After Life – Sermon Text

We live our lives in stories – this happened, then that, then the other thing, and happily ever after. We can imagine what happens after the prince kisses the princess, or the assassin goes to jail, or the war ends, or the last alien returns to their planet.

But death – the story ends. We can’t complete the happily ever after because we haven’t even a clue. No one comes back and says, “so this is really what happened.” Sure, we have those who may have experienced near death experiences, but they don’t all agree and don’t have the whole story. So once again, it’s a story without an ending. It’s the sudden cut to black at the end of the Sopranos – we have no idea what happened, or why, and so we are left to make it up. To prognosticate. And that question is so big, it becomes Philosophy big. Religion big. Sacred text big.

When I did the first question box sermon in February, I read Ceil Loucka’s question about Unitarian Universalist perspectives on the afterlife and quickly put it on the bottom of the stack, knowing it would take some time and thought to answer. And the question has been sitting with me, all spring, summer, and now into the fall. What happens when we die? What do we have to say about it? How do we understand it in the scope of all the sources and knowledge we draw from? How can we make sense of this?

Let’s start by looking at the season we are in. Here in the Northern Hemisphere, we are at the end of the harvest season, the summer’s end, or – in Celtic, “Samhain.” According to tradition, this end of the year time also means that the veil between the living and the dead is the thinnest. It’s believed that this, more than any other time of the year, is when we can talk to those souls who have ‘crossed’ – that we could communicate with others to receive answers and predictions. In these days of celebration, people would wear masks to hide from mischievous spirits.

As medieval Christians were wont to do as they spread themselves across Europe, they adopted the festival and adapted it for their use, incorporating the connection to the dead into hallowed days, or all saint’s day – and the evening before of course known as all hallow’s eve, or Halloween. Folks would still dress up as ghosts and ghouls, going door to door ‘a-souling’ to exchange food for prayers for the household’s dead relatives. The day after was called All Souls day, where they prayed for those in purgatory. Other cultures celebrate this time as well, most colorfully by Mexican Christians as Los Dias de los Muertos, the Day of the Dead.

What it boils down to is that we have a season devoted to venerating, celebrating, praying for, and connecting with the dead.

Add that to the many rituals we do when someone dies – we have funerals, viewings, wakes, memorial services. In some traditions there are rituals to help the soul move on. In others, there is careful treatment of the dead body in a proscribed manner. And there are prayers, and keening, and wailing, and remembering, and joking, and celebrating. There are even bagpipes – which I hear often in the parsonage from the Catholic church across the street. They say Americans don’t do death well, but I think it’s because we are uneasy about the unfinished story.

We want closure. We don’t care what the story is, we just want to know.

Guess what.

We’re never really going to know until we are dead. If we know anything.

And even our denomination’s website holds more questions than answers; on a page about memorial services, they write:

“Unitarian Universalist views about life after death are informed by both science and spiritual traditions. Many of us live with the assumption that life does not continue after death, and many of us hold it as an open question, wondering if our minds will have any awareness when we are no longer living. Few of us believe in divine judgment after death. It’s in our religious DNA: the Universalist side of our tradition broke with mainstream Christianity by rejecting the idea of eternal damnation.”

Well … okay…

I suppose, if we’re looking for how UUs view the afterlife, we can, at least in part, look at the beliefs of our Unitarian and Universalist forebears. The Unitarians were Christians who believed in salvation but did not buy that Jesus was God, rather that, to quote William Ellery Channing, “that he was sent by the Father to affect a moral, or spiritual deliverance of mankind; that is, to rescue men from sin and its consequences, and to bring them to a state of everlasting purity and happiness.” And what is that state of everlasting purity and happiness? Channing explains “We conceive of heaven as a state where the love of God will be exalted into an unbounded fervor and joy; and we desire, in our pilgrimage here, to drink into the spirit of that better world.”

