Why our loved ones are very much alive in another life
I am told that in the Netherlands, when a love one dies, the occasion is not sorrowful but happy. A Dutch acquaintance told me that when her brother died, the wake attended by 20 relatives and close friends was more like a despedida (farewell) party. They believed that once mortal life ends, freed from the sufferings and trials of the earth, God brings the spirit of the person into His Paradise where there is no more grief nor suffering, questioning or temptation, but only peace and joy.
While bringing the coffin to the cemetery, several would give their farewell greetings. Then, the whole party sings a song in the spirit of till we meet again. These are contrary to what is traditionally believed and practiced.
The traditional way of looking at death
When you have lost by death one whom you loved dearly – one who, perhaps, was all the world to you – life seems empty and no longer worth living. You feel that joy has left you forever… that existence can be for you nothing but hopeless sadness... nothing but one aching and longing for “the touch of a vanished hand and the sound of a voice that is still.” You are thinking chiefly of yourself and your intolerable loss, but there is also another sorrow.
Your grief is aggravated by your uncertainty as to the present condition of your beloved. You feel that he has gone you know not where. You hope earnestly that all is well with him, but when you look upward all is void. When you cry, there is no answer. Thus, despair and doubt overwhelm you, and make a cloud that hides the sun from you, which never sets. Your feeling is most natural. That is understandable and so you received your friends’ sympathy.
Our sorrow is founded on the ignorance of nature’s law
Theosophy is the study of spiritual facts. (Theo means God, sophy means wisdom.) They are profound truths of the unseen spiritual world revealed to sensitives who may be clairvoyant, visionaries, or mystical. Among famous theosophists are Annie Besant, Geoffrey Hodson, and C.W. Leadbeater.
There are three major facts according to Theosophical Teachings:
Your loss is only an apparent fact – apparent from your point of view. Another viewpoint is that your suffering is the result of a great delusion, which is an ignorance of Nature’s law.
You do not need to be uneasy or uncertain with regard to the condition of your loved one, for the life after death is no longer a mystery. The world beyond the grave exists under the same natural laws as our world, and has been explored as well as examined with scientific accuracy. There are two bestsellers by Dr. Raymond A. Moody Jr., which are most consoling to those who are bereaved: Life After Life is a classic bestseller that offers astonishing proof of a life after physical death; and, Reflections on Life After Life includes important discoveries in the ongoing investigation of survival of life after bodily death.
You must not mourn, for your mourning does harm to your loved one. If you can open your mind to the truth, you will mourn no more. Try to clear your mind from preconceptions then you will see that this opinion rests merely upon assertion, for religions teach different views, and the words of the Holy Book have been given to various interpretations.
The physical and the spiritual body
Man possesses an immortal something called a SOUL, which is supposed to survive the death of the body. Man has a soul and a body. The body is not the man, it is only the clothing of the man.
What you call death is the laying aside of a worn-out garment, and it is no more the end of the man than it is the end of you when you remove your overcoat. Therefore, you have not lost your friend. You have only lost sight of the clothes, in which you were accustomed to see him. The clothes are gone, but the man who wore it is not. Surely, it is the man that you love, and not the garment.
Before you can understand your loved one’s condition, you must first understand your own. Try to grasp the fact that you are an immortal being, immortal because you are divine in essence – a spark from God’s own fire that you lived for ages before you put on this vestment, which you call a body. You will live for ages after it has crumbled into dust. “God made man to be an image of His own eternity” (Genesis 1:27)>
Yet, you must not think of him as a mere bodiless breath. As St. Paul said long ago: “There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.” People misunderstand that remark, because they think of these bodies as successive and do not realize that we possess both of them even now. You have both a natural or physical body, which you can see, and another inner body, which you cannot see that St. Paul calls “spiritual”.
Sleeping is a pleasant exercise of dying
Every night when you go to sleep, you slip off your “overcoat” for a while, and roam about the world in your spiritual body – invisible as far as this dense world is concerned, but clearly visible to those friends who have died and are in their spiritual bodies. Each body sees only that which is on its own level. Your physical body sees only other physical bodies; your spiritual body sees only other spiritual bodies.
