
Why are Christians itching to get their hands on heaven tourism books and movies? It is a question that has many theologians reeling.
Why are Christians itching to get their hands on heaven tourism books and movies? It is a question that has many theologians reeling.
A 12-year-old girl who survived a 30-foot fall into a hollow tree says she met Jesus while unconscious.
Heaven’s not for sale, and books recounting people’s journeys there won’t be, either—at least not at LifeWay, the bookseller and publishing house established by the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) in 1891.
As a Christian, J.R.R. Tolkien knew that death was not the end, but the beginning. However, some Christians take it a step too far.
Earlier this week, LifeWay Christian Resources announced it would no longer carry “experiential testimonies about heaven,” such as Don Piper’s popular “90 Minutes in Heaven.”
Christian bookstore chain LifeWay Christian Resources has made a decision to pull all books in the “heaven tourism” genre from its shelves.
Last week, Alex Malarkey, the subject of the book “The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven,” made headlines for admitting he had not been to Heaven following a devastating car crash at age six.