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Lee Strobel's 'The Case for Heaven: A Journalist Investigates Evidence for Life After Death,"' Presents a Christian View of Death
Frontpage Mag ^ | 03/04/2022 | Danusha V. Goska

Posted on 03/05/2022 9:46:27 PM PST by SeekAndFind

If I knew that I was about to die, I would buy a pound of macadamia nuts, and then go to a pet store and scoop up every puppy in the place, and spend my remaining time stuffing my face and playing with puppies. I won't do this today, because I assume that my life will go on, and I will need money for rent, not for very expensive macadamia nuts, and I don't have the facilities for long-term dog pack care. What I think about death shapes my behavior.

Of course, as David Horowitz wrote, "You're Going to Be Dead One Day." But there's another reason to think about beliefs around death. Not just personal, but culture-wide conceptions of death inform human behavior. Politics is downstream from culture, and culture is downstream from religion. Lee Strobel's September, 2021, Zondervan Press book, "The Case for Heaven: A Journalist Investigates Evidence for Life After Death," offers the casual reader an introduction to Christian ideas about death. Strobel is the bestselling author of over forty books and curricula that have sold fourteen million copies. Strobel is very gifted at taking abstruse theology and translating it into material that one can read, understand, and be intrigued by during a subway ride. Even non-Christians can benefit from Strobel's books. Death forms life as no other feature. Strobel informs the reader on how Christian ideas about death form life and culture.

One can better understand the specifics of Christianity's approach to death, and the impact of that approach, by first comparing it to non-Christian belief systems. Hinduism claims to be the oldest living religion in the world; with over a billion adherents, Hinduism, after Christianity and Islam, is the third largest religion.

In Hinduism, death is inextricable from caste. For hundreds, perhaps thousands of years, devout Hindus have believed that they must behave according to the dictates of their caste. If you are born a Valmiki caste sewer cleaner, you must clean sewers, even if you are a scientific genius. Further, you must perform your assigned task with an impersonal "detachment." You are not the one carrying out the action. Your caste is the active doer; you are just a tool in its hands. The enlightened one "Rejoices not; grieves not," and is "from all works detached." "I am born to do this," says one member of the Valmiki caste, of the filthy work that kills, on average, almost one Indian sewer cleaner per day. Indians living overseas bring caste with them. One of Britain's biggest dating sites asked users to self-identify by caste. "Untouchables are undateable," reported the Times.

To do the work of a different caste than the one you are born into is fraught with danger. So says the Bhagavad Gita, 3:35. If a member of the Valmiki caste were to attempt a different occupation, he would not be fulfilling his caste duty. That refusal would earn him a reincarnation as something even worse than a sewer cleaner. Reincarnation can manifest as punishment or reward, coded according to caste. "The murderer of a Brahmin [a member of the highest caste] becomes consumptive," and is reborn as an Untouchable. "Karma which has been made … must inevitably be suffered. Karma not suffered does not fade away even in tens of millions of ages."

American New Agers use the word "karma" incorrectly. Karma isn't about universal standards of morality applicable to all, regardless of race or gender, class or social station. Karma keeps score of, and thus rigidly maintains, caste-related virtue and vice. Note that according to the Garuda Purana, there is a special, punitive reincarnation for killing a high caste Brahmin. One is reborn Untouchable. Thus, one need not feel compassion for the suffering of India's 200 million Untouchables. They deserve the low caste into which they were born, because of caste-specific violations in a previous incarnation. They can escape their fate by being obedient to the strictures of Untouchability. Their next incarnation will be better.

The ultimate goal, though, is not a superior rebirth, but no rebirth whatsoever. The ultimate goal is moksha. Moksha is not Heaven. Moksha is release from human life, "this cage of suffering," and from samsara, the "aimless and directionless wandering" of human birth, death, and reincarnation. In moksha, the individual ceases to exist as a separate personality and becomes one with Brahman, an impersonal creative principle. Hinduism's moksha is related to Buddhism's nirvana. The word "nirvana" means to blow out a light. Nirvana produces "anatta" or non-self, and "sunyata" – emptiness. The Prasna Upanishad, 6:5, speaks of rivers losing their "names and forms" and merging with the ocean. Just so the human loses his name and form and merges with Brahman. This impersonal process is captured in the Bhagavad Gita. "Thou grievest where no grief should be … the wise in heart mourn not for those that live, nor those that die."

