3. thats it, chapter close. its like switching off a light.
but then we wanna think theres more to it right?..hence your question
2006-08-25 17:55:19
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answer #1
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answered by sree 2
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1, 4, 8, 9...saved will go to heaven, unsaved will go to hell and be separated from God
2006-08-26 00:54:13
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answer #2
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answered by heather 3
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1...2...8...9
1..because that is what is in the word...its your choice where you want to spend eternity.
2..because one day there will be a new heaven and a new earth..no more sin.
8..because "the way is straight and narrow and few there be that find it"
9..because some will be told by Jesus.."depart from me you who work iniquity, I never knew you".
2006-08-26 00:51:39
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answer #3
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answered by Judah's voice 5
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4 8*
8 of the generation after the Baby boomers very few!
2006-08-26 01:31:45
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answer #4
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answered by Grandreal 6
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1-2-8-and 9. good luck with your poll. id love to see the results
2006-08-26 00:53:54
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answer #5
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answered by leeleebear2529 3
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10. You left out the REAL one. That when you die, you die, i.e., Jesus Christ died and went to H*ll for 3 days and was resurrected, however he was DEAD and knew nothing, he was not burning in eternal fires. Christ Jesus also promised his followers a resurrection, and this is ALSO WHERE everyone who DIED BEFORE CHRIST is resting, waiting for their resurrections. Read below:
For one thing, the scriptures speak of 4 hells - these are THE 4 REAL WORDS USED IN THE BIBLE FOR HELL, plus the “Lake of Fire” in Rev. 20:14.
#1. Hades
#2. Gehenna
#3. Sheol
#4. Tartarus
#5. The Lake of Fire
#1 HADES
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hades
The unseen world, translated hell in A.V., Matt. 11:23; 16:18; Luke 10:15; 16:23; Acts 2:27,31; Rev. 1:18; 6:8; 20:13,14. See Hell. Eventually, came to designate the abode of the dead.
#2 GEHENNA
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gehenna
Gehenna' is a word tracing to Greek, ultimately from Hebrew: ××(×)-××× ×× Gêhinnôm (also Gei ben-Hinnom (Hebrew: ××× ×× ××× ××) meaning the Valley of Hinnom. The valley, which forms the southern border of ancient Jerusalem, is first mentioned in Joshua 15:8. Originally it referred to a garbage dump in a deep narrow valley right outside the walls of Jerusalem (in modern-day Israel) where fires were kept burning to consume the refuse and keep down the stench. It is also the location where bodies of executed criminals, or individuals denied a proper burial, would be dumped. Today, "Gehenna" is often used as a synonym for Hell.
#3. SHEOL
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheol
Sheol (ש×××) is the Hebrew language word denoting the "abode of the dead"; the "underworld", "the common grave of mankind" or "pit". It is also transliterated Sheh-ole, in Strong's Hebrew and Greek Dictionaries and Strong's Concordances. In the Hebrew Bible it is portrayed as a comfortless place beneath the earth, beyond gates, where both the bad and the good, slave and king, pious and wicked must go after death to sleep in silence and oblivion in the dust. In some sources, for example in Deuteronomy 32:22, Sheol seems to be synonymous with the "depths of the earth". Sheol is sometimes compared to the gloomy, twilight afterlife of Hades or Tartarus from Greek mythology. Sheol is the common destination of both the righteous and the unrighteous dead; the righteous Job sees it as his destination (Job 3). In the Book of Job, while Satan is portrayed as tormenting and testing the living, he does not appear to have any particular presidency over Sheol, or to dwell in Sheol.
#4 Tartarus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartarus
Christianity's Tartarus: In the Bible, 2 Peter 2:4, Tartarus is designated as a section of Hades that the fallen angels who had produced the Nephilim of Genesis 6 were cast into to await judgment by God. It does not figure promeninently into the doctrines of Christianity; many translations of the Bible insert Hell in the place of Tartarus. No other specific use of the word Tartarus is in the Bible, however, Jude 6 describes the abode of the same fallen angels mentioned in 2 Peter as 'total darkness'.
#5 The Lake of Fire (which means the 2nd death, the lake of fire)
See (The Book of Revelation 20:14) and also Acts Ch. 5, the story of Ananias & Sapphira sinning against the Holy Spirit.
Here we see in The Book of Revelation Ch. 20:14 where "Death & Hades" or both DEATH AND HELL are thrown into the Lake of Fire, THE 2ND DEATH, to be destroyed eternally it says HERE! So, we see that the Lake of Fire is Symbolic for ETERNAL DESTRUCTION. Much the same way Gehenna was for the destruction it caused! Nothing that goes in comes out. Ananias and Sapphira in Acts 5 are both eternally destroyed for sinning against the "holy ghost/spirit" for lying to it. So, much like before they were born, they are now, neither knowing anything nor suffering.
Source(s):
There IS NO ETERNAL BURNING HELL. This is YET ANOTHER (OF MANY, MANY) apostasies brought INTO THE EARLY Christian church from pagan origins. As many have wondered, God is NOT so unkind to make someone suffer eternally for "simply" not accepting him or his son's sacrifice. Sooner or later anyone's sins would have been paid in that kind of hell according to a "righteous" God.
2006-08-26 00:53:23
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answer #6
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answered by AdamKadmon 7
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3.
2006-08-26 00:48:37
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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1. true
2. false - earth will be destroyed
3. false - Jesus told us there is
4. true
5. FALSE - Jesus said few will find their way to Heaven
6. false
7. false - Jesus said most will be punished
8. true - (same as 5)
9. true
10. n/a
2006-08-26 00:52:18
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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10
I don't believe in death, our bodies may fail us but we never die.
Our universe has no end, once existence is; it will always be.
in some form or another depending on the will of the individual
2006-08-26 00:55:41
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answer #9
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answered by ? 2
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7. I am an optimist
2006-08-26 00:52:43
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answer #10
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answered by Ricky 6
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