When you resume your “overcoat” and wake up to this lower world – it occasionally happens that you have some recollection of what you have seen. You call this a vivid dream.
As we sleep and dream a silver cord is attached to our spiritual body, which moves about in the dream world. Sleep, then, may be described as a kind of temporary death. The difference is that you do not withdraw entirely from your “overcoat” so that you are able to resume it. When one dies the silver cord is severed as the spiritual body is released. So death is not the end of life. The dead have not left us. It is only a step from one stage of life to another. It is only the laying aside of his “overcoat,” but man still finds himself clad in his undergarment.
When you take off your overcoat in the hall, you do not suddenly vanish to some distant mountaintop, you are just standing where you were before, though you may wear a different garment. In the same manner, when a man puts off his physical body or when he dies, he remains exactly where he was before but as a spirit. And so the spirit of a man who suddenly dies in a car accident hovers over his dead body, but no one sees him.
This phenomenon is vividly portrayed in the film Ghost, starred by Patrick Swayze and Demi Moore, a couple so in love that when the husband died the longing for each other is expressed by the theme song, Unchained Melody:
“O my love, my darling, I’ve hungered for your touch. A long, lonely time. Time goes by so slowly and time can do so much. Are you still mine? I need your love (2 times). God speed your love to me.”
It is true that the character played by Demi Moore can no longer see her beloved, played by Patrick Swayze. The reason for this is not that he has gone away, but because he is now wearing his spiritual body, which is no longer visible to his beloved who is still alive in her physical body.
There is no hell
As an old scripture puts it, “The souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and there shall no torment touch them. In the sight of the unwise they seem to die, their going from us to be utter destruction; but they are in peace.”
Therefore, we must put aside antiquated theories. The dead man does not leap suddenly into an impossible heaven, nor does he fall into a still more impossible hell. There is indeed no hell in the old wicked sense except as man makes for himself. He does not suddenly become a great saint or angel, nor is he suddenly endowed with all the wisdom of the ages. He is just the same man the day after his death as he was the day before it, with the same emotions, the same disposition, and the same intellectual development. The only difference is that he has lost his physical body.
If his enjoyments in this world were low and coarse, he will find himself unable in that world to gratify his desires. A drunkard will suffer from unquenchable thirst, no longer having a body through which it can be assuaged. The glutton will miss the pleasures of the table. The miser will no longer find gold for his gathering. The man who has yielded himself during earth-life to unworthy passions will find them still gnawing at his vitals.
Meantime, the artistic and intellectuals are supremely happy in that new life. Yet even happier still are those whose keenest interest has been in their fellowmen – those whose greatest delight has been to help, to succor, or to teach. Although, there is no longer any poverty, no longer any hunger or thirst in that world, there are still those who are in sorrow who can be comforted, those who are in ignorance and who can be taught.
Dead men must be freed from earth’s long mourning
Are the dead disturbed by the anxiety of those they have left behind? Sometimes that does happen, and anxiety delays their progress. So, we should avoid this. The dead man should be utterly free from all thoughts of the life he has left so that he may devote himself entirely to the new existence that he has entered. It is advisable to especially take care of the children whom a dead man left behind, for in that way one not only benefits the children, but also relieves the departed parent from anxiety and helps him on his upward path.
All suffering comes from ignorance. Dispel the ignorance and the suffering is gone. That is why a child who dies is the happiest because he is not anxious about death.
A Christian view of death
We picture death as coming to destroy;
Let us rather see it as Jesus Christ coming to save.
We think of death as an ending;
rather think of it as new life beginning.
We think of death as losing;
rather think of it as winning, as final victory.
We think of death as parting;
rather think of it as a meeting of loved ones.
We think of death as going away;
rather think of it as surviving, home at last!
Death is not extinguishing the light.
It is putting out the lamp--because the DAY,
The Eternal Day has dawned.
So, Lord: Help us to see death for what it really is.
(Reference: To Those Who Mourn by C. W. Leadbeater)
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