DEATH, HEAVEN, AND HELL
In general, Jewish thinkers have focused on the ways to lead a good
life on Earth and improve this world, leaving concerns about death
and beyond until the appropriate time. Judaism has stressed the
natural fact of death and its role in giving life meaning. Of
course, issues of death are inevitably important. The fear of
death, concern about the fate of our own soul and those of our
loved ones, ethical concerns that some people die unfairly, all
these and many other issues are discussed in Jewish literature.
Since God is seen as ultimately just, the seeming injustice on
Earth has propelled many traditional Jewish thinkers into seeing
the afterlife as a way to reflect the ultimate justice of human
existence.
Traditional thinkers considered how individuals would be rewarded
or punished after their deaths. There are a few rare descriptions
of life after death. Traditionalists gave the name Gehenna to the
place where souls were punished. Many Jewish thinkers noted that
since, essentially, God is filled with mercy and love, punishment
is not to be considered to be eternal. There are, similarly, many
varying conceptions of paradise, such as that paradise is the place
where we finally understand the true concept of God. It is also
possible that there is no separate Heaven and Hell, only lesser or
greater distance from God after death. In addition, punishment
might be self-determined on the basis of suffering in kind the
suffering the person brought about. That is, Judaism doesn't have a
clear sense of Heaven and Hell, with different places in Hell for
different punishments. Rather, the idea is that God uses the
afterlife to provide ultimate justice and for the wicked to seek
some sort of final redemption.
Judaism does not believe people who are Gentiles will automatically
go to Hell or that Jews will automatically go to Heaven on their
basis of their belonging to the faith. Rather, individual ethical
behavior is what is most important. Many traditional Jews believe
that Judaism provides the best guide to leading such an ethical
life.
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