Hell, Sheol, Hades, Paradise, and
the Grave
By W. Edward Bedore, Th.D.
Executive Director, Berean Bible Institute
There seems to be some confusion about the meaning of Hell
and who goes there because of the way the Hebrew word
Sheol and the Greek word Hades have been translated in our English Bibles.
Since this confusion has led some into an erroneous understanding of
what the Bible actually teaches about the intermediate state and the
final state of the dead, we think that it is important that we address
this subject here.
Sheol is found in the Bible sixty-five times. It is translated
"the pit" three times, "the grave" thirty-one times, and "hell"
thirty-one times. Hades is used eleven times, being rendered "hell" ten
times and "grave" once. Adding to the confusion is that two other words
are also translated hell in the New Testament. These are
Tartarus, which is found once and
Gehenna, which is used twelve times.
The term "Hell" is commonly understood to mean a place of
torment where the souls of the wicked go after physical death. This
is true. However, because Hades in the New Testament and Sheol
in the Old are variously rendered hell or grave, there has been
some misunderstanding about what hell and the grave are. Before
looking at these words though, we should first give our attention to the
Greek word Gehenna, which is always translated hell and used in
reference to the Lake of Fire. It is found in Matthew 5:22,29,30; 10:28;
18:9; 23:15,33; Mark 9:43,45,47; Luke 12:5; and James 3:6.
THE FINAL HELL
The Lake of Fire, or Hell, is a literal place of everlasting fire
that was originally created by God as a place of punishment for Satan
and the angels that followed him in his rebellion against God (Mat. 25:41).
Because it is referred to as the place of "outer
darkness" (Mat. 8:12; 25:30), we believe that it is most probably located at the
farthest reaches of the creation. Gehenna is described in Scripture as a
"furnace of fire" (Mat. 13:42);
"everlasting punishment" (Mat. 25:46);
"the mist [gloom] of
darkness" (II Pet. 2:17); the "hurt of the second
death" (Rev. 2:11 cf. 20:6,14; 21:8); "a lake of fire burning with
brimstone" (Rev. 19:20; 20:10; 21:8).
While Hell was created for Satan and the other fallen angels,
the unsaved of humanity from all ages will be with them in this place
of torment where "there will be wailing and gnashing of
teeth" (Mat. 13:42). This is the "everlasting reward" of all that die in their sins.
While there is no one in the Lake of Fire at this time, it will
one day hold a vast multitude. The first residents of this place of
righteous retribution will be the Beast (Antichrist) and the False
Prophet who, at the end of the Tribulation, will be
"cast alive into a lake burning with
brimstone" (Rev. 19:19-20). Joining them will be the
unsaved of the nations who survive the Tribulation (Mat. 25:31-32,41-46).
Also, at Jesus Christ's return to earth, the rebel Israelites, i.e.
unbelieving Jews, who survive the Tribulation, will be denied
entrance into the Millennial Kingdom, no doubt to join their Gentile
counterparts in the "place of everlasting
fire" (Eze. 20:33-38; Mat. 7:21-23;
cf. Mat. 24:29-31,45-51). Then, at the end of the Millennial Kingdom
of Jesus Christ, Satan will be "cast into the lake of fire and
brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented
day and night forever and ever" (Rev. 20:10). And finally, the
unsaved dead of all ages will be raised and judged at the Great White
Throne by Jesus Christ and then cast into the Lake of Fire (see Rev.
20:11-15).
The name Gehenna comes from a deep narrow ravine south
of Jerusalem where some Hebrew parents actually sacrificed their
children to the Ammonite god, Molech, during the time of the kings
(II Kin. 16;3; II Chron. 28:1-3; cf. Lev. 18:21; I Kin. 11:5,7,33). This
pagan deity is also referred to as Malcham, Milcom, and Moloch in
the Bible. This valley later served as the city dump and, because
there was continual burning of refuse there, it became a graphic symbol
of the place of punishment for the wicked. It was named the "Valley
of Hinnom," which translated into Greek becomes Gehenna. The
passages where the word is found in the New Testament plainly
show that it was a commonly used expression for Hell by that time.
The word is found twelve times in the Scriptures, being used eleven
times by the Lord Jesus and once by James. When we consider the
context, it is clear the Lord used this word in reference to the place of
everlasting punishment for the wicked dead and not to the city dump.
