Where Did the Idea of Hell Come From? | Baby Lady Explores the Hebrew Text
Many people grow up believing that the Hebrew Bible clearly teaches the idea of Hell as a place of eternal fiery punishment.
But when we examine the original Hebrew terms, the picture becomes much more complex.
In the latest Baby Lady episode, we explore the question:
Where did the idea of Hell actually come from?
The Hebrew Bible Uses the Word “Sheol”
In the Hebrew Bible, the most common word associated with death is שְׁאוֹל (Sheol).
Sheol appears throughout the Tanakh and is usually described simply as the realm of the dead or the grave.
It is not portrayed as a place of fiery torment.
Instead, Sheol is often depicted as a silent place where the dead reside.
For example:
Psalm 6:5
“For in death there is no remembrance of you;
in Sheol who will give you praise?”
The verse describes Sheol as a place where the dead no longer participate in the life of the living.
This idea appears repeatedly throughout the Hebrew Bible.
Another example is Ecclesiastes 9:10:
“There is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are going.”
Again, Sheol is portrayed as the destination of the dead, not a place of eternal punishment.
The Valley of Hinnom (Gehenna)
Later Jewish texts introduce another concept connected to judgment: Gehenna.
The word comes from the Valley of Hinnom outside Jerusalem.
In the book of Jeremiah, this valley is associated with terrible practices and divine condemnation.
Jeremiah 7:31
“They have built the high places of Topheth in the Valley of the Son of Hinnom.”
Because of these associations, the valley eventually became a symbol connected with divine judgment.
Over time, the term Gehenna began to develop theological meaning beyond its original geographic location.
Second Temple Jewish Developments
During the Second Temple period, Jewish literature began to develop more detailed ideas about the afterlife.
Texts such as:
1 Enoch
2 Esdras
other Second Temple writings
began discussing concepts like:
divine judgment after death
separation between the righteous and the wicked
punishment for the wicked
These developments show that ideas about the afterlife were evolving within Jewish thought long before later theological systems formed.
How the Concept of Hell Developed
Over time, different traditions connected several ideas together:
1 Sheol – the realm of the dead
2 Gehenna – associated with divine judgment
3 Later theological interpretations
This process eventually produced the more defined concept of Hell as a place of punishment in later religious traditions.
Understanding this historical development helps us see how interpretations can grow and change over time.
Why Studying the Original Text Matters
When we examine the Hebrew text carefully, we often discover that later interpretations were built on earlier ideas that originally meant something different.
This does not necessarily invalidate later traditions.
But it reminds us of something important:
Returning to the original language can reveal how ideas developed over centuries.
And that is exactly what the Baby Lady series explores — one text at a time.
https://youtube.com/shorts/PyZcvzQT1F8?feature=share
What do you think?
When the Hebrew Bible uses the word Sheol, should it simply be understood as the grave, or could it already hint at later ideas about the afterlife?
I would love to hear your thoughts and interpretations.
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