Sentences with phrase «than hell about»

Not exact matches

I already know it is all hocus pocus, but if it will make you feel better about yourself to condem me to hell than go ahead.
The LORD Jesus spoke more about Hell than he did about Heaven.
I'm speaking about my own faith only: To become a Christian, it must be your own choice.No else can decide this life style for you.I know many in the past and present have thought raising a child under the Christian label will save them for hell but in actual reality, the choice is their own not their parents etc.This life (being Christian) goes deeper than just believing.You have to consider this yourself.Many today do not even consider Christ as their savior because they just believe what their church or family says.
Even worse, those very atheists who spend all of their time on forums like this and fighting against the truth (rather than being out enjoying the world in what little time they have) will ultimately die and go to hell only to then find out the truth — that they've been wrong about everything they've believed their whole life.
Warning people about hell is no different than warning people that saying «Bloody Mary» three times in front of a mirror will conjure that particular spirit.
Since the gospel is about way more than just receiving eternal life but is also about how God's people are to live their lives in this world, then the goal of living out the gospel is not primarily to rescue people from hell so they can go to heaven when they die.
But when Christians talk about getting saved from their sins, more often than not, they are referring exclusively to what they believe are the eternal ramifications of sin — damnation in hell.
Jesus talked more about hell than any preacher of his time.
When I hear people complain about hell it is usually because they think it will be worse than the eternally lost deserve.
Hey, Ben, shouldn't you be trying to save him rather than taunting him like a child about how you can't wait to see him sent to hell?
For example, as a faith, we make no claims about an afterlife other than that there is no hell.
the source of the problem is the men who have traditionally left the pregnant woman alone to fend for herself... Roe V Wade came from the womans rights movement... -LCB- this demonstrates that people give a hell of a lot more ofa damn about whats» in a womans uterous than the actual Woman they can see with their own eyes...
The concept of Jesus Christ coming simply to save us from hell sounded more like an insurance plan rather than being a «new creation» as Paul wrote about.
Then you have no business telling anyone anything about scripture at all, because scripture doesn't support that belief anymore than it supports your belief that gays are doomed to hell or that Jews will burn in a lake of fire.
Paul — The apostle Paul says more about final punishment than anyone else in the Bible and he never uses the word «hell
Yesterday, Edward Fudge responded to your questions about conditionalism (sometimes called annihilationism)-- the view that immortality is conditional upon belief in Jesus Christ, so the unsaved will ultimately be destroyed and cease to exist rather than suffer eternally in hell.
As a non-believer, I have to say I am far less concerned about non-existence than I guarantee most believers are about the possibility of Hell.
A country where many more people believe in heaven than in hell, for example, is likely to have a much higher crime rate than one where these beliefs are about equal.
Dear Rev Blair you are not much better than Rev Camping (who you criticize) with all of your fear mongering of hell and torcher; then you have the nerve to be selling a book for profit about apocalyptic doomsday perdictions.
In this case hell better exist because you are the POOREST rep for a good Christian and have no right EVER pretending to be better than ANYONE when you treat other humans so poorly... not that you really care about the living!
As I have contemplated a response, I came to realize that your question about hell is really no different than the question of how things began: Which is right, creationism, evolution, or intelligent design?
Earlier this month, Edward Fudge responded to your questions about conditionalism (sometimes called annihilationism)-- the view that immortality is conditional upon belief in Jesus Christ, so the unsaved will ultimately be destroyed and cease to exist rather than suffer eternally in hell.
Last, had I known that alcoholism is a disease worse than cancer, and that it ran through the family genes thus any baby born had a strong chance of becoming one... well, that seals the deal but, I bet the parents who also fell for religiosity, not knowing it was an enclave for pedophiles... talk about regrets from hell.
Yes i know two counsellors i told one of them about this and i want to know why Jesus Christ without any mercy sends that person to hell forever to suffer and never ever forgives them even though they didn't commit any thing like murder and that also forever you can forgive that person went in minutes of that sin with in a snap of a finger then only why that sin why not give him another life in Earth after forgiving and punishing him for the rest of his sin it is said that god and Jesus Is very merciful then why he is giving such a life sentence that is much more worse than eternal nothingness and why doesn't he punish Satun with eternal nothingness because i think most of the sins in Earth are committed because of him only?
