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Hell: What Do You Really Believe?


By George W. Sarris

It’s been said that the best indicator of what people really value is what’s written in their checkbook! 

That’s because what we do speaks louder than what we say.  Proverbs 20:6 is a clear example of that truth –

“Many a man claims to have unfailing love, but a faithful man who can find?”

When it comes to the issue of Hell, what we say often doesn’t match up with what we do

What I mean is that many Christians say they believe that Hell is a place of conscious, never-ending suffering, but don’t live their lives in ways that would indicate that they really believe it to be true.  They don’t exhibit any serious concern for the billions of people supposedly destined to end up there.  They have to be taught to “just walk across the room,” instead of running as fast as they possibly can to tell their lost relatives, friends, and coworkers of the horrific danger they face.  And, very few seem to care enough for those they think are heading toward endless misery to go out of their way to try to stop them. 

The lost may be destined to experience the “fires” of Hell.  But, the saved often don’t seem to have enough of a “fire” in their belly to actually do anything about it.

So, what do most Christians really believe about Hell?  Or, more importantly, what do you really believe about Hell?

The Real Issue

We, in our time, are not as bold about communicating our belief in Hell as many of our predecessors were.  Consider the words of one of the best known, most learned, and well respected preachers and theologians of Protestant Church history, Jonathan Edwards.  His sermons began the First Great Awakening in America in the 1730s and 1740s, and he is widely considered to be one of the greatest thinkers America has yet produced. 

Do but consider what it is to suffer extreme torment forever, and ever to suffer it day and night, from one day to another, from one year to another, from one age to another, from one thousand ages to another, and so, adding age to age, and thousands to thousands, in pain, in wailing and lamenting, groaning and shrieking, and gnashing your teeth; with your souls full of dreadful grief and amazement, with your bodies and every member full of racking torture, without any possibility of getting ease; without any possibility of moving God to pity by your cries; without any possibility of hiding yourselves from him; without any possibility of diverting your thoughts from your pain; without any possibility of obtaining any manner of mitigation, or help, or change for the better any way.

. . . when after you shall have worn out a thousand more such ages, yet you shall have no hope, but shall know that you are not one whit nearer to the end of your torments; but that still there are the same groans, the same shrieks, the same doleful cries, incessantly to be made by you, and that the smoke of your torment shall still ascend up, forever and ever . . .

Is that what you believe?

A little over a century later, another great preacher and theologian, Charles Spurgeon, challenged his audience with these words:

There is a place, as much beneath imagination as heaven is above it; a place of murky darkness, where only lurid flames make darkness visible; a place where beds of flame are the fearful couches upon which spirits groan; a place where God Almighty from his mouth pours a stream of brimstone, kindling that “pile of fire and of much wood,” which God has prepared of old as a Tophet for the lost and ruined. There is a spot, whose only sights and scenes are fearful woe; there is a place . . . where the only music is the mournful symphony of damned spirits; where howling, groaning, moaning, wailing and gnashing of teeth, make up the horrid concert. There is a place where demons fly, swift as air, with whips of knotted burning wire, torturing poor souls; where tongues, on fire with agony, burn the roofs of mouths that shriek for drops of water—that water all denied. There is a place where soul and body endure as much of infinite wrath as the finite can bear; where the inflictions of justice crush the soul, where the continual flagellations of vengeance beat the flesh; where the perpetual pourings out of the vials of eternal wrath scald the spirit, and where the cuttings of the sword strike deep into the inner man.

Spurgeon was the foremost preacher of the nineteenth century and is still the most widely read preacher in history.  In 1861, before the modern “mega-churches” of today that seat thousands, Spurgeon’s congregation built The Metropolitan Tabernacle which seated 4,700 people.  In that same year, he preached at London’s Crystal Palace to a congregation of 23,654 people without the use of a microphone or any other means of amplification.

Do Spurgeon’s words reflect the belief that exists in your heart?

Most people today, including many devout Christians, feel embarrassed when they read or hear such hellfire-and-brimstone preaching.  We don’t like to talk about Hell, and, when pressed by someone who questions it, we usually try to change the subject or explain that it is not a place of literal fire and torment.  We would prefer to describe the suffering and pain of Hell more abstractly as a state of loss or separation from God.  Many of us feel more comfortable if we say that it may not be inflicted pain, but simply felt pain. 

But, any way you look at it, what people generally claim to believe is that Hell is a place where countless billions of people will experience unending agony, pain and anguish.

Words vs. Actions

The common and traditionally held belief within Christendom is that Hell is a place of conscious suffering that never ends, established by the God who talks of turning the other cheek, forgiving sinners who know not what they are doing, and loving enemies in this world, but who withdraws His hand of mercy in the next. 

