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Learning
What
Happens After Death |
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I asked my friend, and his friends, about death
what happens when we die?
They said that when a loving person dies, angels come down to
meet him, and they take him up gradually, at first, because it would be unbearable
for that person to be instantly exposed to God.
Knowing what's inside of every person,
the angels don't have to prove anything by showing off. They know what each of us
needs, so they provide that. In some cases it may be a heavenly meadow, and in another,
something else. If a person needs to see a relative, the angels will bring that relative.
If the person really likes jewels, they will show the person jewels. We see what is
necessary for our introduction into the spirit world, and those things are real, in the
heavenly, the divine sense.
They gradually educate us as spirit beings,
and bring us into heaven. We grow and increase, and grow and increase, and shed the
concerns, desires, and base animal stuff that we have been fighting much of our life.
Earthly appetites melt away. It is no longer a struggle to fight them. We become who we
truly are, which is part of the divine.
This happens to loving people, people who are
good and love God. They made it clear to me that we don't have any knowledge or right
to judge anybody else in terms of that person's heart relationship to God.
Only God knows what's in a person's heart. Someone whom we think is despicable,
God might know as a wonderful person. Similarly, someone we think is good, God may see as
a hypocrite, with a black heart. Only God knows the truth about every individual.
God will ultimately judge every individual.
And God will allow people to be dragged into darkness with like-minded creatures. I have
told you, from my personal experience, what goes on in there. I don't know from what I
saw anymore than that, but it's my suspicion that I only saw the tip of the iceberg.
I deserved to be where I was I was in
the right place at the right time. That was the place for me, and the people I was around
were perfect company for me. God allowed me to experience that, and then removed me,
because he saw something redeeming in putting me through the experience. It was a way to
purge me. People who are not allowed to be pulled into darkness, because of their loving
nature, are attracted upwards, toward the light.
I never saw God, and I was
not in heaven. It was way out in the suburbs, and these are the things
that they showed me. We talked for a long time, about many things, and
then I looked at myself. When I saw me, I was glowing, I was radiant. I
was becoming beautiful not nearly as beautiful as them but I had a
certain sparkle that I never had before.
Not being ready to face the
Earth again, I told them that I wished to be with them forever. I
said, "I'm ready, I'm ready to be like you and be here forever.
This is great. I love it. I love you. You're wonderful."
I knew
that they loved me and knew everything about me. I knew that everything
was going to be okay from now on. I asked if I could get rid of my body,
which was definitely a hindrance, and become a being like them with the
powers they had shown me.
They said, "No, you have to go
back."
They explained to me that I was very underdeveloped and that
it would be of great benefit to return to my physical existence to learn.
In my human life I would have an opportunity to grow so that the next time
I was with them I would be more compatible. I would need to develop
important characteristics to become like them and to be involved with the
work that they do.
Responding that I couldn't go back, I tried to argue
with them, and I observed that if I bear that thought the thought that
I might wind up in the pit again I pled with them to stay.
My friends then said,
"Do you think that we expect you to be perfect, after all the love we
feel for you, even after you were on Earth blaspheming God, and treating
everyone around you like dirt? And this, despite the fact that we
were sending people to try and help you, to teach you the truth? Do you
really think we would be apart from you now?"
I asked them, "But what
about my own sense of failure? You've shown me how I can be better, and
I'm sure I can't live up to that. I'm not that good."
Some of my self-centeredness
welled up and I said, "No way. I'm not going back."
They
said, "There are people who care about you; your wife, your children,
your mother and father. You should go back for them. Your children need
your help."
I said, "You can help them. If you make
me go back there are things that just won't work. If I go back there
and make mistakes I won't be able to stand it because you've shown me I
could be more loving and more compassionate and I'll forget. I'll be mean
to someone or I'll do something awful to someone. I just know it's going
to happen because I'm a human being. I'm going to blow it and I
won't be able to stand it. I'll feel so bad I'll want to kill myself
and I can't do that because life is precious. I might just go
catatonic. So you can't send me back."
They assured me that
mistakes are an acceptable part of being human.
"Go," they
said, "and make all the mistakes you want. Mistakes are how you
learn."
As long as I tried to do what I knew was right, they said, I
would be on the right path. If I made a mistake, I should fully
recognize it as a mistake, then put it behind me and simply try not to
make the same mistake again. The important things is to try one's
best, keep one's standards of goodness and truth, and not compromise those
to win people's approval.
