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Religion See other Religion Articles Title: Is Hell Hot? Is Hell Hot? Pagan religions are noted for teaching red-hot hells. The ancient Egyptians, Babylonians, Phoenicians, Persians, Grecians and Hindus taught flaming hells. The Buddhists teach a hell wherein people cook and sizzle in blazing kettles. Is the Bible hell as hot as the pagans paint theirs? Here is the answer. PEOPLE often forget they have brains when it comes to a topic such as hell. Oh, many persons will ponder on financial or other matters, but when hell is the subject they seem to prefer that someone else do the thinking. They may even push all hope of reasoning aside and declare, as one hell-fire believer did, that if he did not think the Bible taught a literal, red-hot, soul-scorching hell he would throw his Bible into the ash can. That is an extreme case. But it reflects a modern-day tendency to try to make God conform to mans ideas of how things should be run. These opinionated persons go to the Bible, not to weigh all the evidence, but to pluck out a few texts that seem to support their view of things; and so new religions start. True Christians, however, will let God be found true, though every man be found a liar. (Rom. 3:4, NW) That is what we propose to do, appealing, at the same time, to common sense, as we let the Bible answer the question: Is hell hot? From the frequency of the expression hot as hell it is apparent that many people view hell as being red-hot. This view has been fostered by the clergy teaching that hell is a fiery place of eternal torment for human souls. Tons of leaflets teaching a blazing hell have been printed and distributed. If you have read any of these you may have noticed that almost all point to the same four or five proof scriptures, such as Jesus story of the rich man in hell, the undying worms and unquenchable fire of Mark 9:44, the everlasting punishment of Matthew 25:46 and the lake of fire five times mentioned in the book of Revelation. We want to examine these texts. But first, to have a thorough look at the subject, let us go to the Hebrew Scriptures. Turning to the book of Genesis, we read about the creation of the earth, seas, fish, animals and even the sun and the moon. Yet nowhere do we read about Gods creating a special underworld compartment for the broiling torment of man. It seems strange that, if he made one, God did not have recorded in the Bible the creation of such an important place as a burning hell. Yet suppose he did make one. Would not Jehovahs love and justice have moved him to warn Adam of the full penalty of sin? Jehovah told Adam the consequence of sin was death. Are we really to think that, after Adam sinned, Jehovah changed his mind about the death sentence and decided to give Adam the torture treatment? The Bible answers: I, Jehovah, change not.Mal. 3:6, AS. But does not hell appear in the Hebrew Scriptures? Yes. So let us do the logical thing and pry into the background of that word hell. Websters unabridged dictionary tells us that hell corresponds to the Hebrew Sheol and the Greek Hades. It also says that hell comes from the English word helan, meaning to conceal. So we have found that the early meaning of the word hell carried no thought of any kind of heat. It merely meant concealed. We have found, too, that the original Hebrew word, usually translated hell in English Bibles, is Sheol. Now what does Sheol mean? It simply means a hollow place. So the original Hebrew word perfectly corresponds with the original or early meaning of the English word hell. Now that the clergy have put fire into the word hell, the vital question is, Did the inspired Hebrew Bible writers say that conscious life and red-hot activity exist in Sheol or hell? No, quite the opposite! Instead of blazing fire it is described as a land of darkness. (Job 10:21) Instead of a place of soul-chilling shrieks it is described as a place of silence. (Ps. 115:17) The Catholic Douay Bible, at Ecclesiastes 9:5, 10, says: The living know that they shall die, but the dead know nothing more. Neither have they a reward any more: for the memory of them is forgotten. Whatsoever thy hand is able to do, do it earnestly: for neither work, nor reason, nor wisdom, nor knowledge, shall be in hell [Sheol, AS], whither thou art hastening. So, since the dead know nothing more, or as the King James Version says, the dead know not any thing, it would be impossible for them to know conscious torment. And since there is no work in hell, how can there be activity, red-hot or otherwise? JACOB, JONAH, JOB AND JESUS Now let us examine what Jacob said concerning hell. After hearing that his son had seemingly been killed by a beast, Jacob said: I will go down to my son into hell [Sheol, AS], mourning. (Gen. 37:35, Dy) Did Jacob visualize his son in a steaming, scorching fire? And did Jacob expect to go to such a place? Clearly, Jacob did not view hell as being red-hot. After the prophet Jonah had been swallowed by a big fish, Jonah prayed: I cried out of the belly of hell [Sheol, AS]: and thou hast heard my voice. (Jonas 2:3, Dy) Was it red-hot where Jonah was? No, it must have been damp and dark, although warm at fish-body temperature. Jonah spoke the way he did because he understood hell or Sheol to be the grave. For, had not Jehovah delivered him, the fishs belly would certainly have become Jonahs grave. If hell were eternal, Jonah would not have gotten out. Job was a faithful servant of God. Trying to break Jobs integrity, the Devil placed Job in a miserable state of affairs. So the suffering Job prayed to God: Who will grant me this, that thou mayst protect me in hell [Sheol, AS], and hide me till thy wrath pass, and appoint me a time when thou wilt remember me? (Job 14:13, Dy) Since Job was already being tormented by the Devil, would he pray to be protected in, of all places, a Devil-managed compartment of red-hot coals? Hardly! Job would not pray to go from the frying pan into the fire! Job understood hell to