.
● Luke 16:22-23 . . It came to pass that the rich man died, and was buried.
And in Hades . . .
"Hades" is translated from the Greek word haides (hah'-dace) which, in the
ancient Hellenistic culture, was an afterlife facility where all the dead went--
the good dead as well as the bad dead --regardless of age, race, sex, gender
identity, political ideology, and/or religious preference. Jesus spent some
time in Hades prior to his crucified dead body's resurrection. (Acts 2:22-32)
* The Jews spent some time under the influence of Greek culture prior to the
Romans taking them over so it's no surprise they would pick up some of the
Grecian's afterlife terminology.
Hades is divided into sections to which the souls of the dead are assigned in
accordance with the quality of their past life's existence. The best section is
called Paradise (Luke 23:42) whereas the worst section is a deep abyss
called Tartarus. (2Pet 2:4)
● Luke 16:23-25 . . The rich man looked up and saw Abraham far away. So
he called to him: Father Abraham, have pity on me. But Abraham replied:
Son, remember . . .
I should think that one of the negative aspects of perdition is memory. How
people in the afterlife retain their memories sans the brain cells they left
behind with their corpse, I don't know; but they do. Apparently God has
some sort of file transfer protocol that Silicon Valley has yet to discover.
The older one gets, the more memories they accumulate, and many of those
memories haunt us with terrible regret. However, people in Hell not only
have to cope with their bad memories, but also the good ones too, and I
should think it's remembering the good things they enjoyed in life that
makes their situation only worse in the heat. Smart folks deal with their
regrets by unifying with Christ as joint principals with him in his crucifixion
and resurrection per Rom 5:12-21 & Rom 6:3-11, but the dummies? No;
their past will always be an albatross hung around their neck.
_