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God and Destiny: Roger's Questions (Read 27126 times)
freebird
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #15 - Feb 15th, 2005 at 1:55am
 
Quote:
Freebird,

Your questions here are so profound and important that I must weigh them carefully before responding.  A new post might be advisable.  But let me make a suggestion right now.  I go on long walks of 7.2 miles about 5 days a week.  I will designate a certain section of this journey the Freebird section and devote it to prayer for your needs.  Would you mind detailing your afflictions in a private message?  I ask this because, if there's one thing I've learned about prayer, it's the importance of engaging the imagination.  Jesus taught how to do this, but that's another story.  The more concretely I can imagine your need the easier it is to pray with believing faith.  In your private message, let me know what the doctors have told you to grant or deny you hope.


I am very appreciative of your willingness to pray for me.  Smiley  At this point, I am in a mode of living each day at a time and trying to serve the Lord as much as possible while I still can, with great fear of what the future holds in my life.  At least I no longer have the fear of eternal hell which I used to have as a fundamentalist.  I will send you a private message detailing my situation.

Thank you,
Freebird
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Lilforestmusic
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #16 - Feb 15th, 2005 at 6:45am
 
While we're on the subject..I just wanted to share an experience or a few...First I would like to add that I am still on a journey to find God. But reading this has reminded me of certain..I don't know..I call coincidence. I'm not sure how to start, i'm just going to write it.  I became aware of myself at about the age of two. I remember that day clearly. I climbed out of my crib and it was my first taste of my reality and of BEING who I was, am, and always will be.  Does this make sense? Not sure where i'm going here, but I will continue..Anyway..at about the age of 5 or 6..I remember that my mom had me say a little prayer each night before I went to bed. One night I remember doing my cute little thing..on my knees, against the bed with my head down and hands together. I remember saying a prayer and I got so overwhelmed with emotion one night and said something like  "God, please I can't lose you THIS TIME. I will try my best to not forget you. Please don't forget me."  Anyway, this has always stayed with me, all of my life. There is something within me that reminds me of this prayer I said. And here I am today at the age of 31, still searching.lol  In high school, a close friend of mine asked if I would like to go to an all girl/religious private school to just check out for a day.  If we liked it, we could just leave the regular high school we were attending, and attend there instead. So I went with her mom and her to check it out. I was walking into classes that were of interest to me. I walked into the choir class. The teacher asked me to take a seat and join in singing hyms with the other students. I wasn't really religious, but I loved to sing. So I took a seat next to a very nice girl.  During a break..the girl said that she remembered me. Especially because of my name. It is unique. Then she went ahead and introduced herself. I was shocked. Because I also remembered her! When we were children we met at a  summer camp from WAY across the country. Which was also her home town.  Now, the reason this was strange..was because I was always, I guess I could say, looking for signs from God.  This girl knew so much about the bible when we were children. It was a regular summer camp for gymnastics, but she would preach to me and others all of the time. She was like a little adult in a childs body.  And here we were several years later, sitting right next to each other, hundreds of miles away in, a "religious" school. Coincidence??  I'm not sure.. Next experience..About 7 years ago, I was going through a painful experience and found myself needing God in my life. It was so frustrating. So yes, I yelled at him saying to show himself. I was just an emotional wreck. I was looking everywhere on the internet. I ran across one site... I can't remember the mans name. But he claimed he found Noahs Ark..so I read it..he also claimed that during this search he saw a man which appeared to be Jesus. Yes, I'm still skeptical of this story he told..but anyway...as I was sobbing by reading this story and having endless nights crying to a God that  I wasn't even sure was there..I heard this loud shouting from below my apartment building across the street.  It was a man with a big sign across his chest saying "God loves you." So the timing of the event was weird, and that also, in all the years that my friends had lived in that small town, they had never witnessed someone standing outside, shouting gospel. Is this another  coinsidence??
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Roger B
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #17 - Feb 15th, 2005 at 9:58am
 
Don-

I too am struck by the experiences you had.  I read your post last evening and must have lain awake for a couple of hours mulling all of this over in my mind.

