Forever Yours
A woman coping with giref over the death of her husband has an especially hard time on Valentine’s Day.
When we contemplate the afterlife, we might imagine a paradise of angels and loved ones who have gone before us–a blissful place. Imagining the beauty of heaven can be of great comfort at a time of grief, offering hope that life after death is not just a wish but a promise fulfilled.
A woman coping with giref over the death of her husband has an especially hard time on Valentine’s Day.
A woman coping with grief over losing her husband receives a comforting message. Who said it’s better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all?
That plane ride seemed to satisfy Sammy’s curiosity—little did I know how important it would be when Mom went to heaven.
Baseball, birdsong, and the promise of things to come.
My husband and daughter were always together. She would follow him to the ends of the earth.
Norman Vincent Peale recounts his experience of comfort from beyond by his beloved parents.
She lost her husband in the World Trade Center attack. Reassurance about the afterlife came in ways she never expected.
After her father died, a woman coping with grief wonders if the tree he planted in her yard would ever bloom.
A young seminary student finds a spiritual mentor in a genteel old lady, whose wisdom lived on even in the afterlife.
A chance encounter with the hereafter brings peace to a woman who’d recently suffered the death of her daughter.
After my brother’s death, my faith was strengthened and I knew we were still together.
In the last moments of her life before crossing over, a woman’s mother struggled to speak. But what was she trying to say?