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This article originally appeared in Pursuit magazine.
This article is also available in Spanish. 
"I was dying. I heard the doctor pronounce me dead. As I lay on the
operating table of the large hospital, a loud, harsh buzzing began to
reverberate in my head. At the same time, I sensed myself moving quickly
through a long, dark tunnel. Then suddenly I found myself outside my own
physical body! Like a spectator, I watched the doctor's desperate attempts to
revive my corpse.
"Soon...I encountered a 'being' of light who showed me an instant replay of
my life and helped me evaluate my past deeds.
"Finally I learned that my time to die had not yet come and that I had to
return to my body. I resisted, for I had found my afterlife experience to be
quite pleasant. Yet somehow I was reunited with my physical body and lived."{1} Many people have reported near-death experiences (NDEs). What do
they mean? What happens when we die?
While writing a book on this subject, I interviewed people with fascinating
stories. A Kansas woman developed complications after major surgery. She
sensed herself rising out of her body, soaring through space, and hearing
heavenly voices before returning to her body.
An Arizona man in a coma five months after a motorcycle accident said he
saw his deceased father, who spoke with him.
Various theories attempt to explain these NDEs. Physiological explanations
suggest a physical cause--perhaps a blow to the head or lack of oxygen in the
brain. Pharmacological explanations point to drugs or anesthetics.
Psychological explanations propose mental causes such as defense
mechanisms or wish fulfillment. Spiritual explanations cite NDEs as previews
of the afterlife, either genuine (if divine) or distorted (if demonic).
Applications of these theories can be complex.{2} During my sophomore year
at Duke University, the student in the room next to mine was struck by
lightning and killed instantly. For days our fraternity was in a state of shock.
People were asking questions such as, "Where is Mike now?" "Is there life
after death?" "If so, what is it like?"
LIFE AFTER DEATH?
Can we know whether there is life after death? What method would we use to
find out?
The experimental method, useful for scientific questions, is inadequate for
evaluating NDEs. It is impossible in medical emergencies to establish the
required controlled situations and repeatability. Scientists also have no
mind-reading machines to evaluate mental/spiritual experiences. And
finding volunteers for NDE experiments would be difficult.
The experiential method receives mixed reviews. NDEs can provide useful
information, but the mind can trick us. Dreams, fantasies, hallucinations,
drug trips, drunkenness, states of shock--all can evoke mental images that
seem real but aren't.
Some suggest a spiritual method for evaluating these phenomena. What if we
could find a spiritual authority, someone with trustworthy credentials, to tell
us the truth about afterlife issues?
Following Mike's death, I explained to the men in our fraternity that an
increasing number of educated men and women believe that Jesus Christ is a
trustworthy spiritual authority. Once I, myself, was skeptical of Christianity,
but examining the evidences for Jesus' resurrection convinced me He could
be trusted. I found the resurrection of Christ one of the best attested facts of
history.{3} If Jesus died and came back from the dead, He could accurately
tell us what death and the afterlife are like. The fact that He successfully
predicted His own resurrection helps us believe that He will tell us the truth
about the afterlife. What did Jesus and those He taught say about it?
WHAT IS THE AFTERLIFE LIKE?
Jesus indicated that the afterlife will be personal.
Our personalities will not be annihilated. We won't blend into the great
impersonal ocean of cosmic consciousness, as some propose. We will
continue to exist. We will not become angels, as others suggest. Angels are
"ministering spirits" sent out to serve believers in Christ.{4} They are
already-created beings, distinct from humans.{5} At the moment Jesus died
on the cross He cried out, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit" (Luke
23:46).
Earlier, a thief who hung on a cross next to His said, "Jesus, remember me
when you come into your kingdom." Jesus responded, "I tell you the truth.
today you will be with me in paradise" (Luke 23:42-43).
Jesus believed that His own spirit was going to be with God. He also believed
that the thief (apparently the thief's soul or spirit) would be with Him in
heaven that same day. Clearly, Jesus was not thinking of death as annihilation
but as a separation from the physical body.
Elsewhere Jesus implied that our personalities somehow remain intact after
death. He once said, "Many will come. . .and will take their places at the feast
with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 8:11).
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob--the forefathers of the Jewish nation--had died
centuries earlier. Yet Jesus, speaking about a future event, mentioned them
by name. He implied that their personalities were maintained.
Did you ever wonder if you'll be able to see departed loved ones after you
die? Apparently those who participate in eternal life will be able to recognize
each other. King David, who reigned over the ancient nation of Israel around
1000 B.C., spoke of being with his dead son again.{6} Jesus' disciples once
caught a glimpse of Moses and Elijah, two long-dead heroes of Israel, and
recognized them. {7}
Jesus taught that eternal life will be relational.
Life in heaven will focus on a personal relationship with Him and on
meaningful relationships with each other. These will be the warmest and most
enriching relationships we could ever have.
Before His death, Jesus promised His disciples that one day they would be
with Him again: "I am going. . .to prepare a place for you. And. . .I will come
back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am" (John
14:2-3).
Paul, a first-century believer in Jesus, wrote about his "desire to depart and
be with Christ" (Philippians 1:23).
