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The Devil Man
09-13-2006, 08:55 PM
A couple of weeks ago I got talking to this girl who really seriously freaked me out big time :eek: I thought she was alright at first, but, BAM! After a day or so she scared the crap outta me. I totally respect peoples opinions and stuff but she was a hardcore christian and she was saying stuff like, 'I know gay people and they are going to go to Hell for what they do and I tell them that!' I said nothing in return because, like I said one sentence ago, I respect peoples opinions and stuff, but I was so very uncomfortable. Not with the believing in Hell, just the whole 'anti-Gay' crap. Needless to say, I never contacted the girl again. I know plenty of seriously cool people that believe in Heaven or Hell without a crazy idea of who is destined to pay a visit to Satan.

This Thread is about one thing. Do you believe in Heaven or Hell?

This isn't about whether you believe in God, just whether you believe in Heaven or Hell. I believe in God but I don't believe in Heaven or Hell. I don't believe in the common concept laid-out for hundreds of years about Heaven and Hell.

What about you?

Zeldy
09-13-2006, 08:58 PM
No I dont.

LunarWeaver
09-13-2006, 08:59 PM
I believe we die and then rot and that's all there is to it :jess:

Obviously cats have an afterlife though, being the only creature that deserves one and all :cat:

Venom
09-13-2006, 09:00 PM
I dont know.

Erdrick Holmes
09-13-2006, 09:04 PM
I try not to think about it.

I see somebody's a Guilty Gear fan.

Skarr
09-13-2006, 09:06 PM
Yeah, I believe in the eternal abyss...but I'm not hardcore. Hell you'd never even know my beliefs from talking to me. People tend to be easily offened and then they get all gay when that happens. :)

Vikeve
09-13-2006, 09:17 PM
She shouldn't judge others thats just wrong. tell her to read the Bible damnit! I believe in heaven and hell but i also believe in earth and global warming just kidding yeah right global warming *rolls eyes* and ofcourse earth is just in my imagination you are all figments of my imagination hell im just a figment of my own imagination so why does it matter.




Obviously cats have an afterlife though, being the only creature that deserves one and all :cat:

what about dogs?

Faris
09-13-2006, 09:23 PM
I don't know, I have mixed beliefs. But really, who wouldn't get bored of Heaven after a century?

Rye
09-13-2006, 09:28 PM
No. I believe that once you die, you're just dead. And I don't think that's at all morbid. It brings more meaning to your life, is all. :)

ff7+ff10 gurl 100
09-13-2006, 09:31 PM
Well, there are people that tell me I have to be 'saved' or whatever. I dont really know what I believe, but I just hate it when people just try to push their beliefs on me. Gosh, just dont do that and its all good. But, personally, I have no idea what I believe. Im just a kid :p

theundeadhero
09-13-2006, 09:31 PM
Yes

Zante
09-13-2006, 09:34 PM
Whatewer there is after dead, I will find out once my time comes...or not. For now, there is no way to know, so might as well not bother with it.

Madame Adequate
09-13-2006, 10:16 PM
I think that if there is a Heaven and Hell, God's going to have something to say about all the judgemental people.

Yew-Yevon
09-13-2006, 10:19 PM
I think that if there is a Heaven and Hell, God's going to have something to say about all the judgemental people.

I strongly agree with you.

BardTard
09-13-2006, 10:49 PM
OOH I KNOW THIS ONE!

check my location to reveal the answer.

bipper
09-13-2006, 11:18 PM
Yeah, sure I bleive.

XxSephirothxX
09-13-2006, 11:21 PM
Nah.

Hambone
09-13-2006, 11:28 PM
Yes.

Fuego
09-14-2006, 01:11 AM
I think hell is on earth ...... if we can get through it without killing our own self or a hundred other people then we may just get to see the next phase of existance :nibbles:

Vincent, Thunder God
09-14-2006, 01:17 AM
I used to be an Athiest; now I just say I'm agnostic. If I was running things, there would only one, heaven. If you had sinned, you would go through purgatory, but it wouldn't be painful. Helpful angels would work out all of your pyscholigcal problems until you were a good person. Depending on the case it could take a very long time, but eventually you'll work your way up to Heaven.

daggertrepe
09-14-2006, 01:26 AM
God. Jesus. Heaven. End of.