I suspect that those who have the nerve to tell you that you are going to Hell if you don't get saved are afraid for their own souls moreso than they are truly concerned about saving anyone.
Many of us have mixed memories about church weekends away, but how do we ensure that there's more heaven than hell when it comes to organising the next one?
They might argue even (against Paul) that doing such things sends people to hell, rather than seeing references to the «Kingdom of God» or «Kingdom of Heaven» as Jesus used them, as being about out lives here and now and what we might accomplish as we follow Christ (to which a «beneficial» conversation is much more fitting).
This promise of predestination is not about God deciding who gets to heaven and who goes to hell; it is about God decided that rather than just one son getting all of His inheritance, all of His children get to share in the inheritance of His family.
Jesus talked about Hell quite a bit, and eternal damnation is infinitely worse than a mere death sentence of a mortal that had a 100 % chance of dying at some point anyway.
A few philosophers continued to write about him for a while, a few psychologists — perhaps a fate worse than hell — seized on him as a pathology or psychological type.
So instead of God being called a bully, we say his judgements are indisputable, unchangeable and everlasting; he is better than us, high and lifted up, all powerful and holy; he is disappointed or sorrowful or angry about our sin; he constantly convicts us by the Holy Spirit; he sends us suffering in order to teach us, discipline us and inevitably bring us in line with his ways; and he threatens us with exclusion from him and his group now or forever in Hell unless we repent and straighten up.
The God of the New Testament is not a «nice guy» — Christ talks more about eternal hell than just about anyone else.
Sharing your thougths of their (Heaven and Hell) purpose would surely help rather than «scratching your head» out of your unbelief of what I thought about them.
It is so sad that so many atheists will spend most of their lives fighting and arguing against the very thing that can save them, only to die and go to hell and then to spend eternity regretting the fact that they wasted all of their time arguing about it rather than just accepting it, rather than just believing, and a belief that could have saved them.
When the Bible talks about hell, or hades, or sheol, a completely different picture emerges about hell than most people think.
Anyway, I will write a lot more about this when I get to the subject of hell in the current book I am writing on the violence of God, but I wanted to just give a short preview of my views on hell, and provide a follow - up from the post yesterday about whether Jesus spoke of hell more than heaven.
There's something to be said about someone who does well because of inner direction rather than because they're «afraid they'll burn in hell
In the Bible, Jesus talks about hell more than heaven.
Doesn't he know that Jesus talks about hell more than He talks about heaven?»
So if people are going to get fussy about someone calling the «divine» a her than they sure as «hell» better not refer to the «divine» as a he, right?
If I was gay I would still shut the hell up and go about my day rather than showing companies that are chrostain that I am a flaming nut.
Well, he's got me proclaiming, for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear, that something is deeply amiss within; that we think we're special and you are not; that you need us more than we need you; that we don't trust you or your brain; that you are obviously going to hell without us; that we are completely out of touch with the real world; that we don't have a sweet clue about you, your kind, or your needs and desires; and that we're oblivious to innuendo and blind to double entendre.
Thanks to the great Catholic theologian Von Balthasar, theologians have much to say about Christ's descent to hell, which corresponds to many peoples» experience of depression, but I find depression to be more akin to purgatory, a topic even more neglected than hell these days.
Some say that Jesus talked about hell more than heaven and so we should do the same.
Earlier this week, Edward Fudge responded to your questions about conditionalism (sometimes called annihilationism)-- the view that immortality is conditional upon belief in Jesus Christ, so the unsaved will ultimately be destroyed and cease to exist rather than suffer eternally in hell.
Jesus didn't talk about hell more than heaven.
There in that shadowy room the disciples turned to Jesus, who was their light, with greater urgency and passion than maybe ever before because, with all hell about to break loose, they had no other place to turn.
If God's own words quoted in the Bible about his mistakes are less important than your ignorant bigoted fantasies, guess who's going to Hell?
Jesus also talks more about hell than of heaven.
And before we even go on about Muslims from India, vs other places, MOST of the Indians that work for Arabs in the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, etc arent even Muslim, and while the working conditions arent fantastic, they are a whole hell of a lot better than working conditions than in India.
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