Several years ago, I read...
Illustration
Several years ago, I read an interesting little book by Dr. Raymond Moody, entitled Life After Life. As the title implies, it deals with people who were clinically dead yet were brought back to life. In most cases, the person's heart and breathing stopped. Nurses and doctors quickly started resuscitation procedures. After a shot of adrenaline, they would begin pumping on the patient's chest to jar the heart back to work -- occasionally using electric voltage to do the same. Another person would begin artificial respiration until, after a few minutes, the lungs and heart would start functioning again -- restoring the patient to life.
The book is filled with many examples of people to whom this has happened. They tell, in detail, what they experienced during clinical death and how it felt to be brought back to life. Most of them agreed that, at first, they did not like being brought back from the peaceful state of euphoria death gave them. But afterwards, they were very happy about being reunited with their loved ones.
I can imagine the same joy of reunion permeated the widow at Zarephath after Elijah raised her son to life again.
The book is filled with many examples of people to whom this has happened. They tell, in detail, what they experienced during clinical death and how it felt to be brought back to life. Most of them agreed that, at first, they did not like being brought back from the peaceful state of euphoria death gave them. But afterwards, they were very happy about being reunited with their loved ones.
I can imagine the same joy of reunion permeated the widow at Zarephath after Elijah raised her son to life again.
