As she continued to fall, she felt her surroundings becoming hotter and hotter. She acknowledged the fact that although she claimed to be a Christian, she failed to show the fruit of her faith.Īfter this interaction, Jennifer recalls the feeling of falling. ![]() She recalls finding herself standing, ashamed, in front of God. Unlike Bill Wiese and Kenneth Hagin, Jennifer was first led to heaven, and then to hell. Jennifer Perez was another young Christian who had a shocking experience with hell while she slipped in and out of consciousness. He continued to serve God in his adult years, pastoring Rhema Bible Church and founding Kenneth Hagin Ministries. ![]() Fortunately for Kenneth Hagin, his doctors were able to save him from seemingly inevitable death. Reverend Hagin shares many descriptions of hell similar to others including intense darkness, unbearable heat, strange creatures, and great flames of fire. Darkness encompassed me round about - darkness that is blacker than any night man has ever seen.” I could look up and see the lights of the Earth. In his book, he recounts his experience as follows, “I began to descend down, down, into a pit, like you’d go down into a well, cavern or cave. He recalls the feeling of numbness spreading throughout his body. Unlike Bill Wiese, Kenneth Hagin’s experience began when his heart ceased to beat. In his book titled I Believe in Visions, Reverend Hagin shares his experience with hell. Reverend Kenneth Haginīorn and raised in a Christian family, Reverend Kenneth Hagin experienced hell at the age of 15 in a near-death-experience resulting from a chronic heart condition. He continues to teach through his outreach ministry, Soul Choice Ministries. īill Wiese has dedicated his life to sharing his experience, encouraging believers and unbelievers to understand the reality of hell. After sharing his experience with anyone who would listen, he recorded the entire saga in his first book, 23 Minutes in Hell. Following his vision, Bill knew his life calling was to share his experience with the world. Suddenly, Bill recalls seeing a bright light and felt himself rising out of the tunnel through which he had previously descended. While in this foul prison-like cell, Bill realized two large creatures shared the cell with him.ĭuring his time in hell, which lasted exactly 23 minutes, Bill Wiese experienced a great number of horrors including torture, intense darkness, a raging pit of fire, screaming, foul odors, and varying levels of torment. He shares that he experienced an intense heat that seemed too hot for life to even survive. Many people wonder if hell is hot or cold. In his book, 23 Minutes in Hell, Bill Wiese describes many horrifying sights, smells, and sounds.Īfter what felt like falling down a long tunnel, Bill found himself in a dark, dirty prison. In an event that he relates to a vision, Bill Wiese, a devout Christian, describes his experience as being “plunged into hell”. On a November morning in 1998, Bill Wiese, Author of 23 Minutes In Hell had an experience that would forever alter the course of his life. Let’s take a closer look at the stories of ten people who have been to hell and back. While there are many similarities throughout the stories of these ten individuals, there are also a great number of differences. It can be quite fascinating to research this phenomenon. While we should always rely on the Bible to tell us what hell is really like, stories of others can provide us with much to think about. Countless people have been to hell either through a dream, a vision, or a near-death-experience. But not all near-death-experiences are that positive. However, Riley Hospital won't perform a tracheotomy because Treasure is considered clinically dead.We have all heard of stories of people who have experienced heaven and lived to tell the tale. Angela Kosarue via FacebookĪngela Kosarue said she had been scrambling to persuade another hospital to take her daughter, but there was a sticking point, according to her lawyers: Hospitals say they won't receive the teen because she hasn't had a tracheotomy, a procedure in which a hole is made in the windpipe to help with breathing. "We never gave up on her - the doctors failed her and us." Angela Kosarue and her daughter, Treasure Perry. "She was an amazing niece, sister, aunt, daughter and granddaughter," Skylee Kosarue, an aunt of Treasure, said. A court last Friday initially gave her daughter more time on a ventilator, writing that "the injury suffered by the Plaintiff will be irreparable, in that if life-sustaining measures are terminated, the Plaintiff will likely be deceased."īut a judge on Wednesday declined to extend a deadline, and Treasure's family said the hospital took her off the ventilator on Thursday afternoon.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |