The subject of death is a painful one, and many times the Bible speaks of death euphemistically, in order to make the subject easier to bear. Most often, the Bible speaks of death as sleep.
However, there are times when the Bible speaks about death with almost brutal honesty and clarity. When it does this, it quickly becomes clear death is much more than an extended sleep.
Some of the clearest scriptures regarding death are found in the book of Ecclesiastes.
This passage teaches us that men die the same way that animals die, that the same thing happens to men at death as to animals. Both man and animals were made from the dust, both man and animals share the same breath, which they lose at death, and both man and animals return to the dust at death.
This is not what we want to hear about death. Such teaching seems to offer to us no hope at all.
At first glance, verse 21 seems to offer a way out of this bleak picture. Perhaps, though our bodies die like animals die, there is a part of us that survives death, and "goeth upward." However, another passage in Ecclesiastes makes it clear that this is not the case.
This passage makes it clear that man’s consciousness does not survive death. The dead have no love, no hate, no envy, and no memory.
So disturbing is the picture of death painted in Ecclesiastes, and so different is it from what is usually taught in churches about death, that some have taught that Ecclesiastes teaches wrong doctrine about some subjects, including death, in order to teach a greater truth. However, Ecclesiastes is not alone in painting this bleak picture of death. Psalm 146 teaches that a man’s thoughts cease when he dies.
Psalm 115 teaches that the dead no longer praise God.
And Psalm 88 teaches that the dead do not know of God’s goodness.
Why is the Bible so insistent in teaching that the dead are truly dead? There are at least two reasons why this is so important.
First, the Bible teaches that there are evil spirits who impersonate dead people. These were called "familiar spirits." They could impersonate the voices of the dead, and knew things that supposedly only the dead person could know. They used these things to gain the trust of people who had no desire to interact with demons, but who might let down their guard if they thought that someone they loved or respected who had died was trying to communicate with them.
.In the Old Testament, God forbade dealing with familiar spirit.
When you understand that the dead are truly dead, and have no consciousness, you cannot be deceived by evil spirits pretending to be dead loved ones. Any supposed communication from a dead loved one is never genuine, and is either wishful thinking or a demonic spirit.
Second, our salvation, and our whole relationship with God, is based on the fact that someone died in our place.
Since our redemption is based on someone dying in our place, if there is a part of us that is eternal, that survives death, then no one can die for that part of us, and that part of us cannot be redeemed. If each man has an immortal soul, then no soul can die for any other soul, because soul’s can’t die.
Likewise, if there was a part of Jesus that could not die, then that part of Jesus could not die for that part of us.
God has resolved these issues for us by teaching us emphatically that the dead are truly dead. However, God has not left us without hope in the face of death. The hope of the Christian is not life after death, or survival after death, or the immortality of the soul. The hope of the Christian, as taught in the Bible, is our resurrection through Jesus Christ.
When Christ returns, those who are his, both dead and alive, will be caught up together to meet him in the air, and from that point on, we will be with the Lord. It is by reminding each other of this that we are to comfort one another when we are confronted with death.