The
Near-Death Experience(Part One)
The New Age Connection
By J. Isamu Yamamoto
Dan was a warm, gentle, talented, outgoing young
man. One would therefore think he would be popular. But there were in
fact many who hated him because of his lifestyle. Eventually he left his
Midwestern hometown and moved to San Francisco to join a community of
homosexual professionals.
Because he led a very active homosexual life in that community, Dan contracted
gonorrhea. His physician offered him two choices: either receive antibiotics
daily for ten days or one massive dose by injection. Dan selected the
injection. After receiving it he immediately had difficulty breathing.
Soon he went into anaphylactic shock and died. He had no pulse or heartbeat.
His electrocardiogram was flat.
After everything went black, Dan saw himself lying on the floor while
doctors and nurses tried desperately to bring him back to life. He then
saw a long, dark tunnel to which he felt drawn. Before entering it, his
entire life passed before his eyes. His deceased grandparents, who had
raised him, appeared at this time and approached him, expressing their
love for him.
After being in the dark tunnel for a while, Dan saw a light that became
brighter as he drew closer to it. Finally he left the tunnel and found
himself in a beautiful garden, where a fence barred him from going any
further. Meanwhile, a brilliant light radiated warmth, love, and peace
from the other side of the fence. Dan knew that the source of this light
was Jesus Christ.
He wanted to go to the light but the fence prevented him. He then heard
a voice come from that light, which said, "It is not time to come into
my Father's kingdom. You have not lived as I intended. Go back and glorify
me."
At that moment Dan awoke, back in his body, no longer a man living for
himself, but now a believer in Christ. From then on, he left his homosexual
lifestyle and joined a strong, supportive Christian community. To this
day, Dan thanks God for giving him a new chance to live according to His
plan and not according to physical desires.
When this story first came across my desk in 1990, I was skeptical about
the extent to which Christ was really involved in Dan's life. As book
editor at Christianity Today, I was responsible for the content of the
books they were publishing that year. Dan's experiences were part of a
manuscript that a Christian proctologist (an expert on the physiology
and pathology of the rectum and anus) had submitted for one of our chapters
in a book on homosexuality. Furthermore, the ten years I had previously
spent on staff at the Spiritual Counterfeits Project (SCP) caused alarms
to go off in my head while reading his story, telling me that this account
sounded New Age.
When I checked the sources behind Dan's story and discovered that his
testimony was reliable, I had to rethink my previous assumptions about
the issue of near-death experience (NDE). I realized then that my views
on this subject were shallow and not carefully thought out. Since many
advocates of New Age ideas had openly supported the validity of NDEs,
I had reasoned that they were part of the New Age arsenal that was currently
bombarding our society. Moreover, because NDEs had not been in my area
of responsibility at SCP, I dismissed them as an insignificant phenomenon.
Dan's story, however, forced me to reassess my casual response to NDEs.
Many questions emerged in my mind about Dan's conversion experience, but
the most disturbing were: "Why would Christ allow an evil spirit to imitate
Him for the purpose of bringing Dan into His kingdom? Why would an evil
spirit want to do this? Might the spirit who spoke to Dan from the light
actually have been Jesus Christ?"
I could not really answer these questions without deliberate research
into NDEs, which the Christian Research Institute has given me the opportunity
to do. The following is what I have discovered from my research.
BACK FROM THE TWILIGHT ZONE?
Christians are not the only ones wary of those
who claim to have had near-death experiences. For many in the medical
and scientific communities, their stories are as strange as those tales
seen on Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone." In fact these scientists maintain
that either drugs, lack of oxygen, severe psychological stress, or some
other explainable disorder causes people to dream or hallucinate, believing
they are experiencing an NDE.
Perhaps their Western rational minds have predisposed these scientists
against NDEs because they seem too weird — like the stories of those
who insist they have traveled with alien beings in UFOs. Or perhaps the
subject of death has become a forbidden topic for the Westerner, and thus
anyone who has had a brush with it is ignored out of fear and ignorance.
Whatever causes some to avoid this mysterious subject, NDE is still a
phenomenon that Christians particularly must understand if they are to
share the gospel effectively with those who have experienced or been influenced
by it.
