether just or unjust, went to this hell and were “deprived of the vision of God” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 633). All did not share the same lot in Hades, as Christ’s parable about the poor man Lazarus shows (Lk. 16:22-26; Catechism, no. 633). When Christ died, he went down into Hades in order to preach to the dead (1 Pet 4:6), freeing the just who had gone before Him.[6] He did not go there to deliver the damned or destroy the hell of damnation.[7] Christ sent the damned to eternal perdition.
Thus, the “descent into Hell” referred to in the Creed affirms two doctrinal truths: Christ really did die¾he entered the abode of the dead ¾and He fulfilled His saving mission for all times and all peoples, rescuing even those who had died before His birth. The author of Hebrews clarifies that to be a faithful high priest it was necessary for Christ to become like his brethren in every way but sin (Heb. 2:17, 4:15; 1 Pet. 2:22). Thus, Christ’s experience of death and the descent into the abode of the dead were necessary for the salvation of all the just.
Through Christ’s resurrection from the dead and ascension into heaven, He opened the gates of heaven that had been closed since the banishment from Eden (Gen. 3:23, 24). Having conquered death and sin, Christ has “the keys of death and Hades” (Rev. 1:18), the power to release men from the wages of sin, both here on earth and in Purgatory. That Christ has the “key of Hades” affirms that Hades continues as Purgatory after His descent. Those who die and are “perfectly purified” go to heaven (Catechism, no. 1023), those who die in mortal sin go to hell,[8] and the faithful in need of purification go to Hades. However, as the Bible affirms, Hades / Purgatory will ultimately be destroyed (Rev. 20:14).
RECOMMENDED READING:
Holy Bible
Catechism of the Catholic Church
Documents of Vatican II
To order, call Benedictus Books toll-free: (888) 316-2640. Ask for prices. CUF members receive 10% discount.
Faith Facts: Answers to Catholic Questions; Suprenant and Gray
Catholic for a Reason: Scripture and the Mystery of the Family of God; Hahn, Scott, et al.
Courageous Love: A Bible Study on Holiness for Women; Mitch, Stacy
Mission of the Messiah: On the Gospel of Luke; Gray, Timothy
Servants of the Gospel; Suprenant, Leon, ed.
A Catholic Handbook for Engaged and Newly Married Couples; Marks, Frederick
To order, call Emmaus Road Publishing toll-free: (800) 398-5470.
AVAILABLE FAITH FACTS:
· Persevering to the End: The Biblical Reality of Mortal Sin
· Who Knows?: The Human Knowledge of Christ
· Predestination and Free Will
· “Chosen in Him”: The Catholic Teaching on Predestination
· All Aboard!: Without the Church There Is No Salvation
· “Who Art in Heaven”: The Dwelling Place of God
· Hell: The Self-Exclusion From God
· Limbo?
· Purgatory
© 1997 Catholics United for the Faith, Inc.
Last edited: 10/97
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[1] 1 Pet. 3:18-19; 1 Pet. 4:6; Catechism of the Catholic Church, nos. 631-35.
[2] Catechism, no. 633.
[3] Mt. 10:28 (Catholic New American Bible). The Catholic Revised Standard Version uses the word “hell” in this context, referring to the place of eternal damnation, while using "hades" to refer to the limbo of the fathers.
[4] Ibid., nos. 1033-37.
[5] Ibid., no. 1030-32.
[6] Ibid., no. 633.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Cf. Mt. 13:41-42, 25:41; Rev. 19:21.
Date created: 4/20/2004
Date edited: 9/26/2007
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