It's literally laid out by Christ Himself in the parable of Lazarus and the rich man.
And being in hell in torments, he lifted up his eyes, and saw Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom.
Then he cried, and said, Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue: for I am tormented in this flame.
Jesus never used the word hell. The Aramaic word that appears in the earliest manuscripts is Gehenna. And Gehenna wasn't a spiritual concept at all. It was a physical location, the valley of Hinnom just outside Jerusalem. It was the city rubbish dump where fires burned continuously to consume waste. It was a place of decay, of transformation, of things being broken down and returned to their elements. When Jesus warned about Gehenna, he was using a vivid immediate metaphor that his audience would have instantly understood.
I see you didn't read the parable, which clearly isn't speaking about a physical place. Also, the Gospel of Luke I quoted from was written in Koine Greek and used the word hades.
All I can see is you don't know what you're talking about. Have you ever heard of the discoveries at Nag Hammadi in 1945? The soul moves through these layered realms, facing rulers and illusions until it remembers its origin in the eternal light. Instead of a simple heaven and hell cosmology, the Nag Hamadi texts unveil a multiverse, a structure of realities overlapping and interwoven in which your soul's journey is a process of ascent, awakening, and return.
Modern science is only just beginning to catch up with what these ancient mystics taught. speaking now of multiple dimensions, parallel universes, and hidden layers of reality we cannot yet perceive.
It's literally laid out by Christ Himself in the parable of Lazarus and the rich man.
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2016%3A19-31&version=GNV
Jesus never used the word hell. The Aramaic word that appears in the earliest manuscripts is Gehenna. And Gehenna wasn't a spiritual concept at all. It was a physical location, the valley of Hinnom just outside Jerusalem. It was the city rubbish dump where fires burned continuously to consume waste. It was a place of decay, of transformation, of things being broken down and returned to their elements. When Jesus warned about Gehenna, he was using a vivid immediate metaphor that his audience would have instantly understood.
I see you didn't read the parable, which clearly isn't speaking about a physical place. Also, the Gospel of Luke I quoted from was written in Koine Greek and used the word hades.
https://biblehub.com/interlinear/luke/16.htm
All I can see is you don't know what you're talking about. Have you ever heard of the discoveries at Nag Hammadi in 1945? The soul moves through these layered realms, facing rulers and illusions until it remembers its origin in the eternal light. Instead of a simple heaven and hell cosmology, the Nag Hamadi texts unveil a multiverse, a structure of realities overlapping and interwoven in which your soul's journey is a process of ascent, awakening, and return.
Modern science is only just beginning to catch up with what these ancient mystics taught. speaking now of multiple dimensions, parallel universes, and hidden layers of reality we cannot yet perceive.
So, you're just going to change the subject, now that you were proven wrong on the Aramaic thing?