be the common grave of mankind where he would rest until the resurrection. The prophet Amos records Jehovahs words to those who would try to escape the Almightys wrath: Though they go down even to hell, thence shall my hand bring them out. (Amos 9:2, Dy) Would the wicked, trying with all their might to flee from the wrath of God, dig into a place that would bring them only red-hot torture? It has been said that only the children of the Devil go to hell. But if that is true, why did Job pray that he might rest in hell? And if hell were a place just for the wicked, why would God send his Son to hell? For Jesus went to hell and was there three days. At Psalm 16:10 it was prophetically written of Jesus: For thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption. Centuries later the apostle Peter showed, at Acts 2:31, that Psalm 16:10 had its fulfillment in Jesus, that he did indeed go to hell but that God raised him up out of that condition. So hell could not be eternal. TORTURE WITH FIRE REPUGNANT TO GOD How does Almighty God look upon the idea of roasting men and women in fire? Well, man is made in the image of God. Yet we would not torture a man or a woman, even for one day! Why, the man who would torture a cat is, we say, a fiend. This is natural, since man does not love fiends; he detests them. Fiendishness repels. It is repugnant to God. For when the Israelites religiously burned their children in fire, Jehovah said: They have built the high places of Topheth, which is in the valley of the son of Hinnom, to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire; which I commanded not, neither came it into my mind. (Jer. 7:31, AS) Fiendishness does not even enter the mind of the Creator. And no wonder, for God is love.1 John 4:8. Thus far we have learned four things: (1) God detests fiendishness, (2) the good as well as the bad go to hell, (3) hell is not eternal, and (4) the Hebrews viewed hell or Sheol, not as a place of red-hot fire, but as the cold, silent grave. Turning now to the Christian Greek Scriptures, we find that the word translated hell and that corresponds to Sheol is the Greek Hades. Does the literal meaning of Hades carry the thought of glowing fire? No, it simply means the unseen state. As with Sheol, there are no live people in Hades. Death and Hades [hell, AV; Dy] gave up those dead in them. (Rev. 20:13, NW) Since at the resurrection Hades gives up its contents of dead people, it is not eternal. THE RICH MAN AND LAZARUS Still does not the account of the rich man in hell put flames in Hades? Jesus said: The rich man died and was buried. And in Hades he lifted up his eyes, he existing in torments, and he saw Abraham afar off and Lazarus in the bosom position with him. So he called and said: Father Abraham, have mercy on me and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, because I am in anguish in this blazing fire. (Luke 16:22-24, NW) Bible dictionaries list Jesus story as a parable. But hell-fire teachers say, No, that it is not a parable. So let us read the account, taking it literally as the hell-fire teachers say we must. Taking it literally, we have a rich man going to a place of torment for no apparent reason other than the fact that he was rich. Are all rich people bad? Are all rich people going to a red-hot hell? The poor man goes into Abrahams bosom. Are people going here just because they lack money? Is there enough room for all the poor people in the world to recline on Abrahams bosom? Obviously, Bible scholars admit, Abrahams bosom has to be interpreted figuratively. So since the fate of the poor man is symbolic, then, if the story is to be consistent, the fate of the rich man also must be symbolic. Further, if the blazing fire were literal, would the rich man ask for just one drop of water? Could even a bucket of water, much less a drop, get near a blazing hell? Taken literally, the account is worse than absurd: it outrages reason! Jesus spoke a parable, a story with symbolic meaning. The parable showed how the Jewish clergy, pictured by the rich man, were self-righteous. They wore the fine linen and had good things. Lazarus pictured the remnant of Jewish people of faith despised by the clergy and who were spiritually hungry. The death of the two men pictured a change in the two classes. Jesus tormented the clergy by exposing their greed and their false teachings and their hypocrisy. This, as it were, burned up the clergy. The heat was on. So they had to get rid of Jesus, which they did by murdering him. So the clergy came out of a luxurious condition into one of torment. But the remnant of faith had a change for the better. Jesus preaching brought them spiritual food, an opportunity to come into favorable relationship with the Greater Abraham, Jehovah God. The parable has its major fulfillment today. For details see the book What Has Religion Done for Mankind? pages 246-256. But does not the Bible speak of hell-fire? Yes, but the word hell-fire is not a translation of the Greek Hades. Hell-fire is translated from the Greek Gehenna. Gehenna occurs twelve times in the Bible. But the average reader does not know this, since Bible translators have rendered Gehenna as hell or hell-fire. This has caused a lot of confusion. Says the Encyclopedia Americana (1942 ed., v. 14, p. 81): Much confusion and misunderstanding has been caused through the early translators of the Bible persistently rendering the Hebrew Sheol and the Greek Hades and Gehenna by the word hell. The simple transliteration of these words by the translators of the revised editions of the Bible has not sufficed to appreciably clear up this confusion and misconception. Jesus referred to Gehenna at Mark 9:47, 48 (NW): It is finer for you to enter one-eyed into the kingdom of God, than with two eyes to be pitched into Gehenna [hell fire, AV], where their maggot does not die and the fire is not put out. Now Gehenna was a place for dumping refuse, outside the walls of Jerusalem. Its fires were kept burning to prevent pestilence. Sulphur or