There are really two levels of "miracles" represented by your stories.  First, the experience itself of receiving PUL.  This is a term that is sometimes used too loosely in my opinion, but your eloquent account of how it felt moved me immensely.  It also confirms for me what I have always thought....PUL is not a commodity that people can just "send" to one another like a can of beans.  It is a deeply profound, totally inexpicable experience that can only originate from God....or perhaps IS God Himself.

But the second level of the miracle is how preciously rare it is.  The very fact that you were chosen to receive it, and the fact that it turned your entire life around, is awesome.  Distinguished clergymen and women the world over who devote their life, sometimes living in hardship and facing possible death in order to serve others in need.....what % do you suppose received the gift given to you? 

And therein lies the dilemma that kept me awake last night.  Why is it so rare??  Considering the life changing aspects of it, wouldn't you suppose God would want others to experience it also?  What would be the downside if such a gift were given more freely?  I have no answers, and am hoping you might.

In another post you said "Since PUL is the most important force that expedites the scheme, directing PUL to the Creator can deepen one's bond with "Him."   Put differently, if God wanted PUL to be a key force to fulfil "His" grand scheme, why would He not desire PUL to be directed to "Him" as well?" 

Two questions here- are we able to replicate the level and intensity and purity of PUL that you received from God?  Or if not, would something short of that suffice?  And if we can't feel even affection, how do we instill such an emotion toward a God that some of us simply do not know?

And you had said when you had that experience, you were feeling empty and disillusioned.  So does that mean that God can send PUL to someone who hasn't reciprocated?  I would guess God did that to you because He wanted to affect the rest of your life.  But then why wouldn't He want to do the same for the untold thousands or millions who also are at personal crossroads in their life and for whom such an experience would literally be life changing?

Also the story of Leonard and his encounter with his deceased son.....once again, the same problem arises.  That was a wonderful experience for Leonard, but why is it so damn rare??  We all, sooner or later, will grieve a loved one's passing, including those who had tragic and senseless deaths (senseless at least to the survivors).  How about all of the parents of young men killed in Iraq?   How marvelous a blessing if their sons could just for a moment return to them?  Yet it doesn't seem to happen. 

You know, I have less trouble believing these accounts than I do in figuring out why they are so incredibly far and few between. 

Come on Don, give us some pearls here.  Or if not at least send some sleeping pills my way.

Along these same lines, I had asked you a while ago how the demons pick and choose their victims.  Since young people are especially vulnerable to possession, why isn't that something that is more widespread? 

Do you suppose these experiences, from the most beautiful to the most ugly, have a common reason as to why they are so rare?

Last, do you still preach? Do you have a church?  What is the denomination?

Thank you for your wonderful stories of love and compassion.

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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #18 - Feb 16th, 2005 at 1:55pm
 
Roger,

I won't forget your new questions, but will take time to cogitate my replies.  For now, I want to share a story that might help you fulifil your longing.
I sense that your quest is humble enough and open enough to make you wonderfully vulnerable to a similar experience.  I preface the story with these remarks.  I've claimed that almost everyone who reads "Hostage to the Devil" will be convinced of the reality of the demonic.  I say this not merely because of the chilling evidence amassed by Malachi Martin, but also because the reader will actually begin to feel the energy of evil.  I believe that the same effect sometimes occurs in the opposite direction.  That is, if you read examples of what it feels like to be filled or baptized with the Holy Spirit, you open yourself up to the prospect of receiving your own experience, though not all these encounters are alike.   You might ask, "But I lack the basic Christian convictions that might attract the Spirit to me."  Ah, but that can be an advantage.  There are many levels of experiencing God's presence.  The most powerful level is experienced when God decides to stalk you after your long frustrating period of stalking Him.  Your lack of expectation makes the experience all the more convincing when it happens. 

My story is about Charles Finney's conversion.  Finney (1792-1875) is arguably the most influential American preacher who ever lived.  His preaching sparked what historians call "The Second Great Awakening," in which many thousands were converted, but, more significantly, in which many of the future leaders of American Christian denominations were converted.  It is often asked why the USA is more religious than European nations.  Finney is a major part of the answer.

