| There are various lines of thought in relation to Hell. | | | | âHellâ in English. They are |
| Some believe that neither Heaven or Hell exist and | | | | âTartarus,â |
| that when we die that it the end of our existance. In | | | | âGehenna,â and |
| Christian circles some teach that Hell is merely a | | | | âHades.â Tartarus is used only once |
| âseparation from Godâ, others | | | | in 2 Peter 2:4 âGod spared not the angels |
| contend that it is a fiery place of eternal torture | | | | that sinned, but cast them down to hell [Tartarus], |
| where sinners instantly go at the moment of death. | | | | and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be |
| According to this theology, the lost are sizzling right | | | | reserved unto judgment.â Tartarus means |
| now, somewhere in the fiery bowels of this earth. | | | | âdark abyssâ or âplace of |
| Most Christians believe that Hell is an eternal place of | | | | restraint.â Notice also that it says the evil |
| suffering. Is this what the Bible really teaches? | | | | angels are reserved unto judgment, meaning that the |
| In the New Testament there are three different | | | | day of judgment has not occurred yet, and they are |
| Greek words that are translated into | | | | not currently in the red hot fiery underworld. |