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Senin, 02 Juli 2018

5 TERRIFYING Visions Of Hell By Survivors Of Near-Death ...
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Hell , in many religious traditions and folklore, is a place of torture and punishment in the hereafter. Religions with linear divine history often describe hell as a lasting goal while religions with cyclic history often describe hell as the intermediary period between incarnations. Usually these traditions place hell on other dimensions or below the surface of the earth and often enter the entrance to hell from the land of the living. Other end of the world include Heaven, Purgatory, Paradise, and Limbo.

Another tradition, which does not regard the afterlife as a place of punishment or reward, only describes Hell as the abode of the dead, the grave, the neutral place that lies beneath the surface of the Earth (for example, see Sheol and Hades).


Video Hell



Etimologi

The modern English word hell comes from Ancient English hel , helle (first proved to be about 725M to refer to the dead world of the dead) pagan Anglo-Saxon, and finally from Proto-Germanic * distant , which means "someone who covers or conceals something". The Germanic word also brings similar forms in other Germanic languages, such as Old Frisian helle , hille , Old Saxon hellia , Central Netherlands helle (Dutch modern hel ), Old High German helle (German Modern HÃÆ'¶lle ), Denmark, Norway and Sweden hel and helvede / hele ( hel Old Norse vÃÆ'ti where Iceland vÃÆ'ti "hell"), and Gothic distant . The Germanic word comes from the Indo-European roots that intersect with Indo-European languages ​​including Latin c? L? Re ("hiding", related to the English word "cellar") and the beginning of Ireland ceilid ("hiding"). Furthermore, the word was used to illustrate a concept in Christian theology, which saw Gehenna.

Some people theorize that the English word hell is from Old Norse hel . However, this is highly unlikely because hel appeared in Old English before the Viking invasion. Furthermore, the word has the same language in all other Germanic languages ​​and has a Proto-Germanic origin. Among other sources, Poetic Edda , compiled from traditional sources earlier in the 13th century, and Prose Edda , written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson, provides information about the beliefs of the Norse pagans, including a man named Hel, who is described as ruler over an underground location of the same name.

Maps Hell



Religion, mythology, and folklore

Hell appears in some mythology and religion. It is usually inhabited by demons and the souls of the dead. A tale of recurrent hell in folklore in some cultures is the allegory of a long spoon. Hell is often depicted in art and literature, perhaps the most famous in Dante Divine Comedy .

Can You Rescue A Soul From Hell?Will Jesus pardon Hell in the end ...
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Punishment

Punishment in Hell usually corresponds to a sin committed during life. Sometimes this distinction is specific, with the accursed souls suffering for every sin committed (see for example Plato's myth of Er or Dante's The Divine Comedy ), but sometimes they are common, damned sinful people who are degraded into one or more Hell chambers or to the level of suffering.

In many religious cultures, including Christianity and Islam, Hell is often described as a fiery, painful, and abusive affliction, leading to guilt. Although the general portrayal of Hell is a fire place, some other traditions describe hell as cold. Buddha - and in particular the Tibetan Buddhas - a description of Hell has the same amount of heat and cold Hell. Among the Christian descriptions, Dante's Inferno describes the deepest (9th) circle of the innermost blood lake as a guilty feeling. But the cold also played a role in the early depictions of Christianity, beginning with the Revelation of Paul, which originated from the beginning of the third century; "Dryhthelm Vision" by Venerable Bede of the seventh century; "Purgatory St Patrick", "The Vision of Tundale" or "Visio Tnugdali", and "Vision of the Monk of Eynsham", all of the twelfth century; and "Vision of Thurkill" from the early thirteenth century.

Man Ends Up In Hell During Near-Death Experience And Was ...
src: lionsground.com


Polytheism

Ancient Mesopotamia

The life of the Sumerian people is a gloomy dark cave located deep underground, where the population is believed to continue the "bleak version of life on earth". This gloomy domain is known as Kur, and is believed to be governed by the goddess Ereshkigal. All souls go to the same hereafter, and the actions of a person during life have no effect on how that person will be treated in the world to come.

The souls in Kur are believed to eat nothing but dry dust and the deceased relatives will ritually pour the offerings into the graves of the dead through clay pipes, allowing the dead to drink. However, the burial evidence shows that some people believe that the goddess Inanna, Ereshkigal's sister, has the power to reward her followers with special favors in the afterlife. During the Third Dynasty of Ur, it is believed that the treatment of a person in the afterlife depends on how he is buried; people who have been given a luxurious burial will be treated well, but those who have been given a poor burial will get a bad fee.

