Sheol
n.
underworld, realm inhabited by the spirits of the dead (Hebrew)
Sheol
In Hebrew, ²² Sheol (שאול, Sh'ol) is the "abode of the dead", the "
underworld", "the common grave of humankind" or "pit". In the
Hebrew Bible, it is a place beneath the earth, beyond gates, where both the bad and the good, slave and king, pious and wicked must go at the point of death. Sheol is the common destination of both the righteous and the unrighteous dead, as recounted in
Ecclesiastes and
Job.
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shéol (m)
n.
Sheol, underworld, realm inhabited by the spirits of the dead (Hebrew)
Sheol
(n.)
The place of departed spirits; Hades; also, the grave.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
Sheol
[Judaic] The Semitic equivalent of the classical concept of Hades. The word has been derived from a number of roots. The two main probable origins seem to be those from the Assyrian root sha'al ("to consult an oracle") and shilu ("chamber"). The latter derivation seems somewhat more in accordance with the synonym of pit. Sheol was regarded as an underworld of the dead in which the shades lived. Hebrew eschatology, although somewhat obscure in its early phase, probably tended to perpetuate the animistic conception. The habit of burying the family in communal tombs may also have lent some meaning to the word. In Sheol the dead continued to live as on earth. According to Eth. Enoch 22 (1-14), Sheol was divided into four sections, intended respectively for the martyrs, the righteous who were not martyrs, sinners who had lived prosperously, and sinners who had been to some degree punished. The situation in these sections varied from extreme bliss in the first case to loss of all hope of the resur...
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