You Will Live Forever presents Ernest Holmes's metaphysical reflections on immortality, consciousness, and the continuity of the individual beyond physical death.
In this concise yet deliberate work, Holmes explores the premise that life is spiritual in essence and therefore cannot be extinguished by material dissolution. Drawing upon the principles of Religious Science and the broader New Thought tradition, he argues that the individual self participates in a larger, universal Mind. Death, in this framework, represents transition rather than annihilation.
Holmes approaches the subject not through emotional consolation but through metaphysical reasoning. He examines the nature of identity, the persistence of consciousness, and the implications of eternal being for ethical and spiritual conduct. The work reflects his characteristic emphasis on disciplined thought and spiritual law, presenting immortality not as dogma but as logical extension of a unified spiritual reality.
Positioned within early twentieth-century metaphysical Christianity, You Will Live Forever remains a representative expression of Holmes's philosophical theology and his sustained inquiry into the nature of life, mind, and enduring selfhood.