The entrance to the Kur is believed to be in the Zagros mountains in the far east. It has seven gates, where one soul must pass. Dewa Neti is a gatekeeper. Ereshkigal sukkal , or messenger, is the god Namtar. Galla is a class of devils believed to be in the underworld; their main purpose seems to have dragged the unfortunate man back to Kur. They are often referenced in magical texts, and some texts describe them as seven in number. Some of the remaining poems depict galla dragging the god Dumuzid into the underworld. Then Mesopotamia knew the underworld under the name of the Eastern Semitic: Irkalla. During the Akkadian Age, Ereshkigal's role as ruler of the underworld was assigned to Nergal, the god of death. The Akkadians tried to harmonize this double world government by making Nergal Ereshkigal's husband.

Ancient Egyptian

With the advent of the Osiris cult during the Middle Kingdom, the "democratization of religion" offered to its followers the lowest prospects of everlasting life, with moral fitness being the dominant factor in determining one's suitability. At the moment of death one is faced with judgment by a court of divine forty-two judges. If they had lived a life consistent with the teachings of Goddess Maat, who represented true truth and life, the person was welcomed into the heavenly reed field. If proven guilty, the person is thrown to Ammit, "persecutor of the dead" and will be cursed to the lake of fire. The person taken by the perpetrator is the first subject to a terrifying punishment and then annihilated. This portrayal of punishment may have influenced the medieval perception of hell in hell through early Christian and Coptic texts. Purification for the righteous appears in the description of "Flame Island", in which man experiences victory over evil and rebirth. For the damned total destruction becomes a state of no waiting but no suggestion of eternal torture; weighing the hearts in Egyptian mythology can lead to destruction. The story of Khaemwese illustrates the torture of the rich, who did not do good deeds, when he died and compared them to the blessed state of the poor who had also died. Divine forgiveness of judgment always remains a major concern for the Ancient Egyptians.

A modern understanding of the concept of Egyptian hell depends on six ancient texts:

  1. Two-Way Book ( Book of Rosettes )
  2. The Book of Amduat ( Book of Hidden Spaces , The Book That Lays in the Underworld )
  3. Gothic Book
  4. The Book of the Dead ( Next Book Next to Today )
  5. The Book of Earth
  6. The Caverns Book

Greece

In classical Greek mythology, under Heaven, Earth, and Pontus is Tartarus, or Tartaros (Greek ????????, a deep place). It is a deep, gloomy place, a hole or chasm used as a prison of torment and suffering within Hades (the whole underworld) with Tartarus being a component of hell. In Gorgias , Plato (c. 400 BC) writes that souls were judged after death and those who received punishment were sent to Tartarus. As a place of punishment, it can be considered hell. The classic Hades, on the other hand, are more similar to Old Testament Sheol.

Europe

The European Hell included Breton mythology "Anaon", Celtic mythology "Uffern", Slavic mythology "Peklo", Sami mythological hell and Finnish "tuonela" ("manala").

Asia

Asian Hell includes Bagobo "Gimokodan" and ancient Indian mythology "Kalichi" or "Naraka".

In the folklore among the Ainu people, hell is underground, and is described as an unattractive wet place reserved for sinners.

Also Diyu, Taoist Hell.

Africa

African Hell includes Haida mythology Hetgwauge and Swahili Hell mythology ( kuzimu ). Serer religion rejects the general idea of ​​heaven and hell. In Serer religion, acceptance by long-gone ancestors is as close as possible to any paradise that can be obtained. Rejection and becoming a wandering soul is a kind of hell for a passer-by. The soul of the dead must go to Jaaniw (the holy place of the soul). Only those who have lived their lives on earth according to the doctrine of Serer will be able to make this necessary journey and thus be accepted by the ancestors. Those who can not make the journey become lost and wandering souls, but they do not burn in "hellfire".

Native Americans

Hell in America includes the Aztec religion, Mictlan, Inuit religion, and Yanomami religion Shobari Waka. In the Maya religion, Xibalba (or Metnal ) is a dangerous underworld from nine levels. The entrance and exit of it is said to be steep, thorny and very scary. The healing ritual will sing the healing prayer to expel the disease to Xibalba . Most Popul Vuh describe the adventures of Heroes of the Heroic Warrior in their cunning fight with evil superintendent Xibalba .

