No, I don't believe it.
Firstly, Heaven is a place that NO ONE would ever wish to leave.
Secondly, no one comes back from heaven (OR from hell) --from death, period; you only die ONCE.
Thirdly, you don't go to heaven/hell until the Judgment Day.
2007-02-03 16:19:15
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answer #1
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answered by ♡♥ sHaNu ♥♡ 4
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I don't want to watch a 14 minute video, but I have read two books about NDE ("Saved by the Light" and "Embraced by the Light") and both were fascinating. I believe that both authors of these books visited the astral plane and reported their experiences truthfully. The thing is, the astral plane is only the first level of "heaven" and duality exists, therefore there is still deception. Absolute truth does not exist until one reaches the higher spiritual planes, therefore what was reported by these authors (and likely the ones in the video) does not contain any more than their experience, which lacks absolute truth. No one reaches the TOP level of the spiritul planes and comes back to tell about it.
Edit: Curiosity got the best of me, so I watched the video. I believe these people also visited the astral plane ... not the Kingdom of Heaven.. Fascinating, nontheless! Thanks for sharing!
2007-02-03 16:20:25
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answer #2
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answered by MyPreshus 7
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Thanks for sharing this video.
Yes, near death experiences are real, and I find it interesting that one apparently experiences the pain they have caused others, especially very brutal people. It makes eternal justice really profound when one considers the punishment which will be reflected on such nasty people as cruel dictators or just abusive husbands or interrogators. Imagine feeling the pain of each and every person on whom they pronounced torture. It seems like the most exquisite justice.
In the same way that we are shown all of our actions just proves that NOTHING we ever do is done in "secret." Our own mind provides the evidence of our actions in superb detail and we will hold our ownselves accountable to condemnation or approval while the loving God looks on. If all people understood this, everyone would be much more careful about their behavior.
Near death experiences are more prevelant now because of the advances of modern medicine and were much more rare in the days of the Bible. If someone returns, he returns to the same life which hasn't actually ended, but when he finally does accept the final jouney then he would have "lived and died once."
I feel that people who scoff at such phenomenon do so because they are terrified to acknowledge that it is real and that they do not know how to deal with it.
But real it is. My dead grandfather appeared twice to my father and my other dead grandfather appeared to my mother only one week before she died.
2007-02-03 16:58:10
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answer #3
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answered by carolyn 1
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I had a near death experience during surgery 21 years ago. It was the most precious experience of my life. All of a sudden, I was standing in a field of tall, beautiful green grass, which was being gently blown by a soft breeze. The grass covered rolling hills for miles. There must have been billions of blades of grass and I knew every single one of them - and they knew me. I was welcomed home, then told that I couldn't stay, that I had to go back. It was so peaceful there and I could feel the love of God, so I didn't want to return, even though I knew I had to.
In an instant, I felt myself traveling at an incredibly high rate of speed. When I woke up in the recovery room, the entire room was bathed in a very bright golden white light, but it didn't hurt my eyes. The entire room was also saturated with the peace and the love of God. I felt like I had just traveled a vast distance, but I wasn't tired. In fact, I felt like every part of my body, down to the smallest cell, had been made new again.
That experience gave me concrete proof that heaven is real and that God is real, which is a real comfort, especially during times in my life when all hell is breaking loose.
2007-02-03 16:29:20
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answer #4
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answered by loveblue 5
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lol. Nope, I don't. They saw what they wanted to see, thought they would see, and things born out of intense stress. That does not make what they saw Heaven.
Hey... get this... I nearly died in 2004. I have a distinct memory of my long dead mother holding my hand in the hospital. Does that mean she was actually there? No of course not.
During the time when I litterally was dead for about a minute, I didn't see anything. No evidence of any god or heaven at all.
Hallucations born out of intense fear and stress do not reality make.
2007-02-03 16:21:37
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes I do. I have read several book on NDE and find it very interesting to hear each story. Although each story is it's own, many have similarity that link them together. I don't know how many different people could have these same feeling/idea's and not have there be something! I believe in Heaven, and it sounds beautiful!
2007-02-03 17:58:12
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answer #6
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answered by Jedi Lizard 3
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relatively I even have by no potential considered a video of a Muslim that had died and long gone to heaven. in basic terms video clips on people who say the observed Jesus or Christ. Does somebody have a link to a minimum of one? On youtube lower back in basic terms christian who've long gone to heaven, no Muslim debts.
2016-10-01 09:45:27
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answer #7
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answered by koffler 4
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Why do you think that everyone who has a near-death experience and then returns to tell what heaven is like describes a heaven entirely in line with the belief system of the culture in which they are living?
^v^ ^v^ ^v^ ^v^ ^v^ ^v^ ^v^ ^v^
2007-02-03 16:33:44
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answer #8
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answered by NHBaritone 7
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I believe in God, and in Heaven, but I am not sure if I would believe someone actually saw heaven and came back. The Bible says "it is appointed unto man to die once..."
It is possible God may have allowed them to see Heaven, or that they simply had a weird dream while they were out...
2007-02-03 16:17:16
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answer #9
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answered by ? 4
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No. Testimony of someone's personal experience that cannot be shared, measured, recorded or documented, is not sufficient evidence for me to believe in heaven or any other afterlife.
2007-02-03 16:23:10
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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I'll go as far as to believe that those people think they saw heaven. Did they REALLY? Who knows?
2007-02-03 16:21:43
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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