- Joined
- Feb 2, 2012
- Messages
- 10,347
- Reaction score
- 3,600
- Points
- 113
Corky! I drove by his church a few weeks ago.
Halloween candy time is just around the corner.
Corky! I drove by his church a few weeks ago.
Again, I believe those stories because I know and trust the ones who told them.You trust them. Why should I? What can you offer in support of their stories, that we can both agree is objective evidence of their experiences?
| Key Studies and Findings | Researchers/Institution | Year | Main Insight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physiological responses to abduction scripts match those of trauma survivors (e.g., combat vets, sexual abuse victims). | McNally et al., Harvard University | 2003â2004 | Abductees show elevated heart rate, sweating, and muscle tension when recalling "events," equivalent to real PTSD triggers. |
| Abductees score higher on dissociation and PTSD symptoms but lower on suggestibility than controls. | Agnès et al., Explore journal | 2021 | Emotional reactions are genuine, even if memories are implausible; dissociation may explain some cases. |
| No higher psychopathology rates; higher fantasy-proneness and paranormal beliefs. | Bartholomew & Howard, Professional Psychology | 1991 | Abductees function normally but are prone to rich inner worlds and false memory formation. |
| Sleep paralysis as a trigger; hypnosis history and New Age beliefs predispose claims. | Clancy & McNally, Harvard | 2005 | ~5% experience full hallucinations during paralysis, interpretable as abductions. |
| Neuropsychological profiles link to temporal lobe activity and fantasy-proneness. | Persinger, Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1992 | Similar to recovered memories of abuse; no evidence of mental illness. |
You're aware more than one question can exist? Now I'm questioning how you would demonstrate the event's genuineness to me.You question was how I would distinguish a real supernatural event from an imagined one.
You're sandbagging.You're aware more than one question can exist? Now I'm questioning how you would demonstrate the event's genuineness to me.
That Ransom remains unconvinced by a reasonable amount of anecdotal evidence
And for you too.Fixed it for you
Think that Satan and demons have been involved with mankind from early on, and that people would see their activities int he light of their current mindset and technology, so would see them as being as Fairies before, and now as grey aliensBefore you can conclude that a haunting was "demonic," you have to establish that there was, in fact, an objectively real haunting.
How do you distinguish a real supernatural occurrence from, say, a mistake, a dream, or a human deception? (On the last, the FFF was once graced by an "actual" ghost hunter. Let's say he wasn't too happy that we could see his videos were clearly faked.)
Or mistaken, or deceived, or part of a social panic, or...
You know why there are flying saucer sightings? Because in 1947, Kenneth Arnold reported seeing unusual aircraft that he described as "saucer-like." But he was misquoted: the newspaper mistook that description for the shape, where he was describing their manner of flying (like someone skipping a saucer across the water).
Even though what he claimed to see was actually crescent-shaped or semicircular (unusual, but more like a conventional aircraft), that misattribution led thousands to report seeing giant flying discs.
Yes, thousands and millions of people do delude themselves into seeing what isn't there.
True, as I do not see that we have ever had encounters with outer space aliens, but that mankind has had involvement for very long time with demonic entities, who now make themselves to be seen as our space lien brethren , and comes back to me why would Jesus name really bother and hinder them, but no other name seems to be able to do that to them?@JesusFan isn't saying anyone was abducted by an alien, or that there are extraterrestrials. He's saying those who really think they have have been abducted or visited or tormented by extraterrestrials are being deceived and tormented by demons. Demons are certainly real. Where's the rule that says their activities must be limited to the Exorcist style of manifestations.
Do you have to have an example of a 'verified' haunting before you would explain paranormal experiences or torments as demonic?
Unless they're all lying,
In the cases where these abductions have been halted by people calling on the name of Jesus Christ, how would you explain it?
Problem is that they seem to be able to become physical , but also can make it appear to be physical within the minds of those observing themI'd have to see good evidence that UFOs and alien abductions are real, first, before passing judgment on whether they're actually demonic.
There hve also be radar detections, some valid photos, and since dealing with supernatural, what would constitute proof?Before you can conclude that a haunting was "demonic," you have to establish that there was, in fact, an objectively real haunting.
How do you distinguish a real supernatural occurrence from, say, a mistake, a dream, or a human deception? (On the last, the FFF was once graced by an "actual" ghost hunter. Let's say he wasn't too happy that we could see his videos were clearly faked.)
Or mistaken, or deceived, or part of a social panic, or...
You know why there are flying saucer sightings? Because in 1947, Kenneth Arnold reported seeing unusual aircraft that he described as "saucer-like." But he was misquoted: the newspaper mistook that description for the shape, where he was describing their manner of flying (like someone skipping a saucer across the water).
