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even if they have jesus in their heart, what if their life gets really hard and they commit suicide? will they go to heaven?

2006-10-06 14:12:20 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

10 answers

yes, people who are suicidal are mentally ill, and should never be punished for being sick

2006-10-06 14:14:32 · answer #1 · answered by judy_r8 6 · 4 0

No, unfortunately for taking away the gift God gave you is the ultimate sin. God gave man life and committing suicide is like trying to return God's gift.

2006-10-06 14:16:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Well, Kyle, I think that would depend on the person. I think if it's due to a chemical imbalance, depression, or mental instability, then yes. If not, then...I don't know. It's not up to me to judge. Only God knows what's in a person's heart.

2006-10-06 14:16:04 · answer #3 · answered by The_Cricket: Thinking Pink! 7 · 2 0

THE tragic news of a suicide does not close a chapter in the lives of relatives and friends; it opens one, a chapter of mixed feelings of pity and anger, sorrow and guilt. And it raises the question: May we entertain any hope for our friend who took his or her life?

Although self-inflicted death is never justified, never righteous, the apostle Paul did hold out a beautiful hope for even some unrighteous ones. As he told a Roman court of law: “I have hope toward God . . . that there is going to be a resurrection of both the righteous and the unrighteous.”
Many theologians have long dismissed any suggestion that the resurrection of the unrighteous might offer hope for those who commit suicide. Why?

Centuries ago, churchmen introduced a non-Biblical concept: immortal souls that leave the body at death and go straight to heaven, purgatory, Limbo, or hell. That concept clashed with the Bible’s clear teaching of a future resurrection. As Baptist minister Charles Andrews asked: “If the soul is already blissfully in heaven (or is already justifiably roasting in hell), what need is there for anything further?” He added: “This inner contradiction has remained to plague Christians throughout the centuries.”

One result of such errant theology was that “since Augustine’s time [354-430 C.E.], the church has condemned suicide as a sin,” says Arthur Droge in the Bible Review, “a sin beyond redemption, just like apostasy and adultery.”

Jesus told a criminal sentenced to death: “You will be with me in Paradise.” The man was unrighteous, a lawbreaker rather than a distraught suicide victim, guilty by his own frank admission. (Luke 23:39-43) He had no hope of going to heaven to rule with Jesus. So the Paradise in which this thief could hope to come back to life would be the beautiful earth under the rule of Jehovah God’s Kingdom. Revelation 21:1-4.

For what purpose will God awaken this criminal? So that He mercilessly can hold his past sins against him? Hardly, for Romans 6:7, 23 says: “He who has died has been acquitted from his sin,” and “the wages sin pays is death.” Although his past sins will not be accounted to him, he will still need the ransom to lift him to perfection.

Only God can fully understand the role of mental sickness, extreme stress, even genetic defects, in a “suicidal crisis,” which, the National Observer noted, “is not a lifetime characteristic [but] often a matter only of minutes or of hours.”
Granted, one who takes his own life deprives himself of the opportunity to repent of his self-murder. But who can say whether one driven to suicide might have had a change of heart had his fatal attempt failed? Some notorious murderers have, in fact, changed and earned God’s forgiveness during their lifetime.
Thus, Jehovah, having paid “a ransom in exchange for many,” His Son, is within his right to extend mercy, even to some self-murderers, by resurrecting them and giving them the precious opportunity to “repent and turn to God by doing works that befit repentance.”

The Scriptures encourage us to see ourselves, not as immortal souls, but as valuable creations of the God who loves us, who treasures our being alive, and who looks forward with joy to the time of the resurrection.

4000 years had passed from Adam & Eve, Jesus said to a Religious Leader that no one had gone to Heaven, and millions of people had passed away in death. This is a quote from the King James Bible:

John 3:13 " And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven,"

it seems to me, this would eliminate the "immortal soul" belief, not only that, if you go to Heaven or Hell when you die, you completely do away with the resurrection that the Bible speaks about, because the resurrection is suppose to take place after Jesus comes the second time, and that has not happened.

2006-10-06 17:02:52 · answer #4 · answered by BJ 7 · 2 1

No.Even a matyr cannot go to heaven when they commit suicide.

2006-10-06 19:35:35 · answer #5 · answered by Green Lantern 4 · 0 2

Yeah Maybe

2006-10-06 14:14:17 · answer #6 · answered by cvc7chris 2 · 3 0

I believe that everyone who dies goes to the same place, to analyse their life, and decide what they need to learn next, and the prepare for their next re-incarnation.

2006-10-06 14:23:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

how can you take something you cannot give back? your life is God`s gift to you,what you do with your life,is your gift to God.

2006-10-06 14:18:51 · answer #8 · answered by krusty_blue_spaz 5 · 0 2

NO
BECAUSE THEY CAN NOT REPENT IF THEY ARE DEAD TELL ME HOW THEY CAN REPENT AND I WILL BELIEVE U AND DID U NO THAT ARE BODY IS GODS TEMPLE?
JESUS LOVES U

2006-10-06 16:54:11 · answer #9 · answered by justin A 2 · 0 2

that's up to God I guess

2006-10-06 14:13:49 · answer #10 · answered by ? 7 · 4 0

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