Faith

What Will Happen After Your Last Breath?

I’ve learned to fear death no longer: Glory ahead!

John Howard Prin
Koinonia

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Photo courtesy of Patrick on Unsplash.

Have you ever stood by a terminally ill person’s bedside the final hours of their life? For some people who have, thoughts of their own mortality and of the afterlife abound.

Whatever your feelings about the dying person’s fate, facing your own death — however frightening or unsettling — brings up the question, “What happens after my last breath?”

It is an age-old mystery, one that millions of humans face and have wrestled with, and will continue to wrestle with, due to conjecture and lack of certainty.

Some plausible answers: Let’s start with the documented near-death experiences of Dr. Eben Alexander, who wrote Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey Through the Afterlife (Simon and Schuster, 2012).

His story describes in generous detail the journey his consciousness (soul) took beyond this world to the darkest and brightest and highest realms of spiritual existence, where, he says, he “met the Divine source of the universe itself.” *

Although scientists have debated the reality of near-death experiences (NDEs) as impossible and scoffed at tales of the hereafter as mere fantasies — and Dr. Alexander was one of those scientists — his own encounter in the heavenly realms while lying inert in a hospital bed during a week-long coma from spinal meningitis convinced him otherwise.

Since 2011, he has dedicated his career to a single principle: “that true health can be achieved only when we realize that God and the soul are real and that death is not the end of personal existence but only a transition.”

For those who flat-out disbelieve such a story could be real, you are not alone. Of course, there are skeptics who dismiss the possibility of an afterlife and claim human consciousness ends after one’s last breath. But those are topics thousands of people with NDEs over hundreds of years would vigorously dispute.

Back in 731 A.D., the Venerable Bede, an English monk, described a man from Northumbria who “returned from the dead.” After dying in bed one night, the man returned to life at daybreak and sat up, surprising his relatives at his bedside.

“Do not be frightened,” he urged, “for I have truly risen from the grasp of death . . . so I must not live as I used to. Rather, I must weigh my actions with greater care and act in ways more virtuous, so when I die I will have a home among the happy spirits who greeted me there.”

Similar accounts from 65 studies of 3,500 NDEs and from diverse Western and Eastern cultures are documented in excellent books such as Imagine Heaven by John Burke (Baker Books, 2015) and Life After Life by Raymond A. Moody, Jr. M.D. (Stackpole Books, 1976).

The medical professionals weigh in

Over the centuries thousands of parallel accounts have been documented — and, astoundingly, most share a great number of core elements. Take the career of Emergency Room Dr. Thomas Fleischmann of Hamburg, Germany.

He and his staff work tirelessly to resuscitate individuals on the brink of dying, some 2000 people, and he has eye-witnessed 20 percent of those patients return to life after all vital signs were shut down.

From his study of return-to-life patients, he concludes that “a pattern has emerged for which I can personally attest, but for which we have no scientific explanation. That pattern begins instantly once the heart stops beating.” Dr. Fleischmann adds:

  • Patients report how all pain is gone, all fear is gone. They speak of being at peace, of being calm, secure, and sometimes even joyful.
  • Many report floating above their dead bodies completely aware of their environment; they see and hear everything going on as observers.
  • They enter a dark, confined space, which for 98 percent of them (regardless of race) feels warm, soothing, and comfortable — yet there is no connection to any one religion.
  • They see a bright light, far brighter than anything on earth, but not blinding. A dazzling and bright humanlike figure clothed in white garments exudes unconditional love and “speaks” to them via telepathic thoughts.
  • Beautiful colors and ethereal music accompany this loving being, who presents a review of the person’s entire life: like a movie displaying all at once positive and negative encounters the person had with others. The key theme is whether love and kindness was shown to people (even animals), or whether hurtful attitudes and behavior predominated.
  • Each “traveler” faces the decision whether to continue experiencing the wondrous reality that’s ahead, or, based on their own assessment of the impact of their earthly behavior, to finish certain tasks of living back home and to improve their part in relationships.

About half decide for themselves to return. Another half meet former relatives and friends who influence the individual to go back and behave by new rules with othersrecall the man described by Venerable Bede: “I must not live as I used to. Rather, I must weigh my actions with greater care and act in ways more virtuous.”

Emergency physician Dr. Fleischmann says the main lesson for him is: “Because of my NDE patients, I have absolutely no fear of dying. None.”

My own experience as a non-believer

As for myself, I can affirm the credibility of such descriptions of the spiritual world from my own eye-witness experience. Also, like Dr. Fleischmann, I personally have no fear of dying.

A surprising event occurred during my college years the day I stood beside my father’s hospital bed in November 1965. During quiet moments when I held his hand and stared at his shrunken body, shriveled at age 59 from diabetes-induced kidney and heart disease, I pondered his fate. Where might he go next, if anywhere?

“Dad, it’s Johnny,” I whispered. “Can you hear me?”

No response. A coma had held him captive and mute for weeks, unable to speak or even blink his eyes.

Nothing on this rainy evening stood between Dad and death. To us, his family, it was another visiting day like the many dozens before it. Mom, as usual, spent much of her time sitting in a corner of Dad’s room sewing quietly on her needlework.

As I stood at Dad’s bedside humming his favorite song from his boyhood , “A Simple Melody,” a tune he’d sung many times — I hoped it would soothe him now.

You can imagine my surprise when his head arched upward and his eyes opened wide. A smile cracked his face as he looked straight up, beaming, at something invisible — invisible to me but clearly very real to him. I reared back, speechless, observing what seemed a miracle.

In complete silence, his eyes shined with a supernatural radiance and his smile broadened as though he was making contact with an unseen, benevolent presence, perhaps a welcoming party of cherished family members greeting him in the far beyond. His face radiated “Glory-ous” energy for several seconds and eagerness flooded his eyes.

I leaned closer, just a few inches away, and watched his eyes close in complete peace. His last breath came with a slow sigh. The message that seared into my psyche was:

“I’ve gone to a place of peace, rest, and comfort — a place of spectacular wonders — so have no fear, no doubt, no worry. I am home!”

AUTHOR’S NOTE: I was not a Christian at the time, but this incident witnessed strongly of God’s mercy and power to my secular mind. Over the next twelve years, similar mystical incidents nudged me closer to the life-changing acceptance and born-anew surrender to Jesus Christ.

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References

Proof of Heaven, paperback back cover. Proof of Heaven Publisher’s “About the Book” description

Reflections on Life After Life, Raymond A. Moody, Jr. M.D., p. 66.

Imagine Heaven, John Burke, Baker Books; October 20, 2015

Life After Life, Raymond A. Moody, Jr. M.D.

From Life to Death, Beyond and Back, Thomas Fleischmann, YouTube TEDX talk

Originally published at https://pioneerproductions.blogspot.com.

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Encouraging, empowering, and entertaining. In Christ.

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John Howard Prin
Koinonia

John enjoys helping people to discover and live their best lives. His blog, Sacred Fruit Among Thorns, encourages readers to “Live a life worthy of the Lord.”