Finney was a lawyer who delighted in poking holes in Christian answers to life's basic questions.  A great debater, he overwhelmed many Christians with his clever arguments.  But he made one fatal mistake.  He maintained an open-minded spiritual quest, which made him vulnerable to divine ambush.  That ambush gave him an experience which, much to my amazement, is virtually identical to my own.  Compare the two reports and you will see what I mean.  Here then in his own words is part of what happened to Finney:

"Without any expectation of it, without ever having the thought in my mind that there was any such thing for me, without any recollection that I had ever heard the thing mentioned by any person in the world, the Holy Spirit descended on me in a manner that seemed to go through me, body and soul.  I could feel the impression like a wave of electricity.  going through and through me. . .It seemed like the breath of God.  I can recall distincty that it seemed to fan me like immense wings.  No words can express the wonderful love that was shed abroad in my heart.  I wept aloud with joy and love. . .I literally bellowed out the unutterable gushings of my heart.  These waves came over me and over me and over me, one after another until...I cried out, `I shall die if these waves continue to pass over me.'  I said, `Lord, I cannot bear it any more.'  Yet I had no fear of death
(Charles Finney, "Autobiography," p. 22)."
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #19 - Feb 16th, 2005 at 8:42pm
 
We've discussed the mystery of why some live and others die during major catastrophes.   I cited the E. Stanley Jones premonition about the Indian plane crash as an intriguing case in point.  In my ensuing post, I'd like to discuss the Oklahoma City bombing from the same perspective.   Why?   Because Tim McVeigh grew up down the street from me and his Dad lives a few blocks away.

Tim is the most prolific American mass murderer in U.S. history (168 killed).   When his execution was scheduled, the media set up camp by his Dad's house and hounded his acquaintances and school teachers for "dirt" on Tim.   Interestingly, the cooperation of the locals was minimal.    Tim had to come to terms with his parents' divorce.   In his teens he served as an altar boy at a nearby Catholic church.  I know a woman whose sister dated him.  She said Tim was a very nice and sweet young man.   He worked at the local Burger King.  His teachers remember him fondly.   No one around here condones his atrocity.  But they didn't want to desecrate the reputation of the wonderful young man they used to know.  He was somehow wooed by evil during his service in Desert Storm.  He  blamed the government for the fiery cult deaths at David Koresh's compound.    But that hardly solves the mystery of why he did what he did.

Visions from other worlds surrounded this disaster. The relevant testimonials are recorded in Robin Jones's book "Where was God at 9:02 A.M.?"  Barbara Rickner viewed the city skyline from a distance in her car.   She reported: "A huge cloud rested over the city skyline...that cloud was filled with hundred of angels' wings."  A 6-year-old girl on a swing set claimed, "An angel in the sky told me they were coming for the babies."  Most of the children in the Murrah building's daycare center were killed.  From her car Patrice Hutchinson saw the spirits of souls released from the blast.  Even agnostics reported a powerful sense of God's Spirit at the blast site.   

Valerie Koelsch's fate warrants special mention.  Val often referred to her 3 families: her natural family, her church family, and her Credit Union family in the Murrah Building.  Her mother, Rosemary, was away in Dallas when she heard about the bombing.  Her flight home was delayed by a thunderstorm.  While seething with frustration, she suddenly had a waking vision of  a glowing, radiant Valerie in the airport.  Val twice said, "I'm all right, Mom."  A few days later, Val's crushed body was retrieved from a stack of collapsed floors.      

But what I really want to discuss are the cases that pose the question: why did some live, while others died?  It is tempting to say that survival was totally random and that no divine providence operated in this terrible catastrophe.  In my next post, I will share 3 incidents that might challenge this assumption in the same way that the E. Stanley Jones case does.  I'll share the incidents and let readers interpret them as they wish.
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #20 - Feb 16th, 2005 at 11:15pm
 
(1) Tate Wise was to try a case across from the Murrah building.  His father, Robert, began each day with an hour of prayer, part of which was devoted to the protection of each of his 4 grown children.  30 seconds before the Oklahoma City blast, Tate was looking out the window surveying the business district.   Around the time his Dad prayed for him, he felt an impulse to move away from the window.  The explosion shattered the window, but Tate was spared.  Unfortunately, the roof fell in on his secretary.  She might have benefited from the prayers of Tate's Dad!   Her tragedy is depressing, but I'm still impressed by the synchronicity of Tate's impulse and his Dad's prayers on his behalf.

