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It's almost certainly done on purpose, because every single one of the Hell-Lords is trying to convince everybody that he is real Satan and his Hell is real Hell. The brimstone is also specifically there in some parts, as Nightcrawler travels through that dimension when he teleports, bringing back smoke retaining the smell.
Fire and brimstone is an idiomatic expression of referring to God's wrath in the Hebrew Bible . Puritan preacher Thomas Vincent (an eyewitness of the Great Fire of London) authored a book called "Fire and Brimstone in Hell", first published in. So when the Bible speaks of hell-fire, woe to us if we say, “It's only a symbol.” If it is a symbol at all, it means the reality is worse than fire, not.
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories ; no kidding! There is the twist that if a damned soul does good deeds in Hell, he can redeem himself and ascend to Heaven; in one case, a good deed amounts to defending fellow inmates from the demons' torture. Hell is a fiery subterreanean landscape where the souls of the wicked are tortured by Lucifer and his giant red demons. Tartarus, the afterlife of the condemned in Empath: The Luckiest Smurf , resembles this — or at least it did in the version Empath was thrust into in "Smurfing In Heaven" before he realized that both it and the Elysium he visited weren't real.
Disney's The Hunchbackof Notre Dame used a river of molten lead dumped out of the cathedral during the climax to represent Hell. Word of God says that in the universe of The Book of Life , in addition to the Land of the Remembered and the Land of the Forgotten there's another afterlife known as the Land of the Cursed.
It's "a very hot place" ruled by Xibalba's brother and it's where the most wicked of souls reside after death. The film version of Constantine featured Hell and Heaven as parallel universe versions of the real world; when John Constantine visits Hell, it's a demon-infested, burned-out version of Los Angeles insert biting topical humor here , while Heaven is downtown L. Hell is shown as a surging sea, a beach of flaming shipwrecks fitting the trope , a field of disembodied faces, and a parallel universe version of the damned's own house, set on the ceiling of an upside-down cathedral.
Also, none of the torment of Hell depicted is physical, only mental. The Hell of Drag Me to Hell , though not actually seen. Being floating islands chained the to the main devil himself. When the two go to talk to him, the devil traps them in steel like corridors with rooms based on their worst nightmares i.
The Hell in The Black Hole is certainly this with Reinhardt imprisoned for eternity, while standing on a tall rock looking over the fire and brimstone. It is also an ironic hell when you consider what else is there with him Hell on Earth , a priest tells Pinhead, "You'll burn in Hell!
What a limited imagination! The Scrooge musical with Albert Finney has a usually-cut-for-syndication scene of Ebenezer finishing his 'Yet To Come' sequence by being grasped by enormous chains and dragged down to this sort of Hell. Even though nowhere near as bad as some depictions, for a Christmas movie, even at what all know to be the scary part, it was a bit surprising to see.
Appears briefly at the end of Tales from the Hood when the Devil transforms into a giant demon in a fiery Hell. Satan rules of one these in Dead in Tombstone. The movie opens in a classical fiery hell, with rows of people being led around by the demons to suffer their fates. The entrance to Hell is a river of fire. A joke parodied the wording of this trope once, featuring Ulster Unionist politician and minister Reverend Ian Paisley, a man known for his obnoxious views towards Catholics, Nationalists, homosexuals and everyone else he doesn't like.
In this joke, he is delivering a sermon describing a Hell much like this: And in this Hell of eternal damnation, there will be fire, and brimstone, and much screaming and gnashing of teeth! Toothless old geezer at the back of the church: Wo' abou' if ye haven' any teef lef'? In spite of everything , Dante's Inferno actually averted this trope for the most part. Naked flames do feature, but only in four of the twenty-four divisions of Dante's Hell Heretics lie in flaming tombs, blasphemers, usurers, and homosexuals are in a desert with fire raining down, simoniacs are stuck upside down with flames burning at their feet, and evil counselors are stuck in individual tongues of flame and just one of the seven regions in his Purgatory the seventh terrence, for the repentant lustful.
You are as likely to be boiled, drowned, shredded, chopped, frozen, or suffer any number of other creative torments as you are burnt in Dante's Inferno.
Furthermore , Satan along with other traitors is imprisoned in the deepest level of Hell- Cocytus, a frozen lake. Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle wrote a novel, also titled Inferno , that revisits Dante's hell with a few modern updates for 20th-century sins. The protagonist is a somewhat self-deprecating hack science fiction writer , and his guide is a longtime resident of Hell named Benito Mussolini. Piers Anthony 's Incarnations of Immortality series has a Hell that is like this in many places.
It's revealed through later books that Hell has many regions, including a "mock Heaven" for souls that have been incorrectly sent to Hell and can't now be returned to Heaven. Justified in James Branch Cabell 's Jurgen in that the Hell the protagonist visits is based on his father's opinion of what Hell should be like. Everything in that land is constantly burning, although the fallen angels don't mind too much.