To better understand what a near-death experience is, we must go back
17 years to the publication of a book that catapulted this subject into
the national limelight — Raymond Moody's Life After Life. In this
small but fascinating book, Moody compiled a massive number of accounts
of NDEs and discovered 15 separate elements that are common in these experiences.
(1) Ineffability. Many of those who have experienced
an NDE say that no words can adequately or truly describe what happened
to them. Their experience, for them, is inexpressible.
(2) Hearing the News. Many of them relate hearing a medical person pronounce
them dead. To those around them, all their bodily signs indicated that
they had expired, but during that moment, they consciously knew they were
still alive.
(3) Feelings of Peace and Quiet. Many people recall feeling sensations
of extreme pleasure. Although severe pain normally accompanies a life-threatening
injury or disease, they remember feeling only a deep peace and quietness
during the NDE.
(4) The Noise. Many relate hearing a distinct sound that occurs either
at or near death. In some cases, this noise can be quite pleasant, like
rapturous music. In other cases, the noise can be harsh and disturbing,
like continuous buzzing or banging.
(5) The Dark Tunnel. Many recollect being jerked through some dark passageway,
frequently while hearing the noise. This dark tunnel has been variously
described as a cave, sewer, trough, valley, and so on.
(6) Out of the Body. Many remember seeing their physical bodies apart
from themselves as though they were "spectators" observing their bodies.
Surprise, panic, and a desire to return to their bodies often accompanied
the realization that they were separate from their physical form.
(7) Meeting Others. In many cases they encountered spiritual entities
who were present to help them through the experience. These beings variously
appeared as loved ones who had recently passed away, strangers who had
died, or some other spirits who were acting as their guardians.
(8) The Being of Light. Quite a few speak of beholding a brilliant light
that, despite its brilliance, did not hurt their eyes. To them, this radiant
light is a personal being who emanates irresistible love and warmth and
who communicates with them — through thoughts and not speech —
about the meaning of their lives.
(9) The Review. A number of them recall an instant moment of time during
their experience in which they witnessed a vivid review of their lives.
These panoramic images provoked in them the importance of loving people
and understanding the meaning of life.
(10) The Border or Limit. Some recount being obstructed by some form that
often prevents them from going any further in their journey or from reaching
that being of light. It can be a fence, a door, a body of water, or even
an imaginary line.
(11) Coming Back. All of them obviously returned from their near-death
experience, but how they felt about coming back varies considerably. Some
wanted to stay with the being of light. Others felt obliged to return
to complete unfinished tasks. Some chose to return. Others were told to
come back. In any case, the return is often instantaneous — back
through the dark tunnel.
(12) Telling Others. Those who have had NDEs regard their experience as
a real event rather than a dream. But since they believe that it was extraordinarily
unique and that others would be skeptical, they are quite reticent about
disclosing their experience, which they feel is inexpressible anyway.
(13) Effects on Lives. As profound as the effects of their NDEs were on
them, none feel that the experience has perfected them, and few have tried
to gain public attention because of it. Instead, the effects have been
more in the way they now view life and regard others. As was mentioned
earlier, caring for other people and gaining a better understanding of
the meaning of life emerged as high priorities after their experience.
(14) New Views of Death. Most of them no longer fear physical death, but
at the same time they do not seek it. Rather, they view death as a transitional
state to another form of life. Entrance into this new life involves neither
judgment nor the dispensing of rewards and punishments.
(15) Corroboration. Remarkably there are independent testimonies of people
who have corroborated some of the details in NDE accounts; that is, specific
incidents (e.g., in the hospital operating room) witnessed by those who
were supposedly dead. Although their testimonies do not constitute proof
of life after death, they are significant considerations in the study
of NDEs.
A close look at Moody's description of near-death experiences might lead
one to discount Dan's experience as a genuine NDE since his account does
not include all of Moody's elements. For instance, Dan did not relate
that he had heard a distinct noise. In Life After Life, however, Moody
points out that he came across no person who experienced all 15 elements,
though many described quite a few of them like Dan did. In addition, no
two stories were identical, despite striking similarities in details.
Another criticism of Dan's narrative might be its chronology, which doesn't
match up with Moody's outline. For example, Dan said he journeyed through
a tunnel after he reviewed his life and encountered the spirits of his
grandparents, while Moody listed those elements in reverse order. Again,
however, Moody describes variation among the reports he studied, stating
that his order is typical but not universal.
