
How to remove the fear of death? Speaking of the beginning of days, The Silmarillion says that IlĂșvatar gave Men âstrange gifts.â First, he set eternity in their hearts so they would always desire to go beyond the visible world:
âBut to the Atani I will give a new gift.â Therefore he willed that the hearts of Men should seek beyond the world and should find no rest therein; but they should have a virtue to shape their life, amid the powers and chances of the world, beyond the Music of the Ainur, which is as fate to all things else.â The Silmarillion
Second, he gave them a gift of finiteness.
âDeath is their fate, the gift of IlĂșvatar, which as Time wears even the Powers shall envy.â
But what is there to envy? Why would even the Valar envy Men? It turns out that in the beginning, Men didnât fear death. Fear of death was instilled into their hearts by Melkor who deceived them by saying that it was Iluvatarâs punishment rather than a gift.
âBut Melkor has cast his shadow upon it, and confounded it with darkness, and brought forth evil out of good, and fear out of hope.â
Melkorâs shadow had a name; its name was Ungoliantâa monstrous spider born out of his envy. She was neither an Ainur nor Maiar. Most likely, she was Melkorâs Shadow-Self, his own insatiable darkness, which he feared. It was Ungoliant who first spun a spiritual darkness called Unlight, for it was made in mockery of light.
âThe Light failed; but the Darkness that followed was more than loss of light. In that hour was made a Darkness that seemed not lack but a thing with being of its own: for it was indeed made by malice out of Light.â
The darkness that existed before was not a spiritual darknessâit was merely an absence of light. That first darkness was part of a good creation. When the Elves awakened at the Bay of CuiviĂ©nen, they beheld the stars of Varda in the night sky for a long age. There was nothing scary about it. Light and darkness were but paints in the hand of Iluvatar.
Ungoliant infused the first darkness with malice, filling it with ânets of strangling doom.â She cast Melkorâs shadow on it. Darkness became a source of existential fear. Later, Melkor cast his shadow upon the gift of IluvatarâManâs mortality. He deceived Men into believing that death was not a gift but a doom, and they started craving immortality. Eventually, they decided to seize it by force, which led to the fall of Numenor.
Melkor impressed upon the hearts of Men that death was a punishmentâa severing from Iluvatar. Distorted by Morgothâs lies, death became a mockery of Godâs giftâMenâs ability to leave the Circles of the World and be renewed. While the Elves were bound to the fate of the world, growing weary of its unending cycles, Men were granted the grace to depart and be renewed.
In the beginning, there was no more fear in dying than in falling asleep. Men knew they would get up âin the morningâ refreshed. They simply let go of their consciousness and slept, until newness, freshness, rest, restoration, and hope overtook them.
Curiously, most people who have had a near-death experience report that after their return, they no longer fear death. A friend of a friendâwho died of a brain tumor, saw heaven, and returned after being miraculously healedâsays she doesnât fear dying anymore. She says, there is no death. You donât even lose consciousness.
âWhat struck you the most in Heaven?â asked the person who interviewed her. She answered, âThat God is a Soundâan ineffable and irresistible Sound that you hear everywhere: in all things, in others, and in yourself.â
