Heaven is a place where SAVED Christians go after death. It is a place where we live with God. He has made mansions there for us to live in. There are streets of gold. It is beautiful. If you don't accept Jesus, you will have eternal suffering in the lake of fire.
2007-01-11 00:01:52
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answer #1
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answered by RB 7
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Heaven is the place where God dwells and is so wonderful that we cannot even begin to imagine it,those who love God and each other during their lives will go to Heaven and be so happy forever.
2007-01-11 08:03:20
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answer #2
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answered by Sentinel 7
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The Right to Enter Paradise
Death is inevitable. The thief on the cross knew when his would occur, but we can not predict our own. After his death, the crucified criminal went to live in paradise with Jesus. Some of us will also live eternally in God's presence. But others will experience everlasting torment, forever separated from Him.
If we receive Jesus as our Savior, our penalty for sin is paid. We are adopted into God's family, and Heaven is our eternal home. If we reject Jesus, we remain alienated from the Lord and under condemnation for our sin. We are destined to experience eternal judgment. God won't accept any of man's excuses because there is no acceptable defense for unbelief. (Acts 4:12)
Become part of God's family today. Acknowledge your sinfulness, and express your faith in these words:
"God, I have sinned against You. (Romans 3:23) I've followed my own way and refused to give You the right to rule in my life. (Romans 3:10-12) I recognize I am separated from You and cannot rescue myself. I do believe that Jesus Christ is Your Son. I accept the truth of the Scriptures? that His death on the cross paid my sin-debt in full. (1 Corinthians 15:3-4) And I ask You to forgive me of my sins. (1 John 1:9) By faith, I receive You, Lord Jesus, as my personal Savior from this moment on."
If you just spoke those words to God, then, like the thief on the cross, you have received salvation? a gift of God's grace. The heavenly Father welcomes every person who comes to Him through His Son, regardless of background, age, or current situation. Through Jesus, the right to enter paradise is yours!
2007-01-11 13:33:13
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answer #3
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answered by Freedom 7
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An Islamic Prespective :
Jannah جÙÙØ© is the Islamic name for paradise. It is derived from the Hebrew term Gan Eden or Garden of Eden. The Arabic form Jannah, is a shortened version meaning simply "Garden". According to Islamic eschatology, after death, one will reside in the grave until the appointed resurrection on Yaum al-Qiyamah. Muslims believe that the treatment of the individual in the life of the grave will be according to his or her deeds in the worldly life. Jannah is often compared to Christian concepts of Heaven.
The highest level of heaven is Firdaws (ÙردÙس), which is where the prophets, the martyrs and the most truthful and pious people will dwell.
Jannah is maintained by the angel Ridwan
Conditions of going to heaven
According to Qur'an, the basic criteria for salvation in afterlife is the belief in one God, Last Judgment, and good deeds.[1] As the Qur'an states:
“ Surely those who believe (Muslims) and those who are Jews and the Sabians and the Christians whoever believes in Allah (God) and the last day and does good-- they shall have no fear nor shall they grieve. „
—Qur'an, 5:69
Other conditions of going to heaven according to the Qur'an:
“ Those who spend (benevolently) in ease as well as in straitness, and those who restrain (their) anger and pardon men; and Allah loves the doers of good (to others).
And those who when they commit an indecency or do injustice to their souls remember Allah and ask forgiveness for their faults-- and who forgives the faults but Allah, and (who) do not knowingly persist in what they have done. (As for) these-- their reward is forgiveness from their Lord, and gardens beneath which rivers flow, to abide in them, and excellent is the reward of the laborers..
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—Qur'an, 3:134-136
2007-01-11 08:32:39
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answer #4
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answered by MatriX 2
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How deep do you live mermaid cause there seems to be no proper English there. Whatever you are trying to ask, Heaven belongs to God and not to god. Heaven is where reborn bible believing Christians will spend eternity. Our last breath here will be our first breath there.