The Aztecs believe that dead people travel to Mictlan , a neutral place found deep in the north. There is also the legend of the white flower, which is always dark, and is home to the gods of death, especially Mictlantecutli and his wife Mictlantecihuatl, which literally means "ruler of Mictlan". The trip to the Mictlan takes four years, and the travelers have to overcome a difficult test, such as through the mountains where the mountains crash into each other, a field where the wind carries a meat-peeling knife, and a river of blood with a frightening jagar.

Medieval Hell : creepy
src: i.redd.it


Abrahamic religions

Hell is seen by most Abrahamic traditions as a place or form of punishment.

Judaism

Early Judaism had no concept of Hell, though the concept of life after death was introduced during the Hellenistic period, apparently from the neighboring Hellenistic religion. It happens for example in the Book of Daniel. Daniel 12: 2 states, "And many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth, shall awake, some to everlasting life, some to shame and everlasting contempt."

Judaism has no particular doctrine of the afterlife, but it has a mystical/Orthodox tradition to describe Gehinnom. Gehinnom is not a Hell, but it was originally a grave and later in a kind of Purgatory where one is judged by one's life, or rather, where one becomes fully conscious of his own shortcomings and his negative actions throughout his life. Kabbalah describes it as a "waiting room" (commonly translated as "entrance") for all souls (not just bad people). The majority of rabbinic thought states that people are not in Gehinnom forever; the longest one that could be there is said to be 12 months, but there are exceptions that are sometimes recorded. Some consider it a spiritual workshop in which the soul is purified for the eventual ascent to Olam Habah ( heb. ?????; lit. "The world to come", often seen as analogous to heaven). It is also mentioned in the Kabbalah, where the soul is described as broken, like a candle flame shining on another light: the part of the soul that rises to pure and the "unfinished" piece is reborn.

According to Jewish teachings, hell is not entirely physical; On the contrary, this can be compared to a very intense shame. People are ashamed of their bad conduct and this is a misery that covers bad deeds. When a person has deviated from the will of God, one is said to be in Gehinnom. It's not meant to refer to some point in the future, but for now. The teshuva gate (back) is said to be always open, so that one can adjust his will to God's will at all times. Being out of harmony with God's will itself is a punishment according to the Torah.

Many scholars of Jewish mysticism, especially the Kabbalah, mention the seven "compartments" or "dwellings" of hell, just as there are seven divisions of Heaven. This division has many different names, and the most frequently mentioned are as follows:

  • Sheol (Hebrew: ??????? - "Underworld", "Hades"; "grave")
  • Abaddon (Hebrew: ????????? - "calamity", "destruction")
  • Be'er Shachat (Hebrew: ??????????, Be'er Shachath - "corruption hole")
  • Tit ha-Yaven (Hebrew: ?????????? - "mud stuck")
  • Sha'are Mavet (Hebrew: ????????????, Sha'arei Maveth - "death gate")
  • Tzalmavet (Hebrew: ????????, Tsalmaveth - "shadow of death")
  • Gehinnom (Hebrew: ?????????, Gehinnom - "Hinom Valley"; "Tartarus", "Purgatory")

In addition to the above, there are also additional terms often used to refer to Hell in general or to some areas in the underworld:

  • Azazel (Hebrew: ????????, from ez ???: "goat" "go" - "goat goat", "scapegoat"; "removal of the whole", "curse")
  • Dudael (Hebrew: ????????? - lit. "cauldron of God")
  • Tehom (Hebrew: ?????? - "abyss"; "sea", "deep sea")

  • Tophet (Hebrew: ?????? or ??????, Topheth - "place of fire", "place of burning", "Place to spit ";" inferno ")
  • Tzoah Rotachat (Hebrew: ?????? ????????, Tsoah Rothachath - "boiling dirt")
  • Mashchit (Hebrew: ?????????, Mashchith - "ruin", "ruin")
  • Dumah (Hebrew: ?????? - "silent")
  • Neshiyyah (Hebrew: ????????? - "forgotten", "Limbo")
  • Bor Shaon (Hebrew: ????????????? "Sound sound")
  • Eretz Tachtit (Hebrew: ????? ??????????, Erets Tachtith - "lowest earth").
  • Cook Mavdil (Hebrew: ??????????????, Cook Dump - "split curtain")
  • Haguel (Ethiopic: ??? - "devastation", "lost", "waste")
  • Ikisat (Ethiopic: ????? - "snake", "dragon"; "place of punishment in the future")

For more information, see Qliphoth.

