Post by Daniel on May 18, 2015 8:08:28 GMT -5
Is the growing acceptance of both secular and "Christian" near-death experiences one of the prophesied lying signs?
May 14, 2015
The 1970s and 1980s were funny decades. The Free Love movement of the 60s gave way to Age of Aquarius, Eastern Mysticism (thanks, Beatles) and Near Death Experience movement. The 1970s for some reason was a breakthrough decade for study in NDE. For the first time the phenomenon was studied seriously. Books galore came out and the adults around me ate them up. I remember seeing Raymond Moody's Life After Life, a seminal book for the decade that broke open the study of what happens after we die. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross' study of death and the five stages of grief was another that fascinated the adults around me. Then came all the philosophical books from New Age promoting spirituality and mysticism based on "discoveries" reported from NDEs such as those from Carlos Castaneda, (A Separate Reality) and Richard Bach (Jonathan Livingston Seagull).
As a side note, adults, if you think the books you read and put on your bookshelves go unnoticed by your kids, you're crazy. Growing up and as a young adult, I was hugely impacted by the books the adults around me were reading.
As far as NDEs went, I became fascinated by the fact that all these people nearly died or did die, and came back and reported the same thing. They all talked of beauty in another place or dimension, a tunnel, the light, peace. There had to be something to it, I thought! From the vantage point of today, of course I know these to be satanic deceptions perpetrated on unsaved people deluding them into thinking they are going to "that place", "into the light" without repenting of sins or knowing Jesus.
Those 1970s NDEs are no different in their high deception-factor than are the ones from today by "Christians" like Colton Burpo (Heaven is For Real) or Alex Malarkey (The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven).
But when I was a young adult noticing all these New Age books talking about peace and light after death, it made sense to me. It was by the grace of God only that I didn't stop there and came to know the real Light and can read the only book that reports what it is really like "over there" - the Bible.
The "Christian" books 90 Minutes in Heaven, by Don Piper; Heaven is For Real, by Colton Burpo and his dad; The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven, by Alex Malarkey; 23 Minutes in Hell, by Bill Wiese; Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife, by Eben Alexander; To Heaven and Back, by Mary C. Neal, Mary K. Baker's A Divine Revelation of Heaven and other such books, exploring 'the other side' from a Christian perspective, have been enormous best-sellers. As each "Christian" NDE book has been published, they have grown in popularity...and acceptance. By the time Heaven is For Real came along people applauded the book, trusted the four-year-old's account of rainbow horses and homework in heaven, and made a movie out of it. The Burpos are considered evangelical.
There have been great inroads that the testimonies of Christians who claim to have had a personal encounter with Jesus or angels at near death have become mainstream, a path that the 1970s NDE books started, which at that time were looked upon as paranormal quackery.
continue reading
the-end-time.blogspot.ca/2015/05/is-growing-acceptance-of-both-secular.html
May 14, 2015
The 1970s and 1980s were funny decades. The Free Love movement of the 60s gave way to Age of Aquarius, Eastern Mysticism (thanks, Beatles) and Near Death Experience movement. The 1970s for some reason was a breakthrough decade for study in NDE. For the first time the phenomenon was studied seriously. Books galore came out and the adults around me ate them up. I remember seeing Raymond Moody's Life After Life, a seminal book for the decade that broke open the study of what happens after we die. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross' study of death and the five stages of grief was another that fascinated the adults around me. Then came all the philosophical books from New Age promoting spirituality and mysticism based on "discoveries" reported from NDEs such as those from Carlos Castaneda, (A Separate Reality) and Richard Bach (Jonathan Livingston Seagull).
As a side note, adults, if you think the books you read and put on your bookshelves go unnoticed by your kids, you're crazy. Growing up and as a young adult, I was hugely impacted by the books the adults around me were reading.
As far as NDEs went, I became fascinated by the fact that all these people nearly died or did die, and came back and reported the same thing. They all talked of beauty in another place or dimension, a tunnel, the light, peace. There had to be something to it, I thought! From the vantage point of today, of course I know these to be satanic deceptions perpetrated on unsaved people deluding them into thinking they are going to "that place", "into the light" without repenting of sins or knowing Jesus.
Those 1970s NDEs are no different in their high deception-factor than are the ones from today by "Christians" like Colton Burpo (Heaven is For Real) or Alex Malarkey (The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven).
But when I was a young adult noticing all these New Age books talking about peace and light after death, it made sense to me. It was by the grace of God only that I didn't stop there and came to know the real Light and can read the only book that reports what it is really like "over there" - the Bible.
The "Christian" books 90 Minutes in Heaven, by Don Piper; Heaven is For Real, by Colton Burpo and his dad; The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven, by Alex Malarkey; 23 Minutes in Hell, by Bill Wiese; Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife, by Eben Alexander; To Heaven and Back, by Mary C. Neal, Mary K. Baker's A Divine Revelation of Heaven and other such books, exploring 'the other side' from a Christian perspective, have been enormous best-sellers. As each "Christian" NDE book has been published, they have grown in popularity...and acceptance. By the time Heaven is For Real came along people applauded the book, trusted the four-year-old's account of rainbow horses and homework in heaven, and made a movie out of it. The Burpos are considered evangelical.
There have been great inroads that the testimonies of Christians who claim to have had a personal encounter with Jesus or angels at near death have become mainstream, a path that the 1970s NDE books started, which at that time were looked upon as paranormal quackery.
continue reading
the-end-time.blogspot.ca/2015/05/is-growing-acceptance-of-both-secular.html