Gehenna, or the Lake of Fire, might be referred to as the future,
or final, Hell because it is where all of the wicked from all ages
will finally end up. Satan, the fallen angels, and all of the lost of
mankind will reside in torment there forever and ever.
SHEOL/HADES: THE PRESENT HELL
Scripture passages in which Gehenna is used should be
distinguished from those using Hades, which refers to a place of
temporary torment that we might refer to as the immediate, or present, Hell.
What we mean by this is that, at the time of death, the souls of
the lost go directly to Hades, where they suffer in torment until the
time of the Great White Throne Judgment when they will be
resurrected and cast into the Lake of Fire. The souls of all the lost who
have already died are presently there and those who die in their sins
immediately go there to join them.
Hades is the New Testament equivalent of the Old Testament
word Sheol. The Greek and Hebrew words speak of the same place,
the present Hell. However, this is problematic because Sheol has
been translated "grave" as often as it has "hell" and some have
mistakenly taught that Sheol and Hades are only references to the grave
rather than Hell. This erroneous teaching leads to the denial of the
existence of an immediate or present Hell. The false doctrine of
soul-sleep, and other ideas that teach the unconscious state of the
dead between death and resurrection, spring from this error.
The common word for "grave" in the Old Testament is
queber. Of the sixty-four times it is used, it is translated "grave" thirty-four
times, "sepulcher" twenty-six times, and "burying place" four times.
Queber is used five additional times as part of a place name,
Kibroth-hattaavah, which means "graves of lust." As we said earlier, Sheol
is found sixty-four times, being rendered "grave" thirty-one times,
"hell" thirty-one times, and "pit" three times.
A comparison of how Sheol and queber
are used reveals eight points of contrast that tell us that they are not the same thing.
1. Sheol is never used in plural
form. Queber is used in the plural 29 times.
2. It is never said that the body goes to
Sheol. Queber speaks of the body going there 37 times.
3. Sheol is never said to be located on the face of the earth.
Queber is mentioned 32 times as being located on the earth.
4. An individual's Sheol is never mentioned. An individual's
queber is mentioned 5 times.
5. Man is never said to put anyone into
Sheol. Individuals are put into a
queber by man (33 times).
6. Man is never said to have dug or fashioned a
Sheol. Man is said to have dug, or fashioned, a
queber (6 times).
7. Man is never said to have touched
Sheol. Man touches, or can touch, a
queber (5 times).
8. It is never said that man is able to possess a
Sheol. Man is spoken of as being able to possess a
queber (7 times). (These eight points of comparison are adapted from
"Life and Death" by Caleb J. Baker,
Bible Institute Colportage Ass'n, 1941).
From the differences between how Sheol and
queber are used in Scripture, it is obvious that they are not the same thing. The
Greek word Hades in the New Testament would fit into the Sheol column
of our chart, strongly indicating that it is the same thing as Sheol.
Hades is used eleven times, being rendered Hell ten times and grave once.
Words associated with queber are
quabar and qeburah. Quabar
is a verb meaning to bury or to be buried and
qeburah is a noun meaning a grave or place of burial. The use of these related words helps
to reinforce the difference between queber and
Sheol, as they clearly have to do with the grave as a burial place, while Sheol does not.
EXAMPLES SHOWING THAT SHEOL IS NOT A
BURIAL PLACE
1. After selling Joseph into slavery, his brothers stained his
coat with blood and used it to convince their father that he had been
killed by a wild animal (Gen. 37:26-36). Jacob's sons and daughters
tried "to comfort him; but he refused to be comforted; and he said, `for I
will go down into the grave (Sheol) unto my son mourning'. Thus his
father wept for him" (v. 35).
From Jacob's words it is clear that he fully intended to
eventually be reunited with his son in a tangible way. Obviously then, he did
not simply have in mind the idea of joining him in burial as he
believed that Joseph's body had not been buried at all, but was eaten by
an animal (v. 33). This being the case, it was impossible for Jacob
to think he would join Joseph in burial. Obviously, he looked forward
to being reunited with him in the place of the departed dead, not
in burial. The word rendered grave in this passage is
Sheol, the abode of the souls of those who have died.