Meat Puppet
09-14-2006, 02:06 AM
Kind of.

Leen-Leen
09-14-2006, 02:08 AM
I believe in Heaven and Hell, just as I believe in God.

BardTard
09-15-2006, 12:30 AM
I think hell is on earth ...... if we can get through it without killing our own self or a hundred other people then we may just get to see the next phase of existance :nibbles:

That's pretty much how I think. I'm always telling people we're living in Hell.

Starlight Roxas and Sora
09-15-2006, 12:41 AM
Im mostly wondering what will happen to me when I die!! Will I return to the earth like they say we do? but what the Heck does that mean Return to the earth?! what do we become dirt or something?? and really! how do we know we have souls? what if we don't have "souls" then what makes us tick that science can't reproduce? Oh! and going back to the topic, I do beleive in both Heaven, Hell, and God but i rather not think about hell at all, I think it's the only real thing that scares me.

Arrianna
09-15-2006, 12:43 AM
Yes, but it's not that simple.

BardTard
09-15-2006, 12:45 AM
Im mostly wondering what will happen to me when I die!!

You will become part of the Lifestream.

GooeyToast
09-15-2006, 12:46 AM
God. Jesus. Heaven. End of.

No.

The Summoner of Leviathan
09-15-2006, 12:55 AM
I do not necessarily believe in heaven or hell. I do believe in an aftgerlife of sorts and in reincarnation. As for tghe nature of the afterlife, I could only speculate.

~*~Celes~*~
09-15-2006, 12:58 AM
I believe in Heaven and Hell, but I'm not very hard-core. I don't even follow a specific religion because they have too many rules where "if you don't do this you'll go to hell" and it's all just...nonsense.

Starlight Roxas and Sora
09-18-2006, 02:57 AM
"You will become part of the Lifestream."~[/quote]Riku's_Lover

SO TRUE HEHE!! :D wouldn't it be cool if there really is a lifestream!! I think that because we are apart of God then maybe we will return to him becoming one with his soul!

escobert
09-18-2006, 03:25 AM
WHAT DO YOU THINK

Yuffie514
09-18-2006, 09:13 AM
i do believe in them, though sometimes i wished it was rather a process of reincarnation than to spend an eternity in Hell as punishment. because of the religion i was raised on, there are things that are hard to swallow and but they can't always go the way of one mind...

Aurons_Desciple
09-18-2006, 09:15 AM
No i don't beleive in either

sephirothishere
09-18-2006, 09:39 AM
nope....i dont no what ii believe...i jus searchin....christians piss me off thay always tellin me to go an talk to jubus...im like....SHUTUP....i dont care if people have a certain religion its the superiority complexes they have...and theyre always tellin me about it.....

Polaris
09-18-2006, 10:51 AM
I have different conception of heaven and Hell... I have my own ideas, not in a religious way...

Peegee
09-18-2006, 05:37 PM
This Thread is about one thing. Do you believe in Heaven or Hell?

I sure hope Hell exists or my Idoltry-filled life in order to go to hell would be a total waste.

Levian
09-18-2006, 05:59 PM
I don't know, and I don't really care. I'm kinda focusing on enjoying my current life.

Rosenti
09-18-2006, 06:08 PM
funny lol

about the gay thing, i got nothing against Gay's as long as they dont hit on me, im ok..

I beileve Gayness is something your born with, its a chemical molfunction.. or however you say it.. _:lol:

Peegee
09-18-2006, 06:34 PM
ooc: then why isn't heterosexuality a chemical malfunction?

Owen Macwere
09-18-2006, 07:10 PM
I don't know, but I don't really want to think about it. Who knows? there might be.