Moody also says no one element occurred in every account, and no one element
occurred only once. How many NDE elements a person experiences seems to
depend on how deep and how long he or she was apparently dead. In Dan's
case, he was believed to be clinically dead for almost ten minutes, which
might explain why he experienced so many of Moody's NDE elements.
In the introduction to Life After Life, Raymond Moody says, "My hope for
this book is that it will draw attention to a phenomenon which is at once
very widespread and very well-hidden, and, at the same time, help create
a more receptive public attitude toward it."1 This statement raises several
questions: first, what does he mean by "it"? Is he speaking of NDEs in
general, or is he speaking of his interpretation and elaboration of them?
In other words, does he want people like Dan to be more open about their
experiences and others to be more understanding, or does he want his world
view based on his presumed insights into NDE to take a prominent role
in the global marketplace of ideas and beliefs?
Elsewhere in his book Moody insists that he is not trying to prove that
life exists after death or that he is conducting a scientific study of
the claims of the people he interviewed. Nevertheless, although he tries
to be objective and straightforward, he admits that his "background, opinions
and prejudices" are reflected in his book.2 Thus, in answering the first
question, Moody would like "it" to be NDEs in general. He would be thrilled
if people became more sensitive to those who have experienced NDEs and
more open to the study of this phenomenon. But, a subtle agenda does emerge
from his book that inclines the unwary reader toward a particular world
view. And so, a second set of questions must be posed: What points is
Moody trying to make in his book, and to what conclusions do those points
take the reader? In order to answer these questions, one must have some
knowledge of Moody's background, opinions, and prejudices.
VEILED AGENDA
Raymond A. Moody, Jr., attended a Presbyterian
church in his youth, though his parents never insisted that he embrace
the Christian faith. Instead, they encouraged and supported any interest
that influenced and formed his philosophy of life. As an adult he became
a member of the Methodist church. Nevertheless, he states in Life After
Life: "I believe that all the great religions of man have many truths
to tell us, and I believe that no one of us has all the answers to the
deep and fundamental truths with which religion deals."3
In 1969, Moody earned a doctorate in philosophy at the University of Virginia.
After teaching philosophy at the university level for three years, he
altered the direction of his professional career: he entered medical school
with the purpose of becoming a psychiatrist teaching the philosophy of
medicine. During the late seventies and early eighties, however, he spent
much of his time on the lecture circuit sharing his thoughts about NDEs.
In this he was often accompanied by the most famous luminary in the field
of thanatology (the study of concerns related to death and dying), Elizabeth
Kubler-Ross, author of On Death and Dying.
Moody's religious views are veiled in his best-selling book, Life After
Life, in such a way that they do not appear to take center stage in his
studies of NDE. But, in fact, they play a significant role behind the
scenes.
At first glance Moody seems to be observing and making comments about
NDEs as a Christian. After all, he divulges his early Christian training
and later membership in a Protestant church. He confesses that his background
cannot help but intrude into his observations. Indeed, there are numerous
references to the being of light as Jesus Christ. He even tries to show
that such passages in the Bible as Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus
resemble NDEs.4 And yet he slips in other remarks and issues that reveal
he is a man who embraces the beliefs of more than one religion.
As was mentioned earlier, in one of his 15 elements of an NDE (New Views
of Death) Moody describes the afterlife as a place full of love and acceptance
— devoid of a supreme being who makes any judgment about people's
lives or character. In his words, what is absent in this place beyond
death are "harp-playing angels" and "demons with pitchforks."5 The "mythological"
picture of an afterlife with rewards and punishment is replaced with a
being of light who responds, not with righteous indignation against sin,
but with understanding and even humor at our shortcomings. Thus, the character
of a supreme being that Moody presents from his observations of NDEs is
quite different from the character of the infinitely just and merciful
(offering complete forgiveness through faith in Jesus Christ) God portrayed
in the Bible (whose heaven, by the way, is also different from Moody's
cartoon portrait).
