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What Is Everlasting Fire in the Bible?
Doesn't the phrase “everlasting fire” mean “unending”? It says everlasting, that means it's going to burn forever and ever. Let's find out. Jude verse 7, “Even as Sodom and Gomorrah are set forth for an example, suffering the Vengeance of eternal fire." Sodom and Gomorrah were burnt up with eternal fire. Are they still burning today?
No. I've been to the Dead Sea, the lowest point on earth, and those cities are destroyed. Matter of fact, if you go to the south end of the Dead Sea, there's a hilly area there that is just piles of ash, and embedded in the ash, are little sulfur balls. I have one of them in my apartment in California, in my house in California. You can set them on fire and they burn. It's like they're leftovers from the destruction. Only place in the world, where you find something like that. Sulfur balls embedded in ash at the south end of the Dead Sea. That makes me think that the story is real.
Watch the entire program here:
Cities of Ash
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Hellfire
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Hell in the Bible
The word “hell” is used 54 times in the Bible. It is translated from several different words with various meanings, as indicated below:
In the Old Testament:
31 times from the Hebrew “Sheol,” which means “the grave”
In the New Testament:
10 times from the Greek “Hades,” which means “the grave”
12 times from the Greek “Gehenna,” which means “a place of burning”
1 time from the Greek “Tartarus,” which means “a place of darkness”
What is Purgatory?
A tradition held by the Catholic Church that teaches people who are not good enough to be worthy of heaven, but not bad enough to deserve hell, suffer in an intermediary state until their sins are purged.
But is it in the Bible?
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