Some demons argue for exploring, mining and making the most of their existence in Hell. In A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce, Stephen regains his religion after hearing a particularly frightening description of fire-and-brimstone hell from a preacher. Borgel says he doesn't really know what goes on inside, but says that he does know that if you didn't like it, you'll have a lot of trouble getting your money back. The new King of Hell has shaken things up by introducing mental rather than physical tortures, but the actual demons are just as upset about this as the "clients".
In a series of books for children frequently quoted by atheists making emotional appeals , the nineteenth-century missionary priest John Furniss pronounced "furnace"? It is a pitiful sight. The little child is in this red hot oven. Hear how it screams to come out. See how it turns and twists itself about in the fire.
It beats its head against the roof of the oven. It stamps its little feet on the floor of the oven. You can see on the face of this little child what you see on the faces of all in hell — despair, desperate and horrible! God was very good to this child. Very likely God saw that this child would get worse and worse, and would never repent, and so it would have to be punished much more in hell. So God, in His mercy, called it out of the world in its early childhood.
Perhaps at this moment, seven o'clock in the evening, a child is just going into hell. To-morrow evening at seven o'clock, go and knock at the gates of hell, and ask what the child is doing. The devils will go and look. Then they will come back again and say, the child is burning! Go in a week and asked what the child is doing; you will get the same answer — it is burning!
Go in a year and ask; the same answer comes — it is burning! Go in a million of years and ask the same question; the answer is just the same — it is burning! So, if you go for ever and ever, you will always get the same answer — it is burning in the fire! Pulling up at the dock she sees the expected tall menacing gates, fiery skies, etc Computers augmented with bio-neural circuitry.
No 'Cavern of Despair'? I don't consider Voyager hell! Have you ever been truly happy here? If you thought fifty years aboard this ship would be difficult, try eternity! During the skits on MC Chris 's albums, Chris himself ends up sent to hell, and it's portrayed this way. In fact, literally everything is on fire, including the gloves required to pick up the variety of on-fire objects.
The tortures are more mental than physical, with Chris opting to gut himself with a fork to distract himself from some awful rapping his subjected to.
It's also implied that his torture is to produce real versions of the deliberately bad songs he had refused to create in earlier skits. The Squirrel Nut Zippers' "Hell" which is quoted at the top of this page is an obvious example. As part of the preacher's ministry, he is said to frequently reference the traditional depiction of Hell in his sermons " He preached Hell so hot that you could feel the heat ". It's unclear whether they suffer forever or just get cremated to deny them an eternal afterlife. Ask anyone from a more conservative denomination about Hell, and you'll probably hear about this minimalist version.
Talk to someone from a more liberal denomination, and you are more likely to get a reference to " Eternal Separation " than fire and brimstone. What that actually means depends on who you're asking.
Such a condition would feel as if your insides were filled with a "burning emptiness" for the rest of eternity. In spite of this supporting the notion of an all forgiving God over the concept of "eternal separation", the church, controversially, considers these positions heretical. Split the difference, and you can think of Hell as both eternal burning and eternal separation; also, as being both an internal and external condition.
Case in point, the Venerable Bede imagined Hell to be a kind of fire burning inside the damned that, once they were dead and beyond all hope of redemption, might well erupt forth from every orifice. Played with in The Watchtower. Jehovah's Witnesses believe in the eventual permanent destruction of the wicked in a lake of fire, but they interpret the scriptures as implying that Cessation of Existence , not eternal conscious torment, results from this destruction.
Jigoku in Japanese Mythology is presented as this. A carryover from trading beliefs with the mainland such as China , and a notable contrast to Yomi, a more traditional Underworld. Many, many The Far Side cartoons. It's all inferno, of course! I just get a kick out of saying that. The playfield for Devil's Dare is a fire and brimstone hell completely covered in flames.
A large section of Hell is just like this in The Lords. The Fourth Hell, Phlegethos, probably fits it the most. Some of the more traditional levels such as frozen Cania are there though as well. The D20 setting Infernum is set entirely in this sort of Hell. Demons torment souls to extract a substance called "iliaster", which is food and drink to them, and it is not a pleasant place.
It's not all fire and flames, though- in fact, as Hell technically consists of a whopping huge crater punched by the crashlanding of the Fallen Angels, fire and flames are actually a minority. Starting on the surface and going down the nine "Circles" of Hell, you have lifeless desert Emptiness , icy mountains locked under perpetual thunderstorms Tempest , swamps and mires and mudflats Tears , volcanic badlands Toil , war-scarred wastes Slaughter , urbanized ruins Industry , lush jungles sharing borders with a river of flame and a desert Delight , a massive volcanic range Malebolge and an eternally shifting city Pandemonium.
And that's not getting into other notorious landmarks, like the river Cocytus, a river of unnaturally cold jet-black ice that emerges from beneath the volcanoes of Malebolge and forms a barrier around Pandemonium On the balance, it's several separate dimesions, each with multiple subdimensions, that read like a somewhat tedious version of Dante's Inferno. The game In Nomine is the hilarious Gold Standard of Tabletop Game Hell and Heaven, for that matter , since Hell and its environs are a substantial fraction of the gameworld.
