The Scriptures teach that death involves much more than just the expiration of our physical bodies, although physical expiration is certainly our most daunting encounter with death. Per the Bible, death involves four facets of mankind's experience: alienation from God, self, others, and nature (Genesis 3: 1-18).
Adam and Eve didn't immediately die physically when they fell in the garden, but they did start experiencing death immediately—just like you and I do everyday (via what I’ve come to call “death feelings”). For example, when we follow our innate inclination to shut God out of our consciousness, we are experiencing death firsthand, and when we feel empty inside because we don't know our purpose in life, we are processing death's ill effects. Moreover, when we are estranged and hurt by others we love, death is presenting itself in our worlds, and when we go to the doctor because we have pain or sickness, death is reminding us of its nagging presence.
Death is rude, invading our lives everyday, in innumerable ways, whether we like it or not. Death is, in fact, the enemy of all our enemies, and it is ever and always, like a pesky bully, in our faces.
Essentially, this is why I'm a Christian. Through Christ, God offers a satisfying answer to my agonizing encounters with this goliath of a nemesis. In Christ, substantial healing is available, in this life, from my alienation from God, self, others, and nature—and
comprehensive healing is promised by God (via a blood oath) in the hereafter.
This, my friends, is the core of true Christianity. Consequently, everyday I strive to realize these God-given truths more and more, as such is the only way that the promising experiences and hopes of life I have, in Christ, can become as real to me as the pressing and daunting realities of death.
"Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?" (John 11:25, 26)