Spuuky
09-18-2006, 07:16 PM
Why is there something wrong with judging people? Sometimes people are quite simply wrong, and it is not incorrect to point it out when they are.

If someone firmly believes in a literal reading of the Bible, then it is morally wrong from their perspective not to attempt to convert unbelievers, and to allow the things they think are sins to be perpetuated. Homosexuality is among those things. If you honestly believed that someone was going to hell, wouldn't you have to make some sort of effort to try to save them from the path they were walking down? People like you simply fail to recognize that because you really can't comprehend believing what they do. There is no reason to respect the beliefs of someone just because they believe them.

bipper
09-18-2006, 07:46 PM
You cannot judge people who live by a different set of rules and beleifs than you do really. That would simply include ignorance to thier thoughts, beleifs, etc.

Spuuky
09-18-2006, 07:47 PM
Everyone judges people who live by different sets of rules and beliefs than they do. And it's not necessarily the wrong thing to do.

sephirothishere
09-18-2006, 08:55 PM
You cannot judge people who live by a different set of rules and beleifs than you do really

have you ever heard of born again christians...they tell us were wrong all the time...by us i mean regular people that arent bible lubbers....

bipper
09-18-2006, 08:56 PM
lol a christian is not supposed to judge a non christian; It is called 1 Corinthians. We can judge Christians though, and we can also suggest scripture to others, and offer advice; but we are not to judge others.

I know it is habitual, but judging beleifs you do not know everything about is ignorant. Me saying that is relatively ignorant as well, but lawlgically supported.

Spuuky
09-18-2006, 09:01 PM
Logically supported? By what? What are your premises?

bipper
09-18-2006, 09:07 PM
I beleive I already stated the ignorance of the situation; unless if to refute you are saying that forming an opinion based on a few strawpicked facts is enough to create an all correct summary of a person and/or thier actions or beleifs. People seem to think that everyone thinks as they do.

Seriously, the irony and parody here should be seen as a pun on subject; but that is all the subject matter is.

DarkLadyNyara
09-18-2006, 09:23 PM
I have never beleived in hell in the sense of eternal torture. It kind of goes against the whole idea of a just and loving god. I have talked to christians who see hell as merely being cut off from god's presence. They see that as the only punishment necessary.

That said, I think that hell is something you bring upon yourself. Humans are quite skilled at making themselves miserable. They don't need the help of God or Satan. :D


I used to be an Athiest; now I just say I'm agnostic. If I was running things, there would only one, heaven. If you had sinned, you would go through purgatory, but it isn't painful. Helpful angels work out all of your pyscholigcal problems until you're a good person. Depending on the case it could take a very long time, but eventually you'll work your way up to Heaven.

Indeed.:D

sephirothishere
09-18-2006, 09:27 PM
dark lady....god and satan are designed to make people miserable...do i need to remind you that god isnt real.......

bipper
09-18-2006, 09:33 PM
dark lady....god and satan are designed to make people miserable...do i need to remind you that god isnt real.......

lol. Prove to me that a potato exists first. Using complete sentances and proper punctuation?

DarkLadyNyara
09-18-2006, 09:36 PM
dark lady....god and satan are designed to make people miserable...do i need to remind you that god isnt real.......

I think you missed the point... And there is no need to remind me that "god isn't real" since my religion dictates that I don't care one way or another. (And really, how would you know?)

sephirothishere
09-18-2006, 09:37 PM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"If reasoning tightly, why not admit that to disprove the objections to an assertion is not any measure of proof of that assertion. Objections which cannot be disproven might exist but not yet be brought to your attention.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

And here is how I analyzed it...
The first approach I took was to find out WHERE I AGREED with the position. This was, of course, easy to do--as a skeptically oriented Christian! I can construct easily arguments of the type:
Assertion: The Greek god Zeus was born as a sweet potato in Iceland.
Objection: But sweet potatoes don't grow in Iceland - its too cold.
Response: But he sprouted INSIDE a heated greenhouse...so there, skeptic!
In this argument (that even Humpty Dumpty might be proud of!), the objection IS disposed of successfully, but this BY NO MEANS proves the assertion.