The Hindu concept of death, of an endless cycle of birth, death, and reincarnation, and that reincarnation calibrated by how well one carried out one's caste duties in a previous life, has contributed to devout Hindus obediently following, and violently enforcing, caste strictures, again, for hundreds if not thousands of years. One can see how a thinker invested in Hindu concepts of selfhood, individuality, equality, caste, karma, and reincarnation would be unlikely to produce a document like, for example, the Declaration of Independence.

"Shahid" is translated as "martyr" but it does not signify the Christian concept of "martyr," that is one who peacefully accepts death rather than abandon his faith. In Islam, shahids are more typically those who "slay and are slain" to advance Islam, and who die as warriors. Shahids are the only people guaranteed Jannah, that is Paradise, in Islam (Qur'an 3:169-170, 22:58-59, 9:111, 47:4-6). In Jannah, Muslim men will be serviced by supernatural sex workers with large, round, "not sagging" breasts and renewable virginity. Women do not receive any comparable promise, and Muslim women have noticed that.

Allah created some people specifically to send them to Hell (Qur'an 7:179). "Indeed, the unbelievers among the people of the book and the idolaters will remain in the fire of Gehenna. They are the most vile of created beings," says Qur'an 98:6. The Qur'an borrowed much material from pre-existing Jewish and Christian texts, but, significantly, the Qur'an did not borrow Genesis 1:26, in which God creates humanity in his own image. "Tzelem elohim," or "imago dei," Hebrew and Latin for "the image of God," informs Jewish and Christian believers that each human life has an immortal soul, a soul created in the image of God. Islam rejects this concept.

In Islam, 999 people out of 1,000 will go to Hell. Muslims, too, will be sent to Hell, and only rescued from it if it is Allah's will (Qur'an 19:71-72). Short of dying in jihad, Muslims can never be sure that they have performed enough prayers and fasting to earn a slot in Jannah. Given Muslim insecurity about salvation short of jihad, the Qur'an's graphic descriptions of Hell's sadistic tortures and Jannah's sensuous delights, and the Qur'an's assurance that infidels are vile and destined for Hell anyway, one can see how Muslims have been inspired to take up jihad. In his recent book "The Critical Qur'an," Robert Spencer highlights those quotes that promise Jannah to jihadis. Spencer comments, "Muslim warriors have fought with courage throughout history, knowing that … if they are killed, they will enjoy paradise."

In the twentieth century, Nazism, Marxism, and tribalism killed tens of millions of human beings. All three isms adopted, to a greater or lesser extent, a purely materialist, atheist view of human death. All three selected perceived enemy populations, and understood industrial mass murder of those populations as having no more significance than the slaughter of animals – a term used by Soviets mass murdering kulaks, the obliteration of lice –a term used by Nazis mass murdering Jews, or the crushing of cockroaches – a term applied to Tutsis by Hutus during the Rwandan genocide. There is no afterlife, no soul, and no moral cost to the slaughter of mere animals, lice, or cockroaches, in the name of the perceived higher good, the creation of a cleansed communist, Nazi, or tribal Utopia.

America is currently experiencing an epidemic of "deaths of despair," that is, deaths by suicide and self-destructive activities like drug use. The Atlantic mourns that America "is on the edge of an existential crisis … Anxiety, depression, and suicidality have increased to unprecedented levels." At least one causative factor may be a crisis of meaning in the wake of the mass abandonment of Christianity. Christianity promises that suffering has meaning and that we enter a better world when we die. Atheism insists that there is no larger meaning to biological life and that death is merely final erasure. "Depression is a serious problem within the greater atheist community and far too often, that depression has led to suicide. This is something many of my fellow atheists often don’t like to admit … a lot of atheists … would like to believe that atheists are happier people than religious believers … in some very important ways we are not," wrote atheist activist Staks Rosch in 2017. Scholarly studies on faith, atheism, and suicide, for example here and here, support Rosch's assertion.

The Biblical book of Acts records Stephen, the first Christian martyr, fearlessly preaching, though he knows that such preaching will result in his immediate death. Before he is stoned to death, Stephen joyfully announces that he can see Heaven. With this glorious vision in sight, Stephen forgives his killers, and dies.

