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i once heard a bible scholar say when the unrighteous die, they don't go to hell.. in fact he said no one is in hell at this time, that will happen on judgement day...instead they go to a place call hedes at the core of the earth. what do you think? (and is it possible that hedes could be an example of being tormented in the grave?)

2006-12-25 04:46:33 · 9 answers · asked by wayne b 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

9 answers

As the most active preachers on earth, Jehovah's Witnesses preach the BIBLE's "good news", and leave all judging for Jehovah and Jesus to perform "on the last day".

(Acts 10:36,42) Declare to them the good news of peace through Jesus Christ: this One is Lord of all others. ...this is the One decreed by God to be judge of the living and the dead

(John 11:23-25) Jesus said to her: “Your brother will rise.” 24 Martha said to him: “I know he will rise in the resurrection on the last day.” 25 Jesus said to her: “I am the resurrection and the life.

(John 12:48-49) The word that I [Jesus] have spoken is what will judge [a person] in the last day; 49 because I have not spoken out of my own impulse, but the Father himself who sent me has given me a commandment

(John 8:16) if I do judge, my judgment is truthful, because I am not alone, but the Father who sent me is with me

(Matthew 12:36) They will render an account concerning it on Judgment Day

(John 5:22,27-30) [The Father] has committed all the judging to the Son... 27 And he has given him authority to do judging, because Son of man he is. 28 Do not marvel at this, because the hour is coming in which all those in the memorial tombs will hear his voice 29 and come out... I judge; and the judgment that I render is righteous, because I seek, not my own will, but the will of him that sent me.

(Acts 17:30-31) God has overlooked the times of such ignorance, yet now he is telling mankind that they should all everywhere repent. 31 Because he has set a day in which he purposes to judge the inhabited earth in righteousness by a man [Jesus] whom he has appointed


In addition, Jehovah's Witnesses are quite famous for teaching that "hell" does not exist as Christendom has taught it; God has *NOT* arranged for any such place of fiery torment for sinners in some netherworld. The original Hebrew and Greek words most commonly translated as "hell" actually refer to the common grave of mankind; the Scriptures point forward to a time after Armageddon when humans will live forever and death and "hell" are themselves destroyed.

(Ecclesiastes 9:5) For the living are conscious that they will die; but as for the dead, they are conscious of nothing at all

(Ecclesiastes 9:10) there is no work nor devising nor knowledge nor wisdom in Sheol ["hell"]

(Revelation 20:14) And death and Hades ["hell"] were hurled into the lake of fire

Learn more:
http://watchtower.org/e/20000622/article_03.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/20041201/article_02.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/20020715/article_02.htm

2006-12-26 08:01:23 · answer #1 · answered by achtung_heiss 7 · 1 0

nicely, i do sense that this is pointless to declare "hell" in maximum situations..AND all persons individuals do no longer do it. Its very generalizing. i'm American and we at the instant are not ALL approximately John Wayne. That grew to become right into an prolonged time in the past and not in this technology. we don't all holiday horses and shoot bow and arrow. it quite is an previous stereo sort of individuals. Its sort of asserting all Brits have undesirable tooth..no longer all Brits have undesirable tooth.. i think a small inhabitants does..yet no longer ALL.

2016-11-23 16:39:08 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Jesus parable says that he puts them in bundles prior to being throwm into the lake of fire. The bundle are differnt places of punishment Hell, Hades, (the Abyss were fallen angels go),death, the sea of life more likely a place were people slumber in state of sleep awaiting third comming of christ and resurection, unless your taken straight up like moses and elija. Hell is Horror and pain, Jesus describes it as weeping and nashing of teath.fire worms crwling threw ones soul, I've only seen in movies were people get their limbs amputated with no antistetic they give them a stick in their mouth to stop them from nashing their teeth

2006-12-25 05:14:33 · answer #3 · answered by chucky 3 · 0 1

The Bible says the dead are conscious of nothing at all--how can they suffer if they don't know they are suffering?? Why do you listen to men's explainations instead of looking intently at God's??

2006-12-25 06:48:13 · answer #4 · answered by Sparkle1 6 · 1 0

Personally I think that religion is for people afraid of going to hell and spirituality is for people that have already been there.

2006-12-25 07:07:44 · answer #5 · answered by teach_empathy 3 · 0 0

Doesn't exist.