2. After Jacob died, Joseph had his body mummified, a
process that took forty days, then took him back to Canaan for burial
(Gen. 50:1-14). When we add to that the thirty days of mourning
(Gen. 50:2-4), and the time it took to travel to Canaan for the funeral
(Gen. 50:5-13), we see that it was several weeks after Jacob was
"gathered unto his people" (Gen. 49:33) before his body was placed in the
cave that served as his burial place. Considering that he had been
dead for well over two months before his body was buried and that
the Scriptures state that at the time he died he was
"gathered to his people" (Gen. 49:33) is telling. This shows that at the time of physical
death, when "he yielded up the spirit," his soul immediately departed
his body to be with Isaac and Abraham. This cannot be a reference to
his body being gathered together with their bodies, as that did not
take place for over ten weeks. This is strong proof that Sheol does
not mean a burial place for the body, but is the place where the souls
of the departed reside.
3. That communication takes place in Sheol/Hades tells us
that something other than a burial place is in view. In Isaiah 14:4-20,
we find the prophet foretelling the eventual defeat and death of the
king of Babylon. The nation that would eventually send Judah into
captivity will itself be defeated and its mighty king will find
himself among "the chief ones of the earth...the kings of the
nations" (Isa. 14:9) who preceded him in death. These are the kings of nations that
he had conquered with the sword and ruled over with a cruel hand
(Isa. 14:6). These same men will serve as a welcoming committee for
this once great "world ruler" when he arrives in Sheol/Hades. In
mock surprise, they will ask this once powerful king,
"Art thou also become weak as we? Are thou become like unto
us?" (Isa. 14:10). They then taunt him by pointing out that the pretentious display of
magnificence that he had demonstrated as the king of Babylon now
meant nothing (Isa. 14:11).
All of those who find themselves in this section of
Sheol/Hades, like the king of Babylon and the kings who greeted him, will be
faced with the reality of how helpless and hopeless they are. One of
the boasts these kings make against him is that, while their bodies
have been placed in their respective tombs, or graves, he was not
honored by a respectable burial, "But thou are cast out of the grave
(queber) like an abominable (despised) branch
thou shalt not be joined
with them in burial" (Isa. 14:18-20).
Obviously, if his body was not in any grave at all, he was not simply joining them in burial.
What we see here is this man going into Sheol, while at the
same time his body is cast out of its grave. Obviously then, Sheol cannot
be the grave here as the body and soul are in different places, the
soul going to Sheol while the body remains unburied, or outside of
the grave (vs. 20) to be infested by maggots (vs. 11). It is true that this
is a prophetic passage; and there are various opinions as to the
identity of the person in view here (verses 12-15 are commonly thought
to refer to Satan, the power behind the Gentile kings). But,
regardless of who this prophecy is about, or whether it has already been
fulfilled or not, does not change the fact that Sheol and the grave are to
be regarded as different places in this passage of Scripture.
4. In the case of Samuel and Saul, we find another example of
the Scriptures making a distinction between Sheol/Hades and the grave.
In his conversation with King Saul, Samuel, whom the Lord had
sent back from the dead to deliver a message to Saul, said that Saul
and his sons would be with him the next day (see I Sam. 28:15-19).
As foretold, Saul and his sons did die the next day while in battle
with the Philistines (see I Sam. 31:1-6). However, their bodies were
not buried the next day, so they did not join Samuel in the grave but
their souls went down to Sheol/Hades where the person, or soul, of
Samuel was. As it is said that Samuel "came up" it seems obvious that
he went back down after speaking with Saul (I Sam. 28:8,11,14). As
for the bodies of Saul and his sons, their remains were not buried
for several days. As Samuel had said, they died the next day (I
Sam. 31:1-6). But it was the day after they died that their bodies
were taken by the Philistines and hung on the wall of Beth-Shan (I
Sam. 31:7-10). After hearing of this, valiant men from Jabesh-Gilead
went by night and removed their bodies, took them to Jabesh, burned
them, and then buried their bones. All this took place at least three
days after Saul had died, and probably longer. Saul and his sons
joined Samuel in Sheol/Hades the day they died and the flesh of their
bodies was burned with only their bones being placed in a grave
several days later. Obviously Sheol/Hades and the grave are not the
same thing, nor are they in the same place.