Jesus defined life in heaven when He said, "This is eternal life: that they
[people who believe in Him] may know you, the only true God, and Jesus
Christ, whom you have sent" (John 17:3). In other words, eternal life will
involve getting to know God and the meaning of life better.
Eternal life will be enjoyable.
Paul also wrote, "No mind has conceived what God has prepared for those
who love him" (l Corinthians 2:9).
John, Jesus' disciple, wrote, "[God] will wipe every tear from their eyes.
There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain" (Revelation
21:4). Another New Testament writer encourages us to "fix our eyes on
Jesus...who, for the joy set before him endured the cross...and sat down at
the right hand of the throne of God" (Hebrews 12:2). Eternal life with God will
be joy that defies description and exceeds our imagination.
Life after death will be eternal.
It will never end. Have you ever watched a movie so good you wished it
would never end?
Have you ever savored a dessert so sweet, you wished it would last and last?
Have you ever had a relationship so fulfilling you hoped it would go on
forever? Eternal life will be that good, and better! It will never end. "God has
given us eternal life," wrote John, "and this life is in His Son" (l John 5:11).
Jesus taught that eternal life involves all of the positive and none of the
negative. God loves us and desires only the best for us now and in eternity.
How sad that some people don't take advantage of all He has provided.
DON'T STOP!
Chattanooga cardiologist Maurice Rawlings, M.D., tells of a patient who had a
cardiac arrest in Dr. Rawlings' office. Throughout the attempted
resuscitation, the patient faded in and out. Each time the doctor interrupted
the heart massage, the patient appeared to die again.
When the man came to, he screamed, "I am in hell!" A look of sheer terror
clouded his face. "Don't stop!" he begged. "Don't you understand? I am in
hell. Each time you quit I go back to hell! Don't let me go back to hell!" The
patient survived and put his faith in Christ to take away his sins and secure
his place in heaven.{8} The place the Bible calls hell, or hades, is the current
home of those who do not accept Jesus' gift of forgiveness. It is a place of
constant, conscious torment.{9} Hades is not the final dwelling place of those
who die without a personal relationship with Christ. John says these will be
judged at the "great white throne" judgment. Since no one's deeds are
sufficient to earn eternal life, those without Christ's pardon will be cast into
the "lake of fire."{10} Jesus said that "the eternal fire...has been prepared for
the devil and his angels" (Matthew 25:41).
Not a pleasant subject. But remember, God does not want you to perish in
hell. He loves you and wants you to spend eternity with Him. Not without
Him.{11} Paul wrote that God our Savior wants all people to be saved (or
made safe from the consequences of sin, which is separation from God). He
wants us to know Him because He is truth.{12} God sent Jesus Christ, His
Son, to pay the penalty for our sins (attitudes and actions that fall short of
God's perfection). Jesus literally went through hell for us. We simply need to
receive His free gift of forgiveness--we can never earn it--to be guaranteed
eternal life. "Whoever hears my word, Jesus says, "and believes him who sent
me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from
death to life" (John 5:24).
WHAT ABOUT YOU?
According to the latest figures, the death rate in this country is still 100
percent. Every day on this planet about 140,000 people die.
What most of us are interested in is not "What happens to people when they
die?" but "What will happen to me when I die?"
Some seek to avoid the issue of death or to insulate themselves from concern
through popularity, possessions, pursuits, or power. Many feel that whatever
belief makes you feel comfortable is OK. Do any of these descriptions fit
you?
A nightclub near Cincinnati was packed one evening. Suddenly a busboy
stepped onto the stage, interrupted the program, and announced that the
building was on fire. Perhaps because they saw no smoke, many of the guests
remained seated. Maybe they thought it was a joke, a part of the show. When
they finally saw the smoke, it was too late. More than 150 people died as the
nightclub burned.
As you consider death, are you believing what you want to believe or what
the evidence shows is true? Jesus said, "I am the resurrection and the life. He
who believes in me will live, even though he dies" (John 11:25).
Place your faith in Jesus Christ as your Savior, and you, too, will live even if
you die.
Notes
- Adapted from Raymond A. Moody, Jr., M.D., Life After Life (New York:
Bantam, 1976), pp. 21-22.
- For a more complete discussion, see the book from which this article is
adapted: Rusty Wright, The Other Side of Life (Singapore: Campus Crusade
Asia Limited, 1979, 1994).
- See, for example, Josh McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict (San
Bernardino, CA: Campus Crusade for Christ, 1972).
- Hebrews 1:14.
- Hebrews 2:16.
- 2 Samuel 12:23.
- Matthew 17:14.
- Maurice Rawlings, M.D., Beyond Death's Door (Nashville: Thomas
Nelson, 1978), pp. 19-20.
- Luke 16:23-24.
- Revelatlon 20:11-15.
- John 3:16.
- I Timothy 2:3-4
© 1996 Rusty Wright. All rights reserved.
This article appeared in Pursuit magazine, Vol. V, No. 2.
About the Author Rusty Wright, associate speaker and writer with Probe Ministries, is an international lecturer, award-winning author, and journalist who has spoken on six continents. He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. He can be reached at
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What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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