According to Moody, the identification of the being of light varied according
to the religious background of the person he interviewed. So, although
some people believed that the being was Jesus Christ, others claimed the
being was another holy personage, an angel, or simply just a being of
light.6 The point is that the afterlife, in Moody's view, is not restricted
to the singular lordship of Jesus Christ.
Of course, Moody would argue that he is only disclosing details given
to him by others. Moreover, that some people believe they have had such
experiences as Moody recounts cannot be disputed. Nevertheless, since
Moody's system of selection remains in his ballpark, his additional comments
on these reported experiences are suspect of being biased toward his particular
world view — especially when he tries to tie in parallels with other
materials (e.g., the Bible and occultic writings).
After Moody tried to demonstrate similarities between Paul's experience
on the road to Damascus and NDEs, he moved on to more fertile ground.
Most notably he cites the eighth-century Eastern occult work, The Tibetan
Book of the Dead, and the eighteenth-century writings of the Swedish mystic,
Emanuel Swedenborg.7 Although Moody refrained from drawing any conclusions
about the parallels between NDEs and these writings, he does pose carefully
worded questions that would compel many readers to nod in agreement that
NDEs follow an ancient tradition, one that espouses an occult/mystical
view of spiritual reality.
Moody, however, denies being qualified to discuss NDEs as an expert on
the occult. In the introduction to Life After Death he maintains, "I write
as a person who is not broadly familiar with the vast literature on paranormal
and occult phenomena."8 His statement can be defended or criticized depending
upon what is understood by "familiar." But to the casual reader, it would
suggest that Moody has no vested interest in linking NDEs with the occult.
For this reason, and because he has presented himself as a detached researcher,
when he does inject occult interpretations subtly throughout his book
and overtly at the end, many readers would be inclined to swallow his
opinions as true insights into spiritual reality.
Moody's interest in the paranormal and occult, however veiled in his book,
can be traced as far back as his undergraduate days at the University
of Virginia in the mid sixties. Tal Brooke, currently the executive director
of the Spiritual Counterfeits Project and formerly Moody's friend and
fellow student at the University of Virginia, relates that "Moody claimed
that he regularly conversed with a spirit being." Brooke further recalls
that his and Moody's common interest in "esoteric philosophies, whether
Eastern-religious, occult or psychic" was "the major basis for their companionship."9
Brooke's description of Moody's involvement in the occult offers a far
different understanding of Moody's use of the word familiar than what
his book suggests.
Even more revealing is his association with Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, who
wrote the Foreword to Life After Life, praising Moody's research and contribution
to the field of thanatology. They worked closely together, with Moody
even filling in for Kubler-Ross on numerous occasions when she was unable
to appear for speaking engagements. Kubler-Ross has been widely acclaimed
for her work in the treatment of emotional problems experienced by terminal
patients. Her research and claims regarding mediumship (divination by
contact with the dead, especially through the agency of familiar spirits),
however, have met with mixed reactions. Some ridicule her contentions;
some condemn them; but many others have been enthralled by them. In any
case, she is the most noteworthy guru in the field of thanatology.
In September 1976, Kubler-Ross revealed to her audience that she had acquired
her own personal spirit guide, called Salem.10 This announcement confirmed
for her followers that her out-of-body experiences (OBE) had attained
an even higher level of transcendence. For Christians it confirmed that
her involvement with spiritistic practices had reached the lower depths
of necromancy (concourse with forbidden spirits). Although both Kubler-Ross
and Moody preach love, peace, understanding, and world unity, they also
speak of our spirits traveling outside our physical bodies and communicating
with other spirits, (Kubler-Ross and OBEs), and of gaining new insights
into the mysteries of life from contact with the being of light during
a deathlike state (Moody and NDEs).
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and Raymond Moody were trailblazers in the research
of death and dying. Unfortunately, their research also included spiritism,
religious universalism, and a denial of sin, judgment, and the need for
repentance and grace. During the past two decades, their paths have been
followed by others. These have not only expanded their studies in near-death
experiences, but have also broadened the influence of New Age ideas in
our society.
THE PSYCHOLOGIST AND THE PHYSICIAN
In the wake of Moody's Life After Life, many no longer view near-death
experiences as utterly strange and unusual. More and more people are stepping
forward and sharing their own experiences. The print and broadcast news
media have been more sympathetic in their inquiries into NDEs. We can
even go to the cinema or turn on the VCR and see serious treatments of
the subject, such as the movie Flatliners.
