It is hell it appears 117 times.
While Jesus did speak about both heaven and hell in the Bible, he mentioned hell more frequently than heaven in his teachings.
The notion of Heaven and Hell exists in the religion of Christianity. To learn more about Hell, one would be best to look in the Bible for further information.
Jesus spoke more about heaven than hell in the Bible. He taught about the kingdom of God, eternal life, and the importance of our relationship with God. While he did also mention the concept of hell, his primary focus was on the love and salvation offered by God.
The Bible contains about 2,350 verses on money. 15% of the Bible is about money/possessions, that is more than any other single topic including Heaven, Hell, faith or prayer!
No, Jesus emphasized the concept of heaven more than hell in his teachings.
Yes. He certainly did. In fact He taught a lot more about hell than heaven.
AnswerThis question can be best answered by Ecclesiastes 9:5: "For the living know that they shall die; but the dead know not anything, neither have they any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten." If the Bible is literally true and Ecclesiastes is a legitimate book of the Bible, then people go neither to heaven nor hell. The concept of heaven only came into the Jewish religion after the Babylonian Exile, when the Jews were exposed to new ideas.
Yes of course & the both are mentioned in the Holy Quran. refer to question below for more information.
You can't know that, because Jesus also talked about Heaven way more in life than just what was in the Bible, so we CAN'T know!
It was St. Thomas Aquinas who said that those in heaven would look down on those in hell and be more glad for their suffering.
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.
This was open to translation. It never actually said he went to hell, but it did say that he ascended and descended in Ephesians 4. Some people believe that Adam and Eve's sin closed the gates of heaven, and all souls went to the land of the dead, called Sheol. This was not the fiery pits of hell that are described later in the Bible, but more like a holding place for everyone that died. Part of this line of thought is that when Jesus died, he ascended to reopen the gates of Heaven, the descended into Sheol to make the proclamation.