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One of christianity’s
fundamental tenets is heaven for those who believe in Jesus
the
so-called one and only son of
god
and hell for those who
do not so believe.
Says Jesus: “Repent, for the
kingdom of heaven is at hand.” (the book of Matthew 4:17)
But is it really heaven that Jesus means by that term?
Of the two others done to
death along with Jesus, one declared his faith in Jesus.
Jesus said to him then: “I
tell you this: today you will be in paradise with me” (the book
of Luke 23:43).
But in the book of Matthew 12:40, this is
what Jesus reveals about his own whereabouts
after his death: “The son of man
will spend three days and nights in the depths of the earth,”
or hell.
Just a few moments after he
told the believer that he would be in paradise with
him the same day, both were
to die. Jesus, who turned in at the depths of the earth or
hell, surfaced to the earth on the
third day as he said before. So, by paradise Jesus
signifies hell. This is what Jesus is
really saying: “You will be with me today in hell”!
Later on in the book of John
21:15-18 Jesus put to Peter an identical question three
times. The question: “Do you
love me?” Each time Peter answered in the affirmative. By
the way, Peter had thrice
denied Jesus. This is why Jesus makes him retract himself for
three times.
After the third time Jesus
said to him:
“I tell you the truth: when
you were young you used to fasten your belt and go
anywhere you wanted to; but
when you are old you will stretch out your hands and
someone else will tie them
and take you where you don’t want to go.” Heaven is where
Peter wanted to go and hell
is where Peter did not want to go!
Breaking into our tongue at
another time, Jesus the sworn enemy of man targeted
man’s basic means of
subsistence.
In the book John 6:51 Jesus glaringly
said: “The bread that I will give him is my flesh,
which I give so that the
world may live.” But when someone actually takes the bread, it is
Satan that enters into him.
“So he took a piece of bread, dipped it, and gave it to Judas,
the son of Simon Iscariot. As
soon as Judas took the bread, Satan entered into him”
(the book of John 13:26-27).
Instead of Jesus, Satan drops in when a person actually
receives the bread given to
him by Jesus. This so happens for the reason that Jesus and
Satan are the same.
As Jesus and Satan are
identical, Satan automatically takes over without disguise
when someone partakes of the
bread materialised as his own body by Jesus by the use of
his formula, “this is my
body.”
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