Heaven and Hell work pretty simply according to Christian mythology. All persons who are good and accept God and believe that Christ died for their sins and accept him will go to Heaven. Sinners and people who reject God and Christ will go to Hell. However, depending on who you talk to, the rules change.
hell is like a pit stop, you work off your sins then you go to heaven.
"The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" by William Blake was printed in 1790. It is a visionary work that explores themes of the human experience, spirituality, and the nature of good and evil.
That may refer to Dante's "Divine Comedy".
Ron Steele has written: 'Plundering hell to populate heaven' -- subject(s): Biography, Evangelistic work, Evangelists
It's not an option. This is destined to all human creatures by their Creator (God).On Earth you work for the benefit of Humanity and yours , then you get rewarded in Heaven with eternal life having immortal peace and delicacies. On the other hand , don't forget that there is eternal life in Hell and also its destined.
Jesus the Christ had not yet died for our sins.....the work was not yet done. heaven was not yet attainable. believing in God was enough to keep the saints from hell......but not enough to get them into heaven!
AnswerIf you believe in heaven, then you would end up there after you pass on.This is a contradiction between hell and heaven,bad and good, evil and moral,but it is not solution,you should believe in heaven similarly believe in hell,as you believe in bad and good,it is fact bad work gives the loss and good work gives the use,by this it will be better for you being related to any religion any nation any language,but world is only one where at each nation,each religion is nourishing existence,now the matter is when are you going to heaven,who is going to heaven everyone or only one,this justice you have to decide,by your behavior performance attitude and working can make you capable to convey to heaven.When are you going to heaven,now at that time,because you are ready to act upon orders of God,orders of your elders.
The question is not written very clearly. I do believe that something in me will survive after death. Heaven is what "Eye has not seen, ear has not heard, neither has it entered it the heart of man to conceive, that which God has in store for those who love Him." Purgatory is for people who still need a bit of work after death before they reach heaven. Despair is the absence of any hope. Hell is doing everything that you most enjoy on Earth -- forever! (This last is a joke.)
the wind pushed the propeller and it made the whole thing fly
He who tells you that an animal has no soul, has no soul himself, for Man is merely an animal of higher order. Heaven is to be experienced on Earth. Heaven is a metaphor for the opposite of all that is bad. For example, if you commit a crime, you will experience Hell. Hell is never-ending and for some it may begin at birth. Hell is a state of experience that is synonymous to affliction and condemnation. It is a very real experience, and it is felt by all animals. Just as Heaven may be experienced by any animal, Hell is no exception. Furthermore, when a person dies, their heart fails to pump oxygen from the lungs and into the brain. When the cells aren't supplied oxygen, they become toxic time-bombs. After a couple of hours, they rupture and are rendered useless. This is the actual point of death (no return). It may be in certain scenarios possible to revive them before this point, but it is usually best to let them pass. All of your memories, all of your experiences, and all of your knowledge will perish when you die. The only thing that remains is the chemical composition of what you once were and whatever intellectual properties (creations) you left behind. So there are no requests. You work for Heaven or you fall into Hell. It's your choice. ~ Right-hand hidden, left-hand free...
no
The title The Divine Comedy is appropriate because the work is a journey that leads from suffering in Hell (Inferno) to spiritual enlightenment in Heaven (Paradiso), encompassing the human experience of sin, redemption, and salvation. The word "comedy" in the title refers to the work's structure, where it starts in a place of darkness and ends in a place of light and ultimate fulfillment.