Rather, in order to portray the event of the Resurrection, the Byzantine tradition depicts Christ’s descent into hell. This might seem a bit strange at first: however related the events are, they don’t seem to be the same thing, and we might initially think that the descent into hell precedes the Resurrection.
In fact, though, this image draws us into the very heart of the Easter mystery, for when we talk about the moment of the Resurrection, we are talking about the moment of Christ’s victory, and that is what this icon shows. Here we see Jesus standing on the broken gates of hell, which he has destroyed by his redeeming sacrifice. This is the moment of his conquest of the power of death and hell, and it is in that conquest of death that he rises, the first fruits of the dead, to the new life of the Resurrection. What is more, this icon reminds us that Christ’s Resurrection is not just something that happened to him, for this is the moment when the human race is set free from death, and so we see Christ raising Adam out of the tomb and drawing him to himself, He who is the Son of God and the source of life.
The message of this icon is summed up, too, in the words of the oft-repeated refrain of the Byzantine Easter liturgy: Christ has risen from the dead, conquering death by death, and unto those in the tombs giving life!
Did Christ descend to Hell? I beg to differ, he went to the kingdom of death and that's not the same lace as the abyss where God has prepared a prison for Satan and his angels.
ReplyDeleteAlma Mater, a Swedsh keen reader of your beautiful Blog
You may wish to consider this article from the Summa Theologiæ of St Thomas Aquinas which addresses the doctrine of Christ's descent into hell: http://www.newadvent.org/summa/4052.htm
ReplyDeletePart of the confusion may be linguistic. The word 'inferos', into which Christ descended, has been translated into 'hell' in (old) English, but is sometimes now rendered as 'death', 'the dead', or even 'kingdom of the dead', as you say.