by
Jon M. Sweeney
The
loss of twelve miners in West Virginia last week reminded us
not only of the fleetingness of life, but also of the persistence
of hope.
You’ve
probably heard the story of what happened last Wednesday,
when
for three hours the family and friends of thirteen trapped
miners believed that their loved ones had survived, only
to learn later that they were dead and the earlier information
had
been
wrong.
Just
before midnight on Tuesday, the families were told that the
miners appeared to be safe, and church bells rang all over town
in celebration. Then, just before 3 a.m. Wednesday, mine company
chief Ben Hatfield announced that twelve of the thirteen men
were dead and the other was in critical condition. Hatfield
apologized for the earlier message that had given the families
false hope.
According
to news reports, one family member screamed in outrage: “We
have got some of us...saying...that we don’t even know
if there is a Lord anymore. We had a miracle, and it was taken
away from us.”
CNN
reported that family members “were cursing God.”
Such
feelings are understandable, even expected, in situations where
individuals and families face tragedies that seem humanly impossible
to bear. Yet there is an unexpected side as well; instead of
losing all hope in divinity, most Americans still believe that
tragedy is not the final word. Even all the scientific discoveries,
technological advances, dramatic improvements in medicine, and
modern catastrophes have not dulled Americans’ belief
in the afterlife.
We
are a nation devoted to the idea of a “better place.”
According to a poll conducted last month by ABC News, nearly
90 percent of us believe in the existence of heaven. Just as
many Americans believe in heaven now as have so believed in
the last century, according to experts.
Perhaps
most surprising, nearly 5 percent of those who believe in heaven
also believe that they will not be going there after death.
In fact, 10.5 percent of Catholics doubt that they’ll
be getting in. The ABC News survey did not ask respondents why
they didn’t feel they would personally see heaven, but
a good guess is that the answers would have centered around
not being good enough.
Tragedies
happen all of the time—perhaps now more than in the recent
past. But tragic events don’t diminish our belief in the
afterlife—that there is some way in which we live beyond
our deaths. Whether it is our bodies or just our souls that
go there, or whether or not it is a real place or only a spiritual
one, opinions differ widely.
Though
they often do not turn out the way we hope and pray, we still
believe in miracles, with eternity spent in the presence of
God being the most profound miracle of all. In the meantime,
it is up to us to fix the coal mines. And along the way, God
doesn’t stop loving us here, in this life—or beyond.
©
2006 Jon M. Sweeney.
Jon
M. Sweeney is a writer and editor living in Vermont. He is the
author of several books, including THE ST. FRANCIS PRAYER
BOOK.