Christianity

The Christian doctrine of hell comes from the parts of the New Testament. The word hell does not appear in the Greek New Testament; is not one of the three words used: the Greek words Tartarus i , or the Hebrew Gehinnom .

In the Septuagint and the New Testament, the author uses the Greek term Hades to Hebrew Sheol, but often with the Jewish concept rather than the Greek concept in mind. In the Jewish concept of Sheol, as expressed in Ecclesiastes, Sheol or Hades is a place where there is no activity. However, since Augustine, Christians believe that the souls of the dead rested peacefully, in the case of Christians, or suffered, in the case of condemned men, after death until the resurrection.

While these three terms are translated in KJV as "hell" these three terms have three very different meanings.

  • Hades has similarities to Old Testament terms, Sheol as "the place of the dead" or "grave". So, it is used in references to both the righteous and the wicked, as both end up there.
  • Gehenna refers to the "Valley of Hinnom", which is a garbage dump outside of Jerusalem. It is a place where people burn their garbage and thus there is always a burning fire there. The bodies that are considered dead in sin without the hope of salvation (like those who commit suicide) are thrown there to be destroyed. Gehena is used in the New Testament as a metaphor for the last place of punishment for the wicked after the resurrection.
  • TartarÃÆ'³? (the verb "throwing into Tartarus", used of the fall of the Titans in Illiad 14.296) occurs only once in the New Testament in II Peter 2: 4, where it is parallel to the use of the noun form in 1 Enoch as the place of angel detention that fell. It does not mention the human soul sent there in the afterlife.

The Roman Catholic Church defines Hell as "a definite state of self-isolation from communion with God and blessed." One finds himself in Hell as a result of dying in mortal sins without repentance and receiving the merciful love of God, being separated forever from him by his own free choice immediately after death. In the Roman Catholic Church, many other Christian churches, such as Baptists and Episcopalians, and some Greek Orthodox churches, Hell are taught as the final destiny of those who have not been found worthy after the general resurrection and final judgment, where they will be punished forever for sin and separated permanent from God. The nature of this judgment is inconsistent with many Protestant churches that teach salvation stemming from receiving Jesus Christ as their savior, while the Greek and Catholic Orthodox Church teaches that judgment depends on faith and deeds. However, many Liberal Christians throughout the Liberal Protestant and Anglican churches believe in universal reconciliation (see below) although it may be contrary to a more evangelical view in their denominations.

Some modern Christian theologians adhere to the doctrine of permanent immortality. Conditional permanence is the belief that the soul dies with the body and does not live until the resurrection. Like other Jewish writings from the Second Temple period, the New Testament text distinguishes two words, both translated "Hell" in the older English Bible: Hades , "graves", and Gehenna

Christian mortalism is a doctrine that all men and women, including Christians, must die, and not continue and are unconscious after death. Therefore, annihilationism includes the doctrine that "bad guys" are also destroyed rather than tortured forever in traditional "hell" or oceans of fire. Mortalism and Christian anihilism are directly related to the doctrine of permanent immortality, the idea that the human soul is not eternal unless it is given eternal life at the second coming of Christ and the resurrection of the dead.

Bible scholars who see this problem through the Hebrew text have rejected the teaching of innate immortality. The rejection of the immortality of the soul, and the advocacy of Christian mortalism, is the hallmark of Protestantism since the early days of the Reformation with Martin Luther himself rejecting the traditional notion, although his views did not lead to orthodox Lutheranism. One of the most famous English opponents of the immortality of the soul is Thomas Hobbes who describes the idea as "contagion" of Greek in Christian doctrine. The modern supporters of conditional immortality include some in the Anglican church like N.T. Wright and as a Seventh-day Adventist denomination, Bible Students, Jehovah's Witnesses, Christadelphians, Living Church of God, International Church of God, and several other Protestant Christians, and recent Roman Catholic teachings. It is not the Roman Catholic dogma that anyone is in hell. Also, the 1993 Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) seems to allow space for new understanding. In 1033 it states: 'The state of the definitive self-exclusion of fellowship with God and blessed is called "hell"'. Then in 1035 the use of quotation marks may imply the metaphorical nature of the description, and the words that follow are certainly open to interpretation: "... they suffer the punishment of hell," eternal fire. "The ultimate punishment of hell is the eternal separation of God" (CCC 1035). During the Hearing in 1999, Pope John Paul II commented: "The picture of hell presented to us by Scripture must be interpreted correctly, showing the frustration and voidness of life without God. Instead of a place, hell shows their circumstances, which is free and certain separating from God, the source of all life and joy. "