"Paul and Silas bound in jail," is the opening lyric of a traditional American folksong. This lyric alludes to the same Book of Acts in which Stephen is executed. Paul and Silas were stripped, flogged, and imprisoned. The song that mentions them, known as "Eyes on the Prize," became a theme song of the Civil Rights Movement.

Civil Rights activists Jim Zwerg, a 22-year-old college student from Wisconsin, and Fannie Lou Hamer, a Mississippi sharecropper whose most significant formal education took place in church, voluntarily confronted great danger, and both were imprisoned and both were almost beaten to death. Like Stephen, Paul, and Silas two thousand years earlier, Zwerg and Hamer overcame the fear of death by keeping their "eyes on the prize," that is, a heavenly reward. Zwerg gained courage from Psalm 27; Hamer from spirituals. Zwerg's description of what gave him strength is eerily similar to Stephen's words while being stoned. While being beaten, Zwerg said, "I had the most incredible religious experience of my life … I knew … that whether I lived or died, I would be OK … Segregation must be stopped … We're willing to accept death." After white police ordered black prisoners to beat Hamer mercilessly, Hamer, in horrible pain and damaged for life, began to sing. "Paul and Silas was bound in jail, let my people go," she sang, echoing New Testament words written 2,000 years before, and Old Testament words describing the Exodus of over 3,000 years ago. Not only belief in a future reward empowered Hamer. Later, Hamer confronted one of the men who beat her. "Do you people ever think how you'll feel when you'll have to meet God?" she asked. Her implication was, of course, that the man who beat her was destined to go to Hell. Zwerg's and Hamer's Christian understanding of death empowered their rewriting of history.

Of course Jim Zwerg and Fannie Lou Hamer were exceptional heroes, not average Christians. Of course too many Christians accepted or participated in Jim Crow. Jim Zwerg's own parents condemned his participation in Freedom Rides. Hamer said that "most black preachers had to be dragged kicking and screaming into supporting the movement." Most Hindus are not Sannyasis, living lives of complete renunciation, and most Hindus do grieve when their loved ones die. Most Muslims are not jihadis. But ideas influence enough members of a society for societies to exhibit the distinctive imprint of those ideas.

So, yes, even non-Christians can benefit from reading Lee Strobel's "The Case for Heaven: A Journalist Investigates Evidence for Life After Death." In this reader-friendly but still deep book, Strobel works to align traditional Christian beliefs about death with research into consciousness, secular philosophy and ethics, and near death experiences.

Strobel begins with the question of consciousness, a phenomenon that science cannot fully explain. The brain is not consciousness, emphasizes Strobel's interview subject, Dr. Sharon Dirckx, who has a PhD in brain imaging from the University of Cambridge and is the author of "Am I Just My Brain?" If one believes that the brain alone accounts for consciousness, near death experiences must be dismissed as hallucinations or fabrications. A non-functioning brain cannot record accurate accounts of what occurred, for example, in a hospital room after a patient has died. And peer-reviewed research insists that NDEs, or near death experiences, include just such accounts.

Descriptions of what sound like NDEs go back thousands of years. NDEs gained popular attention in the 1970s, with the publication of books like 1975's "Life after Life" by Raymond Moody. NDEs typically involve a person near death, or perhaps already apparently dead, who goes through some or all of the following: leaving the body, observing one's own body and realizing one is dead, encountering deceased loved ones, approaching a bright light that conveys love and knowledge, undergoing a life review of positive and negative life events, seeing a heavenly landscape, encountering a border one cannot cross, and returning to the body.

In response to those who dismiss NDEs as hallucinations the body produces at the moment of death, Strobel cites published, peer-reviewed research into accounts of blind persons who can see during their NDE, and who report accurate descriptions of their surroundings. One NDE involves an experiencer who reported a sticker on the top side of a ceiling fan blade, a sticker not visible from below. Another experiencer reported a sneaker she'd seen on a window ledge. An investigator checked and found the shoe as described. There are other accounts of experiencers reporting accurate information gathered while they were dead or near death.

