Question:

Is h**l anything like this?

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i imagine that h**l is being tied up in the corner and forced to watch satan fold a road map incorrectly while listening to mariah carey and micheal bolton duets. what do you imagine h**l to be like?

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  1. listening to hannah montana all the time and doing nothing but watching her show.......... AHH!!


  2. hmmm.. you are a bachelor right? A married guy will never wonder how h**l would be.. he is not afraid of h**l either ;)

  3. h**l: hannah montana music, high school musical music, jonas brothers music, and having to watch hannah montana show, high school musical movies, thats so raven, the suite life of those retarded twins, so pretty much h**l is the disney channel

    poor walt, look wats happened to his once good company

  4. I have always believed that's where all the nasty girls would end up..thats why I was going!

  5. Losing my individuality. Being without will. Having no true self.

    Was there once. It sucked.

  6. I don't know. But if you're there then it is worse than i've ever imagined.

  7. watching "the view" 24/7

  8. LOL. Good one about the map!  (Mine would be 'mucus and spiders"!!)

  9. being forced to eat millions of doughnuts like in that simpsons episode.

  10. h**l was not created for mankind. It was created for Lucifer and his cronies. Therefore, no mankind concept is possible of how horrible it will be.  I'm just trying like h**l, so to speak, to keep myself out of there.

  11. looking at my brain kept in glass jar and just looking at it.  

  12. I imagine being forced to look at what Zac Effron's face ACTUALLY looks like..

    THE HORROR! lol.

    ...But seriously, no, h**l is nothing like that. h**l is just another term for the grave. No eternal torment or anything like that..

  13. What Really Is h**l?

    WHATEVER image the word "h**l" brings to your mind, h**l is generally thought of as a place of punishment for sin. Concerning sin and its effect, the Bible says: "Through one man sin entered into the world and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men because they had all sinned." (Romans 5:12) The Scriptures also state: "The wages sin pays is death." (Romans 6:23) Since the punishment for sin is death, the fundamental question in determining the true nature of h**l is: What happens to us when we die?

    Does life of some kind, in some form, continue after death? What is h**l, and what kind of people go there? Is there any hope for those in h**l? The Bible gives truthful and satisfying answers to these questions.

    Life After Death?

    Does something inside us, like a soul or a spirit, survive the death of the body? Consider how the first man, Adam, came to have life. The Bible states: "Jehovah God proceeded to form the man out of dust from the ground and to blow into his nostrils the breath of life." (Genesis 2:7) Though breathing sustained his life, putting "the breath of life" into his nostrils involved much more than simply blowing air into his lungs. It meant that God put into Adam's lifeless body the spark of life—"the force of life," which is active in all earthly creatures. (Genesis 6:17; 7:22) The Bible refers to this animating force as "spirit." (James 2:26) That spirit can be compared to the electric current that activates a machine or an appliance and enables it to perform its function. Just as the current never takes on the features of the equipment it activates, the life-force does not take on any of the characteristics of the creatures it animates. It has no personality and no thinking ability.

    What happens to the spirit when a person dies? Psalm 146:4 says: "His spirit goes out, he goes back to his ground; in that day his thoughts do perish." When a person dies, his impersonal spirit does not go on existing in another realm as a spirit creature. It "returns to the true God who gave it." (Ecclesiastes 12:7) This means that any hope of future life for that person now rests entirely with God.

    The ancient Greek philosophers Socrates and Plato held that a soul inside a person survives death and never dies. What does the Bible teach about the soul? Adam "came to be a living soul," says Genesis 2:7. He did not receive a soul; he was a soul—a whole person. The Scriptures speak of a soul's doing work, craving food, being kidnapped, experiencing sleeplessness, and so forth. (Leviticus 23:30; Deuteronomy 12:20; 24:7; Psalm 119:28) Yes, man himself is a soul. When a person dies, that soul dies.—Ezekiel 18:4.

    What, then, is the condition of the dead? When pronouncing sentence upon Adam, Jehovah stated: "Dust you are and to dust you will return." (Genesis 3:19) Where was Adam before God formed him from the dust of the ground and gave him life? Why, he simply did not exist! When he died, Adam returned to that state of complete absence of life. The condition of the dead is made clear at Ecclesiastes 9:5, 10, where we read: "The dead know nothing . . . In the grave, where you are going, there is neither working nor planning nor knowledge nor wisdom." (New International Version) Scripturally, death is a state of nonexistence. The dead have no awareness, no feelings, no thoughts.


  14. it would be eternal burning and agony...

    oh sorry was I too into it???

  15. I imagine h**l to be the absence of God's presence.  But seeing as how that is only a temporary state of being, I need not be concerned with it.

  16. I like Mariah.

    In any case, the bible holds more accurate descriptions of h**l (hades), although vague. However, h**l will be thrown in the lake of fire at the judgment. Rev 20:13-15

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