Pure Land Buddhists believe you can enter Amitabha's paradise after death if you simply chant his name. True Pure Land Buddhists believe that you don't even have to do that; all that's required is faith
Buddhists do not beleive in a heaven or paradise in the afterlife.
Buddhists do not beleive in a heaven or afterlife paradise. Paradise can be found right here on Earth when one attains enlightenment.
In Mahayana Buddhist tradition the Bodhisattva do not enter Nirvana (not Paradise) until all sentient beings are ready to enter. They return to the cycle of death and rebirth to assist this process. In various ways the promise they make is given as:Sentient beings are numberless, I vow to free them.Delusions are inexhaustible, I vow to end themThe Dharma gates are boundless, I vow to open them.The Enlightened Way is unsurpassable, I vow to embody it.
Lucifer, or Satan, didn't have to "enter" Paradise. He was originally one of the angels who sat at the right hand of God. It is more significant that he had to leave Paradise because of his overweening pride.
There are no cheats.
There are no cheats
It is the doorway into Paradise through which people whose fasting during Ramadan was perfect will enter Paradise
yes they will, if they believe and trust in God the Father Son and Holy Spirit. Muslims will not "enter paradise" because they believe in muhammed who was not a real phrophet.
Yes, but the only way they could enter paradise was if Tsume, Hige, Toboe, and Kiba had to die first to be soon reborn into paradise, which was really just the Earth being reborn.
The quote "for only two together can enter paradise" was written by Friedrich Nietzsche in his work Thus Spoke Zarathustra. This line emphasizes the importance of human companionship and mutual support in achieving spiritual or personal growth.
God created the jinn and mankind to worship Him. Whoever obeys Him will enter Paradise and whoever disobeys Him will enter Hell.
A Buddhist seeks to attain enlightenment. Enlightenment is the understanding of how to live life in a skillful fashion that ends desire and its associated pain. This is done by following the Eightfold Path. Once enlightened a Buddhist may, if he choses, enter Nirvana a state of existence without a sense of personal identity.