The Jewish doctrine of helldoi:10.1016/0048-721X(78)90004-0DanielCohn-SherbokInformaworldReligionCohn-Sherbok, Daniel. "The Jewish Doctrine of Hell." Religion 8, no. 2 (1978): 196-209.
for example, inA Guide to Jewish Knowledgeargue that in regard to life after death, ‘Judaism adopted a stand of its own. … Having provided the belief in the deathlessness of the soul, the authoritative
How much money, social status, fame, power or promotion does it take for the negative ego in the 3D ideological belief system to justify itself to take destructive and harmful actions that are inherently evil, immoral and anti-human? The Controllers are essentially the international bankers ...
Jewish demonology can at no time be viewed as the outcome of an antecedent Hebrew belief. While the nomadic Hebrews had much in common with the Arabian Bedouins in their belief in spirits (see Wellhausen, "Reste Arabischen Heidenthums: Skizzen und Vorarbeiten," 1887, iii. 135 et seq.; ...
Owing to his ubiquitousness and to the universal belief that he remained after his departure from the earth the ever-ready helper of the Jew, Elijah the prophet became the prototype of the Wandering Jew. Many characteristics of wandering deities and heroes like those of Buddha, of Zeus, and ...
Do Jews believe in the hereafter such as life after death? THE AISH RABBI REPLIES: The afterlife is a fundamental of Jewish belief. The creation of man testifies to the eternal life of the soul. The Torah says, “And the Almighty formed the man of dust from the ground, and He blew in...
Undergirded by a resolute belief in ‘American Exceptionalism’ and steered by neoconservative ideologues working in concert with the interests of the Military Industry, successive administrations have waged a form of hybrid warfare against the Russian Federation, the successor state to the dismantled So...
There is absolutely no biblical foundation to the belief that God does not have the ability to destroy the soul.Or do you believe that God does have the ability to destroy the soul, but chooses not to?If this were true, then why would the specific word "destroy" even come up in the ...
Jewish conceptions of heaven and hell— gan eden (Garden of Eden) and gehinnom, respectively — are associated with the belief in immortality and/or the World to Come, and were also developed independent of these concepts. Support My Jewish Learning Help us keep Jewish knowledge accessible to...
As the horizon of the Jews gradually widened, and they saw more plainly their relative position among the nations of the earth, and the impossibility of gaining any lasting political supremacy, the belief in an age to come, in which righteousness and the true religion should hold undisputed ...