However, only the domain of the Demon prince of Fire is actually filled with fire and brimstone. Some areas are merely tedious and others even manage to be amusing. While torture and suffering were part of how the evil demons powered their economy, the setting then subverts itself by basically giving all the damned an easy way out: The demons can't drag it out of them, so the only way they can get the dead humans to pay is to bribe or threaten them which means they must be trustworthy over the long haul, or humans will stop powering all the things demons want.
Toad is "killed" by a train. Potentially terrifying, especially when it gets really hot when you are in hell it never really gets what someone from north of, say, Oklahoma would consider cold in either Orlando or Anaheim, but they keep the heaters in the hell section of the ride turned up year-round. The ride no longer exists in the Magic Kingdom Park in Florida it was closed down and replaced with a Winnie-the-Pooh -themed ride , but the original in Disneyland in Anaheim is still there. The erebus maps in the Age of Mythology feature this kind of hell, although they are primarily based off of Greek myths.
The Devil May Cry franchise has a few examples, but mostly averts it: When you fight Mundus, the second half of the battle does in fact take place in a lake of fire. Other parts of Hell include great, dark, ashen plains. This in contrast to the first Diablo which envisioned Hell as a land of bones, blood and mutilated corpses. A couple of areas in the Netherworld in Disgaea are like this, such as the Sea of Gehenna, and the immediate area around Laharl's Castle which itself hovers atop of a giant lake of lava. That being said, Disgaea's Netherworld generally has more variety than your average Hell, including anything from frozen wastelands to trippy starfields to inconspicuously cheerful-looking Ghibli Hills.
The Doom series of games particularly Doom 3 feature just this kind of hell. The planet Heck in the Earthworm Jim game, and the cartoon as well. Crossing over with Mordor , the Deadlands is a bleak and barren realm, containing wastelands of blackened rock, seas of lava, and partially destroyed structures.
However, the Deadlands subverts the "fire" part of the trope as, despite the flowing lava all over the place, mortals who visit are said to feel an " unearthly chill " within the realm. In Oblivion , you get to visit the Deadlands and it really fits the bill. Additionally, Mankar Camoran seems to have taken inspiration from Mehrunes Dagon when constructing the "torture area" of his "Paradise", a pocket realm of Oblivion.
New arrivals are dipped in lava. The final mission of Thief: The Dark Project , "The Maw of Chaos," is set in the Trickster's realm - underground, featuring a lot of lava rivers and monsters. There's even a section called 'Hell's Precipice'. I doubt even Ol' Horney would argue. However, it was the subject of formal debate among scholars:. But the precise nature of this fire had long been a source of puzzlement in Christian thought.
In the US, there was, and still is, a proliferation of Evangelicism and fundamentalism, "movements" within Christianity that tend to favor Bible reading and citation and be "into" literalism, of which, fire and brimstone is part. There is also a particular style of preaching known as "fire and brimstone" preaching, where the believers are repeatedly pounded with the idea of hell if they do not do a series of things.
Most importantly, recognize Christ as their savior. In fact, all Christian believers believe that but not all Christian sects demand people actually say it or demonstrate it. The term fire and brimstone is in no way exclusively heard in North American though it is probably heard more in the US due to the ever increasing it would seem numbers of fundamentalists one sees.
Hellfire and brimstone preaching is used to scare people into accepting a form of religion based on fear of punishment, this is nothing but bondage to religious traditions and terror. God says in Romans 2: By clicking "Post Your Answer", you acknowledge that you have read our updated terms of service , privacy policy and cookie policy , and that your continued use of the website is subject to these policies.
Home Questions Tags Users Unanswered. Dori 2, 3 17 BTW, "native americans" doesn't mean the same thing as "native speakers of American English". Thanks for mentioning the point. I don't believe anyone said anything about native Americans, with a capital A at all. It is merely a Biblical phrase and much associated with all aspects of the Protestant Reformation.
It's good to note that its use isn't limited to religious situations. It is associated with a style of preaching, of course, but trying googling Protestant Reformation and fire and brimstone. Timothy Baldridge 1 2 7. Interesting side note about Jonathan Edwards "fire and brimstone" preaching. While his content matter was exceedingly strong, by all accounts his delivery was monotoned, and he would even admonish worshippers who were having emotional responses to his message - the exact opposite of what one normally pictures in the stereotypical "fire and brimstone" delivery.
You might hear it like this: Manoochehr 7, 12 41 Behrens 3, 14 I think whether or not it is pejorative is rather subjective. New school "happy-clappy" Christians would use it as a pejorative, but old school fundamentalists would use it approvingly.
I guess I'm closer to the "happy-clappy" side of Christianity: Behrens Sep 24 '12 at However, it was the subject of formal debate among scholars: That said, early newcomers to the New World would have been familiar with the term.