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Are you more sentimental about your own passing, than someone else's?
I think I might be. I feel really selfish saying that.
NB: not a thread about suicide
I mean as Christians, we are supposed to ponder on the shortness of our earthly life versus eternal life.
I tend to be obsessive about it though. Wondering about the last hour of my death. How much faith I will have. How much courage. How close I will feel to God.
Some will see it as negative I suppose. But I think it is only natural to be concerned about it.
I think about it every day, to be honest. Oh dear!
I got news for ya... you're already living your eternal life. The only thing that will change in your eternal life when your tainted earthly flesh dies, is your perspective of it....we are supposed to ponder on the shortness of our earthly life versus eternal life.
We can "what if" ourselves to death. We should be focused on what we can do while we are alive. Such as help someone in need. Volunteer to help at ministry outreach center. Teach a child new Christian things. Get busy doing the Lord's work and you won't have time to contemplate death. As far as worrying about it, what if the rapture happens just before a speeding truck hits you crashing through the window of a nursing home while you are in a wheelchair at 106 years of age? Had you been helping in the ministry outreach down the hall you would still be taken while the truck crashes through the window of your nursing home bedroom. And all the contemplating you would have done would have been for naught. I wouldn't worry about it. I can assure you that you will die of an arrested heart someday within the next 100 years.NB: not a thread about suicide
I mean as Christians, we are supposed to ponder on the shortness of our earthly life versus eternal life.
I tend to be obsessive about it though. Wondering about the last hour of my death. How much faith I will have. How much courage. How close I will feel to God.
Some will see it as negative I suppose. But I think it is only natural to be concerned about it.
I think about it every day, to be honest. Oh dear!
I mean as Christians, we are supposed to ponder on the shortness of our earthly life versus eternal life.
I tend to be obsessive about it though. Wondering about the last hour of my death.
BTW, Martin Heidegger said that his advice for happiness was spending time in graveyards thinking about death.
I think about my day every day. I am not anxious because I know Jesus and his merciful grace. I know I will see myself in heaven when I pass away. My only concern is the nature of my death. Will it be quiet and peaceful in my sleep or will it be painful? That I don't know.
I guess it depends on how much it's affecting other areas of your life. Is your pondering on death, in the way you decribed above, robbing you from living your life and being in the present moment. I think it can be healthy but again, it really depends if it's, in any way, disrupting other areas of your life in a negative way (robbing you of sleep, anxiety, preoccupied with thoughts of it constantly throughout the day that you miss out on the beauty of life/living in the present moment).
Not as a matter to obsess about. However, I do know that it is the grace of God that I can take another breath, or that my heart can continue to beat. Saying that, I can also say that it makes me thankful for His grace to keep my body functioning.
In my will, I have the following paragraph: The basic principle in all these things is to let me go if I have started to die. I understand that I have to trust God for every breath that I take, for every beat of my heart, and for the functioning of my body. With that in mind, I am of the opinion that if He wants to call me to my reward, no amount of emergency medical care and no machine will keep me alive. To the contrary, if He wants me to stay alive, He will keep me here without the tubes, etc.
Forgive me, but I disagree with that. Spending time in graveyards thinking about death in simply not healthy. "Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death! Go out there and live LIVE LIVE" (quoting from Auntie Mame). Along the way, while you are living, you may find some other traveler that needs the love of Jesus, and you can share that with him.
Being confronted with the possibility of 'dying' one day serves to appreciate 'life'. But then... Is there really 'death'?
I don't think there is but merely a transformation process to be experienced.
I have talked to a neighbor about this one day. She said to have had a death experience while being very sick.
But the 'other side' refused to accept her and send her back implying her time has not yet come.
God bless
I should have figured a monk would have a completely different perspective, but then I know the eastern liturgies well. There's a reason you guys all wear black, and it's not about color coordination. But for us folks in the world, I don't think we appreciate that perspective very often.
NB: not a thread about suicide
I mean as Christians, we are supposed to ponder on the shortness of our earthly life versus eternal life.
I tend to be obsessive about it though. Wondering about the last hour of my death. How much faith I will have. How much courage. How close I will feel to God.
Some will see it as negative I suppose. But I think it is only natural to be concerned about it.
I think about it every day, to be honest
Hi Kutte,Hi Spirit Reborn,
Please refrain from using red letters when replying to a posting. It is not only annoying but considered yelling.
My best
Oh? and monks are not allowed to have opinions?)
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