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powerofk
Guest
Sheol/the netherworld/Hell/Gehenna/whatever you call it is also outside of time and space. AFAIK, when it’s stated that Jesus, as God the Son, “decended” into Hell/Sheol to release the “righteous ones” who died before His crucifixion, He “unlocked the gates” that held them imprisoned and apart from God. As this happened outside of time, we don’t really understand how it worked. Really, it’s hard, if not impossible, to really understand things that happen outside of time when we are in a temporal state of being. We do know, however, that nothing sinful can enter Heaven, and only a perfect sacrifice would suffice to atone for sins.When you say that Jesus descended to hell, that place of shadows, or Sheol, do you mean the Son of G-d, the Divinity, descended there, or Jesus only in His human nature? If it is the Son of G-d (fully human and fully divine) Who descended to hell, was He the only Person Who descended? IOW, did G-d the Father and the Holy Spirit also descend to hell since the Persons of the Trinity, though distinct, are not separated from one another? Also, what does “descend” mean for G-d, Who is omnipresent and outside of time and space?
The idea that Jesus “went to the netherworld” is a shorthand way of us to say that (1) Jesus really did die - it wasn’t an illusion (as was claimed by gnostic sects and by Islam), and (2) His sacrifice atoned for the sins of all those who came before Him, not just those who came after. As we Catholics (and all true Christian groups, really) believe that Jesus Christ is God the Son, the second part of the Trinity, we say that God Himself visited the netherworld and brought the righteous ones to Heaven. It’s kinda confusing, as Jesus is always united to the Father and the Holy Spirit, and does not do anything without the Father and the Spirit.
However, as Jesus has a physical body, my thought is that the souls of the righteous ones, having not yet been admitted to the Beatific Vision of Heaven, were able to recognize the crucified body of Jesus, who revealed Himself to them as the One they had been waiting for Who had existed before all time. The crucifixion was necessary for the redemption, but the resurrection was the sign to us of Jesus’s triumph over death - and the final proof of His divinity. Without the resurrection, the crucifixion would have been meaningless, because the gospel would have died with Jesus Himself.