One more reason I don't believe most people are consistant in their religious beliefs:
In death, their loved ones would be welcomed to Heaven. This is the ultimate goal. Therefore, death would be celebrated. It would be a happy time for all who truly care about the one they lost. Yet, funerals are full of mourning and sadness. Tears flow regularly.
If people truly believed in Heaven, and that their loved ones end up there, they would not see death as such a sad event.
But they do.
And that is because they don't truly believe what they claim to believe.
The world as seen through the eyes of an atheist. I do not hate God anymore than you hate Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy. I consider religion to be mankind's most appalling and destructive creation yet, but I embrace spirituality. Unfortunately, this ever-one-sided society still refuses to acknowledge the validity of atheism. This blog is my attempt at helping to balance out the spiritual scale of this world. Learn to question what you know. Think for yourself. What do you really believe?
Monday, June 22, 2009
Monday, June 15, 2009
8-year-old Kentucky Boy Found Dead In Church Elevator
STURGIS, Ky. — The body of an 8-year-old boy was found with his head pinned in a church elevator as his family was cleaning up after his grandmother's wedding reception, authorities said Monday.
No foul play is suspected in the death Saturday of Zachary Waddell at First Christian Church in Sturgis, Kentucky State Police said in a statement. The church's pastor, the Rev. Nate Harper, found the boy's body in the doorway at the lower level of the shaft connecting the church's first and second floors, authorities said.
Union County Coroner Stephen Shouse said the boy died as a result of compression asphyxia, meaning he couldn't breathe after the elevator came down on him. He said the elevator was purchased in 1963 and is similar to a freight elevator. The Evansville (Ind.) Courier & Press reported that Shouse is a distant cousin of the boy's mother.
State Police said the boy was pronounced dead at the church. State Police gave few details and did not return telephone messages to The Associated Press about the circumstances.
The boy was found with his head pinned between the walls of the elevator and the shaft and his body was outside the elevator car, Shouse said.
Harper told the newspaper that the discovery was the "worst thing" he's ever experienced.
"It was really hard for us, but more than anything else our hearts go out to that family," he told the newspaper. He also said he did not know a lot about the elevator, "but to our knowledge, we believe it was up to standards."
"There's a family that needs prayer," Harper told the AP on Monday afternoon. "They've suffered a great tragedy."
No foul play is suspected in the death Saturday of Zachary Waddell at First Christian Church in Sturgis, Kentucky State Police said in a statement. The church's pastor, the Rev. Nate Harper, found the boy's body in the doorway at the lower level of the shaft connecting the church's first and second floors, authorities said.
Union County Coroner Stephen Shouse said the boy died as a result of compression asphyxia, meaning he couldn't breathe after the elevator came down on him. He said the elevator was purchased in 1963 and is similar to a freight elevator. The Evansville (Ind.) Courier & Press reported that Shouse is a distant cousin of the boy's mother.
State Police said the boy was pronounced dead at the church. State Police gave few details and did not return telephone messages to The Associated Press about the circumstances.
The boy was found with his head pinned between the walls of the elevator and the shaft and his body was outside the elevator car, Shouse said.
Harper told the newspaper that the discovery was the "worst thing" he's ever experienced.
"It was really hard for us, but more than anything else our hearts go out to that family," he told the newspaper. He also said he did not know a lot about the elevator, "but to our knowledge, we believe it was up to standards."
"There's a family that needs prayer," Harper told the AP on Monday afternoon. "They've suffered a great tragedy."
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