(2) First United Methodist Church was just around the corner from the Murrah building.   Pastor Nick Harris was going to tape 4 radio broadcasts that Wednesday morning in the sanctuary; so he arrived at 7 AM to review his material.  Gus Alfonzo, his sound engineer, was going to be there at 8:30 AM and he was never late or absent.   Yet at 8:50 he called to say, "I forgot!"   So Nick went downstairs.  The sanctuary where he and Gus would have been was reduced to a horrible tangle of broken glass, dislodged bricks, and wooden beams.   Nick's associate pastor, just happened to be away in Enid that morning.   The double window in his office, frame and all, blew in and slammed across his desk and chair.   A sales rep had to cancel his appointment that morning.   It is at least interesting that 4 unusal events prevented 4 people from being in the danger zone where they would otherwise have been at  the moment of the blast.   

(3) Of course, not that all the Christians were spared!   Tom Hawthorne and Ken Harvey were Christian soul mates.   They often spent hours discussing the Bible.  On the Tuesday before the explosion, Tom hurt himself falling off his rickety ladder while pruning branches.  Tom asked Ken to go with him on Wednesday to the social security office in the Murrah building.   Tom, a union official, was going to try to help a man with glaucoma qualify for assistance.  Afterwards, he wanted Ken to bring his ladder and help him finish the pruning.  Later that night, Tom told Ken's answering machine, "Hope your ladder works.  See you tomorrow."  At 7:10 the next morning Ken called and offered to to do the driving.  Tom replied, "No, I'll come and pick you up at 8:30."    Incredibly, after twice reminding Ken to be ready, Tom never showed up!  5 days later, rescuers retrieved Tom's body from the wreckage.  In my view, Tom's bizarre amnesia after his 2 reminders to Ken is more than coincidental and reminds me of Gus's amnesia about his duties at the UMC church.

Providence may be at work in all 3 cases, though I'm most impressed with (3).  But what about those children in the daycare center?  Ugh!  What do you think?
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #21 - Feb 19th, 2005 at 5:35pm
 
THE BEST EXAMPLE OF SYNCHRONICITY
AND DIVINE PROVIDENCE KNOWN TO ME:

This post began with a biblical justification for a paradoxical mystery.  On the one hand, God wants an unpredictable universe; so He created a universe in which He does not micro-manage the forces of chaos in this world.  On the other hand, God can intervene in response to our prayers and faith.  From this perspective the big question is: to what extent is God willing and able to intervene in times of disaster?  This next episode is both faith-inspiring and troubling--faith-inspiring because of the divine orchestration of life-saving events and troubling because we don't know why this sort of protection is not offered more frequently.

It was a cold Wednesday night in Beatrice, Nebraska in March of 1950.  Choir practice was scheduled for 7:30 PM at the Westside Baptist Church.  The choir director, Martha Paul, had never been late in 17 years and insisted that every choir member be there early, so that they could begin singing at 7:30 sharp.  Punctuality was particularly vital that night because it was the last practice before the annual Easter cantata.   22 people were expected: the pastor, the choir director, the pianist, a teenage  trio, and 14 choir members, including the 2 children of 1 member.   Just when practice was scheduled to start, a gas leak caused a huge explosion that blew up the whole church.  But instead of 22 casualties, this is what happened.

(1) Pastor George Norbert planned to arrive at church at 7:15.  but his young daughter, Susan, complained of a very soar throat and asked Daddy to get her a punch drink.   George told her he was in a hurry and she'd have to wait till he got home from church.   But Susan continued to demand some punch.   George finally agreed, but then Susan tripped over a throw rug and spilled the red punch all over her white pinafore dress.  George now had to respond to her cries for help and this made him late for church. 

