Some say that life is like the flickering flame of a candle. When the flame is snuffed out, the light is gone forever. They believe that when we breathe our last breath, we are totally extinguished—as if we had never been!
British writer Arthur Porritt gives this sad description of how atheist Charles Bradlaugh was buried: "No prayer was said at the grave. Indeed, not a single word was uttered. The remains, placed in a light coffin, were lowered into the earth in a quite unceremonious fashion as if carrion were being hustled out of sight." Porritt said that he came away "heart-frozen," realizing how the "loss of faith in the continuity of human personality after death gives death an appalling victory."
Life is not a brief candle-flame that death will forever extinguish. Christians in particular can rejoice that Christ "abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel" (2 Timothy 1:10), that He is "the resurrection and the life," and that all who believe in Him "shall never die" (John 11:25-26).
Because of God's power and grace exhibited at Calvary, we will receive bodies like Jesus' resurrection body, and we "shall shine . . . like the stars forever" (Daniel 12:3). Praise God! We're not flickering candles, but shining stars! — Vernon C. Grounds
In bodies that will ne'er grow old,
We'll reign with Him, through years untold;
O precious thought, we all shall be
With Christ through all eternity. —Watson
Because Jesus lives, we too will live.