Other denominations

The official belief of the Seventh-day Adventist Church supports annihilationism. They rejected the purgatory of the Catholics and taught that the dead lay in the grave until they were raised for the final judgment, both the righteous and the wicked awaiting the resurrection at the Second Coming. Seventh-day Adventists believe that death is a state of unconscious sleep until awakening. They base this belief on biblical texts such as Ecclesiastes 9: 5 which says "the dead know nothing", and 1 Thessalonians 4: 13-18 which contains a description of the dead raised from the grave at the second coming. These verses, it is said, show that death is only a period or a form of sleep.

Adventists teach that the resurrection of the righteous will occur at the second coming of Jesus, while the resurrection of the wicked will occur after the millennium of Revelation 20. They reject the traditional doctrine of hell as a state of eternal conscious abuses, believing otherwise that the wicked will be destroyed permanently after the millennium.

Adventist view of death and hell reflects the underlying beliefs: (a) conditional conservation (or conditionalism), which is contrary to the immortality of the soul; and (b) holistic (or monistic) Christian anthropology or human nature, which is against the bipartite or tripartite views.

Jehovah's Witnesses argue that the soul ceases to exist when the person dies and hence the Hell (Sheol or Hades) is a state of no existence. In their theology, Gehenna is different from Sheol or Hades because there is no hope for the resurrection. Tartarus is considered a metaphorical state of fallen angels falling between the time of their moral downfall (Genesis chapter 6) to their post-millenial destruction along with Satan (Revelation 20).

Universalist Christians believe in universal reconciliation, the belief that all human souls (even demons and fallen angels) will eventually be reconciled to God and received in Heaven. This view is held by some Unitarian-Universalists.

According to Second Coming of Christian Advent of Emanuel Swedenborg, hell is there because the bad guys want it. They, not God, introduce evil to mankind.

Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) teach that hell is a state of death and resurrection, where unrepentant spirits when on earth must suffer for their own sins (Doctrine and Covenants 19 : 15-17).

Islam

In Islam, jahannam (in Arabic: ????) (related to the Hebrew gehinnom ) is a place filled with blazing fire, various other torture for those who have been cursed in the hereafter. After Judgment Day, must be occupied by unbelievers of God, those who have violated their law, or reject His messenger. "Islamic enemies" were sent to Hell soon after their death.

Like Zoroastrian, Muslims believe that on Judgment Day, all souls will pass over the bridge over hell (Chinvat Bridge in Zorastrianism, As-Sir? T in Islam) which destined for hell will become too narrow and fall from their new dwelling. Hell resembles Christian versions of Hell because it is under the sky and full of fire, but this is primarily a place of punishment, created by God, and not a demon region to fight against the sky above.

The holy book of Islam, the Qur'an, gives many literal descriptions of the condemned in the burning hell, comparing them to heaven like heaven ( jannah ) enjoyed by pious believers. The suffering in Hell is physical and spiritual, and varies according to the condemned sins. In the Qur'an, God firmly declares that the majority of mankind and Jin will be cursed eternally in the fiery Jahannam.

Heaven and Hell are each divided into seven different levels, with occupants assigned to each depending on their actions - good or bad - during their lifetime. The gates of Hell are guarded by Maalik, who is the leader of the angels assigned as the guardians of hell, also known as Zabaaniyah . While hell is usually described as hot, there is one hole ( Zamhareer ) characterized in Islamic tradition as an unbearable cold, with snowstorms, ice, and snow.

Polytheism ( shirk ) is a very sad sin because entering Paradise is forbidden for a polytheist (idol) because its place is Hell; and the lowest hell hole ( Hawiyah ), intended for hypocrites who profess to believe in God and his messengers but in their hearts is not. Not all Muslims and scholars agree that hell is a permanent destination or whether some or all that are condemned will ultimately be forgiven and allowed to enter paradise.

BahÃÆ'¡'ÃÆ' Faith

In the BahÃÆ'¡'ÃÆ' Faith, conventional descriptions of Hell and Heaven are considered as symbolic representations of spiritual conditions. The writings of Bahá¡'A illustrate the closeness to God to be heaven, and conversely, the remoteness of God as hell.