brimstone was added to help the burning. Bodies of executed criminals, thought to be unworthy of a resurrection, were sometimes thrown into Gehenna. But live persons were never cast there. When bodies or garbage fell upon the edges of Gehenna, the exposed matter would putrefy and breed worms. The worms finally destroyed the matter. So there were always worms and always fire to destroy matter. Jesus used Gehenna as a symbol, not for everlasting torment, but for everlasting destruction. The lake of fire is also a symbolic term for everlasting destruction: Death and Hades [hell, AV] were hurled into the lake of fire. This means the second death, the lake of fire. (Rev. 20:14, NW) So the lake of fire means the second death, a destruction that lasts forever and ever, with no hope of a resurrection. Note that hell or Hades is eternally destroyed. For hell, says Revelation 20:14, must be hurled into the lake of fire. If hell is the lake of fire, as many say, how can it be cast into itself? As to the everlasting punishment of Matthew 25:46, the original Greek word does not carry the idea of torment but of a cutting off from life. Thus the New World Translation renders it correctly as everlasting cutting-off. But what of Revelation 20:10 about the Devils being tormented day and night for ever and ever? In Jesus time jailers were called tormenters. So when the Scripture says he will be tormented day and night for ever and ever in the lake of fire, it means that the Devil will be restrained in a never-ending detention of destruction. Indeed, it will be for ever and ever. The Bible has answered our question. It has shown that Hades, Sheol or hell is the common grave of mankind. At the resurrection hell gives up its dead. Jehovah destroys hell, for it is cast into the lake of fire. Gehenna represents the state of destruction that lasts forever and ever. There is no hope of a resurrection for those in Gehenna. So the fiery hells are only pagan hells. The Bible hell (Sheol-Hades) is not hot, but is the dark, silent grave.
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#2. To: richard9151 (#0)
That is a lie. And these shall go away (5695) into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal. Punishment: correction, punishment, penalty http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2851
See the post; New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures Actually, I know you have seen it. And the more I read the translation New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures, the more I understand and the more I trust it. As I have stated, numerous times, I have at least 12 different translations of the Bible, and none of them is as consistent or as accurate as the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures. Period. Now, look carefully at the statement that was made about this; the original Greek word does not carry the idea of torment but of a cutting off from life I am finishing a post for another site, and perhaps I will post it here, but it covers much of the reasons why an accurate translation of the Bible IS ESSENTIAL to be available today, to fulfill God's Justice and Purpose. Because of the resurrection, it simply did not matter if Bibles were totally accurate before; now, it is different. This is why, over the last 80 or so years there have been found more than 15,000 documents and fragments of documents that give a very, very detailed and accurate account of exactly what was written in Holy Scripture.
Say what?!?!? That makes no sense at all. 100% accuracy in a translated document is not possible. There is always room for improvement AND error correction. But 100% accuracy is not needed. YOu can glean the truth from the KJV, if you understand its limitations and errors. Actually, IMO, the KJV is good. When it was first compiled there was a statement from the translators that acknowledged its limitations. It's gone thru many revisions since 1611. What bothers me is that some believe the KJV is inerrant and totally perfect and all other translations are satanically inspired. They don't have a clue. .
Totally accurate does not mean 100% error free translation. That is why we ask for guidance from His Holy Spirit whenever we open the book. My friend, I understand that you have the idea of predestination firmly in mind, but we are told that there will be a judgement of those alive at the time of the end, AND, those who are judged as not worthy, will NOT be resurrected. Just the facts, sorry to say. That is also why the Bible talks about a great crowd that will never die; puts the responsibility directly upon us to learn, cause it is truly a great gift to NEVER DIE! Not even once; remember what the Bible says about death forgiving all sin. And if we are not to die in the end times, then we have to earn that forgivness some other way. (Death is an action; there has to be a corresponding action to atone for the lack of death.) And by the way, this is my opinion; I did not get it from the Witnesses. Just so we keep that straight.
No it isn't. The true Church is being judged right now. 1 Pet 4:17 For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? Those are the people that are the elect. They are being judged now. Heb 12:8 But if ye be without chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and not sons. AND, those who are judged as not worthy, will NOT be resurrected. Proof? And by the way, this is my opinion I respect that. I wish you would do that more. It's just that it's hard to get you "off script" and give your own opinions. Copying & pasting articles, IMHO, doesnt help. .
#11. To: PSUSA (#10)
I am curious, did you read the post, Early Christian Neutrals? Most of that I did. But to be frank about it, I simply do not write anywhere near as well as the Society does, nor, do I have as clear of an understanding as they do. As to proof, I am putting up Getting a Permanent Hold on Life. Please do not just read the first couple of paragraphs!
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