(2-3) Martha, the choir director, had to be there 15 minutes early with her daughter, Marilyn (the pianist).  Marilyn was tired from work.  So for the first time ever, she insisted on taking a brief nap and promised to be ready on time.   Uncannily, she couldn't stay awake even after several angry arousals from her mother.   Then the electricity went out, plunging the house into darkness and ensuring that mother and daugher would be late. 

(4-6) The trio of teenage girls wanted to be at church at 7:15.  Donna was supposed to pick up Rowena and Sadie.  But Donna somehow misunderstood this and expected Sadie to pick up her and Rowena.   After a frantic phone call, Donna apologized and promised to track down her Dad to borrow his car.   This hassle made all 3 girls late.

(7-10) Ted Charles was having dinner at Margaret McKinter's with his 2 sons, whom he planned to bring to choir practice.  But despite several protests from Ted, she wouldn't stop talking and this problem made Ted and his 2 boys late.  Herb Kipf also lost track of time in his struggles to finish a letter he as writing.    So he was late too.

(11-12) Two young mothers, Mary Jones and Agnes O'Shaunessy, were both choir members.  Mary was at Agnes's house just 2 blocks from the church.  On this night, Agnes insisted on watching some of her favorite TV show, but, oddly, both women lost track of the time, and so, were both late.   

(13) Gina Hicks lived very close to the church.   Her  mother was behind in her preparations to host a church women's organization the next night and asked Gina to skip practice and help her get the house ready.  Gina protested that her help could wait till after choir practice and went for her coat.  Just then her frustrated mother became embroiled in an attempt to break up a quarrel between 2 other daughters.  Hearing the commotion, Gina changed her mind and decided to stay and help.   
[No report is availabe on why the other 9 were late for church.)

The first of the late choir members heard the huge explosion as they drew near the church and then  witnessed the resulting devastation.  They were paralyzed by the certainty that many choir members must have been killed.  To their dismay and great joy, they soon discovered that everyone was safe. 

Present at the horrific scene, was Erma Rimrock.  She approached the huddled choir and told Pastor Norbert: "Pastor, last week my brother and I purchased the old closed-down Methodist church down the street as an investment.   I want you to know that you can hold services there as long as you need to."
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Polly
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #22 - Feb 19th, 2005 at 7:46pm
 
That's all very interesting and does raise some interesting questions, but I would first ask--why did the explosion have to happen in the first place? 

I know people who worked in the World Trade Center and for some reason or another missed work that day and were spared.  One had been laid off from her job a few months before 9/11 and another had overslept and got to work late (and this person is NEVER late for anything).  So the question is, why are some people spared from tragedies and others aren't?
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Roger B
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #23 - Feb 19th, 2005 at 9:50pm
 
Don-

Somehow I can't conceive of God actually making these kinds of decisions and interventions.  Guardian angels seems to be a more likely explanation altho the same problem is presented in terms of who gets saved and who doesn't.

I posted this some time ago on Linn's website, but it fits into this discussion so I'll repeat it here.  One summer when I was about 10, a friend and I got on our bikes and rode along a rural road a couple of miles from our cottages in Canada.  We had our jars in order to collect pollywogs from a ditch alongside the road.  Very few cars used that road, and even today, many years later, there is not that much traffic.

Anyway, we got to the ditch and were busy catching the pollywogs when a small convertible pulled up and stopped on the opposite side.  A man came over and said he was a doctor, and said he should examine us to see if we were healthy or some such line.  I was to be first, and he told me to lie on my back as he proceeded to straddle me.  He told me to open my mouth so he could examine my throat.  He tried to put his fingers in my throat but I had (have) a very strong gag reflex which seemed to slow him down from doing whatever he had in mind.

Just at that point, another car came alongside his, and the lady driver stopped and called over to us, asking if everything was ok.  The man immediately jumped off me, ran across the road, jumped in his car and peeled rubber getting away.