But, is that what we really believe?  Is it what the Bible really teaches?  Has it always been held by those who were considered true believers in the Church? 

Is that what you really believe?

If actions really do speak louder than words, could it be that our actions are actually telling us something important that we should listen to?  Are we instinctively questioning within ourselves whether or not what we have been told all our lives about the nature and duration of Hell is actually true?  Is it an issue that we should take time to reconsider?

In 1742, British poet Edward Young published a lengthy poem titled, Night Thoughts on Life, Death and Immortality in which he eloquently expressed a question on behalf of the “lost” that we would do well to ponder:

Father of Mercies! Why from silent earth
 Didst thou awake and curse me into birth,
 Tear me from quiet, banish me from night,
 And make a thankless present of Thy light,
 Push into being a reverse of Thee,
 And animate a clod with misery?

The nature of Hell is an important issue.  In light of what our actions are telling us, maybe we should give more thought to what we say we believe

Hellbuster Quote #2 J Preston Eby

“Few people, if they really had authority, would condemn anyone, even their worst enemy, to a burning, scorching, eternal hell. Yet, they expect God to do it!” J. Preston Eby

The following drawings and comments are from a young Korean woman who claims she went to Hell. If her account is true, who do you know who could possibly escape it based upon her comments? These scenes are reminiscent of the paintings and writings of the Dark Age Roman Catholic Church. Many Christian pastors and church leaders perpetuate these kinds of images in their sermons. Please note this young Korean, before she “saw” these things was in a night long prayer meeting. People who watch horror movies often have dramatic real like nightmares. This young person obviously had a horrible dream that totally contradicts the nature and character of God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ.

Christian Hell (Neraka Kristen)


In 2009, a young Korean artist who was attending an all-night prayer meeting, was visited by Jesus Christ. She was taken to see Hell and told by Jesus to draw what she saw, so that the world would know.

Artist Speaking: “As I was praying all night long, I was able to love Jesus more than ever. One day, Jesus came and said in my Heart, I will show you the deeper things of Heaven.


I thought I was going to visit heaven, but instead, we visited Hell.

As I followed Jesus, I cried the whole time.  I then began to hear moans, screams, and wailing sounds…..


 

Most people have a misconception about Hell. They are deluded and think that if they “Only Believe in Jesus Christ” they will end up in Heaven.

Some even think that once they die, there is nothing afterwards.  People believe as they think, and therefore they live their lives as they please…


Jesus also showed me that as people watch violent secular movies, demons would actually torment the person’s soul without the person realizing it. As a person watches the scenes from TV, their soul is tormented and wounded. Watching secular TV does not help Christians develop a loving relationship with our bridegroom Jesus.


I saw that when people were smoking and drinking, that spirits of snakes filled the alcoholic drinks and the cigarette smoke.


Jesus showed me how people fall into Hell.

Jesus: I see countless people falling into the eternal deep sea of the fire of Hell every single day…Please tell the people what you have witnessed in Hell! You must tell them about Hell! Tell people how awful and gruesome Hell is! You must paint the scene of Hell as if you are within my heart. Draw the scenes with My aching heart!


He felt such pity for people who were falling into Hell every single day!

As Jesus witnessed the sins committed by man, He cried.  Satan and his demons would tie the bodies of sinners so tight with iron chains to control them. Therefore sinners would go deeper and deeper in sin. I am pleading with you not to commit sin. Do NOT live as you desire. In Hell, the senses are hundreds of times more vivid than what we feel on Earth. The pain is more severe.

As I was painting the scenes of Hell, satan attacked me severely.  But I wanted to show the world about Hell and the heart of Jesus through these paintings.


I saw people being tormented on a cross.


I saw people who did not want to eat the bread of life (God’s Word).


There were people who would not discuss the things of their lives with Jesus, but made their own decisions, and followed their own will.


There were people who drank and ate prohibited things.




Jesus:
Please tell people who hurt each other’s’ hearts by their words that they must not hurt or wound their brothers/sisters in Christ.  They must not say things without care or love.


This is how Murderers, rapists and child kidnappers will be tormented.


The punishment for liars.



Those people who stole money will be penetrated by arrows and
needles.



In Hell, I saw a woman and her son who had died. In Hell they no longer loved each other. Because of the unbearable pain, they would do anything to escape the torment, even by stepping on each other.


Insects in Hell.

These insects are for people who committed sins by their thoughts. They were filled with their own thoughts and knowledge. Covered by countless maggots, their entire body is wounded by large insects; going in and out of the whole body, mouth, ears and head.

Persecution of the gospel: The picture shows how demons would influence people to persecute, harass and kill the messengers of the full and true gospel.



These people were filled with their own thoughts and knowledge.


These people were obstinate in their thinking. They thought, “why would Jesus work in my life?  Who am I?  I don’t think He loves me.  I am very evil.  I don’t think He would love someone like me.

They were also people who violated God’s word and ignore God’s commandments. They will be placed in an area similar to a frying pan, which was burning with Hell fire.




Those people who do not attempt to align their thoughts with God’s will end up in Hell. We must fix our minds and thoughts on God. This torment was for those Christians who did not share the gospel. They did not evangelize the good news to the lost. They ignored their calling.



This torment was for the people who had ignored God’s word and still continued to commit sin. They are the ones who performed evil in the eyes of the Lord.


For those who worshiped idols, those that had evil thoughts and were stubborn in their ways.


Grumblers and complainers also wound up in Hell. [1st Corinthians 10:10]


Grumblers and complainers in their heart.



There is a place in Hell for men who cheated on their spouses. For those who became gay or bisexual. They were penetrated by knives and spears.


 



For those who became sexually corrupt, their private parts were being pierced by demons.


Hell is endless, the torment are endless.


For those who would not repent.


A raging fire all around, with no place to escape.


You must kill any devil that is living inside of you.


When we repent and pray before God, angel armies come down and pierce the demons with their swords.


Jesus said, “Focus Me. You must focus only Me.


When people repent, they cross over from death to life, and Jesus is waiting for them on the other side.


They drop their heavy load of sin, and start on the narrow path to life, and off the road to hell.


 

Repent of your sins and believe in Jesus!

If you do, Heaven is waiting for you instead of Hell.
The place where you could be joyful and have a happy life forever!


Don’t go to Hell…!!!


In God We Trust

Wassallam.

Hell is dark, dark, dark to my soul. Albert Barnes, Presbyterian minister.

Albert Barnes was a well-know Presbyterian Minister in the nineteenth century wrote a very popular Bible commentary “Barnes Notes: Explanatory and Practical.” During his life he taught from a Calvinist sovereignty, election and predestination point of view which he changed in his later years to a free will position. After decades of ministering and commentating on the Bible he honestly confesses what the teaching of Hell did to his soul and his attitude toward God and life in general:

That any should suffer forever, lingering on in hopeless despair, and rolling amidst infinite torments without the possibility of alleviation and without end; that since God can save men and will save a part, he has not proposed to save all — these are real, not imaginary, difficulties… My whole soul pants for light and relief on these questions. But I get neither; and in the distress and anguish of my own spirit, I confess that I see no light whatever. I see not one ray to disclose to me why sin came into the world; why the earth is strewn with the dying and the dead; and why man must suffer to all eternity. I have never seen a particle of light thrown on these subjects, that has given a moment’s ease to my tortured mind… I confess, when I look on a world of sinners and sufferers — upon death-beds and grave-yards — upon the world of woe filled with hosts to suffer for ever: when I see my friends, my family, my people, my fellow citizens when I look upon a whole race, all involved in this sin and danger — and when I see the great mass of them wholly unconcerned, and when I feel that God only can save them, and yet he does not do so, I am stuck dumb. It is all dark, dark, dark to my soul, and I cannot disguise it. – Albert Barnes (Albert Barnes, well-known Presbyterian minister who wrote one of the best Bible commentaries in the nineteenth century)

1. Bible Mistranslations of the Word Hell

2. A chapter on the word Hell:

CHAPTER II. SECTION III.
(from The Origin and History of the Doctrine of Endless Punishment by Thomas B. Thayer)

ARGUMENT FROM THE WORD “SHEOL,” OR THE OLD TESTAMENT DOCTRINE OF HELL.

The word Hell, in the Old Testament, is always a translation of the Hebrew word Sheol, which occurs sixty-four times, and is rendered “hell” thirty-two times, “grave” twenty-nine times, and “pit” three times.

1. By examination of the Hebrew Scriptures it will be found that its radical or primary meaning is, The place or state of the dead. The following are examples:

“Ye shall bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave.” Gen. xvii 38.

“I will go down to the grave to my son mourning.” xxxviii 35.

“O that thou wouldst hide me in the grave!” Job xiV 13. “My life draweth nigh to the grave.” Ps. lxxxviiI 3.

“In the grave who shall give thee thanks?” lxxxvi 5.

“Our bones are scattered at the grave’s mouth.” cxlI 7.

“There is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest.” Ecc. ix. 10.

“If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold thou art there.” Ps. cxxxix. 8.

“Hell from beneath is moved to meet thee, at thy coming. It stirreth up the dead for thee,” &c. Isaiah xiV 9-15.

