Revision as of 23:57, 5 June 2003 editPizza Puzzle (talk | contribs)4,762 editsmNo edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 23:58, 5 June 2003 edit undoPizza Puzzle (talk | contribs)4,762 editsmNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
] | ] | ||
"The '''heavens'''" is sometimes in reference to the ] or ]. | "The '''heavens'''" is sometimes in reference to the ] and/or ]. | ||
'''Heaven''' is a concept found in many ] ]s or ] ] that describes a place "not of this ]". Generally, one cannot ] there unless one ]; although, according to some religions, exceptions have been made. Various religions have described heaven as being populated by ]s, ]s, ], and/or ]es. Heaven is generally construed as a place of ] ]. | '''Heaven''' is a concept found in many ] ]s or ] ] that describes a place "not of this ]". Generally, one cannot ] there unless one ]; although, according to some religions, exceptions have been made. Various religions have described heaven as being populated by ]s, ]s, ], and/or ]es. Heaven is generally construed as a place of ] ]. |
Revision as of 23:58, 5 June 2003
"The heavens" is sometimes in reference to the sky and/or outer space.
Heaven is a concept found in many world religions or spiritual philosophies that describes a place "not of this world". Generally, one cannot travel there unless one dies; although, according to some religions, exceptions have been made. Various religions have described heaven as being populated by angels, demons, gods and goddesses, and/or heroes. Heaven is generally construed as a place of eternal happiness.
In Eastern religions (and some Western traditions), with their emphasis on reincarnation, the concept of heaven is not as prominent. But it still is present: for example, in Buddhism there are several heavens, and those who accumulate good karma will be reborn in a heaven; however their stay in the heaven is not eternal -- eventually they will use up all their good karma and be reincarnated as a human.
Religions which have a heaven differ on how one gets into it. Some (followers of universalism) provide that everyone will go to heaven, no matter what they have done on earth. Others make entrance to heaven conditional on having lived a "good life" (within the terms of the spiritual system); those who do not meet the criteria go to a place of punishment, hell. Other religions (many varieties of Christianity) make entrance to heaven conditional not on good works, but on having believed and trusted in the deity, and accepting the deity's offer of salvation. In yet other religions (Calvinism, a Protestant form of Christianity), those who go to heaven go, not because of anything they have done or independently chosen, but because God has chosen to favour them by predestining them to go there.
Heaven is an especially interesting doctrine in Christian thought, as the afterlife depends largely on the resurrection of the body. While the intermediate state (between death and the return of Christ) is unclear, the final state of believers is in a resurrected body, living in the "New Jerusalem" in the "New Earth." The person was never meant to be disembodied. Death is an enemy, not a friend who frees the soul.
The concept of heaven is well-defined within the Christian and Islamic religions. The Jewish concept of the afterlife is sometimes known as "olam haba", the world to come, but Judaism's afterlife beliefs were never set forth in a systematic or official fashion as was done in Christianity and Islam.