2007-01-11 08:28:20
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answer #5
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answered by Andre G 2
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Heaven (according to Christians) is a place they will go after a lifetime spent telling others how to live their lives,( supposedly for God) where they can play Backgammon, wear white shirts, eat ice cream and engage in other family-friendly, yet totally boring, activities with God.
2007-01-11 08:10:20
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answer #6
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answered by Prophet ENSLAVEMENTALITY (pbuh) 4
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Heaven is taken in two ways, one is the skies and another is paradise. Your question is not quiet(the second part) if u can explain it.
2007-01-11 08:03:44
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answer #7
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answered by AbuBakar O 1
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all those who follow Allah's every commands and rules whatever Allah said in the Quran they will go to heaven.And Allah didn't give us that much power to realize how is heven like.Heaven is soo beautiful that u can't even imagine.
2007-01-11 09:36:57
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answer #8
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answered by stolen moment 2
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Acts 2:34: “David [whom the Bible refers to as being ‘a man agreeable to Jehovah’s heart’] did not ascend to the heavens.”
Matt. 11:11: “Truly I say to you people, Among those born of women there has not been raised up a greater than John the Baptist; but a person that is a lesser one in the kingdom of the heavens is greater than he is.” (So John did not go to heaven when he died.)
Ps. 37:9, 11, 29: “Evildoers themselves will be cut off, but those hoping in Jehovah are the ones that will possess the earth . . . The meek ones themselves will possess the earth, and they will indeed find their exquisite delight in the abundance of peace. The righteous themselves will possess the earth, and they will reside forever upon it.”
Ps. 37:11: “The meek ones themselves will possess the earth, and they will indeed find their exquisite delight in the abundance of peace.”
Rev. 21:1-4: “I saw a new heaven and a new earth . . . I heard a loud voice from the throne say: ‘Look! The tent of God is with mankind, and he will reside with them, and they will be his peoples. And God himself will be with them. And he will wipe out every tear from their eyes, and death will be no more, neither will mourning nor outcry nor pain be anymore. The former things have passed away.’”
Mic. 4:3, 4: “They will not lift up sword, nation against nation, neither will they learn war anymore. And they will actually sit, each one under his vine and under his fig tree, and there will be no one making them tremble; for the very mouth of Jehovah of armies has spoken it.”
Is heavenly life set out in the “New Testament” as the hope for all Christians?
John 14:2, 3: “In the house of my Father there are many abodes. Otherwise, I would have told you, because I am going my way to prepare a place for you. Also, if I go my way and prepare a place for you, I am coming again and will receive you home to myself, that where I am you also may be.” (Jesus here shows that his faithful apostles, to whom he was speaking, would, in time, be in his Father’s “house,” in heaven, with Jesus. But he does not here say how many others would also go to heaven.)
John 1:12, 13: “As many as did receive him [Jesus], to them he gave authority to become God’s children, because they were exercising faith in his name; and they were born, not from blood or from a fleshly will or from man’s will, but from God.” (Notice that the context, in verse 11, refers to Jesus’ “own people,” the Jews. As many of them as did receive him when he came to them in the first century became God’s children, with heavenly life in view. The verbs in the text are in the past tense, so this passage is not referring to all people who have become Christians since then.)
Rom. 8:14, 16, 17: “All who are led by God’s spirit, these are God’s sons. The spirit itself bears witness with our spirit that we are God’s children. If, then, we are children, we are also heirs: heirs indeed of God, but joint heirs with Christ, provided we suffer together that we may also be glorified together.” (At the time this was written it was true that all who were led by God’s spirit were God’s sons whose hope was that they would be glorified with Christ. But this had not always been true. Luke 1:15 says that John the Baptizer would be filled with holy spirit, but Matthew 11:11 makes clear that he will not share in the glory of the heavenly Kingdom. So, too, after the gathering of the heirs of the heavenly Kingdom, there would be others who would serve God as followers of his Son and yet not share in heavenly glory.)
2007-01-11 08:05:13
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answer #9
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answered by papa G 6
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It is where you go if you're saved. Asking Jesus Christ to be your Personal Savior.
2007-01-11 08:08:26
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answer #10
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answered by tracy211968 6
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