nikknack,
I offer my condolences for your loss.
Suicide in most cases is a poor choice, but I believe God is forgiving. All people are sinners. If God will forgive somebody who commits some other forms of sin, God will forgive a person who commits suicide. There are many things a person can do that are far worse than suicide. Suicide is usually the result of intense and hopeless despair that lasts for a long time without relief -- something that most people do not have to experience in their life, and have little concept of how it feels. It is largely because of things out of a person's control, which can include organic abnormalities in the brain as well as terrible events in life. I believe God will evaluate each case of suicide individually depending on the circumstances and specific degree of moral responsibility and other factors, and that it is more important how a person lives versus how they die. If suicide causes terrible harm to loved ones, then of course that would be taken into consideration in a person's life review and the future progress of the soul.
I do not believe, as some religions teach, that suicide causes a person to automatically go to hell, nor do I believe, as some people say, that people's own mental state causes their afterlife experience. I believe those who need comforting in the afterlife will receive it, and those who need harshness and judgment will receive it -- and that people can in fact receive the exact opposite of what their beliefs, attitudes, and mental condition would seem to dictate, because
God is in control, not us.
Clinical depression can rob people of their ability to think clearly and make rational choices. I know because I suffer from depression, and I happen to be one who does not benefit from medication. I have been suicidal in the past, and I know it requires tremendous willpower to resist the temptation to kill onself when one is in the grips of a severe depressive episode. It can feel as if one's mind is not one's own, and you have to fight it with all your might. For some people who have the most severe cases of the disease, that can go on continuously for months, even years, without any relief. It is then that people are likely to take their own life because the torment seems too intense to bear and one despairs of hope that things will ever improve.
The fact is, most people have never had their will tested in this way, and God knows that. If God has put a person in a life where they will end up with a disease of the mind, and they must struggle and fight it just to keep living as normal people can live without exerting psychological effort, I believe that soul is actually becoming stronger than most souls. Perhaps your friend gained tremendous strength of will by fighting depression as long as he did. Unfortunately he did not finish the boot camp of life on earth as a mentally ill person, opting out because he could not withstand it until the natural end, but I bet he gained a lot spiritually from whatever time he did choose to spend as a person fighting the disease of clinical depression. I am sure God takes such things into consideration in evaluating where a soul goes in the afterlife.
I believe the most important things you can do are to pray for your friend and forgive him if you are angry about his suicide. Additionally, I would recommend reading the following website about near-death experiences and suicide, which shows that the afterlife of those who kill themself varies according to their character and spiritual needs, not automatic hell:
http://www.near-death.com/suicide.htmlPeace in Christ,
Freebird