You ought to see it implied there. I mean, the word hadēs (ᾅδης) is front and center in the text (v. 23). Regardless of its genre, the passage depicts conscious postmortem existence prior to final resurrection and judgment. The rich man is dead but not yet resurrected; his brothers are still alive on the earth; the final judgment has not yet occurred. That is, by definition, the intermediate state.
Jesus spoke as a temporal human to temporal humans existing in this temporal realm. I do not see the afterlife as subject to time. When Jesus tells stories and parables, he is using common thinking, common terms, common notions, as a backdrop for the point of the story/parable. I don't think he was teaching that there is a place of the dead between death and resurrection.
What does “the progression of fact” mean? That phrase is much too vague to assess.
While it is true that Scripture doesn’t reveal everything about the state between death and resurrection, it doesn’t need to in order for us to know something truly about it. Or are you suggesting that Scripture doesn’t reveal anything determinate about it? Because those are very different claims.
In Second Temple theology, which Jesus occupied and addressed, “paradise” denoted the abode of the righteous after death (hadēs), as distinguished from the final state. Paradise is where the righteous enjoy conscious communion with Christ in the presence of God, awaiting the resurrection of the body and the final consummation.
Logical progression of fact. One fact contingent upon another. Think in terms of events, if you wish. Cause and effect.
I think Scripture reveals a WHOLE LOT more about things than any of us realize. For example, the God we love, admire, serve, worship and desire—the God we learn about every day and come to know better every day—that is the God that we will be with. So we DO know a whole lot about Heaven, if only from that. But we don't think that way; we think all we can know about Heaven is specific references such as the streets of gold, and such. I may be wrong, but I don't see passage of time relevant to the dead, but only to us. That is, I see no reason to assume it is relevant, and a lot of reason to assume it is not relevant. God's POV is the only reality, anyway.
And what is it that we know from this, exactly? Whatever your answer, it should take seriously the statement Jesus made to Mary Magdalene: “I have not yet ascended to my Father.” Need I remind you that this was Sunday morning? That is, two days later.
Therefore, the paradise which the thief entered “today” must refer to the intermediate state, not the eternal reward that awaits believers, which is after the resurrection. Believers who die are with Christ immediately in paradise, the blessed intermediate state of the righteous dead—awaiting the resurrection of the body and the renewal of all things.
I can already hear it: “All of this is temporal.” It is. So are we. So are God’s acts in history.
“God’s point of view is different.” True—and irrelevant, for we don’t have or even know his point of view.
I disagree. Yes, God's acts IN history are temporal, but how does God see them? A person's death happened temporally. Resurrection is seen as future for we who are not yet passed from this temporal life. In my opinion, (and yes, I can be wrong), 'paradise' is not an intermediate state.
The fact Jesus had not yet returned to the Father was a temporal fact referring to a future completion. That doesn't mean it had to have been past to be otherwise. I see the same thing with the transfiguration, and with Samuel showing up at Endor. I should think that Samuel in Heaven reviewing the events of his life, and considering that, thinking hardly more than, "Well, that was weird!"
Are you saying “we don’t know” existentially or in ourselves what he suffered? True—but also trivial. We may not know his sufferings as he knew them in the immediacy of his own experience, but we do know them truly, covenantally, and savingly through the inscripturated revelation God has given—revelation that happens to come in “words and concepts.” Let’s not despise or undercut revelation itself, as though it were somehow a thin or inferior medium. God binds us to what he has revealed; it is ours to know truly. As I have said before elsewhere, we can know something truly without knowing it comprehensively (e.g., the Trinity)
I'm saying we don't know ontologically. We have words and concepts. I'm not saying we don't truly know them, but that we don't know them completely, nor well enough to make some of the conclusions we do. —At least, I don't.
Nothing, strictly speaking, except remain dead. The grave was the place of his burial, not a theater in which he performed further redemptive action.
There is a more dramatic tradition, found in some patristic strands, known as the “harrowing of hell.” It speaks of Christ descending to hell (hadēs) in triumph, proclaiming victory and releasing Old Testament saints. That model has had a long history, but confessional Reformed theology has generally been cautious about building much on it
Of course no further redemptive action, but I am curious what is the purpose for this 'intermediate state'. I don't see how it is necessary. I do see how people might need to think that way, because of their temporal experience of life.
At the risk of going off-topic, I will copy this I wrote elsewhere, as an attempt to explain my point of view on the whole after-death realm of 'non-time' and its implications to what hell is about:
I'm not saying that I am right about what happens in the afterlife, and in perdition, but there is a LOT that gives me reason to think it is not a question of time spent-and-ended, nor infinite time spent in torment, but something just as bad. 'Intensity', is the only word I have for it. The FACT of it. Just as God spoke reality into existence, (and it may well be to him it was complete at speaking it into existence), so this punishment/payment/torment, for those 'undergoing' it, is altogether timeless, yet precise and thorough, according to their sin. It is a fact, and that's all it is, not even an existence in the same sense as we think of it now. I also believe that even now, but for God, the person that ends up "there" is only that, just as conversely, we in Heaven are finally the "complete" beings that God spoke into being.
(Edit: The Bride of Christ is pure and holy, incomprehensively loved by God, and so, the Bride is worthy. The reprobate are unworthy, only suited for their punishment. THAT is what they are. THAT is what God spoke into being) (Also edit—to the reader: I repeat, these statements are how I see things. I'm describing a point of view, not positing a fact as such, here.)
Thus, the events we consider as temporal, such as Adam's sin, Jesus' death and resurrection, me stubbing my toe or enjoying a just-right BLT sandwich, Job's suffering, are all eternal FACTS from which meaning is drawn into the completed product. I see God's language as not descriptions, but the very thing itself. And this temporal is vapor by comparison.