Even though what he claimed to see was actually crescent-shaped or semicircular (unusual, but more like a conventional aircraft), that misattribution led thousands to report seeing giant flying discs.
Yes, thousands and millions of people do delude themselves into seeing what isn't there.
And amny times they met human looking persons who claimed to be from mars or venus, or else were part of a top secret lab, as seems that whatever was behind it was a "cosmic trickster" John Keel and Vallee have the right idea on what it all means, but cannot see it in deminic framework, as neither were/are ChristiansOn November 17, 1896 someone in California reported seeing a mysterious UFO/airship, which resulted in a wave of such sightings in 1896/1897. As many as 100,000 people reported seeing the airships, which were believed to have come from Mars. Eventually, the hysteria over the airships died down, with only a few isolated sightings in later years.
![]()
Mystery airship - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Mystery airship illustrated in the San Francisco Call, November 22, 1896
See the author kurt Koch, and see those who have tracked Ufos such as keel and valle, as all of them have sourced this area as being heavy into the occultic/supernatural side, as while keel was weird and not a Christian, he did ackowledge that what passes today as abductions and Ufos would be seen as being demonic and possession from earlier timesIn the case of the occult, like witchcraft or necromancy, one way to examine it would be to experiment with it. That, of course, is forbidden, but the prohibition itself is evidence of the danger.
But the testimony of those who did experiment with those things, is also evidence. People I trust have told me of their experiences.
My father told me of his experience with a Ouija board. The lensed item (I don't know what it's called) moved on its own to answer his question. It scared him and he burned it.
A late pastor of mine told of a visit paid to him and his wife by an invisible intruder. They were young and lived in a basement of the house they were building. They had just gone to bed and they both heard heavy foot falls coming down the stairs, across the floor to the foot of their bed. The foot falls stopped, and they heard the laugh of a woman they knew who had recently passed, as if she were standing right there. They were terrified, of course, and they began to claim the blood of Jesus. And, of course, they knew it wasn't her ghost.
Once I gave a lesson on Samuel's ghost, which, of course, wasn't really Samuel's ghost. A couple I knew, and whose kids I went to school with, told me of their experience seeing the ghost of their son who had died in an automobile accident. He stood at the foot of their bed and assured them he was doing okay. (With good reason, they feared his eternal state.) They believed my lesson about Samuel, that the ghost was an imposter, but asked if I thought God would sometimes send someone back to comfort those in grief.
I simply told them that I was talking about Samuel, and that God would not yield to a witch, but that God is also very merciful. They've both passed on now. So they know whether or not it was the ghost of their son that they saw. If I were to be less tactful, I would have simply answered them, I don't believe so.
My dad was alone in his experience. But I believe him. Those in the two ghost stories were not alone, and unless they were having the same dream (or nightmare) there is the mouth of two or more witnesses, describing the same event.
In the cases of the so-called alien abductions, over four million people, just in the U.S. are describing terrifying experiences, not mere sightings, with common elements. And in the book and the movie, there are those featured who ended the torments by calling upon the name of the Lord.
Testimonies are valid evidence. I believe very few ghost stories. And I tend to believe Christians, especially those who, like the author of the book, are reputable.
Don't you wish film was a thing during the Exodus?
satan and demons are real, see Jesus ministry as the Promised messiahThe danger of witchcraft, like idolatry, is in not relying on God for provision or wisdom, but seeking or crediting some false god or supposed occult power for making the sun rise and the crops grow, or giving special insight.
Whether the false god or magical power actually exists is immaterial to the point. I don't need to believe in the existence of Odin to understand that I shouldn't worship him. Paul does credit such things to demons in some places, but he also says that an idol is nothing (1 Cor. 8:4). "Nothing" doesn't mean "a demon." Some--I dare say most--occult entities are simply not real in any sense.
That's simply anecdotal evidence and argumentum ad verecundiam. You trust them. Why should I? What can you offer in support of their stories, that we can both agree is objective evidence of their experiences?
"Of course," you say, as though we hadn't had that argument before and the identity of the ghost is settled beyond dispute. That's just an appeal to your own authority - self-assurance in the correctness of your own opinions.
When I say their ghost videos were clearly faked, I mean they consisted of someone standing off-camera making spooky voices and throwing ordinary objects like cards into view. I don't see how inept special effects are suppose to prove or disprove the Exodus, for which the word of God is itself a sufficiently reliable authority.
satan and demons are real, see Jesus ministry as the Promised messiah