
Virgil leads Dante away from the beast (Inferno, Canto I, lines 87–88).
Illustration by Gustave Doré, c. 1861.
A spooky title for this column, I know. But first, let’s pause over the question: do the dead live on – in some form appropriate to their condition – but still recognizably themselves?
My mother was quite close to Louise Green, the woman who came once a week to clean, and later helped me very much in the work of closing the apartment on 96th Street after both my parents were gone.
One day Louise told me that my mother had visited her from the afterlife. “She’s with Henry [my father],” Louise went on, “and they’re very happy to be together again.”
Only one feature of that afterlife visit struck Louise as remarkable. “I never thought she’d come to Brooklyn!’ she said.
I have other such stories and I’ll bet you do too. However, the story on my mind today is one I saw recently on a video, reported by a man who gave only minimal information about himself:
His name was Jonathan and he was 75 years old.
Since the story was so unusual that one would be inclined to doubt it, I looked for any kind of corroboration. The sole supportive evidences were his face and his voice as he told his story. Neither showed any of the marks of doubleness that undercut made-up stories. Jonathan spoke with a slight foreign accent, but it was an accent recognizable to me. In childhood, in my parents’ home, I’d met people who had accents like his.
This is what Jonathan said. He’d been sitting at home in his familiar armchair, feeling at ease and in apparent good health. But suddenly he felt himself losing balance and consciousness. Everything went dark. He no longer had a pulse (as later he was told). His heart had stopped.
There was little time for dread or panic before he found himself in quite a wonderful ambiance. Presently he was face to face with a figure he had no trouble recognizing as Jesus. (I’ve read of Jews returning from the afterlife who reported seeing Jesus, as well as Christians who didn’t, so this by itself doesn’t identify Jonathan as a Christian. Especially since his accent put me in mind of the refugees of my childhood.)
“Jonathan,” said the Jesus figure to him, “I am showing you something. You will return and you will speak!” (This message was conveyed rather than uttered in words.)
What Jesus showed him was a place that was quite unmistakable.
Hell.
The fire burning there was unlike any fire we know – in that it burned with intention! In the midst of that very fire was the late Ayatollah Khamenei.
“I recognized him immediately,” said Jonathan. “He was there and he saw me.”
Here Jonathan emphasized that he himself was “not a political man.” Also that he “took no satisfaction in it. What I saw,” he went on, “filled me with a grief so heavy” … that he feels it still!
From hell, Khomeini had a message for him. “Tell the world that no man who uses God’s name like a sword for his own power is serving God. … The fire knows the difference even when the world does not.”
“It was,” Jonathan added, “a soul stripped of every title, rank, earthly armor – just a man, terrified, burning, undone.”
*. *. *
That was about the substance of Jonathan’s message. Was he telling the truth? Even if he meant to be honest, could any of this be thought credible?
All I could judge by was his face, his expression, the timber of the voice and the look in his eyes. There was nothing double in what I could see – nothing covert or complicated or self-important. To me, by whatever marks one uses to distinguish the fraudulent from the genuine, he appeared credible.
The Comments posted below the video seemed to come overwhelmingly from evangelical Christians and they were as jubilant as if they’d won a race in the intergalactic Olympics. Hey, hurray! – we win! We get the gold! The champs are us!
However, I noticed that Jonathan himself had refrained from identifying himself with any denomination or faith community. He’d laid stress on inner genuineness in contrast to outward show. He’d not appeared to endorse any of the known brands of religion.
So what do I personally make of it? Obviously it made an impression or I wouldn’t be devoting a whole column to it!
Do I think – along with Jonathan and possibly Plato – that every soul stands before the same bar of judgment after death? Not if I credit the wide array of afterlife reports. (For a somewhat different report, see my article, “What Ayer Saw When He Was Dead.” A. J. Ayer was a highly-regarded twentieth-century philosopher who “died” in the clinical sense for about fifteen minutes during which he saw what it would be like to live inside the world that his theories had postulated. He discovered that it wouldn’t be livable! It’s a nice test for any philosophic theory.)
I do take seriously the implication that when we depart this life, we deposit on this side all the honors – all the ribbons – that we’ve won here. Also, as Jonathan said, that “any wall between ourselves and accountability will come down.”
By the same token, I honor a life unmarked by pretense – though humility too can be an affectation.
To be a straight shooter is
not as simple as it sounds.
Related Content: Thought Faces the Future | Death Be Not Proud | What Ayer Saw When He Was Dead









