THE JEWS
CONCERNING HADES
AN EXTRACT OUT OF JOSEPHUS'S DISCOURSE TO
THE GREEKS
FLAVIUS JOSEPHUS
BORN AD. 37 - DIED ABOUT 101 AD.
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In the war between the Jews and the Romans
of 66-70 CE, the Jewish general Joseph son
of Matthias defended Galilee against the
Roman legions. After he had been defeated,
he defected to his enemies, and advised the
Roman general Vespasian. When the latter
became emperor, his adviser started a career
as a historian who tried to explain Judaism
to the Greeks and Romans. His most important
works are the Jewish War, the Jewish Antiquities,
an Autobiography and an apology of Judaism
Against Apion (or Against the Greeks). Being
an influential Roman citizen, he accepted
a new name: Flavius Josephus. He must have
died about 100 CE, more than sixty years
old. Life Joseph was born in Jerusalem in
37 CE as the son of Matthias, a man from
priestly descent, and a mother who claimed
royal blood. Stated differently, he was born
as a Sadducee and an aristocrat. The boy
must have been a real know-it-all, because
he excelled in all his studies and at the
age of sixteen, he decided to find out for
himself what philosophy was best - that of
the Sadducees, that of the Essenes or that
of the Pharisees. Although he studied all
three systems, he was not content, and for
three years, he lived in the desert with
a hermit named Bannus. Returning to Jerusalem
at the age of nineteen, he choose to become
a Pharisee. At least, this is what he writes
in his Autobiography. The problem is that
it can not be true. To become an Essene,
one had to study three years and we may assume
that one did not understand the essentials
of the teachings of other Jewish sects within
a few weeks either. It was simply impossible
to study the three disciplines and live three
years in the desert before one's nineteenth
year. Worse, the Jewish War and Jewish Antiquities
show a profound dislike of the Pharisees.
Hence, we may conclude that Josephus only
says that he became a Pharisee because he
had a special talent to know from where the
wind blew, and Phariseism was very popular
at the moment he was writing his Autobiography
1. NOW as to Hades, wherein the souls of
the good things they see, and rejoice in
the righteous and unrighteous are detained,
it is necessary to speak of it. Hades is
a place in the world not regularly finished;
a subterraneous region, wherein the light
of this world does not shine; from which
circumstance, that in this region the light
does not shine, it cannot be but there must
be in it perpetual darkness. This region
is allotted as a place of custody for souls,
ill which angels are appointed as guardians
to them, who distribute to them temporary
punishments, agreeable to every one's behavior
and manners.
2. In this region there is a certain place
set apart, as a lake of unquenchable fire,
whereinto we suppose no one hath hitherto
been cast; but it is prepared for a day afore-determined
by God, in which one righteous sentence shall
deservedly be passed upon all men; when the
unjust, and those that have been disobedient
to God, and have given honor to such idols
as have been the vain operations of the hands
of men as to God himself, shall be adjudged
to this everlasting punishment, as having
been the causes of defilement; while the
just shall obtain an incorruptible and never-fading
kingdom. These are now indeed confined in
Hades, but not in the same place wherein
the unjust are confined.
3. For there is one descent into this region,
at whose gate we believe there stands an
archangel with an host; which gate when those
pass through that are conducted down by the
angels appointed over souls, they do not
go the same way; but the just are guided
to the right hand, and are led with hymns,
sung by the angels appointed over that place,
unto a region of light, in which the just
have dwelt from the beginning of the world;
not constrained by necessity, but ever enjoying
the prospect of the good things they see,
and rejoic in the expectation of those new
enjoyments which will be peculiar to every
one of them, and esteeming those things beyond
what we have here; with whom there is no
place of toil, no burning heat, no piercing
cold, nor are any briers there; but the countenance
of the and of the just, which they see, always
smiles them, while they wait for that rest
and eternal new life in heaven, which is
to succeed this region. This place we call
The Bosom of Abraham.
4. But as to the unjust, they are dragged
by force to the left hand by the angels allotted
for punishment, no longer going with a good-will,
but as prisoners driven by violence; to whom
are sent the angels appointed over them to
reproach them and threaten them with their
terrible looks, and to thrust them still
downwards. Now those angels that are set
over these souls drag them into the neighborhood
of hell itself; who, when they are hard by
it, continually hear the noise of it, and
do not stand clear of the hot vapor itself;
but when they have a near view of this spectacle,
as of a terrible and exceeding great prospect
of fire, they are struck with a fearful expectation
of a future judgment, and in effect punished
thereby: and not only so, but where they
see the place [or choir] of the fathers and
of the just, even hereby are they punished;
for a chaos deep and large is fixed between
them; insomuch that a just man that hath
compassion upon them cannot be admitted,
nor can one that is unjust, if he were bold
enough to attempt it, pass over it.
5. This is the discourse concerning Hades,
wherein the souls of all men are confined
until a proper season, which God hath determined,
when he will make a resurrection of all men
from the dead, not procuring a transmigration
of souls from one body to another, but raising
again those very bodies, which you Greeks,
seeing to be dissolved, do not believe [their
resurrection]. But learn not to disbelieve
it; for while you believe that the soul is
created, and yet is made immortal by God,
according to the doctrine of Plato, and this
in time, be not incredulous; but believe
that God is able, when he hath raised to
life that body which was made as a compound
of the same elements, to make it immortal;
for it must never be said of God, that he
is able to do some things, and unable to
do others. We have therefore believed that
the body will be raised again; for although
it be dissolved, it is not perished; for
the earth receives its remains, and preserves
them; and while they are like seed, and are
mixed among the more fruitful soil, they
flourish, and what is sown is indeed sown
bare grain, but at the mighty sound of God
the Creator, it will sprout up, and be raised
in a clothed and glorious condition, though
not before it has been dissolved, and mixed
[with the earth]. So that we have not rashly
believed the resurrection of the body; for
although it be dissolved for a time on account
of the original transgression, it exists
still, and is cast into the earth as into
a potter's furnace, in order to be formed
again, not in order to rise again such as
it was before, but in a state of purity,
and so as never to he destroyed any more.