We got on our bikes and headed back where we told our parents what happened.  They called the police and they came over to take the report.  It was at that time that my friend, in telling what he saw, told the police that the man was edging me over to where there was barbed wire strung between some fence posts, apparently trying to get my head under the wire.  I was unaware of this at the time.

I have no idea what his objective was, there was nothing sexual in what he was doing, so my only guess is that he intended to kill me for his own pleasure.

But here's the thing....we told the police about the woman who stopped, but neither one of us saw her drive away.  We saw the man take off, but the woman and her car just literally disappeared.  The road at that point was empty of other traffic and visibility was clear, so it would have been impossible for neither one of us to see her leave. 

I can halfway understand why maybe I was in too much stress to notice, but my friend who was just a few feet away from me would surely have seen her leave.  The fact that he didn't, nor did I, makes me reasonably convinced that she was an angel who appeared at the precise time to save me from what probably would have been either some sort of attack or possibly even murder within the next minute or two.

But I am perplexed as to why.  Thousands of kids are killed or attacked.  Why was I saved?  My life since then has been totally without major consequence.  I haven't accomplished anything out of the ordinary.  No inventions, no works of art, etc etc.  A wife and two kids and a Fed Govt career.  So why was I selected?  I'll probably never know, any more than the people in your story about the church or about the man who avoided the airplane crash by getting out of line at the ticket counter.

So we are left with one of at least two possibilities.  One, it's all a crapshoot.  *hit happens.  Or there is a method to all of it that is so mysterious that we can't know the answers and maybe never will.

Your own experiences of the PUL and the stigmata and other things you have recounted should convince you of the reality of the afterlife.  Maybe we need to stop trying to find proof and live our lives as best we can.  Tomorrow will take care of itself.



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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #24 - Feb 20th, 2005 at 12:42am
 
To Polly and Roger,

I've already addressed the mystery of how God "picks and chooses."   Of course, I wouldn't presume to know how in a specific case.  The disadvantage of detailed biblical discussions is that the reader sometimes can't see the forest for the trees.  So this time, let me list 7 principles that seem consistent with Scripture without getting bogged down in chapter and verse citations.  I'd be interested in knowing what you think.

(1) God has a varied lifespan and exit strategy in
     mind for each of us.
(2) God has a certain scripted events for our lives
     and will ordinarily protect us and guide us until
     we experience those events.
(3) But God wants an unpredictable universe.  So
     He does not micro-manage the effects of
     Nature's laws.   The forces of chaos can at times
     interfere with God's plans.
(4) We can choose to ignore the impulses that God
     sends us in time of danger or crisis. 
(5) God does not foreordain our choices which can
     interfere with and even alter God's plans.  For
     example, raging hormones may stifle our
     receptivity to wisdom and divine guidance and
     thus prompt women to marry the wrong men. 
(6) The Bible identifies several principles that are
     essential to an effective prayer life.  Most
     Christians give these principles little thought
     and pray as if God just needs information about
     our needs.   If meditation and prayer are the
     foundation of an intimate relationship with
     God, then one's life might be adversely affected
     by ignoring these disciplines or by failing to
     apply their divinely revealed principles.
(7) In mysterious ways our welfare is to some
     extent subject to the jurisdiction of guardian
     angels.  These angels are probably higher non-
     human intelligences, but may sometimes be
     discarnate humans.  In either case, they may
     not be infallible and their mistakes may
     occasionally lead to tragedy.   
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #25 - Feb 20th, 2005 at 1:17am
 
Roger,

I'm impressed by your report of what is probably a childhood guardian angel experience.  A real woman might not have paid attention, or if she did, might have been too scared of the man to intervene, or might have assumed, with 2 boys present, that the 3 of you were just horsing around.   And like you say, where did she come from and how did she vanish so quickly? 

I've shared my story of how an inner voice once shouted "Stop!" when I started to drive through a green light and, with my side view blocked by parked trucks, failed to notice the big rig speeding through the red light on course to cream me.  But let me share my Dad's story about his agnostic acquaintance's conversion through an encounter with a guardian angel.   

