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Heaven to them is a place that they go after death that rewards them for being an ignorant piece of crap their whole life. The only way to get to Heaven, to them, is to be "saved." Hell is a place that people who don't believe in Jesus Christ to be their savior go to burn for all eternity. It's pretty messed up, I know.

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Heaven is the barrier between God and Man being removed, bringing back a state such as the garden of Eden, or possibly better.

Hell is separation from God. This is where Evil must go, and anyone who clings to it.

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12y ago
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13y ago

True Christians believe that Hell is a place created to hold Lucifer and the angels that followed him when he tried to take the throne of GOD. It is also the place that people that don't receive the gift of atonement go when they die. It's not where he wants us to go but he can't force us to accept the gift because he gave us free will and we have to choose to accept Jesus as our savior. The Bible says:

Romans 6:23

For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

This means that because the devil introduced sin into human DNA we can no longer enter into god presence when we die, but the gift of God was to send his only son to die as atonement for this sin, therefore giving us the the opportunity to restore the relationship that was originally intended and giving us access to heaven and eternal life.

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14y ago

For Christians hell is a place which the souls of the unsaved will suffer consequences of sin.

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Mark Twain's story "Letters From the Earth" provides an excellent discussion of the prevailing Christian concept of heaven in Letter II.(Link)

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11y ago

Yes. Christians believe if you have been good throughout life you go to heaven, and if you have sinned you go to hell.

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Death is the one thing in life we can be sure about and that is why religions have beliefs about what it means! Everything else 'might' happen to us: we might get married, be rich, be happy, have children, open our own business or travel the world, but the only real certainty is that we will die. The major western religion Christianity has borrowed heavily from the Egyptian model of what happens after death. The idea of final judgment, physical resurrection and heaven being a garden with a river running through it, are all ideas borrowed from the Egyptians. We must also remember that man's life is in God's Hands. Only He determines the moment of death and the destiny of every soul on separation from the flesh. For this reason, attempts to produce experiments in this field are in conflict with the Will of God and bring the experimenter into contact with the fallen spirits of that world. Christians believe fervently that there is a life after death on earth. While the actual nature of this life is not known, Christians believe that many spiritual experiences in this life help to give them some idea of what "eternal life" will be like.

Christianity has historically taught that everyone has only a single life on earth. After death, an eternal life awaits everyone either in Heaven or Hell. There is no suffering in Heaven; only joy. Torture is eternal without any hope of cessation for the inhabitants of Hell. The overwhelming majority of mainstream Christian denominations rejects the notion of reincarnation and considers the theory to challenge basic tenets of their beliefs. In standard Christian theology, the soul is an individual entity which is totally separate from other souls and (can become) totally separate from God. There is thus one God (or maybe three depending on how you interpret the Trinity) and a plurality of souls. Every person has exactly one soul. In the Genesis version, as believed by 'young earth' creationist theologians, humans were created on the Saturday of the first week, after God had created land, sea, stars, planets, birds, beasts fishes etc during the previous Monday to Friday. Since only humans have souls, all these features existed quite concretely in the absence of observers. In contrast, theologians who believe in evolution subscribe to the 'soul-injection theory', which states that "There came a moment in the evolution of hominids when God intervened and injected a human soul into a previously animal lineage. All the features of the world existed in the absence of souls, in this case for many hundreds of millions of years rather than one working week. So, to the Christian, reality is totally objective and souls have no part in determining the existence of the real world. If Jesus is the only way to God, it is because the salvation of the person, body and spirit, is a hope profoundly different from all other religious hope. It gives a new dimension to salvation not found anywhere else. Spiritual life is walking after the spirit by the Spirit, focused on the spirit, exercising and strengthening our spirit, substantiating things unseen. Such is the life, in Christ Jesus, the only help that could ever work, authentically, for us helpless sinners in achieving victorious life: with Christ, Christ in me, and for Christ.

Resurrection means to return back in the same physical body with the same face. Hence the practice of burial, preserving the body and burying it to be resurrected at the end of times. Rebirth is when a soul which resides in a human body returns back to another human body after the previous body's death. Now to begin with no one knows what happens to the soul after it leaves the body, so for argument's sake, for a soul to return, it requires a body which can sustain it, which evidently is not a rotten corpse which is nothing but decayed bones, whereas a newborn or a foetus is much more apt for a soul to make it its dwelling. So from a rational point of view isn't it more appropriate for a soul to take rebirth rather than claim the old rotten body it once used to reside in. Belief in the resurrection of the dead, and Jesus Christ's role as judge of the dead, is codified in the Apostles' Creed, which is the fundamental creed of Christian baptismal faith. The Book of Revelation also makes many references about the Day of Judgment when the dead will be raised up. However, there are also many Christians who do not believe that individual consciousness continues after death, and a higher number who do not believe in a place or condition of eternal punishment for sins.

Christians believe there is an afterlife. Christian views of the afterlife generally involve heaven and (somewhat less frequently) hell, with Catholicism adding an intermediate realm of purgatory. Except for purgatory (whose denizens will ultimately enter heaven, after "purification"), these realms are usually assumed to be eternal. Although the body dies and is buried or cremated, they believe that their unique soul lives on and is raised to new life by God. Christians believe that God is just and fair, and so cannot let evil go unpunished. Most believe in the idea of judgment after death, and that God will treat people in the afterlife according to how they lived their life on earth. Historically, Christianity has taught "Heaven" as a place of eternal life, in that it is a shared plane to be attained by all the elect. Roman Catholics believe that entering Purgatory after death cleanses one of sin period of suffering until one's nature is perfected, which makes one acceptable to enter heaven. This is valid for venial sin only, as mortal sins can be forgiven only through the act of reconciliation and repentance while on earth. In Protestant Christian sects, eternal life depends upon the sinner receiving God's grace through faith in Jesus' death for their sins, see atonement, his resurrection as the Christ, and accepting his Lordship authority and guidance over their lives. If the soul could satisfy the gods, "the soul was straightway gathered into the fold of Osiris. But if it could not, if it was found wanting when weighed in the heavenly balances, then it was cast into a hell, to be rent to shreds of the 'Devouress.' For only the righteous souls, only the guiltless, were thought to be deserving of life everlasting. The concept of heaven and hell in traditional Christianity heavily depends on the doctrine of the immortality of the soul. The Bible is even less specific about hell, and Christians have very different ideas about this too. Some Christians believe that hell is a place of suffering, and of separation from God. Others (perhaps most) believe that hell is a spiritual state of being separated from God for eternity.

