Travel Advice

Travel Advice

Travel Advice header image 2

A Travel Guide to Heaven

2 Comments

A Travel Guide to Heaven

From Publishers Weekly

Forget angels playing harps. In this fascinating, comforting book, DeStefano takes the reader on a tour of heaven, painting it as a dynamic place of unlimited joy, and using Scripture and dramatic imagination to fill in details about the afterlife. “God doesn’t throw away the good things he creates,” he writes, an idea which is the basis of many of his speculations about heaven. Heaven is a tangible place, believes DeStefano, and at least part of it will be a transformed new earth. People will have their own recognizable bodies, only perfected. DeStefano tackles tough questions about heaven, including the role of angels, the measurement of time, marriages and whether pets will be there (”Of course!”). Fears of boredom are dispelled with his depictions of possible activities (”How about a tour of the Andromeda galaxy?”) and creative work (”Books will be written and read, public structures will be built and utilized”). However, he writes that nothin
Click Here For Big Discounts On A Travel Guide to Heaven at Amazon

Related posts:

  1. Learn About Local History on the Heaven Hill Distillery Trolley Tours If you’re new to Bardstown, Kentucky or simply visiting...
  2. Alaska Tour And Travel Getting the Best From Alaska Tour And Travel Alaska is...
  3. The Rough Guide to Spain 13 The Rough Guide to Spain is the ultimate travel...

Tags: Travel Tips

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Uriel // Nov 6, 2009 at 12:39 am

    Wow…I bought this book on a lark, and I’m so glad I did. I’ve read other books that explore the subject of the afterlife, but none was ever as uplifting as this one. Other books on life after death were always either a little scary or strange. This author doesn’t claim to have actually been to Heaven, but instead uses solid research to back up his vision of life after death. After I finished the book, I was left with feelings of hope and security. I can see how it would be comforting for someone who recently lost a loved one, or someone who is struggling with illness themselves. I’ve already purchased this book for two of my friends–it’s the kind of book that, once you read it, you want to share it with others. Overall, a great read!

  • 2 Galya // Nov 6, 2009 at 1:08 am

    I was touched and delighted by this beautiful work. This book does more than anything I’ve ever read to make heaven real and accessible to the average Christian. I loved the logical speculations and imaginative ideas, and I admire Mr. Destefano’s attempt to make this book as ecumenical as possible, focusing on what all Christian sects teach in common about the afterlife. Devoid of jargon and full of hope, A Travel Guide to Heaven is something I recommend for anyone who wants to know the basis for Christian optimism.

Leave a Comment