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It also leads to some interesting cross-cultural concepts based on differences in mythology. It shows how many beliefs are more intertwined that we might have first imagined. It ALSO suggests that our ideas about afterlife are part of many cultures.
If we say "It will be a cold day in Hell before X happens." - in Norse mythology, Hell already IS frozen. EVERY day is cold because Hel (with one L) is in a corner of the realm called Frostheim. It is where you go if you died a quiet death rather than a warrior's death. We get the name "Hell" from Hela, the Norse goddess of death, who rules over that region. If you died the noble death of an heroic warrior, you went to Valhalla where you had the company of other heroes in a boisterous feasting hall with unending food and fermented beverages, and the camaraderie of others who chose a noble death.
If you look at Islamic deaths, those who died the death of a hero went to a garden-like place of feasting, but you also got 72 virgins to tend to your needs and, IF I recall the myth correctly (which is not a guarantee), the virgins miraculously regained their virginity after they tended to you. To be fair, not all beliefs go this way, and the description could be interpreted as 72 angelic attendants. The name of this place, jannet 'adn, translates to Garden of Eden. (Yes, THAT Garden of Eden!) Their Hell is Jahannam, which is oddly similar to the Greek Gehenna, which in turn is probably derived from Hebrew ge Hinnom ("valley of Hinnom"), a place where bloody pagan sacrifices occurred, as noted in the history of the area.
In Greek mythology, we don't go to Hell, we are condemned to the pits of Tartarus, which is volcanic. There, we go to Hades. Recognize that name? Hades isn't a place, though. There, you go to the Devil. Hades is the name of the ruler of Tartarus, the final "resting" place of lost souls who perpetually grieve the things they have lost - presumably because they valued material things over love. The area is actually called Gehenna (see above.) If you were a good person, you might go to Elysian Fields, a perpetual and idyllic garden - much like the image of the"Garden of Eden." The REALLY good people got a corner of that area as a staging place for their return to a new life (reincarnation).
If you look at early Hebrew ideas about death, go no farther than Ecclesiastes 9:5 (and a few more verses) to find that early Jewish beliefs were that ALL deaths are final and absolute. No awareness, no sorrow, no pain, no joy, ... NOTHING. It wasn't until later that the "fiery Hell" and "idyllic Heaven" became commonplace, probably after the Jews had contact with Greek culture and liked their idea of an afterlife.
If we say "It will be a cold day in Hell before X happens." - in Norse mythology, Hell already IS frozen. EVERY day is cold because Hel (with one L) is in a corner of the realm called Frostheim. It is where you go if you died a quiet death rather than a warrior's death. We get the name "Hell" from Hela, the Norse goddess of death, who rules over that region. If you died the noble death of an heroic warrior, you went to Valhalla where you had the company of other heroes in a boisterous feasting hall with unending food and fermented beverages, and the camaraderie of others who chose a noble death.
If you look at Islamic deaths, those who died the death of a hero went to a garden-like place of feasting, but you also got 72 virgins to tend to your needs and, IF I recall the myth correctly (which is not a guarantee), the virgins miraculously regained their virginity after they tended to you. To be fair, not all beliefs go this way, and the description could be interpreted as 72 angelic attendants. The name of this place, jannet 'adn, translates to Garden of Eden. (Yes, THAT Garden of Eden!) Their Hell is Jahannam, which is oddly similar to the Greek Gehenna, which in turn is probably derived from Hebrew ge Hinnom ("valley of Hinnom"), a place where bloody pagan sacrifices occurred, as noted in the history of the area.
In Greek mythology, we don't go to Hell, we are condemned to the pits of Tartarus, which is volcanic. There, we go to Hades. Recognize that name? Hades isn't a place, though. There, you go to the Devil. Hades is the name of the ruler of Tartarus, the final "resting" place of lost souls who perpetually grieve the things they have lost - presumably because they valued material things over love. The area is actually called Gehenna (see above.) If you were a good person, you might go to Elysian Fields, a perpetual and idyllic garden - much like the image of the"Garden of Eden." The REALLY good people got a corner of that area as a staging place for their return to a new life (reincarnation).
If you look at early Hebrew ideas about death, go no farther than Ecclesiastes 9:5 (and a few more verses) to find that early Jewish beliefs were that ALL deaths are final and absolute. No awareness, no sorrow, no pain, no joy, ... NOTHING. It wasn't until later that the "fiery Hell" and "idyllic Heaven" became commonplace, probably after the Jews had contact with Greek culture and liked their idea of an afterlife.