Amos 9:2 says: Though they dig into hell, thence shall mine hand take them; though they climb up to heaven, thence will I bring them down. This Bible verse is a future prophecy that’s referring to Yahawashi, who’s falsely called Jesus Christ, returning to Earth and destroying the Beast system headed by Esau Edom and his vassals. When the verse says they dig into hell, it means the ground, not a place where people’s souls burn for eternity. In fact, the concept of hell dates back to the Greek Empire, when Hedes was called the Greek god of the underworld. The Roman Catholic Church would ultimately incorporate the concept of hell into their religion, and this belief has been a major stronghold for the majority of people on Earth to this day.
In addition to hell being the ground or grave, hell is also a condition or state of being. For example, when Jonah was swallowed by a giant fish and remained in its belly for three days, he was in a state of hell for being disobedient to the LORD. Another example is the parable of the rich man and Lazarus pursuant to Luke 16:19-31. The rich man isn’t burning in hell forever and a day, and Lazarus isn’t in heaven or Abraham’s bosom, so to speak. This parable is an allegory and a future prophecy, where one kingdom ends, and another begins.
The rich man represents Esau Edom, the so-called White man, and Lazarus represents the nation of Israel―who are the so-called Blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans. They will ultimately switch places once the Kingdom of Heaven is established here on Earth by the Lord, and Esau Edom’s kingdom is destroyed by the thermonuclear fire of the ICBMs and concentrated laser beam fire from the army of angels flying the chariots aka UFOs. When it says the rich man or Esau will be in hell and torment, it’s talking about slavery, not a physical place called hell in the center of the Earth. And the great gulf that’s fixed doesn’t mean sinners will see the Kingdom of Heaven from afar while being tormented in hell for eternity like the Christian church teaches―it simply means that the rulership of the Israelites will last forever while Esau and the other nations will be in perpetual servitude.
So, the question of the day is: if hell were a place, why don’t the wicked elites fear it? And if there were such a thing as burning in hell for eternity, why aren’t they repenting? Wouldn’t they be afraid of going to hell too? The LORD created good and evil as stated in Isaiah 45:7, so there’s no such thing as hell where the spiritual demon Satan dwells and souls burn eternally. We go back to the spiritual realm once we die, receive judgment from YAHAWAH, who’s falsely referred to as God, and then we’re reincarnated three to four generations later in order to play out that judgement. For example, a judgment from the LORD for the sins committed from a previous life could be intellectual disabilities or blindness. For the wages of sin is death, not death and eternal damnation in a lake of fire―burning in hell for infinity is an unjust balance, and the LORD hates unjust balances. All praise, honor, and glory go to Yahawah Bahasham Yahawashi.