7/13/2023 0 Comments Christ in limbo meaningHow can we arrange in plausible order the events after His resurrection? In more than one way, e.g., : 1) Magdalen and other women come to the tomb at dawn, and see it is empty, 2) In excitement she or they run to the Apostles (Matthew here, between 20:8 &9, omits the visit of Peter and John, our item 3), 3) Peter and John do not believe but do run to the tomb, and see it empty. So many witnesses saw Him after this resurrection, for example we have an enumeration of them in First Corinthians 15:5-8. It also says the Father raised Him: this is true, thinking of His human nature. Sometimes Scripture says He rose, that is, by His own power. Jesus rose from the dead, as He had foretold in John 2:19-22, and elsewhere. The passage is poetic, and so need not mean that Sheol is under the earth. Paul wrote in Philippians 2:9-10: "God exalted Him and gave to Him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus, every knee should bend, of those in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth." This can also refer to the power of Jesus over Satan. Jesus came to take them out of that drab and dull place. It says there is no knowledge-that is, of what goes on on earth. Qoheleth 9:10 says there is no work in Sheol-of course not. Those in Sheol cannot appeal to the covenant. In Isaiah 38:19 we read that "those who go down to the pit cannot hope for God's fidelity." The "fidelity" means God's faithful keeping of His covenant promises. That liturgical praise of course is not found in Sheol. The Psalmist is thinking of the grand liturgical praise of God, which the Hebrews really loved. Psalm 6:6 asks "who in Sheol can praise you?" Sheol is the realm of the dead. 9-10 says that the dead one "does not return to his house." Of course not, the resurrection will be not a return to the present mode of life. So we can understand some otherwise strange texts in the Old Testament. Of course, then, the afterlife was very different then from what it is now. But without that vision, it would not know any of these things, unless God might decide to give a special revelation. When a soul reaches the vision of God, by that vision, it knows all that pertains to it on earth. For the just, who had died in the state of grace, and had paid all the debt of their sins, were still not admitted to the vision of God until Jesus had died. He visited what is called the Limbo of the Fathers. It does not mean at all the hell of the damned. After His death, the soul of Jesus, still united to the divinity, descended into the realm of the dead, which the Creed calls "hell", in the old English usage.
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