Perhaps even more convincing than experiencers' knowledge of material inaccessible to a "dead" brain, or even merely someone with their eyes closed, is how NDEs change people. Howard Storm, for example, by his own description, was an abusive person and an atheist. After, as he reports, he was sent to Hell, he quit his academic career and became a Christian minister. Ben B., a suicide, had tortured birds and other animals. He was, he reports, sent to Hell. Even this wretch encountered a being of love and compassion who tried to teach him the error of his ways. Since the NDE, Ben B. has tried to change his life for the better; he reports that he has gone years without hospitalizations or further suicide attempts. Research suggests that hellish NDEs often result in life changes for the experiencer.

NDE researchers claim that NDEs have similar features cross-culturally. Before NDEs became a subject of popular conversation, researchers note, people who had never heard of NDEs independently reported similar narratives. The similarity of NDEs from person to person and place to place suggests that some similar process is occurring, independently of cultural influences. Either this is a universal bodily response to death, or these are actual accounts of what happens when humans, from any culture or religion, die.

Strobel argues that NDE features support Christian concepts of death. Strobel acknowledges that experiencers may interpret their NDE differently depending on their culture, but that features that support Christian theology are not limited to NDEs experienced by Christians. Similarities between NDEs and Christian belief include the following: NDEs suggest that there is life after death; experiencers report persistence of their mortal personality, which suggests survival of individuality; the dead encounter those they knew in life and converse with them; previously incomprehensible life episodes are explained; life's pains fade to insignificance; experiencers encounter a unique, omnipotent, omniscient, all-loving God; that God is personal, and has a very intimate relationship with the experiencer, and addresses the experiencer with the focused intimacy of a loving parent or sibling; that God is light, knowledge, and love; experiencers visit an overwhelmingly pleasant place, suggestive of Heaven. The life review supports the Christian idea of love as the highest good and harming others as a moral wrong, and death as a time of judgment. In life reviews, worldly success means nothing. How we treat "the least of these" is as important as how we treat titled personages. Experiencers report that their experience is more real than life on earth, and life on earth is a testing ground and school to prepare one for eternity. Negative NDEs support the Christian concept of Hell as a place of punishment for bad behavior. These features, taken as a whole, do not comport with Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic, or Atheist views of the afterlife. Judaism "is famously ambiguous" about what occurs after death, and so no real comparison can be made here.

Anita Moorjani's bestseller, "Dying To Be Me: My Journey from Cancer, to Near Death, to True Healing," expresses Hindu-influenced and relativistic New Age views. "There's no separation between you and me or Mother Teresa or Hitler," she has said, and there is no judgment in the afterlife. We are all gods, she says, and we create our own realities, including death by cancer. Again, I suspect that Strobel would say that the features of Moorjani's NDE do not contradict Christian theology, but her interpretation of those features do. For example, Moorjani reports encountering her deceased father and friend during her NDE, and she reports that she immediately recognized both. They were not, in short, nameless, formless, droplets of water merged with the sea of Brahman. Moorjani reports love as the most important force in the universe. An emphasis on love is more typical of Christianity than Hinduism.

Strobel asked theologians whether or not there will be animals in Heaven. It's perfectly reasonable for a Christian to assume that there will be; there were animals in the Garden of Eden, and the Bible speaks, in Isaiah 11, of animals in a redeemed world.

The wolf will live with the lamb,

the leopard will lie down with the goat,

the calf and the lion and the yearling together;

and a little child will lead them.

The cow will feed with the bear,

their young will lie down together,

and the lion will eat straw like the ox.

The infant will play near the cobra’s den,

and the young child will put its hand into the viper’s nest.

They will neither harm nor destroy

on all my holy mountain,

for the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the Lord

as the waters cover the sea.

Psalm 36:6 reports, "You preserve man and beast." God expresses his love and concern for animals, for example in Job 39 and Matthew 10:29. Romans 8:22 says that "all creation groans" for salvation. NDE accounts certainly include animal encounters. Michael S. reports, "I saw my deceased dog from my childhood … I remember exclaiming her name at the top of my lungs as I saw her bounding towards me. It was overwhelmingly wonderful … It was as if she had never died and she had always been waiting for me to wake up from my nap in the grass."

