C
Charlemagne_II
Guest
I found this interesting tidbit in Stanley’s History of the Jewish Church, 1862
“The Jewish religion is characterized in an eminent degree by the dimness of its conception of a future life. From time to time there are glimpses of the hope of immortality. But, for the most part, it is in the present life that the faith of the Israelite finds its full accomplishment… Not from want of religion, but (if one might use the expression) from excess of religion, was this void left in the Jewish mind. The Future Life was not denied or contradicted – but it was overlooked, set aside, overshadowed by the consciousness of the living, actual presence of God Himself.”
I am looking for references in the Old Testament to the belief in immortality, in both heaven and hell. Also, do the Jews of our time believe in heaven and hell? If so, which branches do and which don’t?
“The Jewish religion is characterized in an eminent degree by the dimness of its conception of a future life. From time to time there are glimpses of the hope of immortality. But, for the most part, it is in the present life that the faith of the Israelite finds its full accomplishment… Not from want of religion, but (if one might use the expression) from excess of religion, was this void left in the Jewish mind. The Future Life was not denied or contradicted – but it was overlooked, set aside, overshadowed by the consciousness of the living, actual presence of God Himself.”
I am looking for references in the Old Testament to the belief in immortality, in both heaven and hell. Also, do the Jews of our time believe in heaven and hell? If so, which branches do and which don’t?