Hick is an honest, meticulous analyst of human thought on death and its aftermath. He’s a Christian who open-mindedly considers the observations of Hindus, ancient Greeks, humanists, body-mind scientists, parapsychologists, etc. Here are a few provocative quotes:
“… alone among the animals he knows that he is going to die … but—in an important sense—does not believe it!”
“We cannot assume … that it would violate the divine love to allow us at death to cease to exist; or to put the life of which we have been formed back into a lump, like the potter with his clay; or to have us survive only as insubstantial shades in sheol, as was believed by the ancient Hebrews …”
[Concerning studies of spirit mediums] “The spirits do not seem to speak out of the context of a continuing life; they seem to lack a credible environment of their own, a community of which they are a part, real next-world tasks, interests and purposes. They seem instead to be still very much what they were in this world.”
“It is not what man [sic] has come from but what he is going to that is important.”