The story of the Rich Man and Lazarus that is found in Luke
16:19-31 gives us the record of a remarkable conversation that took
place in Hades between the Rich Man and Abraham. Obviously, these
two men could not have had this conversation at all if Sheol/Hades
is only a place where dead bodies are buried. First, there could be
no communication between lifeless, decaying corpses and
second, Abraham's body, which was buried in the cave of Machpelah
over 1800 years earlier, had long since decayed. Also, the rich man's
body, regardless of whether it had decayed or not, would not have
been buried in the burial cave of Abraham. From the context, it is
obvious that these men were in the place of departed souls rather than
a burial place.
There are some that contend that this is a parable that never
actually took place and deny that it could have ever taken place. To
these, who usually hold to a position of soul-sleep or the eradication of
the soul at death, we answer; the Lord said that it did take place.
Besides, as we have already pointed out, a parable by definition is
a "true to life" story. To have meaning, it must be a story that
could have actually taken place whether it ever did or not.
DEATH AND SHEOL
Death and Sheol/Hades are linked together at least
thirty-three times in the Scriptures. In these, we see a general distinction
between the "outward man," which is the body and the "inward
man," which is the soul (cf. II Cor. 4:16). In this sense, death, or the
grave, claims the physical part of man, the body, while Sheol/Hades
claims the separated, spiritual part of man, the soul. This is exactly
the meaning of Psalm 16:10: "For Thou wilt not leave my soul in
Hell (Sheol); neither will Thou suffer Thine Holy One to see
corruption." In his Pentecostal address, Peter left no room for doubt that this
was a prophetic pronouncement concerning the time between the
Lord Jesus Christ's death on the Cross and His resurrection. First,
he quoted Psalm 16:8-11 (Acts 2:25-28) and then made direct
application of verse 10 to Christ (Acts 2:31). Not only was the Lord
Jesus' soul not left in Sheol/Hades, but neither was His body left to rot
in the grave. That Peter used Hades, the place of Sheol, in this
quotation shows that they are identical in meaning.
Of course, the Lord Jesus Christ is exceptional because He had
the power not only to lay down His life on our behalf, but also to take
it up again (Jn. 10:17,18). This is not so of any other man, as the
Psalmist points out when he asks, rhetorically,
"What man is he that liveth and shall not see death? Shall he deliver his soul from the hand of
the grave (Sheol)?" (Ps. 89:48). Because of the curse of sin, all of
mankind faces the reality of physical death. None can evade it by their
own power, nor can any man or woman escape from Sheol/Hades on
their own. We know that since the Cross the souls of those who die
"in Christ" do not go to Sheol/Hades, but to heaven. However, this
is through the merit of Jesus Christ and His power, not their own.
For those "in Christ," death has no sting and Sheol/Hades has no
victory because their body and soul will be united in a resurrection unto
life (see I Cor. 15:19,20,51-57). This is as certain as the fact of
Jesus Christ's resurrection. This is not so for those who die without
Christ for they face a resurrection unto judgment, which is referred to
as the "second death" (Rev. 20:13,14; 21:8).
Psalm 89:48 speaks of the time when the soul is separated
from the body. The body is given over to death where it will decay,
while the soul is assigned to Sheol/Hades to await the final judgment. It
is clear that the body and soul of the lost will be reunited at the time
of the Great White Throne Judgment of the unsaved dead, when
"death and Hades" will deliver up the dead that are in them. That is,
their bodies will be raised from the grave, or death, and reunited with
the soul, which will come out of Sheol/Hades to be judged by Jesus
Christ at the Great White Throne (see Rev. 20:11-15; cf. Jn. 5:28,29).
When the Lord Jesus said that "as Jonah was three days and
three nights in the whale's belly; so shall the Son of Man be three days
and three nights in the heart of the earth"
(Mat. 12:40), He was saying that He would spend the time between His death and resurrection
in Sheol/Hades. We know from Psalm 16:10 and Acts 2:25-32 that
the Lord's soul, which was made an offering for sin (Isa. 53:10), was
in Sheol/Hades, and we know from Matthew 12:40 that He was in
the heart of the earth, which is where we believe that Sheol/Hades
is located.
When we speak of the heart of something, we are not referring
to that which is superficial or only skin-deep. Symbolically, the
heart signifies the innermost character, feelings, or inclinations of a man.
