A CHRISTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD Margarete Van Den Brink & Hans Stolp
What happens to us after death? How do we stay connected and even help our loved ones who have died? Surprisingly, answers to these questions can be found not only in Eastern religions, but also in the Christian tradition. In fact, say the authors, they were prevalent in original Christian teachings but, over time, were lost by the Church. Margarete van den Brink and Hans Stolp bring the remarkable - sometimes controversial - perspective of esoteric Christianity to their reflections on the afterlife. They describe inspiring near death experiences and stories, and give very worthwhile insights into what happens after death and how we can help departed loved ones.
156pp, 138mm x 215mm, softback, 2004
A Book of the Dead by Gerhard Reisch, translated by Jehanne Mehta, is a collection of verses and paintings about how to develop contact with deceased loved ones.
In A Celtic Book of Dying Phyllida Anam-Aire gives celtic teachings on caring for the dying and travelling with the dead, drawn from the Cauldron of Brigit.
In Arthur Conan Doyle's Book of the Beyond Ivan Cooke describes how spirit communications about the afterlife were received from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and how Grace Cooke's White Eagle Lodge was founded.
Stephen Turoff's Seven Steps to Eternity records Stephen Turoff's communication with a soldier who had died and reveals much about the afterlife and life after death.
Testimony of Light is a document of lasting importance, telepathically transmitted to Helen Greaves by a close friend, Frances Banks (an Anglican nun), who had recently died.
Sogyal Rinpoche's The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying is an inspiring introduction to the Tibetan Buddhist approach to spirituality, meditation, enlightenment, life and death.