And to every body shall its own soul be restored.
And when it hath clothed itself with that
body, it will not be subject to misery, but,
being itself pure, it will continue with
its pure body, and rejoice with it, with
which it having walked righteously now in
this world, and never having had it as a
snare, it will receive it again with great
gladness. But as for the unjust, they will
receive their bodies not changed, not freed
from diseases or distempers, nor made glorious,
but with the same diseases wherein they died;
and such as they were in their unbelief,
the same shall they be when they shall be
faithfully judged.
6. For all men, the just as well as the unjust,
shall be brought before God the word: for
to him hath the Father committed all judgment
: and he, in order to fulfill the will of
his Father, shall come as Judge, whom we
call Christ. For Minos and Rhadamanthus are
not the judges, as you Greeks do suppose,
but he whom God and the Father hath glorified:
CONCERNING WHOM WE HAVE ELSEWHERE GIVEN A
MORE PARTICULAR ACCOUNT, FOR THE SAKE OF
THOSE WHO SEEK AFTER TRUTH. This person,
exercising the righteous judgment of the
Father towards all men, hath prepared a just
sentence for every one, according to his
works; at whose judgment-seat when all men,
and angels, and demons shall stand, they
will send forth one voice, and say, JUST
IS THY JUDGMENT; the rejoinder to which will
bring a just sentence upon both parties,
by giving justly to those that have done
well an everlasting fruition; but allotting
to the lovers of wicked works eternal punishment.
To these belong the unquenchable fire, and
that without end, and a certain fiery worm,
never dying, and not destroying the body,
but continuing its eruption out of the body
with never-ceasing grief: neither will sleep
give ease to these men, nor will the night
afford them comfort; death will not free
them from their punishment, nor will the
interceding prayers of their kindred profit
them; for the just are no longer seen by
them, nor are they thought worthy of remembrance.
But the just shall remember only their righteous
actions, whereby they have attained the heavenly
kingdom, in which there is no sleep, no sorrow,
no corruption, no care, no night, no day
measured by time, no sun driven in his course
along the circle of heaven by necessity,
and measuring out the bounds and conversions
of the seasons, for the better illumination
of the life of men; no moon decreasing and
increasing, or introducing a variety of seasons,
nor will she then moisten the earth; no burning
sun, no Bear turning round [the pole], no
Orion to rise, no wandering of innumerable
stars. The earth will not then be difficult
to be passed over, nor will it he hard to
find out the court of paradise, nor will
there be any fearful roaring of the sea,
forbidding the passengers to walk on it;
even that will be made easily passable to
the just, though it will not be void of moisture.
Heaven will not then be uninhabitable by
men, and it will not be impossible to discover
the way of ascending thither. The earth will
not be uncultivated, nor require too much
labor of men, but will bring forth its fruits
of its own accord, and will be well adorned
with them. There will be no more generations
of wild beasts, nor will the substance of
the rest of the animals shoot out any more;
for it will not produce men, but the number
of the righteous will continue, and never
fail, together with righteous angels, and
spirits [of God], and with his word, as a
choir of righteous men and women that never
grow old, and continue in an incorruptible
state, singing hymns to God, who hath advanced
them to that happiness, by the means of a
regular institution of life; with whom the
whole creation also will lift up a perpetual
hymn from corruption, to incorruption, as
glorified by a splendid and pure spirit.
It will not then be restrained by a bond
of necessity, but with a lively freedom shall
offer up a voluntary hymn, and shall praise
him that made them, together with the angels,
and spirits, and men now freed from all bondage.
7. And now, if you Gentiles will be persuaded
by these motives, and leave your vain imaginations
about your pedigrees, and gaining of riches,
and philosophy, and will not spend your time
about subtleties of words, and thereby lead
your minds into error, and if you will apply
your ears to the hearing of the inspired
prophets, the interpreters both of God and
of his word, and will believe in God, you
shall both be partakers of these things,
and obtain the good things that are to come;
you shall see the ascent unto the immense
heaven plainly, and that kingdom which is
there. For what God hath now concealed in
silence [will be then made manifest,] what
neither eye hath seen, nor ear hath heard,
nor hath it entered into the heart of man,
the things that God hath prepared for them
that love him.
8. In whatsoever ways I shall find you, in
them shall I judge you entirely: so cries
the END of all things. And he who hath at
first lived a virtuous lift, but towards
the latter end falls into vice, these labors
by him before endured shall be altogether
vain and unprofitable, even as in a play,
brought to an ill catastrophe. Whosoever
shall have lived wickedly and luxuriously
may repent; however, there will be need of
much time to conquer an evil habit, and even
after repentance his whole life must be guarded
with great care and diligence, after the
manner of a body, which, after it hath been
a long time afflicted with a distemper, requires
a stricter diet and method of living; for
though it may be possible, perhaps, to break
off the chain of our irregular affections
at once, yet our amendment cannot be secured
without the grace of God, the prayers of
good men, the help of the brethren, and our
own sincere repentance and constant care.
It is a good thing not to sin at all; it
is also good, having sinned, to repent; as
it is best to have health always, but it
is a good thing to recover from a distemper.
To God be glory and dominion for ever and
ever Amen.
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