The heart is also used when referring to the center, or core, of
something. For example; it is sometimes said, "the heart of a
watermelon is the best part," meaning that the center part of the
watermelon tastes better than the part closer to the rind. If we say that we
have a "heart-felt desire" for a particular area of ministry, we would
be speaking of a yearning to do the Lord's work that comes from
our innermost being as opposed to a superficial desire based on the
emotions of the moment. When used figuratively in the Scriptures,
the word "heart" is used in a similar fashion, thus the heart of the
earth gives reference to something much deeper than a simple place of
burial for a man's body barely under the surface of the earth. That it is
said that before His ascension the Lord Jesus first descended
"into the lower parts of the
earth" (Eph. 4:9) affirms this. In a Psalm of
thanksgiving for being delivered from death, David makes reference to
this by distinguishing between Sheol/Hades (rendered grave in the
KJV) and Queber (rendered pit in this passage) (Ps. 30:1-3).
In Ezekiel we find prophecies against the kings of Assyria
(Ezek. 31) and Egypt (Ezek. 32) that indicate that Sheol/Hades is in
the center of the earth. In these two chapters it speaks of the fall of
these mighty kings, who in death ended up in the underworld with
those who have gone before them. We do not have the space here to
give extensive commentary on these two chapters. But we do want
to point out that in regard to both kings it is said that in death
they would go "to the nether parts of the earth...with them that go
down into the pit" (see Ezek. 31:14,16,18; 32:18,24), the
"nether parts" being the lower regions of the earth. We should take note that in
chapter thirty-one it is being pointed out to Pharaoh that just as the king
of Assyria, who was greater than he was, had died and gone into
the underworld, so would he.
In chapter thirty-two we find a prophecy, given in the form of
a lamentation, foretelling Pharaoh's defeat by the king of Babylon
(Ezek. 32:1-16). This is followed by a lamentation over the multitude
of Egyptians who would be slain by the Babylonians (Ezek. 31:17-31).
We have pictured for us those of the nations who preceded
them, welcoming Pharaoh and his host as they arrived in Sheol/Hades
by taunting them. They point out that the Egyptians had thought
themselves to be invincible because of their strength and fame among
the nations. But now they were just like the great nations who had
gone before them, their individual souls being confined to
Sheol/Hades while their bodies decay in the grave.
"The strong among the mighty shall speak to him out of the
midst of hell (Sheol)..." (Ezek. 32:21). The "strong among the mighty"
spoken of here refers to the men who had been the kings and leaders
of the different nations that are mentioned in this passage: Asshor,
or Assyria (v. 22), Elam (v. 24), Meshech and Tubal (v. 26), Edom,
her kings and her princes (v. 29), the princes of the north and the
Zidonians (v. 30). This passage shows that while those of each group
mentioned are in their respective burial places, their
quebers, they are at the same time all together in "the pit," which is an expression that
is sometimes used for Sheol/Hades (vv. 18,25,29). These are
similar examples as that found in Isaiah 14, which we have previously
looked at.
While we have not exhausted the subject by looking at every
passage that Sheol is found in, it is clear from these examples that
Sheol is not simply the grave but is located at the center of the earth and
is the abode of the souls of the unrighteous dead who are awaiting
their resurrection unto condemnation. It is equally clear that those in
Sheol/Hades are not in an unconscious state of existence but are quite
aware of what is going on around them. There is memory, recognition,
and communication there.
TARTARUS
The Apostle Peter used the word Tartarus in reference to
"the angels that sinned" that God delivered to Sheol/Hades to await
judgment (II Pet. 2:4). This word, which is translated "hell" in the
KJV, was used in Greek mythology to refer to the place of punishment
for the most wicked. It is not clear if Peter was using this word in
reference to Sheol/Hades in a general way or if he was referring to a
specific compartment of Sheol/Hades where a certain class of fallen
angels are confined awaiting final judgment. Either way, this passage
teaches that there is a place of confinement in which a particular group
of beings are being held until the time of their judgment. This is
consistent with the overall Biblical teaching about the existence and
purpose of Sheol/Hades.
PARADISE
While Paradise is not now a part of Sheol/Hades it will be
mentioned here because it was located in Sheol/Hades at one time.
Before the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ
everybody who died went to Sheol/Hades, which was at that time divided into
at least two compartments. One was a place of torment while the
other was a place of blessing, which was referred to as Abraham's
Bosom (Lk. 16:22-25). As we mentioned before, Tartarus may be a
specific place in Sheol/Hades.