The word Salvation signifies deliverance from actual trouble or threatening danger. Salvation is the gift of God given by a covenant with man where God acts by grace to save man from the slavery and evil effects of sin. Only in Christianity is this path of Salvation made clear by God's covenant with man through Jesus Christ who is the sacrifice of God for the sins of the whole world. Christians believe that salvation was made possible by the sacrificial death of Christ by crucifixion 2,000 years ago. The word atonement, one of the few theological words of English origin, is used to describe this concept. The verb "atone" derives from the adverb "at one," and therefore means "to reconcile." The notion of deification (Theosis in Greek) is based on the perspective that when Christ was incarnate in the man Jesus, he did take on just one human nature, but all of human nature. He thus made it possible for the reverse to occur - for humans to participate in the divine nature. "The Son of God, as the one through whom the process of creation was fulfilled, came down from heaven into the world and became fully man.

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9y ago

Christians believe heaven and hell are real and everybody will go to one of these places.

Hell is taught in the Bible. The Bible says hell is a place of:

everlasting punishment

everlasting fire

everlasting chains

eternal fire

darkness

without God

Heaven is also taught in the Bible. The Bible says heaven is:

the abode of God

the home of angels

the place where the redeemed will be one day

where Christ the redeemer is now.

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11y ago

The basic idea is that we were made by God to be happy with Him forever in heaven. Because He wants us to be happy, He has given us free will, so that we can choose what we want: without freedom to choose, there can be no real happiness. He put us on this earth to "work out our salvation with fear and trembling." In other words, life here on earth is just a growing up period where we get to create ourselves either as good, loving people who choose others and God, or we create ourselves as self-centered monsters, and thus choose hell. Heaven and hell are not places that you go to after you die, they are states that you are building right now, all death does is remove your ability to change anymore. If you have chosen God, and spent your life loving Him and other people, then you are already in "heaven" before you die - look at Mother Teresa. We are NOT here to have fun, we are here to "pick up your cross daily and follow ME" - says God Incarnate. We do not get fun, we get joy, a joy and a love that becomes overwhelming and lasts forever. Or as St. Paul puts it in his letter to the Philippians 2:12b "work with anxious concern to achieve your salvation."

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13y ago

Heaven = With God, with Light for eternity

Hell = Without God, No Light for eternity.

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Q: Do Christians believe in heaven and hell?
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Do christains believe in heaven and hell?

Yes, Christians believe in heaven and hell.


Do you have to go to heaven or hell?

Only if they exist. Christians and Muslims believe that both heaven and hell exist, but belief is not proof.


Do christians in Asia believe in afterlife?

Yes, all Christians believe when you die; your soul goes to heaven or hell.


What do Cherokee believe about heaven and hell?

Seriously, it depends on the person. Most Cherokee are Christians!


Do Christians believe in after death reincarnation or in heaven?

Christians do not believe in reincarnation. Christians believe in Heaven.


What do Christians believe in the soul?

We believe that when we die, our body remains on earth, but our soul goes to either Heaven or Hell.


Do you really go to hell if you do not believe in God?

People who do not believe in God also do not believe in hell. This is a worry only for Christians.


What do the different groups of Christians believe about heaven and hell?

Christians believe heaven is a place of peace, and there willbe no illness, sadness,sorrow there , the lion and the lamb will feed there, the roads in heaven are made of gold. and we have eternal life there. While hellis a place of eternal fire.


Do Sikhs believe in heaven and hell?

No they don't believe in hell or heaven! They believe in reincarnation! That you may born as animal or insects


What do Christians beileve about heaven and hell?

We believe Heaven is a eternal place with "no more saddness, tears, pain, death, sin, or mourning". Hell is a "burning lake of sulfer" that unbelivers will be tortured in for eternity.


What is hell how is it What is heaven how is it?

Many Christians believe that Hell is the place where evil-doers and those who did not accept Jesus Christ will go at the end of time. Views on what it is like vary from it simply being a place without God to being a burning pit, where sinners are tormented for their evil deeds; it is also said to be the dwelling place of Satan, the father of lies. (It should be noted that not all Christians believe that non-Christians are condemned to hell, but some Christians do in fact believe this.) Heaven is where Christians believe that those who have been good and led a life in accordance with God's teachings, will go to at the end of time. Some Christians believe only other Christians will go there. Some Christians believe that all people who led a good life will go there. Heaven is the kingdom of God, where God is one with everyone and they are one with God. Christians also believe that Jesus is there, sitting at the right hand of His Father. It is impossible for us to know what Heaven and Hell are really like, but most Christians believe we just have to trust God to make the right choice, in his infinite wisdom, and hope that someone who willingly let his son die for us won't condemn all the good people in the world who aren't believers to Hell.


Why do Christians believe you go to heaven or hell when die?

Because Jesus Christ who brought dead people back to life, and who died on the cross and rose from the dead, frequently talked about life after dead as well as Heaven and Hell.