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  1. The word "paradise" is probably of Persian origin. It occurs but three times in the Old Testament, namely, in Cant. iv. 13, Eccl. ii. 5, and Neh. ii. 8. In the first of these passages it means "garden"; in the second and third, "park."

  2. Jan 15, 2019 · The word paradise in Aramaic is paradesa, which is a loan word from the Persian language. It means a garden of pleasure. Some say it is the Garden of Eden, but Jesus would have said that it was Eden.

  3. Nov 8, 2024 · Abraham’s bosom is obviously a place of peace, rest, and joy after death—paradise. In the Hebrew Scriptures, the word used to denote the realm of the dead is sheol. It simply means “the place of the dead” or “the place of departed souls/spirits.”

  4. I would add: The rabbis refer to the mystical meaning of scripture as Paradise, where the consonants are the same in Hebrew and English. Specifically it refers to the hermeneutic method of PaRDeS, refering to the four layers of interpretation. Pashat - Literal, Remez - Hints, Drash - Compare and contrast, & Sod - hidden.

  5. Paradise. Persian loanword for "an area enclosed by a wall" or "garden." Its three uses in the Hebrew Bible ( Neh 2:8; Eccl 2:5; Sol 4:13) retain this meaning.The Septuagint uses the Greek paradeisos [paravdeiso"] for the garden of Eden in Genesis (called the "garden of God" in Isa 51:3; and Ezek 28:13).

  6. Paradise in Hebrew . The word “paradise” derives from the Biblical Hebrew word for a walled-in garden: pardes (פרדס). We can see the true meaning of paradise in the Song of Solomon 4:13: “Your channel is an orchard (pardes =פרדס) of pomegranates with all choicest fruits.”

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  8. As elusive as the identification of the rivers of paradise is the meaning of "the tree of knowledge of good and bad" (ʿeẓ hadaʿat tov wa-raʿ; for the syntax cf. ha-daʿat ʾoti in Jer. 22:16). Several theories have been proposed over the centuries, but none has won general acceptance. MORAL DISCERNMENT

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