"Everybody knows" that Christians believe that members of their congregation are going to Heaven, and everyone else is going to Hell. As usual, what "everybody knows" is true is incorrect. There are a variety of Biblically supportable understandings of who goes to Heaven, who goes to Hell, and for how long.

Purgatory is a doctrine associated with Catholicism, but even some Protestants believe in a place that is neither Heaven nor Hell, where imperfect people can be perfected, through purgation, before entering Heaven. Believers in Purgatory, as Strobel points out, can cite Biblical verses and church traditions for this belief. Surprisingly, CS Lewis, probably the most famous Protestant author of the past century, believed in Purgatory.

The eternal suffering of the damned is often assumed to be a universal Christian belief. It is not, and it never has been. There are other beliefs, and Strobel treats a couple of them, annihilationism and universal salvation. In annihilationism, the damned are simply erased, possibly immediately, and possibly after some time in Hell. Jehovah's Witnesses are annihilationists.

Believers in Hell debate whether its flames are metaphorical or literal. Others define Hell as the absence of God, a place unbelievers have chosen and created for themselves. Strobel cites a terrifying, 1960 "Twilight Zone" episode, "A Nice Place to Visit." Criminal Rocky Valentine is shot and killed. He is sent to what he thinks is Heaven, because he has everything he has ever wanted: women, riches, luxury. He soon finds that these don't satisfy. When he reports his misery to Sebastian Cabot, a genial figure in white he had assumed was his guardian angel, Cabot cackles diabolically. Valentine finally realizes he is in the Hell of his own creation.

There are now, and there have been since Christianity's beginnings, Christians who believe in universal salvation. In this concept, the damned suffer in Hell for as long as it takes for them to repent and accept God. Not a few NDEs mention just such a scenario. The aforementioned Howard Storm first went to Hell. After his torment, he began to sing "Jesus loves me, this I know," and, he reports, Jesus rescued him from Hell. He changed his life completely after he was revived. Ben B.'s NDE included his encounter with a man who had sexually abused him when he, Ben, was only a child. The abuser had been stabbed to death in prison. When Ben B. encountered his abuser, the abuser begged for forgiveness and deliverance from Hell. A "booming voice" said to Ben B., "You can’t help him; he is where he needs to be. He has hurt children, he has burnt bridges, he has manipulated others, and he will remain here for eternity until the day he can accept the love, and light."

One of the best reviewed theological tomes of the past few years is Dr. David Bentley Hart's "That All Shall Be Saved: Heaven, Hell, and Universal Salvation." In that book, Hart insists, "The whole substance of Christian faith is the conviction that another has already and decisively gone down into that abyss for us, to set all the prisoners free, even from the chains of their own hatred and despair; and hence the love that has made all of us who we are, and that will continue throughout eternity to do so, cannot ultimately be rejected by anyone." Martin Luther, who famously condemned those he assessed as sinners in very harsh language, made statements that some interpret as reflecting a belief in universal salvation, including, "God forbid that I should limit the time of acquiring faith to the present life. In the depth of the Divine mercy, there may be an opportunity to win it in the future."

The concept of eternal damnation in Hell, the annihilationist concept, the Purgatory concept, and the universal salvation concept are all supported, by their adherents, with Biblical verses and references to early church fathers who advanced one position or another. Strobel clearly supports the first concept, but he gives a hearing to, and plenty of footnotes for, all the others.

In closing, Strobel quotes CS Lewis. "If you read history, you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were just those who thought most of the next." Those world-changing Christians had their eyes on the prize. Given the impact of Western Civilization, one need not be a Christian, or any kind of person of faith, to want to understand how Christians understand death, a key part of life. For those wanting to understand Christian concepts of death, Lee Strobel's "The Case for Heaven" achieves the admirable feat of being both an easy read and an intriguing entrée into weighty, and highly influential, theological concepts.


Danusha Goska is the author of God through Binoculars: A Hitchhiker at a Monastery.



TOPICS: Current Events; History; Religion & Culture; Religion & Science
KEYWORDS: death; heaven; leestrobel
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1 posted on 03/05/2022 9:46:27 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

BFL


2 posted on 03/05/2022 10:07:47 PM PST by fidelis (Ecce Crucem Domi/i><p>! Fugite partes adversae! Vicit Leo de tribu Juda, Radix David! Alleluia! )
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To: SeekAndFind

Thanks for the post.