On the Universalist side, heaven is seen similarly – a place of Glory, as Hosea Ballou would describe it. The biggest difference between early 19th century Unitarians and Universalists was the mechanisms for salvation itself, and the state of one’s soul. For many on the Unitarian side, and even some Universalists, there was punishment, or at least purgatory, after death, where a soul could work out their sin issues before going to that state of everlasting purity and happiness. But for the Death and Glory crowd, heaven was instantaneous – we work out our stuff here on earth, then all souls go to heaven. No punishment, no holding pattern – just… heaven.

Now I should pause here to consider the idea of heaven in this context; for those familiar with the Lord’s prayer as found in the Christian gospels, it says “thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” A common understanding of heaven is that it is this world, perfected. The unfallen Eden. Paradise. All that we can imagine, all that we imagine that God intended earth – and us – to be, if only we hadn’t exercised our free will (and an exploration of the Adam and Eve story will have to wait for another time).

It’s not a bad image, although it still feels like we’d be subservient to God, the ruler of the kingdom of heaven.

And it’s not an image I suspect modern Unitarian Universalists hold.

So…that’s not it.

Sigh.

I’m afraid, Ceil, our tradition doesn’t help much here.

So let’s consider some other ideas. One I have loved is from CS Lewis, in his book The Great Divorce. In this short allegory, he proposes that when someone dies, they are introduced to heaven as though they are tourists, given a chance to talk to those who have gone before, but mostly to see heaven for what it is – reality, intensified. In Lewis’s imagination, earth is but a pale, ghostly imitation of what is real. His protagonist cuts his feet on the sharp grass, dodges falling leaves as though they are bullets, and is blinded by the intensity of the colors and sounds. In this allegory, heaven is More Real – and takes some getting used to.

I am also fond of the myriad proposals found in David Eagleman’s book Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives. In these 40 very short essays, Eagleman proposes scenarios like this:

The afterlife is reuniting with the cast of our life’s play…

We are microbes that God doesn’t even notice, and so we think there is no afterlife…

Heaven is highly bureaucratic and that god “often invites over men like Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, and together they sit on the porch drinking tea and lamenting about movements that swept over the tops of their founders.”

“When you die, you are grieved by all the atoms of which you were composed…”

“Everything exists in all possible states at once”…multiple lives in parallel – eating and not eating, working and not working, in relationships with everyone and no one…

There is an underlying code – a matrix, if you will, and we are granted the…opportunity to view the underlying code” – the giant collection of numbers.

The afterlife is soft – the walls, the floors, everything is cushioned. “A hard surface is impossible to find.”

 

And those are but a few of the forty perspectives – and they are only forty, out of billions – maybe 7 billion or so?

Because I suspect there are about as many perspectives on the afterlife as there are human beings on earth. Maybe more than that, because everyone who has died has had their own perspective too.

The joy of Unitarian Universalism is that we don’t have to have any one idea about this; rather, we can lean into what makes sense for us, what helps us tell the story we have no way of knowing is true or false until we die.

So let me share mine – which is just one opinion.

I don’t know what the afterlife is like, really, and I can only guess that it is like that scene in the film Contact – which we’ll be showing on the 18th – where Jodie Foster’s character exits the wormhole to see the universe with all its galaxies and stars and planets and things unimaginable to us, and in her awe and wonder, she says “I had no idea…” That the incredible, indescribable love that awaits us is so overwhelming, even the worst person would find themselves embraced in that utter awe and wonder.

And – if that isn’t true, and it certainly may not be – I still think we see evidence of the afterlife, every single day, amongst each of us. We carry the DNA of our parents, and their parents before them, generation after generation, going back as far as time. WE are their afterlife. And all of our children and niblings, our friends and colleagues, our lovers and companions, our helpers and healers – we are their afterlife too. And when we tell their stories, when we look at their photos, or say that thing they always used to say, or listen to their favorite song, or fill out their name on a form, or see someone who reminds us of them – they are alive. In us.

This is why we do the rituals – wash the body, hold a wake, play the bagpipes, scatter the ashes, cry at the gravesites, gaze at the picture. This is why we build memorials and monuments. This is why we honor the dead.

To give them – and us – a sense of the afterlife.

To complete the story.

 

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