"But," I said, "mistakes
make me feel bad."
They said, "We love you the way you
are, mistakes and all. And you can feel our forgiveness. You
can feel our love any time you want to."
I said, "I don't
understand. How do I do that?"
"Just turn
inward," they said. "Just ask for our love and we'll give it to
you if you ask from the heart."
They advised me to recognize
it when I made a mistake and to ask for forgiveness. Before I even got the
words out of my mouth, I would be forgiven but, I would have to accept
the forgiveness. My belief in the principal of forgiveness must be real,
and I would have to know that the forgiveness was given. Confessing,
either in public or in private, that I had made a mistake, I should then
ask for forgiveness. After that, it would be an insult to them if I
didn't accept the forgiveness. I shouldn't continue to go around with
a sense of guilt, and I should not repeat errors I should learn from
my mistakes.
"But," I said,
"how will I know what is the right choice? How will I know what you
want me to do?"
They replied, "We want you to do what you want
to do. That means making choices and there isn't necessarily any
right choice. There are a spectrum of possibilities, and you should make
the best choice you can from those possibilities. If you do that, we will
be there helping you."
I didn't give in easily. I
argued that back there was full of problems and that here was
everything I could possibly want. I questioned my ability to accomplish
anything they would consider important in my world. They said the world is
a beautiful expression of the Supreme being. One can find beauty or
ugliness depending on what one directs one's mind toward.
They explained
that the subtle and complex development of our world was beyond my
comprehension, but I would be a suitable instrument for the Creator. Every
part of the creation, they explained, is infinitely interesting because it
is a manifestation of the Creator. A very important opportunity for me
would be to explore this world with wonder and enjoyment.
They never gave
me a direct mission or purpose. Could I build a shrine or cathedral for
God? They said those monuments were for humanity. They wanted me to
live my life to love people not things. I told them I wasn't good enough
to represent what I had just experienced with them on a worldly level.
They assured me I would be given appropriate help whenever I might need
it. All I had to do is ask.
The luminous beings, my
teachers, were very convincing. I was also acutely aware that not far away
was the Great being, what I knew to be the Creator. They never said,
"He wants it this way," but that was implied behind everything
they said. I didn't want to argue too much because the Great Entity was so
wonderful and so awesome. The love that was emanated was
overwhelming.
Presenting my biggest
argument against coming back into the world, I told them that it would
break my heart, and I would die, if I had to leave them and their love.
Coming back would be so cruel, I said, that I couldn't stand it. I
mentioned that the world was filled with hate and competition, and I
didn't want to return to that maelstrom. I couldn't bear to leave
them.
My friends observed that they
had never been apart from me. I explained that I hadn't been aware of
their presence, and if I went back I, again, wouldn't know they were
there. Explaining how to communicate with them, they told me to get myself
quiet, inside, and to ask for their love; then that love would come, and I
would know they were there.
They said, "You won't be
away from us. We're with you. We've always been with you. We always will
be right with you all the time."
I said, "But how do I know
that? You tell me that, but when I go back there it's just going to be a
nice theory."
They said, "Any time you need us we'll be there
for you."
I said, "You mean like you'll just appear?"
They
said, "No, no. We're not going to intervene in your life in any big
way unless you need us. We're just going to be there and you'll feel our
presence, you'll feel our love."
After that explanation I ran
out of arguments, and I said I thought I could go back. And, just like
that, I was back. Returning to my body, the pain was there, only worse
than before."
(Howard Storm's near-death
experience ends here.)
Returning to life wasn't easy for Howard. In addition
to his physical problems, he had to face the usual array of
uncomprehending and insensitive responses to his new spiritual condition.
It began in the hospital, he said.
Howard states: "I felt this overwhelming sense of
love for everyone. I wanted to hug and kiss everyone, but I couldn't even
sit up. I would say, 'Oh you're so beautiful' to anyone and
everyone. I was the joke of the floor. People found it very amusing."
Like other near-death experiences, Howard's sense of empathy expanded, as
well as his compassion. He could, he said, feel the emotions of others
more powerfully than his own. Howard decided to enter the Christian
ministry after his near-death experience.
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"I knew with total certainty that
everything was evolving exactly the way it should and
that the ultimate destiny for every living being is to
return to the Source, The Light, Pure Love." -
Juliett Nightingale, near-death experiencer |
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Copyright 2007 Near-Death Experiences & the Afterlife
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