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SMITH COLLEGE AUTHORS DETAIL THE RANGE OF VISIONS OF HEAVEN
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Heaven, it seems, is a place, and a state of mind. It is ancient
and it is eternal. It is bliss and it is peace.
To the ancient Icelanders, heaven was an extraordinary land of ice
bridges and flaming mountains.
To the ancient Greeks, it was Mount Olympus, home to a whole
family of gods.
A Jewish mystic described the exact measurements of God, with his
heart of 70 names and his neck measuring 130,000,000 parasangs.
And Dante envisioned the classical heaven, with ange...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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SMITH COLLEGE AUTHORS DETAIL THE RANGE OF VISIONS OF HEAVEN
The Boston Globe
; Heaven, it seems, is a place, and a state of mind. It is ancient and it is eternal. It is bliss and it is peace. To the ancient Icelanders, heaven was an extraordinary land of ice bridges and flaming mountains. To the ancient Greeks, it was Mount Olympus, home to a whole family of gods. A Jewish
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Why We Need Heaven: In troubled times, the afterlife beckons with visions of dark-eyed virgins, gardens and palaces, the bliss of God's eternal presence and the joy of uniting with loved ones. How can the promise of paradise inspire so many to goodness, and few to murder?
Newsweek
; ... dark eyes. (The exact number of houris available to the faithful is not specified; the number 72 or 70, popularized in recent news stories, may originally have come from early commentaries that most scholars believe to be unreliable.) As John O. Voll, associate ...
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What should we believe about heaven?
Sunday News Lancaster, PA
; Is there really a place called heaven? Or, is heaven a superstitious myth? A tool for religious bribery? A product of wishful thinking? Prompted by Mitch Albom's The Five People You will meet in Heaven, people everywhere are talking about heaven. And according to a recent Newsweek poll, 76 percent
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HEAVEN ON THEIR MINDS THE VIEWS FROM DOWN HERE
Rocky Mountain News
; Heaven is that place up there, out there, way beyond the blue. It looks like . . . something. From pulpits to bookshelves, movie screens to artists' canvases, visions of heaven have been a source of faith and comfort for the devout and of artistic inspiration even for the theologically indifferent.
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HEAVEN ON THEIR MINDS THE VIEWS FROM DOWN HERE.(Lifestyles/Spotlight)
Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)
; Byline: Mark Wolf ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS Heaven is that place up there, out there, way beyond the blue. It looks like ... Illustration, Color Photo On the cover: Illustration by Tim Williams, Rocky Mountain News CAPTION: Heaven on their minds
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Heaven on Earth; Popular culture creates multiple visions of the afterlife
Daily Breeze
; Oh, heavens! Note the plural. Traditionally, most believers think of one heaven. But in the world of secular popular culture, there are many heavens, from the profound to the profane, although usually tending more toward the latter. Thus, in last year's Chris Rock comedy "Down to Earth," heaven was
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Teddies stop you from being shy in heaven by sleeping in your bed when you arrive..; SECOND PART OF OUR LOOK AT HOW PEOPLE SEE LIFE IN THE HEREAFTER.(Features)
The Mirror (London, England)
; A DOME of ivory, a place of splendours beyond human imagination - or sharing your bed with teddy bears? In the second part of our celestial series, JENNY JOHNSTON shares more unique visions of Heaven, from the gently tongue-in-cheek to the quietly profound. Terry Wogan, TV personality I'VE always
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A History of Heaven: The Singing Silence.
Church History
; A History of Heaven: The Singing Silence. By Jeffrey Burton Russell. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997. xvi + 220 pp. $24.95 cloth. Jeffrey Burton Russell, known for his research on the devil, redirects his scholarly energies toward the more divine topic of heaven in part to convince
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HOLLYWOOD HEAVEN
Dayton Daily News
; Tinseltown's take on the Pearly Gates Oh, heavens! Note the plural. Traditionally, most believers think of one heaven. But in the world of secular popular culture, there are many heavens, from the profound to the profane, although usually tending more toward the latter. Thus, in the recent Chris
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Heaven on their minds; Americans take concept seriously.(NATION)(CULTURE, ET CETERA)
The Washington Times
; Byline: Jen Waters, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Bart Millard has often wondered what it will be like to meet God in heaven. Questions about eternity were especially important to him after his father died of cancer in 1991. As lead singer of the band MercyMe, he chose to express his struggles through
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