I may play a little bit of Devil's Advocate for sake of this opening post... Anyway...
We live in a world where we have, very early on, learned how to create and destroy life.
We can manipulate the genetic code of living organisms, engineer new forms of life, and clone existing ones. People have also ended lives with weapons, spread of diseases, or contributing to environmental factors and disasters.
But what about restoring or reviving life? What does it take to bring back something that was once alive, but is now dead? Is it possible to reverse the process of death, or is it a one-way street? What are the ethical, moral, and spiritual implications of such an endeavor?
Some might argue that restoring or reviving life is a natural extension of creating or destroying it. If we can make or break life, why not fix or renew it? If we can save lives from death, why not resurrect them from death? If we can enhance lives with technology, why not revive them with technology?
Still others might believe that restoring or reviving life is a violation of the natural order of things. If something is meant to die, it should stay dead. If something is gone, it should not be brought back. If something is beyond repair, it should not be fixed. To tamper with the cycle of life and death is to play God, they might say... and to invite unforeseen consequences.
But what if there is a third way of looking at this issue? What if restoring or reviving life is not a matter of science or technology, but of something else? Something more mysterious, more miraculous. What if there is some miraculous means to restore life? How would that play out? What abilities would one need? And if you had those abilities, would it be within your rights and natural right to use them?