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[Darris McNeely] I've been reading a book about mobile technology. Mobile technology
is becoming just an everyday part of our lives. And mobile technology is also it seems allowing
things to be a part of our life even after we die. In the book that I'm reading on my
mobile technology piece here, it says, "After most people die and a few years pass, the
world knows little about them except what their headstone looks like in the cemetery.
But what if tombs could talk? What if people could walk up to your headstone, see you,
and get to know you long after you've died? In fact," the book says, "You already can.
You can have your grave tagged so that anyone can walk up to it and link it to a digital
tombstone using a barcode or a GPS reading, or even just a searchable name." So you could
walk up to a tombstone with your smartphone and scan a barcode, or connect to a digital
tombstone that would have a message that you could leave as an epitaph long after you died.
It's a fascinating concept.
[Steve Myers] It sure appeals to our egos I think in a lot of ways because we want to
be remembered, we want people to think of our legacy that we leave behind. And the idea
that we could do it on a tombstone, I think has a certain appeal to it.
[Darris McNeely] It is. I mean, we've all walked through graveyards, especially old
graveyards perhaps, and seen tombstones laying there that you can barely read the name and
you don't know who they were, what their - certainly anything about their life - their descendants,
whoever they may be, even in that same locale wouldn't even know where to go to find their
great-great-great-grandparent. And yet, again, there's this desire to be remembered once
we die and digitally now this can be done. But it raises, I guess, a few questions as
to really who does remember us and what is the value of our life while we are alive and
what we do leave behind.
[Steve Myers] Well, will people really remember us? Even with digital memories that would
be on a tombstone, someone would still have to be interested enough to find out about
you. And really, probably in time, wouldn't it be similar to the way it is now - that
people would, after a period of time, forget anyway. So, who is going to remember us and
who is going to keep that legacy in mind? And I think that's the most important question
that we have to answer. And there is an interesting indication of that back in the book of Job.
In Job 14, Job raised the question about that very legacy and who would remember. He says
in verse 13 of chapter 14, "Oh, that you'd hide me in the grave." So he's talking about
death and talking to God he says, "That You would conceal me until Your wrath is passed."
And then Job said something interesting. He says, "That You would appoint me a set time
and remember me" (Job 14:13). And so Job looked to God and realized God's the one that will
remember. He knows everything about us and He's the one that will always have us in mind.
[Darris McNeely] Which brings us to the point that we better be living for God and should
be living to know and understand the true God today in our life and leaving a legacy
with Him that He will remember. That's the most important.
[Steve Myers] That is. That's BT Daily. We'll see you next time.