In Judaism there is a short period of cleansing similar to purgatory -- no eternal punishment for any of God's children!

The Christians can give you vivid descriptions of their hell though... Why is that, do you suppose?
.

2006-12-25 05:11:44 · answer #6 · answered by Hatikvah 7 · 1 2

SHEOL AND HADES

Webster’s Dictionary says that the English word “hell” is equal to the Hebrew word Sheol and the Greek word Hades. In German Bibles Hoelle is the word used instead of “hell”; in Portuguese the word used is inferno, in Spanish infierno, and in French Enfer. The English translators of the Authorized Version, or King James Version, translated Sheol 31 times as “hell,” 31 times as “grave,” and 3 times as “pit.” The Catholic Douay Version translated Sheol 64 times as “hell.” In the Christian Greek Scriptures (commonly called the “New Testament”), the King James Version translated Hades as “hell” each of the 10 times it occurs.—Matthew 11:23; 16:18; Luke 10:15; 16:23; Acts 2:27, 31; Revelation 1:18; 6:8; 20:13, 14.

The question is: What kind of place is Sheol, or Hades? The fact that the King James Version translates the one Hebrew word Sheol three different ways shows that hell, grave and pit mean one and the same thing. And if hell means the common grave of mankind, it could not at the same time mean a place of fiery torture. Well, then, do Sheol and Hades mean the grave, or do they mean a place of torture?

Before answering this question, let us make clear that the Hebrew word Sheol and the Greek word Hades mean the same thing. This is shown by looking at Psalm 16:10 in the Hebrew Scriptures and Acts 2:31 in the Christian Greek Scriptures, which verses you can see on the next page. Notice that in quoting from Psalm 16:10 where Sheol occurs, Acts 2:31 uses Hades. Notice, too, that Jesus Christ was in Hades, or hell. Are we to believe that God tormented Christ in a hell of fire? Of course not! Jesus was simply in his grave.

When Jacob was mourning for his beloved son Joseph, who he thought had been killed, he said: “I shall go down mourning to my son into Sheol!” (Genesis 37:35) However, the King James Version here translates Sheol “grave,” and the Douay Version translates it “hell.” Now, stop for a moment and think. Did Jacob believe that his son Joseph went to a place of torment to spend eternity there, and did he want to go there and meet him? Or, rather, was it that Jacob merely thought that his beloved son was dead and in the grave and that Jacob himself wanted to die?

Yes, good people go to the Bible hell. For example, the good man Job, who was suffering a great deal, prayed to God: “O that in Sheol [grave, King James Version; hell, Douay Version] you would conceal me, . . . that you would set a time limit for me and remember me!” (Job 14:13) Now think: If Sheol means a place of fire and torment, would Job wish to go and spend his time there until God remembered him? Clearly, Job wanted to die and go to the grave that his sufferings might end.

In all the places where Sheol occurs in the Bible it is never associated with life, activity or torment. Rather, it is often linked with death and inactivity. For example, think about Ecclesiastes 9:10, which reads: “All that your hand finds to do, do with your very power, for there is no work nor devising nor knowledge nor wisdom in Sheol [grave, King James Version; hell, Douay Version], the place to which you are going.” So the answer becomes very clear. Sheol and Hades refer not to a place of torment but to the common grave of mankind. (Psalm 139:8) Good people as well as bad people go to the Bible hell.

What does the Bible say the penalty for sin is?

Rom. 6:23: “The wages sin pays is death.”

After one’s death, is he still subject to further punishment for his sins?

Rom. 6:7: “He who has died has been acquitted from his sin.”

Is eternal torment of the wicked compatible with God’s personality?

Jer. 7:31: “They [apostate Judeans] have built the high places of Topheth, which is in the valley of the son of Hinnom, in order to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire, a thing that I had not commanded and that had not come up into my heart.” (If it never came into God’s heart, surely he does not have and use such a thing on a larger scale.)

What would you think of a parent who held his child’s hand over a fire to punish the child for wrongdoing? “God is love.” (1 John 4:8) Would he do what no right-minded human parent would do? Certainly not!

2006-12-25 05:21:35 · answer #7 · answered by Alex 5 · 1 0

the is no hell its a christian fairy tale

2006-12-25 05:17:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I hate it, we live it daily!

2006-12-25 05:05:22 · answer #9 · answered by BubbleGumBoobs! 6 · 1 1

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