Apostle's Creed
(emphasis added)
 

I believe in God, the Father almighty,  
creator of heaven and earth. 

I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord,  
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,  
born of the Virgin Mary,  
suffered under Pontius Pilate,  
was crucified, died, and was buried;  
he descended into hell;  
On the third day he rose again;  
he ascended into heaven,  
he is seated at the right hand of the Father,  
and he will come to judge the living and the dead. 

I believe in the Holy Spirit,  
the holy catholic Church,  
the communion of saints,  
the forgiveness of sins,  
the resurrection of the body,  
and the life everlasting.  
Amen. 

 
 
---------------------------------------------------------
 
Patheos
 
Black Saturday: Satan, Hades, and the Beginnings of  Hell
April 18, 2014 By _Don M Burrows_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/unfundamentalistchristians/author/donburrows/) 
 
 
 
(http://wp.patheos.com.s3.amazonaws.com/blogs/unfundamentalistchristians/files/2014/04/3E.jpg)
  
Oft forgotten amid the Holy Week observances of Palm Sunday, 
Maundy-Thursday,  Good Friday and then Easter is Holy Saturday, or  Black 
Saturday, the 
day Jesus supposedly lay in the tomb after his  crucifixion on Friday and 
prior to his resurrection on Sunday. 
But this day worked on the imagination of early Christians in fantastic 
ways.  In the Apostles’ Creed is the statement that Jesus “descended into Hell”
 as it  is often translated into English. But in the Greek it is 
κατελθόντα εἰς τὰ  κατώτατα, or “going down into the lowermost parts,” and 
in Latin something  almost identical, descendit ad inferos, or “he descended 
to the  lower ones/places.” This is not necessarily Hell, because such a 
concept was not  fully worked out yet. It was rather the netherworld or 
underworld of Greco-Roman  mythology, the conception of which would eventually 
provide us with the imagery  most commonly associated with Hell. 
The most fascinating account of Jesus going down to the underworld has been 
 handed down in the Gospel of Nicodemus, an apocryphal work that  includes 
the Acts of Pilate (yes, that Pilate, whose  ahistorical contrition in the 
Gospels is later elaborated to the point that he  becomes canonized in some 
Christian sects) and Christ’s Descent into  Hell. The _older, 
out-of-copyright translation_ 
(http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/text/gospelnicodemus.html)  of  
Nicodemus by M.R. James is available in many places online. But  
the _more updated and much less baroque  translation_ 
(http://books.google.com/books?id=9vNTo0m08nkC&lpg=PP1&dq=J.K.%20Elliott%20apocryphal%20new%20testam
ent&pg=PA185#v=onepage&q&f=false)  by J.K. Elliot is far superior. 
Probably from about the fifth or sixth century (though its dating is not  
without dispute), the Gospel of Nicodemus is a fascinating example of  
Greco-Christian syncretism — that is, of the mythological blending of Christian 
 
and Greco-Roman traditions. The modern nature of Hell and the afterlife in  
general has been the product of such syncretism; Dante’s version of that 
place,  as told in his famous Inferno, has embedded itself in our culture—and  
much of that work was taken from Book 6 or  Vergil’s Aeneid, wherein the hero 
descends into the  underworld (as all good heroes in such stories must), 
where he witnesses the  punishments of the wicked. 
In Christ’s Descent into Hell, transmitted to us in a number of  
manuscripts (which boil down to one Greek version and two Latin ones), Satan 
has  not 
yet been fully blended with Hades, the Greek god of the underworld. Today  
the two have been merged to the point that Hades is almost always presented 
as  blackened and evil (see such popular movies as  Disney’s Hercules or 
Percy Jackson and the  Lightening Thief), though he was not necessarily so in 
pre-Christian  mythology. Indeed, the figure of Hades isn’t particularly evil  
in Christ’s Descent. He was simply the keeper of the underworld,  who 
appears at times more powerful than Satan himself. 
In Christ’s Descent, Satan and Hades have numerous conversations  about 
Jesus prior to and after his arrival in the netherworld. A personification  of 
the underworld and death itself, Hades, “the insatiable one,” questions 
Satan  as to how they will withstand Jesus when he appears to be able to raise 
the dead  at a single word. Indeed, Hades muses on the fact that Lazarus had 
recently up  and walked out. He then orders Satan to go out to the gates 
and contend with  Jesus “if you can.” 
When Jesus does come and free the souls (which include an all-star cast of  
Biblical figures such as Abraham, Isaiah, David, and even Adam), he has the 
 angels bind Satan and hand him over to Hades to be held until his second 
coming.  The god of the underworld then poetically rebukes the angel of 
darkness: 
O Beelzebub, heir of fire and torment, enemy of the saints, through what  
necessity did you contrive that the King of Glory should be crucified, so 
that  he should come here and strip us naked? Turn and see that not one dead 
man is  left in me, but all that you gained through the tree of knowledge you 
have  lost through the tree of the cross.
Satan has thus not yet become the overlord of Hell, a role he so often 
plays  in the imagination of Christians today. Rather, the Christians of this 
period  still saw Hades as the god of the underworld, or at least the 
embodiment of  death and the unblessed afterlife. (Nicodemus goes on to show 
the few 
 folks who are in heaven: Enoch and Elijah, and the “good thief” crucified 
with  Jesus.) 
The Gospel of Nicodemus serves as yet another reminder that  Christianity 
arose in the Greco-Roman world, absorbing much of its aesthetic  along the 
way, and passing it to us in a wonderfully blended concoction. It also  
problematizes present-day visions of the fiery eternal punishment that we are  
everywhere served up, from the Left Behind series to  the _disturbing Hell 
Houses_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hell_house)  that each Halloween crop  up 
in fundamentalist circles. The truth is that our ideas about Hell are the  
product of a long process — not a neatly transmitted one — that blended 
Hebrew,  Greek, Roman, and other mythologies. Christians are reinventing them 
today as  much as they did two millennia ago.

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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