In addition to this trivial case, I am familiar with countless scientific/philosophical arguments that have a related structure, especially along historical axes.


For example, in particle physics you might see such an arg:

Assertion: The 10-15 extra dimensions of space-time necessary for supersymmetry/superstring theories are 'curled up' inside spaces smaller than the proton.
Objection: We cannot conceive of 'curling up' dimensions.
Response: We couldn't conceive of elasticity of space-time (a la relativity) either, but it was true...
And the history of philosophy is replete with examples of positions that overcame all objections of their time, only to be dashed to pieces under powerful objections derived in LATER generations.

So the notion of a position that could disproved LATER by objections unknown today seems entirely reasonable (and well-documented).


So, then I had to figure out why this question was submitted as a candidate for the "Tough Question of the Quarter"...What argument/assertion did I make (in some 200-300 pages of material!) that was the subject of this question?


I can only guess...but my bet (if I were a 'better' man) would be around one of the survey questions that reads like this:

The dead body of Jesus Christ was never recovered--even by the authorities of his day...other attempts to explain the empty tomb and the eyewitness accounts (other than the resurrection) seem shallow, contrived, and contradict known data from psychology or history...
I can see what the visitor is getting at ("just because there are no better explanations TODAY for the missing body/empty tomb, doesn't mean there won't be one SOMEDAY" and the implication that "we do not have to accept the 'best' explanation TODAY--that He rose from the dead--as true"), although I cannot cast it into the form (assertion, objections, response) I have used so far.

It is at this point that I realize that the question might be oversimplifying the nature of argument (esp. historical argument) or might be misunderstanding the argument itself.


A fuller statement of the argument runs something like this:

Every scrap of historical data we have, when interpreted in a non-conspiratorial manner, describes a bizarre individual who claims to be God and who predicts (to his often dull, oppositional, and unimaginative followers!) his death, burial, resurrection, and subsequent appearances to other humans.


Every scrap of historical data we have, when interpreted in a non-conspiratorial manner, affirms that indeed said individual was killed, buried, came back to life, and made subsequent appearances to other humans.


The evidence that this individual 'rose from the dead' consists mainly of:


The numerous post-death appearances to people of all persuasions --skeptical followers (thomas), militant anti-Christians (saul), insider groups (the apostles), wider groups (500 people at one time), woman (mary and others), the impulsive (peter), the thoughtful (john)...and these appearances were not simple 'ghost-like' apparitions--he was touched, he ate fish, he spoke, he cooked.


These eyewitnesses were consistent in their testimony:
2Pet. 1:16 "We did not follow cleverly invented stories when we told you about the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of his majesty. "

Acts 1:3 "After his suffering, he showed himself to these men and gave many convincing proofs that he was alive. He appeared to them over a period of forty days and spoke about the kingdom of God." (written by a physician)


1Cor. 15:4 "that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles, and last of all he appeared to me also" (written by a converted militant skeptic)

Now, if you notice, this position argues NOTHING like 'he must have risen from the dead, since we can't think of anything better'...Rather, it gives EVERY possible 'proof' one could give about such a unique event in history (i.e. physical appearances in a wide variety of settings, to a wide variety of people, over a period of a month and half, predictions ahead of time about this).

How much more data could one want?!


Think about this for a second...in the world of first-century Palestine, WHAT MORE COULD HE HAVE DONE to 'prove' his resurrection? What else would it take?


(He didn't 'waste' his appearances, of course, on those with hyper-closed minds...compare Luke 16.19ff in which some people wouldn't believe EVEN IF someone rose from the dead, and John 12.9ff in which the leaders planned to kill the resurrected Lazarus, because too many people were beginning to take Jesus at his word--they didn't DISBELIEVE the resurrection of Laz--they just didn't like the implications! But...in Acts 9, Jesus appears to one of his enemies, with the result of a massive change of viewpoint...the militant skeptic Saul becomes the zealous apostle Paul.)


