The early books of the
Tanakh reference
Heaven (Heb.
Shamayim), but not a Third Heaven or a specific number of heavens. A third concept of Heaven, also called
shămei hashamayim (שׁמי השׁמים or "Heaven of Heavens"), is mentioned in such passages as
Genesis 28:12,
Deuteronomy 10:14 and
1 Kings 8:27 as a distinctly spiritual realm containing (or being traveled by)
angels and God. The ambiguity of the term
shamayim in the Hebrew Bible, and the fact that it's a plural word, give "heavens" various interpretations regarding its nature, notably the
ascension of the prophet Elijah. In the non-canonical
Second Book of Enoch, Third Heaven is described as a location "between corruptibility and incorruptibility" containing the
Tree of Life, "whereon the Lord rests, when he goes up into paradise." (chapter 8) Two springs in the Third Heaven, one of milk and the other of honey, along with two others of wine and oil, flow down into the
Garden of Eden. (verse 6) In contrast with the common concept of
Paradise, the
Second Book of Enoch also describes it as "a very terrible place" for those who do wrong, with "all manner of tortures" inflicted by merciless angels on "those who dishonour God, who on earth practice sin against nature," including
sodomites,
sorcerers,
enchanters,
witches, the proud, thieves, liars and those guilty of various other transgressions. (chapter 10) In the
Slavonic version of the
Greek Apocalypse of Baruch, also known as
3 Baruch, the author is shown a
phoenix, and a
dragon residing there is said to eat the bodies of "those that have spent their lives in evil." In
The Legends of the Jews by
Louis Ginzberg, this third division of Paradise is said to be, like the other six, "twelve myriads of miles in width and twelve myriads of miles in length," built of silver and gold, and containing "the best of everything there is in heaven."
Residents Aside from the redeemed, the transgressors and various angels mentioned in the Bible and other Hebrew literature, a number of specific figures and spirits are mentioned as residing in the Third Heaven. According to
The Legends of the Jews by
Louis Ginzberg these include: •
Abraham •
Isaac •
Jacob •
Moses •
Aaron •
Azrael • the
Israelites of the
Exodus • the kings of
Judah (notably
David, but "with the exception of
Manasseh, the son of
Hezekiah, who presides in the second division, over the penitents") ==Christianity==