3 posted on 03/05/2022 10:18:09 PM PST by Inyo-Mono
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To: SeekAndFind

I am pretty sure I will die.

Certainly it is possible I will be virtualized, or even reincarnated

But certainly a random reporter got it right.


4 posted on 03/05/2022 10:26:50 PM PST by algore
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To: SeekAndFind
One NDE involves an experiencer who reported a sticker on the top side of a ceiling fan blade, a sticker not visible from below. Another experiencer reported a sneaker she'd seen on a window ledge. An investigator checked and found the shoe as described. There are other accounts of experiencers reporting accurate information gathered while they were dead or near death.

And there are no doubt also many, many more instances of experiencers providing inaccurate information or ludicrous narratives about the supposed afterlife.

"...and then I was led into a giant hall, and was introduced to the Ruler of the Universe. And it was BOZO THE CLOWN!"

But we aren't told about those accounts... those accounts don't make it into the Sunday supplements... because they don't support the established narratives / don't help sell newspapers / don't make good click-bait.

Regards,

5 posted on 03/05/2022 10:36:58 PM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: SeekAndFind

India is not happy with those 200M untouchables converting to Christanity. I have to conclude it is the same with the Jewish faithful watching Christians try to take away “their God” by way of Jesus.

Fascinating.


6 posted on 03/05/2022 11:07:54 PM PST by Jumper
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To: spirited irish

ping


7 posted on 03/05/2022 11:45:19 PM PST by spirited irish ( )
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To: SeekAndFind

I was excited to buy this book because I liked the “Case For Christ” so much. This one was very disappointing. Just not enough evidence. Instead lots of opinions from theologians and philosophers and a lot of scripture.


8 posted on 03/06/2022 12:03:25 AM PST by Beernoser
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To: SeekAndFind

This is a relatively broad based comprehensive examination of death and Heaven. It covers many perspectives with little judgement. It’s pretty good.

I’ve had my own NDE in the late 1980’s, crossed over into Heaven, and returned to this physical body, RELUCTANTLY. (reluctantly is an understatement).

First, allow me to say that as a result of that experience, I am a Christian who accepts Jesus as my Savior and accept the New Testament Bible as the inspired word of God. However, much of it is misunderstood and misinterpreted.

As a result of 30+ years of study and continued experiences, I am also a Hindu, a Buddhist, a Moslem, and see the truth in most religions.

Religion(s) are merely theories and philosophies of the anatomy and physiology of the human soul and how it interacts with its environment. They are for the most part correct, but incomplete.

I came back from Heaven with a very unusual ability. Consciousness itself and the stored memories in the souls of other people are physical to my perception. I read people’s souls in detail. I might add that this is an awareness, but not a judgement.

Thus, I physically observe the anatomy and physiology of the human soul and understand the religions based upon direct observation. They are all teaching how to help your soul grow.

I was a university professor and business executive when I died. The experience was so profound that there has not been a day since that I have not desired, often begging in tears for God to allow me to return to His full Love. It truly is bliss beyond words of description and more addictive than any drug could possible be.

I left my teaching position at the university, picked up a degree in psychology (which is pretty much worthless) and went on to study neuroscience for the last twenty years.

Most of the people mentioned in the article relating to NDE’s I know personally and many I consider friends.

The soul has a very complex anatomy and physiology, even more complex than the physical body it creates. It has two aspects of consciousness at its lowest level, masculine and feminine, that spin in opposite directions. Memories are stored in the soul at the intersection of the two aspects of consciousness as holograms in reverse sequence going outward from the physical body.

If I walk about fifteen feet from a person and reach out, I am touching the stored memories of conception. As I walk toward the person, next are the memories of the experiences while in their mother’s womb. Then early childhood, then teen memories and so on through current time.

These are the same stored memories in the soul that are experienced as a life review when a person dies. This perception is caused by a person’s conscious awareness expanding outward through these same memories that are physical to me. It’s also the experience generating the phrase “My life passed before my eyes.”

I define “sin” as any memory that creates an obstacle to Love in a person’s soul. Love is the glue that holds the soul together and without it the soul has difficulty growing.