Included among those who have more recently taken up the banner of NDEs
are both Christians (who will be the subject of Part Two of this article)
and New Agers, whose ubiquitous slogans dot the landscape of our spiritually
bankrupt society. Among the legion of researchers in the field of NDEs,
two stand out: one is a psychologist, Kenneth Ring, and the other is a
physician, Melvin Morse.
In 1981, Life at Death: A Scientific Investigation of the Near-Death Experience
achieved national exposure. This book propelled Kenneth Ring to the forefront
of professional researchers who were examining near-death experiences.
Eight years earlier Ring had become intrigued with NDEs when he first
heard of them. After shifting his academic studies from social psychology
to the psychology of consciousness, Ring commenced his scientific research
of the NDE phenomena in 1977 as a professor of psychology at the University
of Connecticut. The first significant fruit of his labor was the publication
of Life at Death two years later.
In Life at Death Ring tried to measure the experiences of a number of
people who claimed to have undergone NDEs. After he delineated their experiences
into components quite similar to Moody's 15 elements, he assigned values
to each component. His goal was to determine whether a single pattern
could be constructed from their accounts. He found that certain feelings,
perceptions, and experiences were common among the people he interviewed.
Life at Death sparked renewed interest in NDEs, so much so that the International
Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS) was established in Storrs,
Connecticut. Ring cofounded and once served as president of IANDS, which
is internationally branched. Many of IANDS's most prolific writers and
speakers do not hesitate to support their New Age world views with the
accounts of NDEs.
When interviewed by the news and print media about his NDE research, Ring
himself is much more cautious in publicizing his metaphysical views. His
policy is certainly understandable since the scientific community, of
which he is a respected member, is one of the most vocal and ardent critics
of such people as Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and Raymond Moody. In fact, when
Kubler-Ross announced that near-death experiences indicate there is life
after death, she was vilified by the scientific establishment. And so,
Ring is guarded in his remarks.
For instance, when John White of Science of Mind asked him about "the
being of light," Ring at first replied, "That being or that light which
the individual encounters is so loving that even though the individual
may have done many bad things, somehow he still knows that he as an individual
is okay. His acts may have been wrong, but he himself is okay."11 Ring
goes on to cover himself, however, by saying: "I can't recall any case
of someone reporting being judged by God."12 In other words, he is only
presenting a particular character description of that being of light —
which other people have reported to him.
In that same interview, when White specifically asked him how his research
has affected his religious views, Ring offered an answer that can be swallowed
like honey: "I'm much more aware of the importance of unconditional love.
I now understand that to be not only the supreme principle of life itself,
but also the core of all religions. I think this is what all religions
are trying to show us."13
At first glance, his statement appears benign, but it really is no different
from the religious universalism espoused by Kubler-Ross, Moody, and most
New Agers. It also indicates that he puts more stock in a "being of light"
who is totally accepting and nonjudgmental than he lets on. Ring said
he doesn't have "any particular religious affiliation,"14 but one doesn't
need an affiliation to carry a world view banner.
While holding up such a banner, Kenneth Ring has lectured widely on the
near-death experience. He has conducted numerous seminars and workshops
for professional organizations and lay audiences. He has also been a guest
on many television and radio programs. But it is in his book, Life at
Death, where a statement can be found that discloses the most disturbing
feature of his message: The "light" is "actually a reflection of one's
own inherent divine nature and symbolizes the higher self. The light one
sees, then, is one's own....If one can accept the idea of a higher self,
it is not difficult to assume that that self — as well as the individual
self — is actually an aspect of God, or the Creator."15
Anyone familiar with New Age doctrine will recognize Ring's reference
to "the higher self." For many New Agers, every individual has a higher,
larger, wiser, and more real self which needs to be tapped into and then
manifested. This will hasten one's self-realization, when a person realizes
that he or she is god. This is the most prominent statement etched in
the cornerstone of the New Age movement and it happens to be the slogan
written on Kenneth Ring's banner.
