John Proctor.
because they had just killed bob and were on the run from the cops, and he said they were sent down from heaven.
Jehangir.
Hamlet tells him to send his messengers to see if Polonius is in Heaven, and if he is not there, then he tells him to go see if he's in Hell in person. He then tells him that Polonius is under the stairwell.
Hank Hill from the adult cartoon King of the Hill
John Calvin (1509-1564) said god predestined heaven and others for hell, because god is sovereign and can do what he wants.
No one can say that because no one has been to heaven and back.
a term used to express the word hell... hell is the opposite of heaven and the said place to go if you die and don't go to heaven. a term used to express the word hell... hell is the opposite of heaven and the said place to go if you die and don't go to heaven.
Satan didn't exactly get sent to hell, he chose to be alienated from God, of his own free will, and "fell from heaven" Luke 10:18 [Jesus said] And he said to them, "I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven." He went to hell because he chose not to serve God.
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.
I think it was an old saying that many ministers quoted!
William Blake (1757-1827), in his poem The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
'In' is the usual word to use in reference to living in a street. LATRE. My apologies, I should have said that I was replying from the UK, where I feel that 'in' would be the more common useage. Just shows that George Bernard Shaw was right when he said that we are two nations divided by a common language! =================================== In American usage, one would usually say something like: "I live at 123 Hell Street in Heaven City" -or- "I live at 123 Hell Street, Heaven City" -or- "I live at the Hell Garden Apartments in Heaven City." If you didn't want to give a specific address, you would say: "I live on Hell Street in Heaven City." Saying "I live in Hell Street" would leave the listener with the impression that you are living in the middle of the roadway or that you are living in a tunnel under the street.
The quote "It is better to reign in Hell, than to serve in Heaven" is from John Milton's epic poem "Paradise Lost," where it is spoken by the character Lucifer. Lucifer makes this statement after being banished from Heaven following his rebellion against God.
John Proctor.
Let's first know what is heaven? Then you will get your answer. 'Heaven' and 'hell' are obviously for the mind, they do not have any existence elsewhere. So 'heaven' is a situation in which the mind gets what contends it deeply, a relaxation. That relaxation is not possible in the otherwise agitated life. Common life is sheer agitation. Right? Provocation, agitation, excitement, and the resultant frustration. 'Heaven' is the company that on one hand relaxes you, and on the other hand gives you the courage that it can happen! That it is not impossible, that the situation is not hopeless. "I can be free! My deepest dreams were not just nonsense. There were there to be realised. They can be realized!" You are struggling, laboring, somehow carrying yourself on, trudging and taking life as drudgery. You have given up all hope, and then the hope is rekindled. That is 'heaven'. And not only is it a hope that something can happen in the future, it is there for the taking. Extend your hand and take it! That is 'heaven'. The false will never admit that I am just a shadow. It will say that nothing but me is there. The world itself is 'heaven'. When is the world 'heaven'? When you realize that the world is like a door, a gateway to the beyond, now it is 'heaven'! The beyond is not heaven. Remember! Because beyond, there is no mind, and 'heaven' and 'hell' are in the mind. The world is 'heaven', when it is a gateway to the beyond. The world itself is 'hell' when the world becomes an objective reality in itself. "I am all!" When the world says, "I am all that there is," then the world is 'hell'. Everything is neither 'heaven' nor 'hell'. 'Heaven' exists for us because we are distant from the truth. When you are far something, only then it seems like 'heaven'. We said that the world is a gateway to the beyond. Beyond, there is no 'heaven' or 'hell'! There is just an empty stillness. 'Heaven' is for the one who has lost his way and who suddenly gets a guide. 'Hell' is when you have lost your way, and there are voices around that say that you cannot go back, that there is no home. A point comes where there is neither 'heaven' nor 'hell'. So, from 'hell' to 'heaven' and then 'beyond'!
Ghosts are not. However, demons are. Ghosts are spirits, and all spirits either go to heaven or hell, so no, but demons, as I said, are real.