When Jesus said “Love God”, He was telling people to strive to tune their consciousness to the highest frequency at all times.

I define “God” as any level of consciousness that exists above the level I am at. This definition is used to maintain humility as in actual experience, everyone becomes aware that they become “One with Our Father” as Jesus stated. That is Heaven.

There are many levels of consciousness, each with its own frequency and reality. Jesus is here right now. We exist in Him. All we need to do is tune our consciousness to His frequency. The same is true of the higher levels of Heaven. Read John 14 where Jesus explains that He is in the Father and the Father is in Him. And further down He states that if He is in us (communion), the The Father that is in Him is also in us. This is 100% accurate and it is all physical and material. It just exists at frequencies of consciousness above the channel we are tuned to.

People on earth belong to the “Flat Consciousness Society.” They think that this channel and reality is the only one. They are stuck. Meditation and prayer, along with accepting the Holy Spirit ( which is also physical. I see it as a golden swirling Light of higher consciousness) assist us in removing the obstacles to Love in our soul (sin), that act as anchors and/or ballast to hold us from changing frequencies and therefore channels.

Our perception of reality is a function of the frequency of consciousness from which we view it.

The goal in life in these physical bodies is transcendence. This is where we raise our consciousness frequency to a level that we begin to perceive directly with our consciousness beyond our physical bodies. This is the gamma frequency on EEG’s. This is the born again experience as we begin to explore a whole new reality, similar to what happened at birth.

Death is merely the end of a school year for the soul. The soul is eternal.

My explanations merely scratch the surface of how the soul functions.

PS. For the scientists, like me, I needed proof of what I was perceiving. I found that if I have a person close their eyes, I say nothing, I don’t touch the person’s body, and no taste or smell, I am bypassing all the bodily senses and thus the person’s critical mind as I touch a physical stored memory in a person’s soul many feet from their physical body. Doing this physically moves the person’s body as though I am shoving or pulling them. Trauma often knocks the person off their feet when I merely touch it far from their physical body. These are obstacles to Love in a person’s soul.

If I grab hold of the obstacle to Love and pull it, the person comes toward me like I have a rope tied to them. I then ask them if they desire to forgive the person and themselves, and if they say YES, they fly backward like the rope pulling them forward broke.

PTSD is relatively easy to resolve by healing the stored memory in a person’s soul.

🙏🙏🙏


9 posted on 03/06/2022 12:52:34 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: alexander_busek

When you exit your physical and the profound Light and Love shining down from Heaven touches your soul, you could care less about a sticker on a fan blade.


10 posted on 03/06/2022 1:01:03 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: alexander_busek

A friend of mine is a cardiologist in Denmark. He’s old, and was practicing medicine before the paddles and resuscitation techniques were developed.

In the 1990’s, many of his patients who were resuscitated told him about experiences after they left their physical bodies, while they were dead.

He began a study, interviewing a large sample of resuscitated cardiology patients and found that about 18% of them recalled such an experience.

This study was published in the medical journal Lancet in 2001.

His name is Pim van Lommel.


11 posted on 03/06/2022 1:08:19 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: SeekAndFind

Per the article:

“Anita Moorjani’s bestseller, “Dying To Be Me: My Journey from Cancer, to Near Death, to True Healing,””

I’ve known Anita for many years.

She was an inpatient in a hospital hospice and died of cancer, went to Heaven, and came back cured.

She is of Indian heritage and when she was young, her parents arranged a marriage for her. At the last minute, just before the wedding, she ran away and refused to marry the man bringing great shame to her parents in the Indian community.

While in Heaven, she met her father who had died and he forgave her for what she had done. He explained that he now understood why she did it.

This removed the guilt she was carrying. Consequently, with no guilt, she no longer needed to punish herself through suppression of her immune system. She had no need for the cancer.

The guilt created a huge obstacle to Love in her soul. Guilt is a low frequency heavy consciousness thought. (Sin)

Just as Perfect Love casts out fear, another low frequency dense thought, it casts out guilt, anger,.. ( basically all the things Jesus taught us to heal).

Placing a low frequency thought in the high frequency of Heaven is like placing a dense object in the high frequency of a microwave. It heats up, catches on fire and is transmuted. This is also how/why prayer heals.

This is why Jesus said He is baptizing with fire.