In 1990 Ivy Books published Melvin Morse's Closer to the Light: Learning
from the Near-Death Experiences of Children, with, by the way, a foreword
by Raymond Moody. It was on the New York Times Best Seller List for three
months. The New York Tribune, quoted on the back cover, called this book
"compelling," and went on to say, "What a salute to Morse's moral courage
and intellectual curiosity is his book. It deserves serious attention."
Melvin Morse and his book certainly do deserve serious attention. As a
physician, he has made two significant contributions to the subject of
near-death experiences. First, he has provided professional insights into
NDEs from a medical perspective. And second, his research was mainly conducted
with children. Because his studies and observations gave the whole subject
of NDEs a needed boost for the early nineties, Morse has frequently appeared
before the media spotlight. For this reason also, the banner he is waving
should be examined as well.
Morse is a pediatrician who studied at the George Washington University
School of Medicine, and whose private practice is in the suburbs of Seattle,
Washington. He was introduced to NDEs when one of his young patients shared
her experience with him after she awoke from a coma caused by a swimming
accident. With the help of a major hospital in Seattle he began research
projects that would examine this phenomenon scientifically. In 1983 his
first article on the subject was published in the American Journal of
Diseases of Children. Since then he has studied a number of people who
claim to have had an NDE as a child.
In the November 1986 issue of the American Journal of Diseases of Children,
Morse published a study in which he tried to demonstrate that drugs are
not the source of NDEs. He went on to say that NDEs "are a natural psychological
process associated with dying."16 These medical observations, as well
as others, have given NDE researchers the ammunition they needed to bring
attention and respect to their work and claims.
The use of people who had NDEs as children in Morse's study is also significant.
Unlike adult NDEs, children are too young to have absorbed adult views
of death. In other words, there is far less likelihood for preconceived
ideas about death to influence what they believe is happening to them
during NDEs. Thus, the validity of an NDE could be more forcefully argued
with the addition of Morse's findings with children.
Morse's comments about the medical profession, and particularly doctors
who treat dying patients, also have elicited much interest — and
praise. "For instance," he writes, "it is well documented that as patients
get closer to death their doctors spend less time at their bedsides."17
This criticism strikes a loud chord felt almost universally by Americans,
who believe they wait at least a long hour to see a faceless physician
for a few brief minutes at the cost of long hours of hard labor. Morse
also says the role of comforter is often left to the nurse or to no one.
What his colleagues need to do, he says, is "be able to answer questions
about death just as we can about other aspects of normal development and
life stages."18 Rightly or wrongly, Morse's remarks have been well received.
How can doctors become more sensitive and caring toward their patients
who are facing death? "Make the patient's spiritual needs a routine part
of daily rounds," Morse says, "just as much a part of his medical chart
as a detailed description of urine output."19 But what does Morse mean
by "spiritual needs?" "For me the answer is simple," he says. "NDEs are
the way to join science and spiritualism....We will combine the essence
of those ancient truths with scientific knowledge and create new rituals
with which to heal our inner selves and society."20 Although this declaration
is still somewhat vague, it is at least becoming clearer where his metaphysical
orientation lies.
In Closer to the Light Morse does what Moody and Ring did in their books
— he compares NDEs with the experiences found in different world
religions, including Christianity. Morse even says Saint Paul claimed
to have experienced astral travel. He then speaks of Paramahansa Yogananda's
spiritual experiences as described in Autobiography of a Yogi, a book
that opened the minds of countless Westerners to Eastern mysticism. He
tries to tie the experiences of both Yogananda and St. Paul — along
with those of Native American spiritual leader Black Elk and Calvinist
theologian Jonathan Edwards — into elements of NDEs.21 He is even
more deliberate when he draws similarities between NDEs and The Egyptian
Book of the Dead and The Tibetan Book of the Dead.22
Morse's spiritual inclinations are most evident when he discusses the
being of light, or "The Divine Light," as he calls it. "The Light," he
says, "is the key element of the NDE."23 He goes on to explain: "I think
the Light seen during NDEs and the mystical light seen by those having
spiritual experiences are the same light. Both fuel religious awe and
both have the power to transform."24 But who is this light who is doing
the transforming? Is it Jesus Christ? Is it the spirit of Osiris, the
Egyptian god? After Morse describes the rituals of ancient Egypt he states:
"Just as children that I interviewed often perceived the light that they
saw as the light of Jesus, these king-initiates would perceive that same
light as the spirit of Osiris."25 Morse is not claiming that the being
of light is necessarily the spirit of Osiris, but he is inferring that
this being can be the spirit of any god or holy personage that people
have worshiped, past and present.
