When The Dead Teach The Living

Dr R K Behera
Principal, MGM College

A cemetery is more than a resting place—it is a book of wisdom carved in stone. Every name and every quiet corner reminds us of truths we often forget in the rush of life. Inside those silent grounds, life suddenly becomes clearer. We realise that life is not measured by years, but by meaning. The graves of the young and old whisper the same message: life is a gift, never a guarantee. They teach us to cherish people, forgive quickly, love deeply, and use our time wisely. A cemetery gently asks, “What are you doing with the time God has given you?”

There, tears fall freely—not as signs of weakness, but of love. Scripture says, “You have kept count of my tossings; put my tears in your bottle” (Psalm 56:8). Our tears connect earth with heaven, grief with God’s comfort. The silence of the cemetery is not frightening but peaceful. It reminds us that struggles are temporary, while God’s peace is eternal. Status and possessions lose their meaning, teaching us that true rest is found not in success but in surrender to God’s will and timing. Though it is a place of death, it is also a place of divine presence—God walks with the brokenhearted and lifts the grieving with His hope. For believers, the cemetery is not the end but a reminder of eternity. “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in Me will live, even though he dies.” — John 11:25. A cemetery teaches us to live differently: to speak kindly, walk humbly, serve faithfully, forgive freely, and trust God completely. Life becomes meaningful when we see every breath as God’s grace. As we walk out of its gates, we should leave with renewed purpose—to honour God and bless others with the life we still have.
 



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