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What happens to us when we die? Many think of heaven as an
unimaginable state of bliss. As for hell, it's far out of
proportion to any sin we might have committed and makes a travesty
of God. But what if the afterlife was something very different? The
key to such knowledge is mediumship. Three decades of research have
taught the author, a world expert in the field of death and
afterlife studies, who the most reliable voices are. These accounts
are far better developed and more plausible than anything found in
the world's scriptures or theologies. Taken at face value, they
represent the vivid experience of spirits, or ex-humans, eager to
tell about their amazing world, and ours in a few short years. We
hunger for a reliable revelation telling us that life here and now
is meaningful and good, that each of us has an important part to
play in its proper unfolding, that we are accountable for all we
do, and that the godless materialism all around us is a
pathological mistake. The world ahead, unlike ours, is fascinating
and fair. Authentic mediums may be the closest thing to the voice
of God that our planet has.
Macrina McGrath, a young 23-year-old Catholic ex-Marine and unwed
mother, begins to see cracks in the Church she grew up loving. Bad
priests preying on children, harsh treatment of the divorced and
LGBTQ, a deep-seated and toxic sexism, and archaic dogmas force her
to choose between leaving the Church or trying to make it better.
Pursuing graduate school in theology at Georgetown and a trip to
India help form her resolve: She will stop at nothing to take the
Church out of the Middle Ages and deliver women from their abject
status. Macrina McGrath joins and soon after heads the
excommunicated Womanpriest movement and, with the help of the
Archbishop of Boston, begins an ascent she never imagined. But her
love for Ezra, a Jewish physicist and colleague at Amherst where
they teach, is getting in the way.
Heaven and hell - are they real places, or are they fantasies
invented to inspire good behavior and overcome our fear of dying?
In this book Stafford Betty, a university professor and
international expert on afterlife research, answers these
questions. He allows deceased human beings speaking through
authentic mediums to describe their actual worlds. And what they
tell us would revolutionize the world's religions if they would
listen. Our brothers and sisters in the afterlife are not
"resting," as Christian theology often asserts. They live in a
world of infinite possibility, and their wills are as free over
there as they are here. They are busy beings, and some are climbing
toward higher realms while others languish. Suffering in the
afterworld, not just joy, can be intense; it exists to awaken souls
to their errors so they will enter into the happiness of those
higher spheres, where corruption can't enter. Professor Betty
explores those heavens, those places where love reigns unchecked -
as well as those unhappy places where it doesn't. The religions
we've fashioned here on earth could all use an upgrade. They are
moons that derive their light from the central sun. This book is
about that sun.
Kiran is a gifted but self-absorbed college professor who grew up
on ritzy Marine Drive in Mumbi. Now working at a leading California
university as a professional philosopher, he lives in a sham of a
marriage to Lisa, an American, but this comes to an abrupt end on a
visit home to India when he dies in a plane crash. As Kiran watches
annihilation gallop toward him, and then death - suddenly he
discovers he's still very much alive-more alive than ever. But now
he must face his karma...He relives the events of his selfish life
not as he experienced them, but as his victims did-his students,
his fellow workers, above all the women who loved him. Eventually
he seeks out Shalini, who committed suicide after he rejected her
in favor of her rival, Lisa. Kiran, facing heavy odds, is assigned
the task of rescuing Shalini from her self-made hell in the
Shadowlands. Will he succeed - and if he does, what then? He cannot
stay where he is. He must move ahead into diviner worlds, or
"repeat the grade." ...And what about Shalini? Where will her
passion for Kiran take her next?
This book presents a correspondence between two friends who
disagree about how to answer the question, "What does it mean to be
a Christian?" Crosby argues that Christians understand themselves
as hearing a definitive word of revelation spoken by God and
intended for all human beings. But Betty sees Christianity as one
of several options, usually the preferred way for those born in the
faith, but no more unique or special than Hinduism or Buddhism. It
is a debate over the kind of initiative the Christian God takes, or
does not take, toward human beings. Throughout the debate Crosby
alleges that Betty's God is a very finite god, an all-too-human
god, and for that very reason is something different from the God
venerated by Christians, while Betty maintains that his theism
remains within the Christian orbit and is a much needed corrective
to a religion with exclusivist tendencies.The debate between the
two friends is presented here in the form of a correspondence they
conducted over a period of two years (and did not originally intend
for publication). It has undergone very little editing and
revision; the authors have wanted to preserve the spontaneous give
and take of their exchange. Together they have produced a work of
philosophical dialogue that is unusually fruitful in its ability to
clarify some fundamental issues of religion.
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