Morse would be appalled to hear conservative
Christians declare that his message is demonic, just as Moody explained
he was in his sequel, Reflections on Life After Death. This would be a
hard judgment to make since Morse is obviously a very caring and sensitive
person. But his message is never so clear as in the story he tells at
the end of Closer to the Light. It is a moving account of a boy who had
cerebral palsy. When he was six months old his mother had a vision of
her son happy, beautiful, and healthy.
Ten years later he died, still a cripple. "It
was then that she realized the meaning of her vision: He was free of a
body crippled by Cerebral Palsy."26 In the context of Jesus Christ one
could only praise God for her faith. But Morse says he doesn't understand
her premonition just as he doesn't know what the light is in NDEs. Both
are beautiful and wonderful, but neither are defined, except that there
is no room for sin, judgment, repentance, grace, and, most importantly,
for the primacy of Jesus Christ.
These are the trademarks of the New Age message: to present their thoughts
sincerely and graciously, to speak of unconditional love and acceptance,
but to deny that salvation for a person can come only through the person
and work of Jesus Christ. Unfortunately, the banner of Melvin Morse has
such a message.
EIGHT MILLION STRONG AND GROWING?
To dismiss near-death experiences simply because
the most prominent researchers in the field have interpreted NDEs from
a New Age perspective would not be wise. NDEs touch the lives of too many
people, demanding that Christians explore this phenomenon more thoroughly
and objectively.
In 1982 George Gallup, Jr., published Adventures in Immortality, which
presented a number of surveys relating to NDEs. A frequent resource and
contributor to such evangelical publishers as Christianity Today, Gallup
found that the number of people who have claimed an NDE is considerable.
In a 1981 poll, he conducted a scientific survey of 1,500 adults who experienced
brushes with death. One-third of them admitted to a near-death experience.
Using that ratio for the entire U.S. population of those believed to have
come close to death, Gallup estimated that as many as 8 million could
have had NDEs.
Furthermore, the resuscitation technology in the medical field has advanced
greatly. More and more people who have apparently died from a cardiac
arrest or other conditions are now being revived. And, as the subject
of NDEs becomes increasingly accepted as a normal phenomenon, people are
becoming more open about describing their NDEs. This includes people like
Dan, who have accepted Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior because of
their near-death experiences.
In Part Two we will evaluate alternative explanations for NDEs to those
supplied by the New Age movement, from both secular and Christian sources.
And we will examine biblical texts which are used to validate this phenomenon.
NOTES
1 Raymond A. Moody, Jr., Life After Life (Harrisburg,
PA: Stackpole Books, 1976), 10.
2 Ibid., 9.
3 Ibid., 10.
4 Ibid., 80-82.
5 Ibid., 70.
6 Ibid., 46.
7 Ibid., 84-89.
8 Ibid., 9.
9 Mark Albrecht and Brooks Alexander, "Thanatology: Death and Dying,"
SCP Journal, April 1977, 9.
10 Lennie Kronisch, "Elizabeth Kubler-Ross: Messenger of Love," Yoga Journal,
November-December 1976, 20.
11 John White, "Beyond the Body: An Interview with Kenneth Ring," Science
of Mind, November 1982, 88.
12 Ibid., 89.
13 Ibid., 89-90.
14 Ibid., 89.
15 Kenneth Ring, Life at Death: A Scientific Investigation of the Near-Death
Experience (New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1980), 240-41.
16 Melvin Morse with Paul Perry, Closer to the Light: Learning from the
Near-Death Experiences of Children (New York: Ivy Books, 1990), 49.
17 Ibid., 52.
18 Ibid.
19 Ibid., 102.
20 Ibid., 98, 105.
21 Ibid., 125, 142-43.
22 Ibid., 86-92.
23 Ibid., 133.
24 Ibid., 144.
25 Ibid., 89.
26 Ibid., 213.
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"I Am The Alpha And
Omega" Says The Lord God,"Who is And Who Was And Who Is To Come, The Almighty"
Rev 1:8
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