In the New Testament a notable figurative use is made of the word in the phrase "the furnace of fire," he kaminos tou puros. It is found in the parable of the Tares (
Mt 13:42) as part of the remarkable imagery of that parable; while in the companion parable of the Drag-Net (
Mt 13:50) it stands as a symbol of the final destiny of the impenitent, a synonym of "hell"; compare
Jer 29:22;
Da 3:6,
22;
Re 20:14-15, etc., and "eternal fire" (
Mt 25:41), "unquenchable fire" (
Mt 3:12), "the Gehenna of fire" (
Mt 5:22 margin;
Mt 18:9 parallel
Mr 9:43 margin, etc.). A fact which modern travelers speak of, that furnaces for punishment have been found in Persia as elsewhere in the East, sheds some light upon this use of the expression "the furnace of fire."