Don't Believe in Hell? You Will When You Get There
src: www.churchmilitant.com


Eastern Religion

Buddhism

In "Devaduta Sutta", 130th discourse of Majjhima Nikaya, Buddha taught about hell in clear detail. Buddhism teaches that there are five (sometimes six) natural rebirths, which can then be subdivided into degrees of suffering or pleasure. Of these realms, the realm of hell, or Naraka , is the lowest realm of rebirth. From the realm of hell, the worst is Av? Ci or "endless suffering". The disciple of the Buddha, Devadatta, who tried to kill the Buddha on three occasions, and created a schism in the monastic order, is said to have been reborn in the Avici Hell.

However, like all natural rebirths, rebirth in the realm of Hell is not permanent, although suffering can last for thousands of years before being born again. In the Lotus Sutra, the Buddha teaches that ultimately even Devadatta will become Pratyekabuddha himself, emphasizing the temporary nature of the Hell realm. Thus, Buddhism teaches to flee from the relentless migration of rebirth (both positive and negative) through the attainment of Nirvana.

Bodhisattva Ksitigarbha, according to Ksitigarbha Sutra, makes a great oath as a young girl not to attain Nirvana until all beings are liberated from Hell Realms or another unkind rebirth. In popular literature, Ksitigarbha travels to Hell realm to teach and free sentient beings from their suffering.

Hinduism

The early Vedic religion had no concept of hell. ? g-veda mentions three realms, bh? r (earth), svar (sky) and bhuvas or antarik? a (middle area, ie air or atmosphere). In the later Hindu literature, especially the books of law and the Puranas, more of the mentioned realms, including nature similar to Hell, called naraka (in Devan? Gar?: ???). Yama as the first man born (along with his twin brother, Yam?), Based on his priorities, becomes the male ruler and judge over their departure. Initially he lived in Heaven, but then, especially medieval, tradition mentions his palace in naraka.

In the law books (sm? Tis and dharma-s? Tras, like Manu-Ti? Ti), naraka is the place of punishment for sin. This is a lower spiritual plane (called naraka-loka ) where the spirit is judged and some karma affects the next life. In Mahabharata there is a mention of the Pandavas and the Korawa both going to Heaven. At first Yudhisthir went to heaven where he saw Duryodhana enjoying heaven; Indra tells him that Duryodhana is in heaven when he performs the duties of Kshatriya. Then he showed Yudhisthir's hell where his brothers looked. Later it is known that this is a test for Yudhisthir and that his brothers and the Kauravas are all in heaven and living happily in the abode of the divine god. Hell is also described in various Puranas and other scriptures. The Garuda Purana gives a detailed description of Hell and its features; it lists the number of penalties for most crimes, such as modern criminal law.

It is believed that those who commit sins go to Hell and must be punished according to the sins they commit. God of Yamar? Ja, who is also the god of death, leads Hell. The detailed account of all the sins committed by an individual is kept by Chitragupta, who is the record keeper in Yama court. Chitragupta recites the sins committed and Yama orders the appropriate punishment to be given to the individual. These penalties include dipping boiling oil, burning fire, torturing using various weapons, etc. In various hells. Individuals who complete their quota of punishment are reborn according to their karmic balance. All created beings are not perfect and thus have at least one sin into their records; but if a person in general leads a godly life, one rises to svarga, a temporal pleasures similar to paradise, after a brief period of redemption in Hell and before the next reincarnation, in accordance with the law of karma.

According to the iron world Brahma Kumaris (kalyug, stage of the world cycle) is considered hell.

Jainism

In Jain cosmology, Naraka (translated as Hell) is the name given to the world of a suffering existence. However, Naraka is different from the hell of the Abrahamic religions as the soul is not sent to Naraka as a result of divine judgment and punishment. In addition, the length of stay in Naraka is not lasting, although it is usually very long and measurable in billions of years. The soul is born into Naraka as a direct result of previous karma (action of body, speech and mind), and is there for a limited period until its karma has achieved maximum results. After his karma is exhausted, he may be reborn in one of the higher worlds as a result of his previously immature karma.