This man thought Christians were simple-minded and naive and he often bated them into arguments that he generally won.   He was an oil baron in Alberta, Canada and a good friend of the Premier of the province.  One day he was driving to a conference in a skyscraper in downtown Edmonton.  As he drove, he was musing about a recent religious debate and brashly posed this challenge to God:  "OK God, if the Christian God is real, then let someone approach me at the door of the building hosting the conference and ask, "Alms please."  He set up this condition because it was unheard of to see panhandlers in this business area. 

He forgot about his whimsical challenge as he approached the skyscraper's front door.   Suddenly, a Scotsman dressed in a kilt stopped him. looked him in the eye, and asked, "Alms please."   Our oil baron ignored this request and whizzed on by, but then quickly realized the significance of what had just happened.  Within a few seconds, he had whirled around and raced out the door.   The scotsman had vanished.  The area was open and large and the scotsman could not have raced out of sight that quickly.  Dad's friend was so impressed by this angelic response to his challenge that he became a devout Christian and shared this testimony with my father.

Don
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #26 - Feb 20th, 2005 at 11:58am
 
Don-

You caused me to consider another angle....it could have been a real woman who was compelled by the spirit world to arrive at the very moment I was in danger and was further compelled to stop and ask what was going on.  After all, this was the 1950s, a relatively innocent age, and as you say, child abuse/abduction/murder was simply not something on which people focussed.  But that doesn't explain her sudden disappearance.

As long as we're recounting stories, years ago I had a boss who was pretty much a hard bitten, cynical type who made no bones about being an agnostic if not an out and out athiest.  If anyone ever got on the wrong side of him they were toast.  Touchy feely he was not!

His wife at the time had MS and she was confined to a wheelchair, unable even to feed herself or use the bathroom.  He never spoke unkindly about his situation but on the other hand he was openly having an affair with a younger woman who worked in our office as well as fooling around with his secretary.

After working for him a few years and gradually coming into his confidence, he told me the following story.  One evening he was at home, I think in his bedroom, and suddenly he was filled with the conviction that someone was in the room with him.  His eyes were drawn to the wall near the ceiling, and he told me there appeared an outstretched hand with one of the fingers pointing at him.

He told me that it was the most beautiful hand he had even seen.  He knew no human hand could ever be so perfect.  It was breathtakingly beautiful, so much so that he said he knew instinctively that he could not bear to see the rest of the figure.  He said the sheer beauty of the hand was overwhelming, and I got the impression it was almost painful for him to look at it, and he knew that there was a message meant for him but he was unable to clearly discern it.

He agonized over its message.  He pretty much concluded it was meant to tell him to put his personal life in order and devote his life to his wife.  But he also said there wasn't anything threatening, or menacing, or reproachful about it.  The hand gradually faded, he never did see anything else (nor did he want to!).

I knew him well enough at that stage to know that he wasn't joking about this.  It was totally against his character to talk about anything relating to God or the afterlife.  He was not religious and unsympathetic to those who were.

I lost touch with him and never knew what became of his wife or his girlfriend who he (and she) claimed would marry when his wife passed away.  But his vivid description of how he was virtually paralyzed by the magnificence of the experience has stayed with me for many years.

Roger
ps- Have  you had a chance to consider my other question as to how demons choose their victims, and since children are especially vulnerable to possession, why it is that there are so few cases?

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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #27 - Feb 20th, 2005 at 8:51pm
 
Roger,

Perhaps you wonder why I create and reply to posts and questions the way I do.  I don't approach this site in my old professorial way.  I want my answers to feel prompted by the heart rather than by a mind on the defensive from surly attacks.  At times, even replies I deem rational don't feel appropriate in this settng.  At other times, I feel the need to create the kind of hysteria that my "Agenda" post generated.   I often feel that true stories, however, mystifying, are more helpful than even valid critical analysis.  

Anyway, back to your last post.  For me, spiritual and paranormal experiences that defy the preconceptions of the percipient are particularly compelling. Examples of this include: (1) the early church's reluctant admission that God's love never permanently abandons anyone after death; (2) an anti-religious Robert Monroe's repeated and  uncomfortable witness [apparently] of Christ's performance of  retrievals; (3) your agnostic ex-boss's waking vision of a heavenly being's beautiful hand.  Such experiences seem to refute Seth's claim that we create our own reality.  