Notice that up to this point, there has been no mention of 'objections'...so let ME try to raise a couple...


To avoid the conclusion that he rose from the dead, I would have to have better evidence than the above, that either:

all the eyewitnesses were mistaken (they only THOUGHT they saw Jesus--a HALLUCINATORY view);
all the eyewitnesses were lying (they NEVER saw him, but tried to convince us they did...for reasons of power, fame, money, spite, etc.--a CONSPIRATORIAL view)
there were no eyewitnesses (the writers of the documents were either not who they claimed to be or were mistaking/lying ABOUT the eyewitnesses--a combination of the above views)
Notice that this is NOT a simple "that's all the options we can come with SO FAR" argument. This boils down to a simple case of logic...the predication A ('the eyewitnesses saw Jesus alive') or ~A (NOT-'the eyewitnesses saw Jesus alive'). It is a simple matter of which of the two positions has the 'best' historical support...

Now I submit that there is not a scrap of historical data, from the relevant period of history, that can be advanced as data that the eyewitnesses did NOT see Jesus, as they claimed.


The only argument I have consistently heard AGAINST the resurrection is the 'natural law' argument--"that since people do not rise from the dead, Jesus couldn't have risen from the dead" (or its variant anti-miraculous argument). Although I tend to be very skeptical myself of miraculous claims, one cannot dismiss them out of hand in historical settings. Consider the words of the eminent historiographer Robert Jones Shafer in discussing historical probability and plausibility:

"The opposite case is that of the implausible statement, the statement that we find difficult to believe. Statements are implausible if they do not fit with the rest of the evidence. Such statâø«¹ ¾&¬˜Áà‹ø‡÷f¥‡÷âð mistaken, yet they cannot be dismissed out of hand. Readers of detective stories will remember the numerous occasions on which the incongruous piece of evidence proves to be not only true but the key to the mystery. In historical investigation this dramatic turn of events occurs less frequently, but it occasionally happens. The careful historian will remember that a piece of evidence may seem implausible only because of a mistaken interpretation of previously known evidence. Even more implausible are statements that run counter to our best scientific knowledge--statements about witchcraft, extrasensory perception, flying saucers, and the like. Certainly the trained investigator will deal with all such stories with a very high degree of skepticism. They are probably false or mistaken. Yet he should temper his skepticism with a bit of humility. The history of science is a history of changing ideas about what is possible and what is impossible, and the evidence of an extremely improbable event just might be confirmed by further investigation." ( A Guide to Historical Method, Dorsey: 1974, pp.41-42.)
So what data can be advanced that he did not rise from the dead, as the preponderance of the data DOES support?...It would take one of four items: 1) a dead body, 2) a confession of lying by the eyewitnesses, 3) public evidence that they were lying (not just a possible motive, but real historical evidence), or 4) compelling psychological evidence that they were crazy. (Again, there are NO OTHER options--these are simply a logical 'unpacking' of ~A.) And remember, the evidence must be as strong, well-attested, widely available as the data FOR the eyewitness accuracy.

Needless to say, none of this counter-evidence exists. They never found the body, there are no confessions of lying on record, there is no public evidence that they were lying (in spite of the myriad of theories that they made it up for status, power, glory etc.), there is no compelling evidence that they were crazy (their lives and writings showed them to be cogent, rational, balanced, and no more crazy that mainstream 'religious' people today).


(And the position that they NEVER claimed that he rose, but that the later church 'put these words into their mouths' flies in the face of archeology. We have manuscripts of these claims that date within the lifespans OF THOSE eyewitnesses. There is simply not enough time to create the illusion.)


Now, even given that ALL the data is in favor for the 'theory' that He rose from the dead, and that there is NO meaningful data against the position, why cannot one simply 'suspend judgment' like we do on other things we cannot understand (e.g. the 'nature' of light) or on matters in which we have too little data (e.g. the lifespans of Mesopotamian kings)? After all, life is filled with such things, for skeptics of both Christian and non-Christian persuasions. (And, on the other hand, the VAST MAJORITY of the decisions we DO make fall into this category as well...this argument doesn't stop us in those, why should we fall short here?--especially in light of the extraordinary evidence.)


