Defining Death Scientifically and Faithfully

“He who brought all visible and invisible creation into being solely through the momentum of His will, had in His good counsel determined – before all the ages and even before the very genesis of created beings – an ineffably good plan for His creations. And this plan was for [Jesus] to be mingled, without change, with human nature through a true union according to hypostasis, uniting human nature, without alteration, to Himself, so that He would become man – in a manner known to Him – and at the same time make man God through union with Himself, and this He wisely divided the ages, determining that some would be for the activity of His becoming man, and others for the activity of making man God.”[10]


[1] The Language of God, Collins pp.106-107

[2] Genesis 1.26

[3] Genesis 1.28

[4] Orthodox Psychotherapy, p.104, Vlachos

[5] De bono mortis, St. Ambrose of Milan, Patrology by James Quasten Vol. IV p.157

[6] Life after Death; p. 51, Vlachos

[7] Genesis 3.19

[8] Wisdom of Solomon 1.13

[9] Life after Death; p.224, Vlachos

[10] St. Maximos the Confessor, On Difficulties in Sacred Scripture: The Response to Thalassios. Trans. Fr. Maximos Constas (Washington, DC: CUA Press, 2018), 150.

[11] Deuteronomy 31.16

[12] 2 Kingdoms 7.12

[13] 2 Chronicles 9.31

[14] Mt. 9.24

[15] Adaptation of 2 Maccabees 15. 37-39

Image: Resurrection of Christ

Ugo da Carpi Italian

After Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi) Italian

ca. 1520–27

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/633752

Parable of the Three Sisters