I kept thinking that when it happened, my mother - in - law,
who went to heaven, needed them.
Elijah was a prophet
who went to heaven in a chariot of fire.
There is a book by Mark Twain about a guy
who goes to heaven.
This guy sounds a bit like Joel Osteen «Oh, I don't know
who goes to heaven or hell, It's not up to me to decice, etc. etc» Come on!
pretty big to say
who goes to heaven and who not.
Since many people think Paul is talking about
who goes to heaven in Romans 9, they think it is unfair for God to force Pharaoh to go to hell against his will.
And since when did God give YOU the power to judge
who goes to heaven and hell?
They said there were three groups of Jews: the utterly evil who go to hell; the really good
who go to heaven; and the majority in the middle.
You said, «Please read my comment about our affairs and that the knowledge of who is guided and
who goes to heaven and how goes to hell lies with the Creator, not me or any other creature!»
Please read my comment about our affairs and that the knowledge of who is guided and
who goes to heaven and how goes to hell lies with the Creator, not me or any other creature!
They seem to focus on
who goes to heaven.
2) The reason some go to hell and others go to heaven is because
those who go to heaven have fulfilled the requirement and others have not fulfilled the requirement.
There has to be something, then, that seperates
those who go to heaven and those who go to hell.
I don't know
who goes to heaven or if there is such a place.
You might be surprised, because the Mormons have one of the most open theologies of
who goes to heaven.
Now are you going to answer the same question, since YOU»RE the one pretending you have all the answers as to
who goes to heaven and what is a sin?
Drep - God nowhere instructs mankind to make decisions on his behalf as to
who goes to heaven and who goes to hell.
the point about
who goes to heaven is very valid and my heart goes out to you over your father... it is not for us to judge... remember that Abraham (first Jew) was saved by faith and did not know who Jesus (God Incarnate) was (this is in Paul's writings).
We don't decide
who goes to heaven and some of us need to look in the mirror in the first place.
When theologians and others were arguing about the ultimate fate of Scobie in The Heart of the Matter, Graham Greene commented: «I wrote a book about a man who goes to hell — Brighton Rock — another about a man
who goes to heaven — The Power and the Glory.
@Ranin God does not remove «bad things» from
those who go to heaven.
In the light of all the controversy of
who goes to heaven and who goes to hell, and how they get there, my heart cries, «She will make it!
Not exact matches
Even people
who want
to go to heaven don't want
to die
to get there.
Tom Brady dies and
goes to heaven and is greeted by God,
who shows him
to his new house — a cozy, modest home with a Patriots flag flying from the porch.
More arrogant than believing that you're
going to heaven for your beliefs and everyone
who doesn't agree isn't?
Previously we had
to rely on second hand accounts at best, the «I know a guy
who prayed and it totally came true» or «I know this person
who died and
went to heaven and came back» or «this person in our church saw a Smurf doll get up and start trying
to choke a baby...»
Those
who believe in the Easter Bunny are also saved, and
go to a part of
heaven where they become happy children whose baskets are always full of candy.
What, that god sent himself in human form
to earth
to live and die, so that he could live again and then rejoin himself in
heaven, so that the creations,
who apparently have original sin because a talking snake convinced a rib lady
to eat an apple thousands of years ago, could choose
to believe in Zombie Jesus and if they did they would
go to heaven but if they didn't believe in Zombie Jesus they would fry in Hell forever, regardless of how good a life they lived on Earth?
But, if there is a
heaven, and I see no indication that there is, then I believe you are right about
who gets
to go there.
If it changes your faith... then either you are looking at it in a different way than I do, or you place too much stock in
who gets into
heaven and
who goes to hell.
Will the person
who had an experience
go to heaven while the person
who didn't burns forever in Hell?
I choose
to believe that I don't know
who's
going to heaven and
who wouldn't be
going.
No
go to celestial
heaven and get your own planet
to rule next
to their God and Jesus,
who live on adjoining planets.
And those
who have the privilege of being selected
to go to heaven, serve in an official capacity as «kings and priests» (Rev 1:6), not as equals
to God, but as 144,000 individuals
who recognize that God, whose name is Jehovah, is the Grand Creator of all the universe, with these ones casting their crowns before God's throne, saying: «You are worthy, Jehovah, even our God,
to receive the glory and the honor and the power, because you created all things, and because of your will they existed and were created.»
The fact is, the evil murderous man, assuming his deathbed repentance and finding JC is genuinem,
goes to heaven, while the saintly wonderful man,
who worships another, burns for all time.
Most Christians don't understand how others might see it as hate when they make the claim that their
heaven & heII exists and that those not invited
to heaven are
going to go to heII
to be tormented and tortured for eternity and the only way
to salvation is
to accept their God as your Lord and Savior... They think
to themselves that they are just trying
to help by condemning those they dislike and
who don't worship the same way they do, but that doesn't change it from what it is, «hate filled».
Who is
going to heaven, christians, jews, mormons or muslims?
It is not in the
heavens, that you should say, «
Who among us can
go up
to the
heavens and get it for us and impart it
to us, that we may observe it?»
Babies
who die before birth, as well as children
who have not reached an age of accountability when they die, are given God's grace and
go to heaven.
--
who moved the stone Matthew - There was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from
heaven and,
going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it.
So Steve, You believe that a person
who, as you say, belongs
to Christ, and is a practicing homosexual when they die, they are
going to heaven?
So could you honestly say that you don't think anyone has ever become religious, especially much later on in life as the end isn't far off (and even statistics that common sense would tell you should trend the opposite way, ie, someone
who's
gone 70, 75 years not believing in god or
heaven, decides then
to become a devote Christian?
Oh where oh where could my baby be, the Lord took her away from me, she's
gone to heaven so Ive got
to be good...
who can finish the lyrics?
He does not have enough knowledge
to take him
to heaven, but he does have enough sin
to send him
to hell — the person
who never hears of the name of Jesus doesn't
go to hell because he has never heard the gospel, he
goes to hell because he is a sinner, he is a monster of iniquity, willingly disobedient
to his own conscience that screams
to him whenever he does wrong (Romans 2:12 - 16)-- and he loves it so...
Our God does not pick and choose
who is
going to heaven and
who is
going to hell.
-- like the Republican evangelicals
who all think their church is the most Christian, the most right, the only ones
going to heaven yet ignore the real teachings of Jesus by judging others, ignoring charity and the needs of their community, not understanding when the Lord's Prayer begins with «Our» Father — the «Our» is not just white people.
(The people
who talk about
heaven always seem
to assume they are
going there.)
There will be millions of surprised people one day
who believe they're
going to be in adultery, pornography or in unrepentant sin and headed
to heaven.
Is it time
to ask serious questions of publishers
who release books by people claiming
to have
gone to heaven and come back?
We know that those
who do not believe will not
go to heaven, and so will never be forgiven for their unbelief.