The fact of the matter is that to not-choose is to choose. For in choosing 'not to choose', we are indeed choosing 'the data is not adequate to create an obligation for me to believe it'. In other words, in our world of personal and social responsibilities, overwhelming evidence creates a moral obligation to decide. (Imagine the comical situation where we are stopped by a police officer for speeding. He has a record from the radar saying we were going 100% over the speed limit. Yet we argue that evidence MIGHT be forthcoming someday that radar guns are totally inaccurate, and that we don't have to choose to believe him or not--we can suspend judgment. The situation could be extended to medical diagnoses, school reports, legal contexts.)


At the same time, we must avoid the criticism of T.S. Elliot, who in the introduction to Pascal's Pensees (Dutton: 1958, p. xv) made this scathing anthropological observation:

The majority of mankind is lazy-minded, incurious, absorbed in vanities, and tepid in emotion, and is therefore incapable of either much doubt or much faith; and when the ordinary man calls himself a skeptic or unbeliever, that is ordinarily a simple pose, cloaking a disinclination to think anything out to conclusion.
We don't have an option as humans who have to live in a world of truth. And, in this case, we don't have an option because of Who the Risen is. The implications of 'suspending judgment' on an event of this magnitude (God came to earth, died for us, rose again, and now challenges us with our position vis-a-vis Him) which was deliberately architected to make it MORE REASONABLE for us to believe(!) are staggering and matters of grave concern (esp. in light of His other claims of or responsibility before God and His truth).

bipper
09-18-2006, 09:43 PM
What? I said prove a potato exists. Oi!

Besides, those posts can only fly in EoEo; sorry.

Quindiana Jones
09-18-2006, 09:44 PM
There's something weird about humans. And I don't believe that when you die, you're dead. But Heaven and Hell is a load of b....rubbish.

sephirothishere
09-18-2006, 10:01 PM
ok....i jus searched in google how to prove the potato exists...and i clicked on this hopin nobody wud read it....hahahahahahhahahahaaha...


There's something weird about humans. And I don't believe that when you die, you're dead. But Heaven and Hell is a load of b....rubbish.


id say lifestream is pretty effective....hahahaha...but seriously...budhism is probably the most realistic religion...

Spuuky
09-18-2006, 10:25 PM
lol. Prove to me that a potato exists first. Using complete sentances and proper punctuation?This post makes me laugh. You can't be a grammar nazi without proper grammar and spelling.

bipper
09-19-2006, 12:25 AM
lol. Prove to me that a potato exists first. Using complete sentances and proper punctuation?This post makes me laugh. You can't be a grammar nazi without proper grammar and spelling.

You lack a certian core peice to the nervous system. Sits in the cranium, or in the ass, depending on the general appearence of the person. Finding and using one would prolly make my sarcastic sense of humor a little more clear...

Bipper

Dante WolfWood
09-19-2006, 12:42 AM
A couple of weeks ago I got talking to this girl who really seriously freaked me out big time :eek: I thought she was alright at first, but, BAM! After a day or so she scared the crap outta me. I totally respect peoples opinions and stuff but she was a hardcore christian and she was saying stuff like, 'I know gay people and they are going to go to Hell for what they do and I tell them that!' I said nothing in return because, like I said one sentence ago, I respect peoples opinions and stuff, but I was so very uncomfortable. Not with the believing in Hell, just the whole 'anti-Gay' crap. Needless to say, I never contacted the girl again. I know plenty of seriously cool people that believe in Heaven or Hell without a crazy idea of who is destined to pay a visit to Satan.

This Thread is about one thing. Do you believe in Heaven or Hell?

This isn't about whether you believe in God, just whether you believe in Heaven or Hell. I believe in God but I don't believe in Heaven or Hell. I don't believe in the common concept laid-out for hundreds of years about Heaven and Hell.