We know that Jesus Christ went "into the lower parts of the
earth" (Eph. 4:9), that is to Sheol/Hades, "in the heart of the earth," for
three days and nights while his body was in the grave (Mat. 12:40).
The Lord Jesus told the repentant thief that he would join Him in
Paradise that same day (Lk. 23:42,43). This tells us that Paradise
was located in Sheol/Hades at that time. We believe that this was
the same place referred to as Abraham's Bosom in Luke 16.
However, after Jesus Christ rose from the dead He ascended to the
Father, taking the saints who were in Abraham's Bosom to heaven with Him.
Thus, He took "captivity
captive" (see Eph. 4:8-10).
That Paradise was moved to heaven is confirmed to us by
the Apostle Paul who speaks of a man who was "caught up into
Paradise" where he "heard unspeakable
words" (II Cor. 12:3,4). With Jesus Christ's work complete, the believers who had been confined to
Sheol/Hades were now taken to Heaven to wait in God's presence until
the time of their resurrection to enter His Kingdom on Earth. Since
that time, at death all believers go to Paradise in Heaven to await
the time of their resurrection. This is true whether they belong to
the Kingdom Church of the future or the Body of Christ Church of
the present Dispensation of Grace.
THE GRAVE
We have already looked at the word
queber, the most common word for grave, or a burial place, in the Old Testament, and have
shown that it is not the same as Sheol. As previously stated, of the
sixty-four times it is used it is rendered "grave" thirty-four times,
"sepulcher" twenty-six times, and "burying place" four times. Two
other words that are used for a burial place in the Old Testament are
Shah-ghath and Qeburah.
Shah-ghath: This word is translated "grave" once (Job 33:22). It
is rendered "ditch" twice, "destruction" twice, "corruption" four
times, and "pit" thirteen times. This word speaks of something that
man can dig (Ps. 94:13; Prov. 26:27) and is used in reference to a hole
into which a man can fall (Ps. 7:15; Prov. 26:27), and a hole used as a
trap (Ps. 35:7). It is a place where the physical body suffers
destruction through the corruption of decay (Ps. 16:10; 49:9; 55:23). The
basic meaning is that of a hole of some kind that man digs for a
particular purpose. Generally, it is used of a burial place, i.e., a grave.
Qeburah: This word is related to queber
and means a grave or burial place. It is used of various types of graves and is found
fourteen times and is translated "grave" four times, "sepulcher" five
times, "burial" four times, and "burying place" one time.
In the New Testament we find three more words that refer to
the grave, taphos, mnema, and
mnemeion.
Taphos is used seven times and is translated "sepulcher" six
of those and "tomb" once.
Mnema is used seven times, being rendered "tomb" twice,
"grave" once, and "sepulcher" four times.
Mnemeion is the most common word for grave in the New
Testament. It is used forty-two times, five times as "tomb,"
twenty-nine times as "sepulcher," and eight times as "grave."
The grave is a place where the physical remains of those who
have died are deposited. It can be a hole in the ground, a cave, or a
specially prepared vault or other place used for interment. The soul
and spirit having departed the body at death, there is no consciousness
of life in the grave. It is a place of corruption that serves to point
out man's need of a Savior. The soul of man lives on after physical
death and will always remain in a conscious state of being. The unsaved
go to Sheol/Hades to await their resurrection unto condemnation
while the redeemed go to heaven to await their resurrection unto life
(see Jn. 5:25-29).
PRACTICAL APPLICATION FOR TODAY
A proper understanding of what the Bible teaches about Hell,
Sheol, Hades, and the Grave dispels confusion over what happens to
the soul at the time of physical death and guards against being led
astray by those teaching the false doctrines of soul-sleep, eradication of
the soul, the universal reconciliation of mankind, and the annihilation
of the lost. All of these erroneous doctrines are of Satan, used of him
to dishearten believers and blind the lost to the reality of the cost
of spurning the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Our thinking, and therefore
our life on a day-to-day basis, is influenced by what we believe.
While some of the false doctrines mentioned above are diametrically
opposed to each other, they still have one thing in common. They
subvert the truth of the immortality of the soul.
Questions or comments for Dr. Bedore should be addressed to
him directly at: Berean Bible Institute, P.O. Box 587, Slinger, WI 53086,
or by e-mail at: bbi@bereanbibleinstitute.org.