This is why a prayerful blessing to an evil person is like placing hot coals upon their head.

hell is the perception of reality a soul experiences if they hold onto sin and try to approach the high frequency of Heaven. It is a real process.

If I watch a very devout person pray, I see the Light from above connecting to them. If they continue, it radiates from them like a sun shining. If they are radiating and a low frequency consciousness approaches, it looks similar to when a moth flew into one of those old electric bug zapper lights. The fire flares up, smoke and even smell results during the transmutation. This is also the basis for the ring of fire around the Hindu statue of Shiva. (Its actually a sphere as it radiates in all directions.)

This is how Jesus had power over evil spirits as the low frequency consciousness that made them evil could not exist in His high frequency radiating consciousness.

This is exactly what flows through me when I do exorcisms or spirit releasement work. It’s what actually does the work, not me.


12 posted on 03/06/2022 1:39:21 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: tired&retired

Thank you for your very interesting posts. “And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.”

I have a 20-something daughter that is going through a lot. She has had troubles for a long time now, and things are getting worse. At least she knows that we love her, in spite of our differences.

The part I have a hard time with is “Love your enemies”. Especially when I see what they are doing to my daughter.


13 posted on 03/06/2022 1:55:22 AM PST by 21twelve (Ever Vigilant. Never Fearful.)
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To: 21twelve

I hear you and resemble that remark.

I do it with higher understanding. Every human has a spark of God that created their soul. That is the sparkle you see in a child’s eyes. I can always love that no matter how deep it is buried or hidden.

That goodness is influenced by evil. Love the child always. But not the behavior.

We discipline a two year old throwing a temper tantrum out of Love for the child. Not anger. It’s sometimes a tough Love to help them be better adults.


14 posted on 03/06/2022 2:11:36 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: 21twelve

I’ve often wondered, “Was Jesus angry when He flipped over the money changers tables or just doing what was necessary to get the desired change in behavior?”


15 posted on 03/06/2022 2:13:33 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: tired&retired
Just thinking out loud here, but isn't anger just amplified frustration (i.e., not necessarily hatred).

The energy of anger (amplified frustration) can be managed and channeled into productive behavior.

16 posted on 03/06/2022 2:24:15 AM PST by RoosterRedux
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To: RoosterRedux

I would place them as different levels of intensity of a similar emotion.

Kind of like desire and greed.

But I always reserve the right to be wrong!


17 posted on 03/06/2022 2:26:28 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: RoosterRedux

Sometimes the pain of being a victim is externalized as anger as a person takes their power over their will back.

This is good as we must own our emotions to change them. As a victim, someone else is holding our power and we have no authority to change.


18 posted on 03/06/2022 2:29:58 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings )
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To: tired&retired
Very true. I tend to get angry with myself and that leads to a change in behavior.

Anger at others is misdirected unless you have some power over their behavior (i.e., as a leader...and even then the change has to be inside yourself as to how you are managing them).

19 posted on 03/06/2022 2:34:17 AM PST by RoosterRedux
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To: tired&retired
Here's the link to the article you reference:

https://pimvanlommel.nl/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/NDE-NYAS-Experience-Self-article.pdf

Here the gist of the article:

Our study found that 282 patients (82%) had no recollection of the period of their unconsciousness, whereas 62 patients—18% of the 344 patients—reported an NDE. Of these 62 patients with memories, 21 patients (6%) had some recollection; having experienced only some elements, they had a superficial NDE with a low score. Forty-one patients (12%) reported a core experience: 18 patients had a moderately deep NDE, 17 patients reported a deep NDE, and 6 patients reported a very deep NDE.

Summa summarum: The overwhelming majority of people who undergo "clinical death" experience nothing (or at least have absolutely no recollection of any sort of NDE). And of those who do have some sort of NDE, about a third report only a "superficial" experience.

Further, other studies show that many people who are in no way near death (who are, e.g., merely unconscious for a short time or who are undergoing anaesthesia for a banal surgical operation) also report the EXACT SAME sort of experiences.

We are therefore justified in filing these NDE's together with Bigfoot sightings and the accounts of people who report having had sex with aliens.

Nothing-burger!

Regards,

20 posted on 03/06/2022 2:34:35 AM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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