Storytelling for Radio & Podcast for the ORTHODOX ARTS FESTIVAL 2022 by Jonathan Jackson.
C.S. Lewis said, “The heart of Christianity is a myth, which is also a fact. The
old myth of the Dying God, without ceasing to be myth, comes down from
the heaven of legend and imagination to the earth of history.”
This story explores the epic question: What happened between Christ’s
crucifixion and resurrection? In the ancient Christian Tradition, it is said that
Christ not only suffered and died on the Cross physically, but that He also
descended into Hell (Hades to be more precise) to destroy the power of
death and rescue imprisoned souls, breaking the iron bars of Death and
Hades.
In this story, the foreshadowing of pagan myths finds their fulfillment in the
epic of Christ. The Harrowing of Hell is a glimpse into the untold chapter
of the Greatest Story ever told.
This is a work of historical fiction, I prefer to call it a poem because poetry brings us into the “sense of things”; it conveys truth through paradox, mystery, imagination and allegory, where concrete empirical knowledge runs out.
Although there is a great deal of imagination and poetry in this work of
historical fiction, the author seeks to render a faithful depiction of Christ as revealed in the New Testament and the ancient Christian Faith. It is a
painting, more than an icon.
As an Eastern Orthodox Christian, I have encountered a different
understanding of Hell, man’s free will and the mercy of God, then is often
articulated in Western traditions. It is a vision that is not widely known in
Europe or North America. It can be summed up by this phrase, “Even the
flames of Hell are love.”
Millions around the world are journeying through Great Lent on their way
towards the Resurrection of Christ. In these difficult and troubling times, it is
my humble prayer that this story will assist the listener’s meditation on the
mercy of God and the lengths to which He will go to rescue us from
darkness.
Many heroes have risen to the challenge. Only One has descended.
![](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/prQgiyqVIRw/maxresdefault.jpg)