The English word “eternal” in the Bible
most often translates two key biblical words. The Hebrew word ʿôlām (עוֹלָם)
and the Greek word aiōnios (αἰώνιος)
These words carry the idea of unending time, perpetual
duration, or that which belongs to the age to come. Yet each has nuances worth
exploring.
The Hebrew Word: עוֹלָם (ʿôlām)
Root idea: “hidden”, “concealed”, “beyond the
horizon”
Sense: a long duration, antiquity, perpetuity, or
endlessness.
ʿÔlām does not always strictly mean “eternal” in a
philosophical sense. Instead, it points to something so long-lasting that its
end is beyond sight, thus practically everlasting, depending on context.
Key Examples
- God’s
Eternal Nature
“The eternal God is a dwelling place…” (Deuteronomy
33:27)
Here ʿôlām refers to God’s unending existence, His
permanence and timelessness.
- Eternal
Covenant
“I will establish My covenant… for an everlasting
covenant.” (Genesis 17:7)
God’s covenants stemming from His character share this
sense of unending duration.
- Everlasting
Kingdom
“Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom.” (Psalm 145:13)
This expresses God’s rule as truly perpetual.
Though the word can sometimes refer to long but finite
periods (e.g., the “perpetual” priesthood of Aaron), when applied to God, His
attributes, or eschatological realities, ʿôlām takes on the sense of
true eternity.
The Greek Word: αἰώνιος (aiōnios)
Deriving from aiōn (“age”), aiōnios
means “eternal”, “everlasting”, “pertaining to the age to come” and “without
beginning or end”, depending on context.
In the New Testament, especially in the writings of John
and Paul, aiōnios commonly describes the unending life of God and the
unending consequences of His judgment.
Key Examples
- Eternal
Life
“For God so loved the world… that whoever believes in Him
shall not perish, but have eternal life.” (John 3:16)
Aiōnios zōē refers not just to duration but
quality, life that flows from God Himself.
- Eternal
Judgment
“These will go away into eternal punishment, but the
righteous into eternal life.” (Matthew 25:46)
Here the same adjective (aiōnios) describes both
outcomes, underscoring equal duration and permanence.
- Eternal
God
“To the eternal God, immortal, invisible…” (1 Timothy
1:17)
This reflects God’s timeless existence, He is beyond the
constraints of created time.
While aiōnios sometimes carries the idea of
“belonging to the coming age,” in most theological contexts it unequivocally
means unending.
Theological Summary
1. Eternal Means More Than
“Long-Lasting”
Both biblical words carry the idea of
unmeasured duration. Yet when applied to God and His purposes, they also
emphasize timelessness, unchangeability and God’s sovereign permanence.
2. Eternal Life Is Both Present and
Future
According to John’s Gospel, believers possess eternal
life now (John 5:24), and yet its full experience comes in the age to come.
3. Eternal Judgment Is Truly
Everlasting
Because Jesus uses aiōnios for both punishment and
life in Matthew 25:46, the New Testament presents both as equally final and
enduring.
Summary Definition
Hebrew: ʿôlām - that which endures
indefinitely; hidden beyond the horizon; everlasting when referring to God and
His works.
Greek: aiōnios - everlasting; without end;
belonging to the age to come; enduring as long as God’s own life.
In Scripture, “eternal” conveys unchanging, unending,
divinely-given existence or consequence, rooted in God’s own eternal nature.
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