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ABADDON:

a-bad'-on ('abhaddon, "ruin," "perdition," "destruction"): Though "destruction" is commonly used in translating 'abhaddon, the stem idea is intransitive rather than passive--the idea of perishing, going to ruin, being in a ruined state, rather than that of being ruined, being destroyed.

The word occurs six times in the Old Testament, always as a place name in the sense in which Sheol is a place name. It denotes, in certain aspects, the world of the dead as constructed in the Hebrew imagination. It is a common mistake to understand such expressions in a too mechanical way. Like ourselves, the men of the earlier ages had to use picture language when they spoke of the conditions that existed after death, however their picturing of the matter may have differed from ours. In three instances Abaddon is parallel with Sheol (Job 26:6; Pr 15:11; 27:20). In one instance it is parallel with death, in one with the grave and in the remaining instance the parallel phrase is "root out all mine increase" (Job 28:22; Ps 88:11; Job 31:12). In this last passage the place idea comes nearer to vanishing in an abstract conception than in the other passages.

Abaddon belongs to the realm of the mysterious. Only God understands it (Job 26:6; Pr 15:11). It is the world of the dead in its utterly dismal, destructive, dreadful aspect, not in those more cheerful aspects in which activities are conceived of as in progress there. In Abaddon there are no declarations of God's lovingkindness (Ps 88:11).

In a slight degree the Old Testament presentations personalize Abaddon. It is a synonym for insatiableness (Pr 27:20). It has possibilities of information mediate between those of "all living" and those of God (Job 28:22).

In the New Testament the word occurs once (Re 9:11), the personalization becoming sharp. Abaddon is here not the world of the dead, but the angel who reigns over it. The Greek equivalent of his name is given as Apollyon. Under this name Bunyan presents him in the Pilgrim's Progress, and Christendom has doubtless been more interested in this presentation of the matter than in any other.

In some treatments Abaddon is connected with the evil spirit Asmodeus of Tobit (e.g. 3:8), and with the destroyer mentioned in The Wisdom of Solomon (18:25; compare 22), and through these with a large body of rabbinical folklore; but these efforts are simply groundless. See APOLLYON . Willis J. Beecher

 

List of Articles
번호 분류 제목
51 A ABIGAIL; ABIGAL
50 A ABIEZRITE
49 A ABIEZER
48 A ABIEL
47 A ABIDE
46 A ABIDAN
45 A ABIDAH
44 A ABIDA
43 A ABIB
42 A ABIATHAR
41 A ABIASAPH
40 A ABIA; ABIAH
39 A ABI-ALBON
38 A ABI (2)
37 A ABI (1)
36 A ABHOR
35 A ABGAR; ABGARUS; ABAGARUS
34 A ABEZ
33 A ABEL-SHITTIM
32 A ABEL-MIZRAIM
31 A ABEL-MEHOLAH
30 A ABEL-MAIM
29 A ABEL-CHERAMIM
28 A ABEL-BETH-MAACAH
27 A ABEL (2)
26 A ABEL (1)
25 A ABED-NEGO
24 A ABDON (2)
23 A ABDON (1)
22 A ABDIEL
21 A ABDIAS
20 A ABDI
19 A ABDEEL
18 A ABDA
17 A ABBA
16 A ABATE
15 A ABASE
14 A ABARIM
13 A ABANAH
12 A ABAGTHA
11 A ABAGARUS
10 A ABADIAS
» A ABADDON
8 A ABACUC
7 A AB (2)
6 A AB
5 A AARONITES
4 A AARON'S ROD
3 A Aaron
2 A AALAR
1 A A
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