Sheol is used in
the Old Testament to refer to the land of the dead, but it is not a well-defined
location. Unlike the clarity we get in the New Testament about the afterlife as a division between the righteous and the unrighteous (Luke
16:19–31), Sheol is a more general term for the nether region. The word itself simply
means “the grave” or “the place of the dead.” Within it, both the righteous (Psalm
16:10) and unrighteous (Psalm 9:17) reside. It’s a place where there is some
level of conscious awareness (Isaiah 14:9–11). Scripture
describes it as a place of darkness and as a place where one is cut off from God’s active
presence (e.g., Psalm 88:3–6). However, it’s clearly a temporary place from
which both the righteous and unrighteous will be resurrected before facing
either judgment or commendation (Daniel 12:2). Not having much
clarity on what this time will “feel” like, we must learn to trust God even in
death. We also must use what clarity we do have, particularly about the eternal
state after Jesus returns, to warn unbelievers away from that fate
before they die.
Before Jesus rose, Sheol/Hades is described as the temporary realm of the dead where both the righteous and unrighteous awaited resurrection and judgment. The righteous were depicted as being in comfort, while the unrighteous were in torment, still awaiting the final judgment.
But after Jesus’ death and resurrection, something decisive changed in the New Testament understanding of the righteous dead. Jesus tells the thief on the cross, “Today you will be with me in paradise” (Luke 23:43), indicating immediate conscious fellowship with Him after death. Paul later expresses confidence that to be “away from the body” is to be “at home with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8), and that departing is “to be with Christ, which is far better” (Philippians 1:23). Therefore, we can say that believers no longer go to Sheol/Hades in the Old Testament sense of the intermediate realm but now go directly into the presence of Christ.
At the same time, the New Testament still affirms a future bodily resurrection when Christ returns (1 Thessalonians 4:16–17). So believers who die are presently with the Lord in heaven, awaiting the resurrection of their bodies and the new creation.
So death for the believer is no longer a shadowy waiting room but a doorway straight into the presence of Christ, while still holding onto the promise that the story is not finished yet. We don’t just “go somewhere” when we die; we go to Someone, and we wait with certainty for the day He makes all things new.