Day 25 – eternal life (III)
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Ask yourself again: “Do I live my life with eternity in mind?”
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I may not have a date with my dad here tonight,
but there’s one thing I know for sure. And that is:
I’ll have a date with my daddy when I get to heaven. –CHELSEA STEWART,
Payne’s daughter
Yesterday, I offered near-death experiences
(NDEs) as evidence in favor of life after death, suggesting they give us a hint
and a hope of eternal existence. Though by no means confirmatory, many of these
testimonies have features difficult for skeptics to dismiss wholesale or
scientists to explain away. They come from the mouths of innocent children and
seemingly sincere adults, all relating events that happened while undergoing
cardiac resuscitation or while comatose. Included are details impossible to
ascertain from their particular vantage point at the time—prone, unresponsive,
and surrounded by medical personnel and equipment. As a whole, these NDE
testimonies are devoid of exaggeration and boastfulness. In fact, researchers
conducting interviews have noted how these people tend to relay their stories
with a characteristic reluctance and restraint, as if cherishing a private
memory. For sure, a few near-death stories seem a bit fanciful and adorned, but
most—particularly those accepted by impartial investigators—are just the
opposite. They appear to be real experiences that happened to real people at
real moments of real death, and they all point to the same conclusion: the
reality of life beyond the grave.
Besides NDEs, additional evidence can be offered
in support of an afterlife. Today, I will briefly summarize four more reasons I
embrace the life beyond.
1. The Resurrection of Jesus
I believe in the bodily resurrection of Jesus
from the tomb. I think this is by far the best interpretation of the historical
data presented us, far more rational and reasonable than any other explanation.
I will not at this time outline the evidence in favor of its veracity. That is
a later topic. All I will do now is state the obvious: if Jesus did rise from
the dead, then life after death—in his case, at least—is real.
2. The Post-Resurrection
Appearances of Jesus
It is not disputed, except by the most rabid
critic, that the disciples of Jesus claimed to have seen him on numerous
occasions after his death. According to Paul, he and over five hundred people
were eyewitnesses of Jesus post-resurrection. All four gospel writers describe in some detail his appearance and
activities during these days.
Again, I believe these accounts to be true. To
trust their historical reliability seems to me the most sensible conclusion.
All other explanations, in comparison, are illogical or improbable. If I am
right, the answer to the question of life after death becomes rather obvious.
3. The Fulfillment of Eternal
Desire
According to atheists, everything about us has to
be explained by nature, for nature is all there is. We are mere human machines,
a conglomeration of chemicals. At death our machines simply stop running, and
our molecules are reabsorbed into nature. There is no life afterward.
But a philosophical weakness exists in this line
of thinking. If nature is all there is, then everything—even our desires—must
come to us from nature. This includes our desire for eternity. Nature must the
source of that longing, too. Therefore, to be consistent, the atheist must
believe that nature is lying to us, deceiving us, giving us a desire for
something that does not exist.
This, of course, goes against all we know about
human desires. In the natural world there is no desire for which fulfillment is
impossible. Humans hunger (desire food); food exists. We thirst (desire drink);
drink exists. We crave sexual pleasure; sexual intercourse exists. There is a
valid object to every desire. Why, then, do we humans, almost every one of us,
desire eternal life? Shouldn’t there be an object for that desire, too?
Shouldn’t eternal life exist?
Herein lies one of the problems with atheism. It
claims that all our desires are products of nature, then it proceeds to say
that our desire for eternal life is unnatural.
The other option, the one I espouse, is the
supernaturalist view. I claim that there is a Reality beyond and above nature.
I believe that this supernatural Reality, or God, is infinite and eternal and
has created me and given me life. I believe that I long for eternity because
eternal life exists, that my desire has an obtainable object, a potential
fulfillment, a reachable end-point of satisfaction. This afterlife I yearn for
is not a dream, a myth, or a mirage, but a premonition of and movement toward
Reality Itself.
4. A Personal Experience
In over a quarter century as a physician, I have
observed hundreds of people at death or immediately afterwards. I have not,
however, witnessed firsthand any near-death phenomena. This may come as a
surprise to you, but it should not. There are reasons such testimonies are
rare. For one thing, most patients do not survive cardiac resuscitation and
therefore do not live to speak of a near-death experience. Add to this the
tendency of those with NDEs toward privacy, and you can see why most physicians
have not witnessed such events in their medical careers.
This notwithstanding, I do remember an odd
incident over a decade ago in our local ER, one that is hard to dismiss as a
coincidence or fabrication. I was on duty late one afternoon when paramedics
brought in an elderly man in the midst of cardiac resuscitation. The patient,
it turned out, was the uncle of one of our local family physicians. Despite our
efforts he could not be revived, so I pronounced him dead and telephoned his
nephew. While I was on the phone, a nurse interrupted me with some startling
news: the man’s heart had begun to beat again! (In my years of directing
cardiac resuscitation attempts, this is the only time I’ve declared a patient
dead and then had to reverse the pronouncement.) Amazingly, the man lived long
enough to be admitted to the ICU, where he died an hour or two later.
By this time, the nephew was at the bedside of
the patient. From there he called his wife, who had not yet heard of their
uncle's ambulance ride and ER visit. When told of the events, she was surprised
and perplexed. She said she had driven by his house a short while earlier and
had seen him walking in his yard beside the barn. On further questioning, it
was determined that she had observed him in his yard during the very minutes I
had pronounced him dead, just before his unexpected revival.
Coincidence? Fabrication? A near-death
phenomenon, a hint of a life beyond? I'll let you be the judge.
In summary, then, the weight of the evidence
supports the afterlife. I embrace life after death because this is the best
explanation of near-death testimonies, including the one above from my own
personal experience. I believe in the life beyond because the historical
reliability of Jesus' resurrection and post-resurrection appearances points
precisely in that direction. I think eternal life is real because,
philosophically, our desire for eternity would not exist unless something
existed to fulfill that desire.
What do you think?
SELF-REFLECT
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What aspects of life after death
excite you? What about life after death frightens you?
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Paul, the apostle, may have had
a near-death experience. He later said, “Eye has not seen, ear has not heard,
nor has it entered into the heart of man what God has prepared for His loved
ones.” Do you believe this?
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Ask yourself again: “Do I live my life with eternity in mind?”
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Offer a prayer now asking God to
give you purpose and peace in this life. Thank Him for the promise of eternal
life.
Daily Quotation
Quoted in Tracy Stewart, Payne
Stewart, 315.
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