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We don’t actually know much about heaven.
In this episode of Grace, Grit & Grounds, Grace for the Worn Thin, we take a serious look at what Jesus actually tells us about heaven and hell and why abstraction has quietly weakened both our hope and our urgency.
Jesus gives us very little imagery, but what He gives has weight. A real story involving a man named Lazarus. A promise of a prepared place in His Father’s house. Language rooted in covenant and future union, not vague spirituality. Heaven is not a metaphor. It is not symbolic. It is real, prepared, and waiting.
When heaven becomes abstract, it stops shaping how we live. And when that happens, hell softens too, not because Scripture changes, but because complacency sets in.
This episode pushes back against clouds and harps, against thin caricatures that diminish eternal realities. It calls us back to the concrete hope Jesus offered and the seriousness with which He spoke about eternity.
This conversation is for the faithful who are worn thin, not looking for speculation or fear, but for hope that has substance. Hope with weight. Hope that can actually carry tired faith.
☕ Pull up a chair. Eternity presses closer than we think.#GraceGritGrounds
#HeavenAndHell
By kyberhawkWe don’t actually know much about heaven.
In this episode of Grace, Grit & Grounds, Grace for the Worn Thin, we take a serious look at what Jesus actually tells us about heaven and hell and why abstraction has quietly weakened both our hope and our urgency.
Jesus gives us very little imagery, but what He gives has weight. A real story involving a man named Lazarus. A promise of a prepared place in His Father’s house. Language rooted in covenant and future union, not vague spirituality. Heaven is not a metaphor. It is not symbolic. It is real, prepared, and waiting.
When heaven becomes abstract, it stops shaping how we live. And when that happens, hell softens too, not because Scripture changes, but because complacency sets in.
This episode pushes back against clouds and harps, against thin caricatures that diminish eternal realities. It calls us back to the concrete hope Jesus offered and the seriousness with which He spoke about eternity.
This conversation is for the faithful who are worn thin, not looking for speculation or fear, but for hope that has substance. Hope with weight. Hope that can actually carry tired faith.
☕ Pull up a chair. Eternity presses closer than we think.#GraceGritGrounds
#HeavenAndHell