If you want to send a message to Tujuh alasan adalah:

  1. Ratna Prabha
  2. Sharkara prabha
  3. Valuka Prabha
  4. Panká prabha
  5. Dhuma prabha
  6. Tamaha prabha
  7. Mahatamaha prabha

Hell Beings are the kind of souls that are in these hells. They were born in hell with a sudden manifestation. The creatures of hell have a body vaikriya (protean body that can change itself and take various forms). They have a fixed life span (ranging from ten thousand to billions of years) in each hell where they live. According to Jain's scripture, Tattvarthasutra, here are the causes of birth in hell:

  1. Kills or causes pain with a strong desire.
  2. Excessive attachment to worldly matters and pleasures by continuing to commit cruel and cruel acts.
  3. A life of gratitude and uncontrollability.

Sikhism

In the Sikh thought, Hell and Heaven are not the place to live in the hereafter, they are part of the human spiritual topography and nothing is the opposite. They refer to the stages of good and evil life each and can be lived right now and here as long as our existence in the world. For example, Master Arjan explains that people who are caught in the emotional bond and doubt of life in hell on Earth, that is their life is hell.

Taoism

Ancient Taoism has no concept of hell, because morality is seen as a man-made distinction and there is no concept of an immaterial soul. In his native country of China, where Taoism adopts the teachings of other religions, popular beliefs underpin the Taoist hell with many gods and spirits that punish sin in dire ways.

Chinese people's faith

Diyu is the domain of the dead in Chinese mythology. This is very loosely based on the concept of Naraka Buddha combined with traditional Chinese afterlife beliefs and various popular expansions and re-interpretations of these two traditions. Ruled by Yanluo Wang, the King of Hell, Diyu is an underground-level maze and space where souls are taken to atone for their worldly sins.

Combining ideas from Taoism and Buddhism as well as traditional Chinese folk religion, Diyu is a kind of purgatory that serves not only to punish but also to renew spirits ready for the next incarnation. There are many gods associated with the place, whose names and purposes are the subject of much conflicting information.

The exact number of levels in the Chinese Hell - and their associated gods - differs according to Buddhist or Taoist perceptions. Some talk about three to four 'Courts', others as many as ten. Ten judges are also known as the 10 Kings of Yama. Each Court discusses different aspects of redemption. For example, murder is punished in one Court, adultery in another court. According to some Chinese legends, there are eighteen levels in Hell. Punishment also varies according to belief, but most legends speak of a very imaginative space in which the wrongdoers are sawed in two, beheaded, thrown into a manure pit or forced to climb a tree decorated with a sharp knife.

However, most legends agree that once the soul (usually referred to as the 'ghost') has redeemed their deeds and repented, he was given a Drink Cloaking by Meng Po and sent back into the world to be born again, perhaps as an animal or a poor or sick person, for further punishment.

The Gates of Hell
src: investigate.ingress.com


Other traditions

Zoroastrianism

Zoroastrianism has historically suggested some possible fate for the bad guys, including destruction, purification in the molten metal, and eternal punishment, all of which have stood in the writings of Zoroaster. Zoroaster's eschatology includes the belief that wicked souls will remain in hell until, after the arrival of three saves at a thousand-year interval, Ahura Mazda reconciles the world, destroys evil and raises the tormented souls to achieve perfection.

The holy Gathas mention the "House of Lies" to them "which is evil territory, evil deeds, bad words, evil Self, and evil thoughts, Liars." However, the most famous Zoroastrian text to describe hell in detail is the Book of Arda Viraf. It describes the specific penalty for certain sins - for example, trampled by livestock as a punishment for neglecting the need for working animals. Other descriptions can be found in Holy Scriptures (Hadhokht Nask), Religious Considerations (Dadestan-i Denig) and Spirit of Wisdom Spiritual (Mainyo-I-Khard) .

Wicca

In Wicca, there is no such thing as hell because most Wiccan do not believe in the concept of punishment or reward. Although Wiccan views differ among different denominations, Wiccan tends to prefer to see the God of the Horn and the Goddess as a gentle god.

American Christianity and the Hell of Paradise Lost | Pursuing Veritas
src: pursuingveritasdotcom.files.wordpress.com


In popular culture

In his book Divine Commedia , defined in 1300), Dante Alighieri uses the concept of taking Virgil as his guide through Inferno (and later, in both the Canticle, up the mountain Purgatorio). Virgil himself was not condemned in Hell in Dante's poetry, but rather as an idolater, confined to Limbo just on the edge of Hell. Geography of Hell is very detailed in this work, with nine concentric circles leading deeper into Earth and deeper into the punishments of Hell, until, in the center of the world, Dante finds Satan himself trapped in the frozen lake of Cocytus. A small tunnel crosses Satan and exits to the other side of the world, at the base of Purgatory Volcano.

