Want this question answered?
No. The first people to believe in Hell as a place of punishment were the Zoroastrians.
Buddhism
Buddhism
Being saved from sin implies that the consequence of sin is punishment in hell. It also implies that Jesus is divine and therefore capable of forgiving sins, so that the punishment will not be imposed. Some people do not believe that Jesus was, or is, divine. They do not believe in the Christian hell.
Muslims; as all people of other faiths and religions; believe that prison is a kind of justifiable punishment on violating laws.
As long as it is applied equally to everyone, yes. The legislature, acting for "the people" believe it is.
This is a hard question to answer. It's really very sentimental whether you think so or not; But i'd like to believe that you don't know what the punishment is until you've expierienced it. For some people, there is no punishment. For others, there is an extreme punishment. That really depends on what your thoughts are and who you are.
Dum people what do go to school for
In my view, no (although I've never been a victim of a capital crime); capital punishment is about revenge, and revenge never bring peace.Another view.Many people believe capital punishment is the ultimate legal sanction and many people find comfort and closure through it. Capital punishment has nothing to do with revenge.
....... taken into account when deciding on the punishment
Sometimes. It depends on the person and the punishment. Some people commit an offense, get caught and punished, and stop doing it because they expect that they would be punished again. Some people do it again because the punishment was not as bad as committing the offense was good. And some people simply never believe they will get caught next time.
People began to believe the notion "anything can happen"