No, I did read you correctly in the way around your prior post informed. Purgatory has its roots in Gehenna.It's actually the other way around. From a historical and cultural perspective every Jew who died spent time in Gehenna. How long depended upon what needed to be purged. It was said that a good rabi would only pass through Gehenna and because his soul was so clean, he could pick up souls and take them with him as he passed through. Jews today still believe this and it is written by the Sages pre-Christ.
I would put forward that every Jew in the days of Jesus understood Gehenna in a far different way than we do today. But what both of our cultures understand is that Gehenna wasnt a nice place and was to be avoided at all cost. It was tormenting, yet necasarry like a refiners fire. Hence, purgatory.
Hades was very similar. Everyone who died went there and it was more like Hotel 6 than the Hilton. Tartarus was in the deepest Bowles of Hades and was reserved for only the most wicked.
I do not deny Hell, but I do try to hear the words of Jesus from the perspective of the original listeners.
As your post here reiterates. Thanks for that.
I would ask if you think the Jewish journey that you refer to would apply to those who accept and received Messiah as Savior today?
I think too to receive Emmanuel's teachings as spoken by him to his people. And for all time to come. Matthew 10:28 remains in the context of the entire chapter something that is compelling in matters of denying suffering in Hell is eternal.
I did search for what you wrote about early Jewish writings of Gehenna being the root of Purgatory. And found a few resources that speak to that.
Rabbinic Views.
The view of purgatory is still more clearly expressed in rabbinical passages, as in the teaching of the Shammaites: "In the last judgment day there shall be three classes of souls: the righteous shall at once be written down for the life everlasting; the wicked, for Gehenna; but those whose virtues and sins counterbalance one another shall go down to Gehenna and float up and down until they rise purified; for of them it is said: 'I will bring the third part into the fire and refine them as silver is refined, and try them as gold is tried' [Zech. xiii. 9.]; also, 'He [the Lord] bringeth down to Sheol and bringeth up again'" (I Sam. ii. 6). The Hillelites seem to have had no purgatory; for they said: "He who is 'plenteous in mercy' [Ex. xxxiv. 6.] inclines the balance toward mercy, and consequently the intermediates do not descend into Gehenna" (Tosef., Sanh. xiii. 3; R. H. 16b; Bacher, "Ag. Tan." i. 18). Still they also speak of an intermediate state.
Regarding the time which purgatory lasts, the accepted opinion of R. Akiba is twelve months; according to R. Johanan b. Nuri, it is only forty-nine days. Both opinions are based upon Isa. lxvi. 23-24: "From one new moon to another and from one Sabbath to another shall all flesh come to worship before Me, and they shall go forth and look upon the carcasses of the men that have transgressed against Me; for their worm shall not die, neither shall their fire be quenched"; the former interpreting the words "from one new moon to another" to signify all the months of a year; the latter interpreting the words "from one Sabbath to another," in accordance with Lev. xxiii. 15-16, to signify seven weeks. During the twelve months, declares the baraita (Tosef., Sanh. xiii. 4-5; R. H. 16b), the souls of the wicked are judged, and after these twelve months are over they are consumed and transformed into ashes under the feet of the righteous (according to Mal. iii. 21 [A. V. iv. 3]), whereas the great seducers and blasphemers are to undergo eternal tortures in Gehenna without cessation (according to Isa. lxvi. 24).
The righteous, however, and, according to some, also the sinners among the people of Israel for whom Abraham intercedes because they bear the Abrahamic sign of the covenant are not harmed by the fire of Gehenna even when they are required to pass through the intermediate state of purgatory ('Er. 19b; Ḥag. 27a).
Jewish Encyclopedia PURGATORY:
By: Kaufmann Kohler
*Pastings are edited out of order from original site*
History of Purgatory.
The idea of the purging fire through which the soul has to pass is found in the Zend-Avesta ("Bundahis," xxx. 20): "All men will pass into the melted metal and become pure; to the righteous it will seem as though he walks through warm milk" (comp. Enoch, lii. 6-7, lxvii. 6-7). The Church Fathers developed the idea of the "ignis purgatorius" into a dogma according to which all souls, including those of the righteous who remain unscathed, have to pass the purgatory (Origen on Ps. xxxvii., Homily 3; Lactantius, "Divinæ Institutiones," vii. 21, 4-7; Jerome on Ps. cxviii., Sermon 20; Commodianus, "Instructiones," ii. 2, 9); hence prayers and offerings for the souls in purgatory were instituted (Tertullian, "De Corona Militis," 3-4; "De Monogamia," 10; "Exhortatio Castitatis," 11; Augustine, "Enchiridion ad Lauram," 67-69, 109; Gregory I., "Dialogi," iv. 57). Hence also arose in the Church the mass for the dead corresponding in the Synagogue to the Ḳaddish (see Ḳaddish).
Full Encyclopedic entry http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/12446-purgatory