Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Fatima: Most Souls are Going to HELL-Article

Fatima: Most Souls are Going to HELL

The Church has no fashions; Our Lord is always the same.”
Pope Pius XII also assured us that although there can be a wide variety in fashions, “there always exists an absolute norm to be preserved 1 which cannot change with times and customs.  To“justify” immodest fashions by calling them things we get “accustomed to,” he said, was among “the most insidious of sophisms 2.”
Therefore, the following timeless standards should be joyfully welcomed and embraced.  Furthermore, Catholics should both charitably encourage and admonish each other to dress with proper modesty.
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  • All go to hell it’s called the grave.
    But yes most will burn in the lake of fire.
    The word Hell in the Bible
    The word “hell” is found 54 times in the King James 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”
    “Tartarus” is used once, in 2 Peter 2:4, and means “a place of darkness or restraint.” “Tartarus” is where Satan and his demons reside now. It isn’t a place of punishment or flames.
    “Gehenna” means a place of fire, brimstone, and punishment (see Matthew 5:29-30, described in Matthew 13:40-42 and 2 Peter 3:7.) Note these flames are still in the future at the end of the world.
    “Hades” means “the grave” (Acts 2:31; 1 Corinthians 15:55; Revelation 20:14). The body of Jesus rested there and His saints are resting there now awaiting the resurrection.
    The Greek word “Hades” is translated as “Hell” in many English Bibles such as the King James Version. In Revelation 6:8, the King James Version refers to “Death and Hell.” It does the same in Revelation 20:14. Yet some English Bibles use the word “Hades” itself, such as the New International Version, which translates both Revelation 6:8 and 20:14 as “Death, and Hades.” Now here is the point; In Revelation 20:14 “Hades” is eventually “cast into the lake of fire.” So as you can therefore see, “Hades” itself is not a fiery place, but is cast into “the lake of fire.”
    So Biblically speaking, Hades means the grave. This is easy to prove from 1 Corinthians 15:55, which in the King James Version states, “O death, where is thy sting? O grave [Hades], where is thy victory?” If you look in the Strong’s dictionary, you will find that the Greek word here translated “grave” is “Hades.” By looking at the context, it is obvious that it means “the grave” because it is God’s saints who rise out of “Hades” when Jesus Christ returns. See 1 Corinthians 15:50-55. Therefore, “Hades” cannot mean a place of burning, for who can imagine God’s people writhing in flames as they await the resurrection? That would be absolutely ludicrous! Additional proof this word means “the grave” is the fact that “Hades” was the place Christ’s body rested right after His death. Acts 2:31 reads, “His [Christ’s] soul was not left in hell [Hades] neither [did] his flesh see corruption.”

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