>>13174416Angels are not in "hell." Angels came down from heaven, incarnated, and had sex with women. Those hybrids born were nephilim or fallen ones. They were believed to be violent and even giants.
>2Peter 2:4 “God did not hold back from punishing the angels that sinned, but, by throwing them into Tartarus,...”The expression “throwing them into Tartarus” is from the Greek verb tar·ta·roo and so includes within itself the word “Tartarus.”
>Jude6 “And the angels that did not keep their original position but forsook their own proper dwelling place he has reserved with eternal bonds under dense darkness for the judgment of the great day.”Showing when it was that these angels “forsook their own proper dwelling place,” Peter speaks of “the spirits in prison, who had once been disobedient when the patience of God was waiting in Noah’s days, while the ark was being constructed.” (1Pe 3:19,20) This directly links the matter to the account at Genesis 6:1-4 concerning “the sons of the true God”.
Tartarus is a condition rather than a particular location, in as much as Peter, on the one hand, speaks of these disobedient spirits as being in “pits of dense darkness,” while Paul speaks of them as being in “heavenly places” from which they exercise a rule of darkness as wicked spirit forces. (2Pe 2:4; Eph 6:10-12)
In Greek mythology Tartarus isn't a place where dead PEOPLE go when they die. Tartarus is only a prison for lesser gods and Titans. Therefore, Tartarus isn't hell in the Bible. It is a prison-like state ONLY for fallen angels. Therefore, what mythological Tartarus and Biblical Tartarus have in common is that they hold lesser gods which is what angels and demons are. That's where all gods, giants, and demi-gods on earth come from.