These passages show the Hebrew usage of the word sheol, which is the original of the word “grave” and “hell” in all the examples cited. It is plain that it has here no reference to a place of endless torment after death. The patriarch would scarcely say, “I will go down to an endless hell to my son mourning.” He did not believe his son was in any such place. Job would not very likely pray to God to hide him in a place of endless torment, in order to be delivered from his troubles.If the reader will substitute the word “hell” in the place of “grave” in all these passages, he will be in the way of understanding the Scripture doctrine on this subject.

But there is also a figurative sense to the word sheol, which is frequently met with in the later Scriptures of the Old Testament. Used in this sense, it represents a state of degradation or calamity, arising from any cause, whether misfortune, sin, or the judgment of God.

This is an easy and natural transition. The state or the place of the dead was regarded as solemn and gloomy, and thence the word sheol, the name of this place, came to be applied to any gloomy, or miserable state or condition. The following passages are examples:

“The sorrows of hell compassed me about; the snares of death prevented me.” Psalm xvii 4-6. This was a past event, and therefore the hell must have been this side of death.

Solomon, speaking of a child, says, “Thou shalt beat him, and deliver his soul from hell;” that is, from the ruin and woe of disobedience. ProV xxiiI 14.

The Lord says to Israel, in reference to their idolatries, “Thou didst debase thyself even unto hell.” Isaiah lvii 9. This, of course, signifies a state of utter moral degradation and wickedness, since the Jewish nation as such certainly never went down into a hell of ceaseless woe.

Jonah says, “Out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou heardst me.” ii 2. Here we see the absurdity of supposing sheol or hell to mean a place of punishment after death. The hell in this case was the belly of the whale; or rather the wretched and suffering condition in which the disobedient prophet found himself.

“The pains of hell got hold on me: I found trouble and sorrow.” Ps. cxvi 3. Yet David was a living man, all this while, here on the earth. So he exclaims again, “Great is thy mercy towards me. Thou hast delivered my soul from the lowest hell.” Ps. lxxxvi 13. Now here the Psalmist was in the lowest hell, and was delivered from it, while he was yet in the body, before death. Of course the hell here cannot be a place of endless punishment after death.

These passages sufficiently illustrate the figurative usage of the word sheol, “hell.” They show plainly that it was employed by the Jews as a symbol or figure of extreme degradation or suffering, without reference to the cause. And it is to this condition the Psalmist refers when he says, “The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God.” Ps. ix. 17. Though Dr. Allen, President of Bowdoin College, thinks “the punishment expressed here is cutting off from life, destroying from earth by some special judgment, and removing to the invisible place of the dead” (sheol).

It is plain, then, from these citations, that the word sheol, “hell,” makes nothing for the doctrine of future unending punishment as a part of the Law penalties. It is never used by Moses or the Prophets in the sense of a place of torment after death; and in no way conflicts with the statement already proved, that the Law of Moses deals wholly in temporal rewards and punishments.

This position, also, I wish to fortify by the testimony of Orthodox critics, men of learning and candor. They know, and therefore they speak.

1. CHAPMAN. “Sheol, in itself considered, has no connection with future punishment.” Cited by Balfour, First Inquiry.

2. DR. ALLEN, quoted above, says: “The term sheol does not seem to mean, with certainty, anything more than the state of the dead in their deep abode.”

3. DR. CAMPBELL. “Sheol signifies the state of the dead without regard to their happiness or misery.”

4. DR. WHITBY. “Sheol throughout the Old Testament signifies not the place of punishment, or of the souls of bad men only, but the grave only, or the place of death.”

5. DR. MUENSCHER. This distinguished author of a Dogmatic History in German, says: “The souls or shades of the dead wander in sheol, the realm or kingdom of death, an abode deep under the earth. Thither go all men, without distinction, and hope for no return. There ceases all pain and anguish; there reigns an unbroken silence; there all is powerless and still; and even the praise of God is heard no more.”

6. VON COELLN. “Sheol itself is described as the house appointed for all living, which receives into its bosom all mankind, without distinction of rank, wealth, or moral character. It is only in the mode of death, and not in the condition after death, that the good are distinguished above the evil. The just, for instance, die in peace, and are gently borne away before the evil comes; while a bitter death breaks the wicked like as a tree.” 2

These witnesses all testify that sheol, or hell, in the Old Testament, has no reference whatever to this doctrine; that it signifies simply the state of the dead, the invisible world, without regard to their goodness or badness, their happiness or misery. The Old Testament doctrine of hell, therefore, is not the doctrine of endless punishment. It is not revealed in the Law of Moses. It is not revealed in the Old Testament. To such result has our inquiry led us; and now what shall we say of it?

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