Day 24 – eternal life (II)
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SELF-REFLECT
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True or false: “I tend to live my life with eternity in mind.”
Daily Quotation
Dan Piper, 90 Minutes in Heaven (Grand Rapids: Revell, 2004), 125.
I died in that accident. The next moment I stood
in heaven. –DAN PIPER
My first reason for believing in life after death
is the testimony of those who have met death itself and lived to tell about it.
These near-death experiences, or NDEs, first received popular acclaim in 1975
when Raymond Moody summarized 150 firsthand accounts in his book Life After
Life. Two decades later Michael Sabam, a Florida cardiologist, took a more
scientific and less subjective look at near-death testimonies. He was skeptical
when he began his research. "I suppose," he later recalled, "if
someone had asked me what I thought of death, I would have said that with death
you are dead and that is the end of it."¹ But during his investigation he
changed his mind, coming to believe these stories to be actual glimpses into
the life hereafter.
Dr. Sabam's work is just one of several reports
on near-death experiences that have been published since Moody's bestseller.
Some authors have penned their own personal testimonies of an NDE. Others have
sought to analyze and compare the experiences of others. To be honest, some of
the testimonials are far too subjective, a bit too fanciful, and much too
commercial to convince me of their legitimacy. On the other hand, many contain
features that are hard to dismiss as hearsay. They are inexplicable, unless the
explanation is that they are real and true. Consider, for example, the
following:
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An Air Force veteran, hospitalized after a heart attack, suffered a
cardiac arrest in the ICU and was successfully resuscitated on the third
defibrillation attempt. He later recalled that during his resuscitation he had
floated out of his body and observed the whole ordeal from a vantage point at
the foot of his bed. He described in detail how the defibrillator was charged
and used by the medical team, even noticing the movement of two voltage needles
as it was charging. Although he had no prior medical knowledge, his description
during an interview twenty years later—when defibrillators no longer had
voltage needles—fit to a tee those used in 1973, the year of his heart attack
and arrest.
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Another man, after a successful resuscitation, reported that he left
his body and traveled out of the room, observing his wife, his eldest son, and
his daughter entering the hospital. Security footage confirmed that the three
had indeed entered at that very moment, unaware that the loved one they had
come to visit had just suffered a cardiac arrest.
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A little girl named Katie was resuscitated at a swimming pool. She
later claimed to have visited her home during the resuscitation and to have
observed her parents and two siblings. She accurately described the actions of
all four at the very moment of her arrest—her father in front of the
television, her mother cooking in the kitchen, her brother playing with a G.I.
Joe and a jeep, and her sister busy with her Barbie doll. She even related to
them what clothes they were wearing and what food her mother was cooking.
4
An eleven year old boy was successfully revived then described in
detail the actions of the medical personnel from a vantage point above the
events. When compared with the actual medical record, the child's testimony
read like an eyewitness report.
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After being defibrillated, a man described his resuscitation in
detail. He related floating to the ceiling and watching his body jump about a
foot off the bed as he was jolted by the current. He even described the tops of
the heads of the doctors and nurses in the operating room, details he could not
have ascertained while prone on the table, even if he had been awake and alert.
In addition to seeing earthly details, many NDE
patients describe entering another world, most often a realm of light, where
they are greeted by a Being of unconditional love. After a brief but exhaustive
review of their lives, they are told to return, reluctantly obliging. In almost
every case, these individuals are transformed by the NDE. They are more
compassionate than before; they no longer fear death.
In each case above and numerous others described
elsewhere, interviewers found no hint of deception, bias, or exaggeration.
Almost every investigator came to the conclusion that these NDEs were actual
events. Most became convinced that life after death is real. Among them was
Raymond Moody, the pioneer in the field:
Everyone is going to have to look at this and
make up his own mind in his own way. All I can do is speak for myself and my
many colleagues in medicine who have looked into this, and we're
all convinced that the patients do get a glimpse of the beyond.²
So what, you may ask, is my interpretation of the
data? In my twenty-seven years as a physician, I have witnessed and
participated in hundreds of resuscitation attempts. I have seen patients over
and over again in ventricular fibrillation. I know that such patients have no
heartbeat and no level of consciousness whatsoever. I know it is impossible for
a human body during a cardiopulmonary arrest to be cognizant of anything. For
these reasons, the only way I can explain NDEs is to acknowledge that something
outside the body is doing the observing. How else could an unconscious patient
give details of his defibrillation, including the charging of the machine? How
else could these patients relate events coinciding with their demise—events
ranging in distance from the resuscitation room to places miles away—unless
there was a separation of body and soul? Could there be a natural explanation?
Possibly, but thus far nothing definitive has been offered in rebuttal. There
is not one theory that can credibly account for the phenomenon. The
explanations proposed by skeptics are not persuasive and often outlandish. I
have concluded, therefore, that Moody is right. I believe what we are hearing
from these near-death patients is evidence in favor of our continued existence.
Patrick Glynn, a Harvard-educated scientist and a
former atheist, gives a whole chapter to near-death experiences in his
wonderful book God: The Evidence. He ends that chapter with these
words:
I suppose it is possible that some alternative
explanation could be found for people to perceive things out of
body that they could not have physically seen—how I don't know. I
suppose it could be merely accidental that people who claim to have died
and return come back with elaborate narratives and messages about ethics and
life that are by and large more coherent than what one often hears in church on
Sunday—even while being perfectly in line with those values. All this, one
could argue, is merely the result of some accident of evolution that structured
the brain to respond in a certain way to the circumstance of death. Could it be
accidental? I suppose. But it would be a very strange accident indeed.³
Tomorrow, I will relate those four additional
pieces of evidence that compel me to believe in life after death.
1
Which of the near-death experiences mentioned in
today’s reading was the most compelling to you? Why?
2
If you had a near-death
experience, what things about your life would change?
3
True or false: “I tend to live my life with eternity in mind.”
¹Michael Sabam, Reflections of Death: A Medical
Investigation, (New York: Harper & Row, 1982), 2.
²Raymond A. Moody, Jr., author of Life After Life
(New York: Bantam, 1976), quoted in Patrick Glynn, God: The Evidence
(Roseville, Calif.: Prima, 1999), 137.
³Glynn,
137.
Daily Quotation
Dan Piper, 90 Minutes in Heaven (Grand Rapids: Revell, 2004), 125.
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