Is Death a Process?

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Is death a process or an event? I seek to answer this question in this video!
    Original Video: • The Science of the Aft...

Komentáře • 24

  • @Irishman8787
    @Irishman8787 Před 3 dny +10

    Well the last enemy to be destroyed is death period . All praise to the Blessed Holy Trinity one God forever and ever . Blessings and peace of the Lord be with all !

  • @rickfilmmaker3934
    @rickfilmmaker3934 Před 3 dny +5

    Love these 10 min Jimmy Vids!

  • @Catseyes07
    @Catseyes07 Před 3 dny +5

    I fear the process a lot, even though I've had 2 NDE'S. I have stupid fears like what if God forgets me or there's a glitch in his meta machinery and my soul gets lost. ... All silly silly silly fears that can be taken away with just a few mins of listening to someone as calming as Jimmy lol. At least we're all in this together guys ❤

    • @darlameeks
      @darlameeks Před 3 dny

      Trust in the Lord...He loves you so, so much! He won't let anything bad happen to you!

    • @nightyew2160
      @nightyew2160 Před 2 dny

      I fear the suffering that often comes with the process of dying, but I am really eager to leave this life behind and enter into that final healing and perfection.
      I do fear the life review and especially the final judgement when all lives are shown in review. There is a lot that was painful enough the first time around that I really dread seeing again, and I am sure there are even things I have forgotten by now that would also be painful to remember. Seeing that times all the people who ever lived would be unimaginably worse.
      I am also really conflicted about how I will be able to handle sharing the afterlife with people who really hurt me in life. I want everyone to be able to be happy in heaven, but I could I ever have perfect happiness next to any of those I associate with trauma? I deeply pray that those things can be sorted out in purgatory, mine as well as theirs.

  • @Millingtorres
    @Millingtorres Před 3 dny +4

    Thanks for the answer, Jimmy.
    I was reading about a case recently where doctors were trying to determine whether a person was dead to shut off the machines they were attached to. The person showed almost no brain activity and the body was functioning in terms of the machine keeping it breathing and the blood flowing etc. is it possible that the soul of the person may have left the body some time before and the bodily functions were being kept going in a purely mechanical way? In which case, we would be looking at the body of a human simulating living, but not an actual living human as it were.

  • @daisyviluck7932
    @daisyviluck7932 Před 3 dny +2

    Some people fade out of life. It’s hard to describe if you’ve never seen it, but some people die suddenly, other people just slow down like a wind-up clock running down and the line between “alive” and “dead” is a lot less clear

  • @kimfleury
    @kimfleury Před 3 dny

    It's the Hour of Mercy as I type this. Whatever was on my mind to comment about, it's been supplanted by the need to pray for the souls of the Faithful departed. And so I am going to pray the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy 🙏🏼

  • @vernam4337
    @vernam4337 Před 3 dny +1

    Great video, Jimmy!😊👍

  • @dynamic9016
    @dynamic9016 Před 3 dny

    Really appreciate this video.

  • @Maria-qn6fe
    @Maria-qn6fe Před 3 dny

    Thank you Mr Akin

  • @pdxnikki1
    @pdxnikki1 Před 3 dny

    The operational definition of behavior is anything a dead person can't do....in the field of applied behavior analysis

  • @wolfthequarrelsome504

    sickness and death.
    The two things most feared by people.

  • @ShotzWithJ
    @ShotzWithJ Před 3 dny +2

    hey jimmy, this topic really makes me wonder if it is ever possible to truly die and then come back to life, as doctors say they've done to patients. i mean, doesnt scripture say it is appointed for EVERY man to die ONCE? i really need clarification here.

    • @pdxnikki1
      @pdxnikki1 Před 3 dny +2

      🎯 We don't die but once. NDE's aren't death. Death is final not transitory

    • @kimfleury
      @kimfleury Před 3 dny

      Only Jesus can raise the dead. Maybe Jairus's little girl was truly only sleeping in the way we understand sleep, and if she'd been shocked with a defibrillator her heart might have started again. But Lazarus was in the tomb for 4 days, after his body was confirmed to be lifeless. Yet Jesus called him out of the tomb. So we know that Lazarus died at least twice. It's just not the norm. As Jimmy explained, the term "Near Death" was coined to clarify that the heart stopped but was revived. If the heart stops beating and isn't restarted, then the person isn't nearly dead, they're fully dead. And they're not reincarnated.

    • @ShotzWithJ
      @ShotzWithJ Před 3 dny

      @@pdxnikki1 what about preserving ones consciousness through several bodies? like brain transplants. it gets very tricky

    • @nightyew2160
      @nightyew2160 Před 2 dny

      I wouldn't take that passage so extremely literally. Jesus Himself miraculously raised multiple people from the dead. Taking those passages to the literal extreme would either negate those miracles or mean that anyone raised from the dead will somehow become unable to die again (and we have no evidence that those resurrected by Jesus are still alive today).
      Incidentally, I like to joke that women are immortal because the passage says that MEN will die once. 😉

    • @ShotzWithJ
      @ShotzWithJ Před 2 dny

      @@nightyew2160 thanks for the reply. while i completely understand that, what on earth could that scripture mean if not taken literally?

  • @fc-qr1cy
    @fc-qr1cy Před 3 dny

    goo stuff Jimmy

  • @bethmcmullan7686
    @bethmcmullan7686 Před 3 dny

    Respectfully, some of the assertions made here regarding timing of cell death and brain injury are a bit of a sketchy take on the research (or they’re just wrong). Sometimes it’s best to acknowledge that you don’t have sufficient knowledge on a topic to be able to discuss it publicly. You don’t need to prove that you’re more of a polymath than anyone else.