Author: | The Editors of FATE, Phyllis Galde (Ed), Jean Marie Stine (Ed) | ISBN: | 1230002466460 |
Publisher: | Digital Parchment Services, Inc. | Publication: | August 6, 2018 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | The Editors of FATE, Phyllis Galde (Ed), Jean Marie Stine (Ed) |
ISBN: | 1230002466460 |
Publisher: | Digital Parchment Services, Inc. |
Publication: | August 6, 2018 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
PROGNOSIS: INCURABLE
Injured, ill, crippled, at death’s door, Physicians and medical science had given up and diagnosed their cases as hopeless.
Then what can only be called a miracle occurred. Through the aid of prayer or positive thought or women and men with strange powers — they were cured!
Psychic and spiritual healing are not fantasy. They are real.
They don’t always work. And for that reason are not a substitute for orthodox medicine.
But many who have turned to them as a last resort, when all else has failed, have experienced miraculous cures. As the accounts you are about to read attest eloquently.
Such experiences can involve far more than prayer or laying-on-of-hands. Some of the stories in this book relate healings to transcendental experiences, to out-of-body travel, to survival after death, to other dimensions of existence.
For this volume of The Best of Fate, the editors have combed through the publication’s 700+ issues and selected some of the most enthralling and convincing reports of scientific studies and personal accounts of people medicine gave up on — who were inexplicably healed and went on to enjoy full and active lives.
It’s must-have reading for anyone interested in this most critical of subje
PROGNOSIS: INCURABLE
Injured, ill, crippled, at death’s door, Physicians and medical science had given up and diagnosed their cases as hopeless.
Then what can only be called a miracle occurred. Through the aid of prayer or positive thought or women and men with strange powers — they were cured!
Psychic and spiritual healing are not fantasy. They are real.
They don’t always work. And for that reason are not a substitute for orthodox medicine.
But many who have turned to them as a last resort, when all else has failed, have experienced miraculous cures. As the accounts you are about to read attest eloquently.
Such experiences can involve far more than prayer or laying-on-of-hands. Some of the stories in this book relate healings to transcendental experiences, to out-of-body travel, to survival after death, to other dimensions of existence.
For this volume of The Best of Fate, the editors have combed through the publication’s 700+ issues and selected some of the most enthralling and convincing reports of scientific studies and personal accounts of people medicine gave up on — who were inexplicably healed and went on to enjoy full and active lives.
It’s must-have reading for anyone interested in this most critical of subje