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  <title>Losing the Christian Death, Part 3</title>
  <description>This podcast will help you get ready to face the inevitable unpleasant things that will happen in your life -- things like trouble, suffering, sickness, and death -- the death of people you love and your own death.&#13;
The Bible says in Ezekiel 18:32: &amp;quot;For I have no pleasure in the death of anyone, declares the Lord God; so turn, and live.&amp;quot;&#13;
The featured quote for this episode is from Dean Koontz. He said, &amp;quot;Because God is never cruel, there is a reason for all things. We must know the pain of loss; because if we never knew it, we would have no compassion for others, and we would become monsters of self-regard, creatures of unalloyed self-interest. The terrible pain of loss teaches humility to our prideful kind, has the power to soften uncaring hearts, to make a better person of a good one.&amp;quot;&#13;
Our topic for today is titled &amp;quot;Losing the Christian Death (Part 3)&amp;quot; from the book, &amp;quot;The Art of Dying: Living Fully into the Life to Come&amp;quot; by Rob Moll.&#13;
--- We Have No Christian Dying&#13;
There is an untapped reservoir of Christian belief about dying. Christians are people who claim to worship and have the life of the risen Son of God. A renewed practice of Christian dying should affect not just the dying and those caring for them, but will fundamentally affect church life and individual spiritual lives from beginning to end.&#13;
For example, I have prayed in church and in prayer groups for the sick and the terminally ill. I've always felt obliged to pray for a miracle, that God would use the opportunity of a person's severe illness to disrupt the apparent laws of nature and display his power. But, eventually, praying this way became discouraging because those miracles never came. Slowly, I began&amp;amp;mdash;I thought&amp;amp;mdash;to pray more realistically. Instead of asking for a miracle, I prayed simply for grace and comfort from the Holy Spirit for the patient and his or her family. I prayed for wisdom when deciding among treatment options, and I prayed for those treatments to be effective. When they were not, I fell silent.&#13;
Yet my so-called realistic prayers were not really better prayers. I never prayed that someone would die well, as a faithful Christian. I never prayed that a death would bring about an opportunity for reconciliation and completion in relationships, or for God to bring something good from this evil. I never asked God to smooth someone's entrance to eternity. I know better now. &amp;quot;The idea that deaths can be inspirational&amp;amp;mdash;even redemptive&amp;amp;mdash;almost never enters modern conversations about death,&amp;quot; writes John Fanestil, &amp;quot;yet this understanding lies at the core of the Christian gospel.&amp;quot;&#13;
...</description>
  <author_name>Preparing for the Inevitable</author_name>
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