Graham Cooke Tries to Punch Out Jesus 1/2
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God there dramatizational videos are sooo stupid. I'd rather hear the story instead of seeing amature video makers trying to make it more appeasing.
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I am Giving away a free MP3 Set "Experience The Almighty" A Conference that was recorded at Friends Langley Vineyard.Graham Cooke leads us prophetically into a time where we can prepare for the next season, the next challenge, the next call in our lives by upgrading our view of God.
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@pikfissepikpik : My friend, I suggest that it is you who is missing the point. As I said earlier, this is not an isolated instance in Graham's life. At MANY other times, while well-fed and rested, in the best of physical situations, he also has had similar powerful supernatural experiences. Check out his other videos (for instance, the one called "Graham Cooke Satanist Jesus in Fire". Are you telling me that these are also hallucinations?
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You are absolutely right. His lack of food and water couldn't cause hallucinations. Neither could his "physical hardship" as you put it. Nor his lack of sleep. But you're missing the point entirely. It's the combination of all those things that could. You're greatly overestimating the body's resilience if you think that hallucinations are extremely rare under said conditions. I urge you to ask your doctor if you still find it hard to believe.
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@pikfissepikpik : No, I don't imagine that he found enough food and water to comletely satisfy his body's needs. But I have gone 13 days without food. I have friends who have gone much longer. I know many who have gone through much physical hardship. None have hallucinated. Hallucinations are an EXTREMELY rare phenomenon in any situation. And I know much about Grahame Cooke's life - this was not a one-time experience. He has had many supernatural interactions with God, while well-fed and rested
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@pikfissepikpik: again, you make a lot of assumptions (without real evidence) to refute the story. He NEVER mentions water deprivation. Three days without food does not equal "starvation" - people do it all the time, with no hallucinations. He also mentions nothing about sleep deprivation - again, that is a convenient assumption you make to support your argument. And you make an unsupported blanket statement about Navy Seals... It is clear to me that you just don't want this story to be true.
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Concidering that he's running from the police, I'd say it's a safe bet to assume he didn't bring water to last him for three days. Even if he did, sheer fatigue, starvation and sleep deprivation would be sufficient to cause hallucination. If you don't believe me - ask any Navy SEALs instructor how many students he's seen hallucinate during training. Regarding the impact of hallucinations on a person's life, they can indeed be life changing. Read up on "DMT" - you'll be surprised.
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@pikfissepikpik - He said that he hadn't eaten for three days. He said nothing about water. People often fast for three days and much longer, and they never hallucinate. And this experience changed this man's life in a powerful, lasting way. Hallucinations do not do that. And after not getting a ride, he immediately gets a ride right where he wants to go. It seems to me that you have to really want to not believe his story (and the reality of God) to so adamantly and irrationally refute it.
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"It's not like God wrote a book and stopped talking," Very good point. That is an awesome quote.
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@pikfissepikpik: A reasonable assumption until you keep following the events that followed immediately afterwards, and then for a while after that, and then for the rest of his life until this moment. There's that. :-)
hey...if memory serves correct, someone wrestled with God and has a career ending hip injury!
migrantson 2 years ago 5