Church & Culture Podcast

CCP192: On Death and Doulas

Apr 24, 2026
A conversation about the growing role of death doulas and what they actually do for those nearing the end of life. Discussion of Elisabeth Kübler‑Ross and the stages of dying, and why companionship matters at life’s close. Exploration of rising loneliness, who traditionally provided end‑of‑life care, and how faith communities can offer practical presence and relational repair.
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INSIGHT

What Death Doulas Actually Do

  • Death doulas fill non-medical emotional, spiritual, and practical gaps for the dying and their families.
  • They assist with planning, vigil companionship, caregiver respite, hospice navigation, and post-death rituals, working alongside but not replacing medical care.
ANECDOTE

Mother's Presence Comforted Dying Child

  • James Emery White recounts a story of a dying child who heard 'bells' that his mother framed as the bells of heaven.
  • The mother's presence and reassurance provided deep comfort in the child's final moments and illustrates the power of companionship.
INSIGHT

Presence Matters More Than Procedures

  • Loneliness compounds the trauma of dying because humans are wired for community and companionship.
  • Historical examples (a nurse holding a child, Janusz staying with orphans) show presence matters more than technical care at the end of life.
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