You asked me how demons choose their victims.  Peck expresses the conventional wisdom on this: that we wittingly or unwittingly invite them in (e.g. through Ouija boards).   I shudder to think what might be included in the category  "unintentional invitation."   Perhaps the tendency of young children to converse with imaginary playmates makes them more vulnerable.  Stiil, I suspect this is not the whole story.  In my young cousin E's battle to ward off possession, it seems that he was just in the wrong place at the wrong time--in a car outside a house where his Dad had just performed an exorcism.

You then ask why there are so few cases of demonic possession of young children.  I don't know, but genuine cases are rare for every age group.  Malachi Martin conjectures that only about 1 of every 100 reported cases of possession are genuine.  The other 99 cases are misdiagnosed personality disorders.   Most people imagine that in Jesus' superstitious times, possession was rampant.  In fact, prior to Jesus, possession was virtually unknown in the Mediterranean world!   I mean possession by a demonic entity, not possession by a quasi-benign god or spirit.  The latter type of possession was not uncommon.  But after Jesus, Greek and Jewish exorcists show up all over the place.  Jesus had no influence on most of these exorcists.  So one wonders whether Jesus' incarnation coincides with changes in the spirit world that made the exorcism of demons a new possibility.

At the same time, I think childhood possession is more common than one might think.  When people are possessed by a discarnate human, the discarnate's memories seem to merge with and  become those of  the victim.   In my view, past life recall in young children is more likely attributable to possession.  Ian Stevenson is the most famous proponent of childhood past life recall.  Yet in his celebrated work "Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation" he repeatedly admits the possibility that his reincarnation cases are really possession cases--for good reason.  

In one of his cases, a child, Ravi Shankar, was born 6 months AFTER his 'prior personality' (6-year-old Munna) was murdered.  So Ravi was conceived 3 months prior to Munni's death.   In another case, a child Jasbirwas was over 3 1/2 when his `prior personality' (Shobha Ram) was poisoned to death.  In pro-reincarnation cultures, you would expect young children to interpret their possession memories as reincarnational memories.  Granted, though most cases of childhood past life recall stem from pro-reincarnation cultures, there are a few American cases as well.   But these American children can't be expected to come up with the abstract explanation that their minds are absorbing alien memories!  Besides, why don't we more often hear of the phenomenon of young American children going through the phase imagining past lives?    
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #28 - Feb 21st, 2005 at 8:09am
 
Don-

Ever read Michael Newton's two books?  If not I suggest you check them out.  They offer a unique perspective on our physical life and afterlife, at least to me. 

They really are the accounts of his clients who were placed into deep hypnosis.  The stories they tell tend to be quite consistent, and if nothing more, certainly make for fascinating reading.

Many of the NDE accounts say that for a split second, the person has a complete sense of knowingness about everything.  All of the mysteries fall away, but then of course the answers are forgotten once the person returns to the body.  Makes me wonder whether that will happen to us when we die.

An aside....aren't there stories about Tibetan monks who, after years of intense meditation, are able to levitate?  I say stories, since to my knowledge, this ability was never doumented.
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Re: God and Destiny: Roger's Questions
Reply #29 - Feb 22nd, 2005 at 5:56pm
 
Roger,

After years of researching the question, I'm quite confident in my skepticism about reincarnation.  But I've only superficially browsed Newton's books.  On your recommendation, I'll try to make time to give him closer scrutiny. 

Don

P.S.  Of my recent Barnes and Noble book purchases, I'm most excited about Howard Storm's "My Descent into Death."  This is a much fuller and more rewarding account than the abbreviated online version that I know you've read.  I'm particularly intrigued by the chapter entitled "The Past and the Future."   Evidently Jesus Himself shared this material which resembles both biblical visions and Robert Monroe's time travels.  I've just browsed it so far, but I'll keep you posted about its most novel and engaging claims.
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