John Milton's Paradise Lost was opened with fallen angels, including their leader, Satan, woke up in Hell after being defeated in a war in heaven and that action returned to it at some point throughout the poem. Milton describes Hell as a devil's residence, and a passive prison from which they plan their revenge to Heaven through humanity's corruption. The 19th-century French poet, Arthur Rimbaud, mentioned this concept also in the title and theme of one of his main works, A Season In Hell . Rimbaud's poem illustrates his own suffering in poetic form and other themes.

Many great epics of European literature include episodes that take place in Hell. In the Roman poem epic Virgil, The Aeneid, Aeneas descended to Dis (hell) to visit his father's spirit. The underworld is only vaguely described, with an unexplored path leading to the punishment of Tartarus, while another leads through Erebus and the Elysian Field.

The idea of ​​Hell is very influential to writers like Jean-Paul Sartre who wrote the 1944 drama No Exit about the idea that "Hell is another." Although not a religious person, Sartre was fascinated by his interpretation of a state of Hellish misery. CS Lewis's The Great Divorce (1945) borrowed his title from William Blake The Wedding of Heaven and Hell (1793) and his inspiration from Divine Comedy as a guided narrator through Hell and Heaven. Hell is described here as an endless and lonely city of dusk, on which the night did not seem to sink. The night was actually the Apocalypse, and marked the arrival of the devil after their judgment. Before night came, anyone could escape from Hell if they left themselves beforehand and accepted Heaven's offer, and a trip to Heaven revealed that Hell was so small; it is no more or less than what happens to the soul that turns away from God and into itself.

Piers Anthony in his series The Incarnation of Eternity illustrates the example of Heaven and Hell through Death, Destiny, Underworld, Nature, War, Time, Good God, and Devils. Robert A. Heinlein offers the yin-yang version of Hell where there are still some good inside; most clearly in his book Occupation: A Comedy of Justice . Lois McMaster Bujold uses his Father, Mother, Son, Daughter, and Their Fathers' Five in the Chaldean Curse with the example of hell as a formless chaos. Michael Moorcock is one of the many that offers Chaos-Evil- (Hell) and Uniformity- (Heaven) as an equally unacceptable extreme that must be held in balance; especially in the series Elric and Eternal Champion . Fredric Brown wrote a number of fantasy short stories about Satan's activity in Hell. Cartoonist Jimmy Hatlo created a series of cartoon about life in Hell named The Hatlo Inferno , which ran from 1953 to 1958.

Final Destination: Hell?
src: az616578.vo.msecnd.net


Also see

  • A scared call
  • Damn
  • Divine Levy
  • Terrible Hell
  • The Hell Issue
  • Well to Hell lies

Jim Steinman's Bat Out of Hell The Musical - The Ordway Official ...
src: ordway.org


Reference


North of Hell | BUTCHER ABC
src: f4.bcbits.com


Further reading

  • Boston, Thomas. Hell . Diggory Press, ISBN 978-1-84685-748-5
  • Bunyan, John. Some Sighs from Hell (Or The Groans of the Damned Soul) . Diggory Press, ISBN 978-1-84685-727-0
  • Edwards, Jonathan. God's Justice in the Shameless Sinners . Diggory Press, ISBN 978-1-84685-672-3
  • Gardiner, Eileen. Heaven and Hell's vision before Dante. New York: Italica Press, 1989. ISBN: 0-934977-14-3
  • Loftus, John W. (2008). "No!" Why I'm an atheist . Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books. p.Ã, 387. ISBNÃ, 978-1-59102-592-4.
  • Metzger, Bruce M. (ed) (1993). Michael D. Coogan, ed. The Oxford Companion to the Bible . Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 0-19-504645-5. CS1 maint: Additional text: author list (link)

Letting Go Of Hell (Without Letting Go Of The Bible)
src: wp.patheos.com.s3.amazonaws.com


External links

  • Hell on In Our Time on the BBC.
  • The history of Hell's culture in The Fortnightly Review
  • Atheist Foundation of Australia - 666 words about hell.
  • The Perspective of Jehovah's Witnesses
  • Dead, Yamaraja, and Yamadutas terminal anxiety
  • examples of Buddhist Hells
  • Swedenborg, E. Heaven and Wonders and Hell. From Things Heard and Seen (Swedenborg Foundation, 1946)
  • Hell map on the subject "Hell and Heaven", Perspective Cartography, PJ Fashion Collection, Cornell University Library

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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