Sister Josefa Menéndez: “Jesus showed me how we wi...

Sister Josefa Menéndez: “Jesus showed me how we wi…

Sister Josefa Menéndez: “Jesus showed me how we wi…
Every day, thousands of Americans go about their routines without giving much thought to what may be the most profound question of human existence: What happens when life ends?
Rush-hour commuters crowd the platforms beneath Manhattan. Farmers begin another morning across Ohio. Families gather for dinner in suburban Texas. Students hurry between classes in California. Across the country, life moves forward at full speed.
Yet according to pastors, hospice workers, grief counselors, physicians, and researchers studying end-of-life experiences, one conversation has quietly begun gaining momentum across the United States.
It isn’t about fear.
It isn’t about punishment.
Instead, it centers on an idea that has appeared repeatedly in churches, counseling sessions, hospitals, and family discussions from New York to Los Angeles: that the final moments of life may involve something far more personal than many people imagine.
Rather than picturing a dramatic courtroom in the afterlife, many Americans are increasingly fascinated by another possibility—the idea that a person may confront the complete truth about their own life.
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