What happens to faith when humanity learns to live to two hundred?This book confronts one of the most urgent questions of the coming century: as longevity technology transforms lifespan into a privilege of the wealthy, what must Christianity say - and do? Drawing on Scripture, theology, and honest storytelling, each chapter tackles a different dimension of the challenge: the meaning of eternal life when death grows distant, the danger of endlessly deferred repentance, the church navigating five generations under one roof, the ethics of who gets to live longer, and the love that alone makes a long life worth living.
This is not a health guide. It is a theological reckoning - an invitation for every believer to ask not "how long will I live?" but "what am I living for?"
What happens to faith when humanity learns to live to two hundred?This book confronts one of the most urgent questions of the coming century: as longevity technology transforms lifespan into a privilege of the wealthy, what must Christianity say - and do? Drawing on Scripture, theology, and honest storytelling, each chapter tackles a different dimension of the challenge: the meaning of eternal life when death grows distant, the danger of endlessly deferred repentance, the church navigating five generations under one roof, the ethics of who gets to live longer, and the love that alone makes a long life worth living.
This is not a health guide. It is a theological reckoning - an invitation for every believer to ask not "how long will I live?" but "what am I living for?"