What about you?

I'm going to say one thing; she WILL be judged for judging people that way, she is not supposed to do that and she is part of the reason why people are turned off about christianity. Christianity is all about love....why do some people turn it all into hate? It drives me crazy... Christians are to only critisize (in a positive way) to other christians....thats it.

Spuuky
09-19-2006, 12:52 AM
You lack a certian core peice to the nervous system. Sits in the cranium, or in the ass, depending on the general appearence of the person. Finding and using one would prolly make my sarcastic sense of humor a little more clear... Yes, that's it. I have in impaired anterior frontal lobe. Is that your excuse for failing to provide any evidence at all for your statements earlier in the thread, too? Or were you being "sarcastic" when you said that "you cannot judge people who live by a different set of rules and beleifs than you do"?

bipper
09-19-2006, 03:17 AM
yes

Giga Guess
09-19-2006, 04:45 AM
Do I believe in Heaven? Absolutely. Do I believe in "Hell?" No. For the ultimate father figure, and the embodiment of love, peace and charity, it seems a hair contradictory. A good father will punish his child, when it's needed, but a good father will not shun his child forever and for always.

Araciel
09-19-2006, 05:06 AM
i don't believe in either. i believe in life

Dante WolfWood
09-20-2006, 03:38 AM
Do I believe in Heaven? Absolutely. Do I believe in "Hell?" No. For the ultimate father figure, and the embodiment of love, peace and charity, it seems a hair contradictory. A good father will punish his child, when it's needed, but a good father will not shun his child forever and for always.


you need to understand something; hell wasn't meant for us; it was meant for the devil and his angels that sinned and turned against god; but when man sinned; he couldn't be in god's glory because he is so holy; that he cannot be near sin.

so the only place after death with sin staind on us was hell. see, the worst thing about hell is not fire or pain or torment....its the absent of god thats horrible about it, thats why its the way it is now.

could go into more but I dont think we want a bible lesson or an argument.

Do I believe in heaven and hell? Of course I do.

Giga Guess
09-20-2006, 03:53 AM
Do I believe in Heaven? Absolutely. Do I believe in "Hell?" No. For the ultimate father figure, and the embodiment of love, peace and charity, it seems a hair contradictory. A good father will punish his child, when it's needed, but a good father will not shun his child forever and for always.


you need to understand something; hell wasn't meant for us; it was meant for the devil and his angels that sinned and turned against god; but when man sinned; he couldn't be in god's glory because he is so holy; that he cannot be near sin.

so the only place after death with sin staind on us was hell. see, the worst thing about hell is not fire or pain or torment....its the absent of god thats horrible about it, thats why its the way it is now.

could go into more but I dont think we want a bible lesson or an argument.

Do I believe in heaven and hell? Of course I do.

How can it be possible for man to obtain such purity to enter heaven then? By the Catholic dogma, virtually everything is a sin. You lose your temper and snap at someone, it's a sin. No father can be that unforgiving as to banish his children for any and all misgivings that are indicitive of humanity, and mortality.

sephirothishere
09-20-2006, 01:21 PM
your crazy man....

bipper
09-20-2006, 02:14 PM
Hell is interpeted as the eternal suffering or Seperation from the Father. Therefore Giga Guess' .... guess [opinion]... is very much biblically supported.

rawr man.... rawr!

Rosenti
09-20-2006, 02:20 PM
Do I believe in Heaven? Absolutely. Do I believe in "Hell?" No. For the ultimate father figure, and the embodiment of love, peace and charity, it seems a hair contradictory. A good father will punish his child, when it's needed, but a good father will not shun his child forever and for always.


since i beileve in Hindu's view of heaven and hell, which means if you go to hell, its to get punished. Your not gonna be there forever, but youll be there for some time, then when you die, in hell. Since hell is kind of like this, only ALOT worse, and you have short life spand. But you feel constant extreme unbareable pain. Anyways after you die, you shall be reborn on earth. Thats my view, take it or leave it, I dont care.