Rob's Books, Medium Readings, Animal Rescue Fundraisers

BOOKS: Pets and the Afterlife, Pets and the Afterlife 2, Pets and the Afterlife 3, Pets and the Afterlife 4, Lessons Learned from Talking to the Dead, Ghosts of England on a Medium's Vacation, Ghosts of the Bird Cage Theatre on a Medium's Vacation, Kindred Spirits: How a Medium Befriended a Spirit, Case Files of Inspired Ghost Tracking and Ghosts and Spirits Explained BEST SELLERS: All of Rob's books have reached "best-seller" status on AMAZON.com in various paranormal categories. PET SPIRIT READINGS: Now offered via email and done on weekends. Reserve a spot thru Paypal. Email me at Rgutro@gmail.com Send 1 Photo of your pet, their name, and any questions.ANIMAL RESCUE FUNDRAISING LECTURES : Rob is a dog dad, volunteers with Dachshund and Weimaraner rescues and does fundraising lectures for dog and cat rescues.

Saturday, August 20, 2016

A Caution: 3 Afterlife Books Used to Promote Various Religions

I've read a number of books on after death experiences, noticed that some of them seem to be written to promote certain religions. These books of "true accounts" do a severe injustice to people of all faiths, agnostics and atheists.
   The afterlife is NOT about religion. Religions are all created by man.
  As someone who has written 4 books about the afterlife it's not about religion. It's about life transitioning to a different state of energy. You can call the other side whatever you want whether its heaven, paradise, valhalla, elysium... doesn't matter.


   I'm not doubting that people have after death experiences, but some three books I started reading were so blatantly tailored to promote the writer's religion (in one case the book was written by a boy's father who was the pastor of his own church), that I couldn't get through them. They were obvious advertisements for different faiths.

  Of course writers need to include their experiences, but they should not to promote their religion. In one book, written about a doctor's experience, I was shaking my head when I read "I was carried by Jesus (who referenced is a Caucasian, brown-haired, blue-eyed man) and brought to Heaven."   Jesus was NOT a Caucasian. He was of middle-eastern descent and archaeologists have already provided a picture of what he does look like- black hair, brown eyes, olive skin.
  Further, the book was full of quotations from the bible. That's NOT an afterlife experience. It's a promotion for a religion.

   Another book was about the experience of a young boy who had an after death experience. This one was made into a movie! It was filled with "experiences" of things that were taken straight out of the bible - like "streets of gold." That book is called "Heaven is for Real: A Little Boy's Astounding Story..."
   It turns out that that book was a SHAM to promote religion. It was written by the boy's father, who is a preacher in his own church!
USA Today reported  on 4/21/2011  -"Heaven, released in November as a paperback original with a first printing of 40,000 copies, was written by Colton's father, the Rev. Todd Burpo, who has a small evangelical congregation in Imperial, Neb. It was co-written by Lynn Vincent, who collaborated with Sarah Palin on the best seller Going Rogue." 

 Finally, another book by a man who was struck by lightning and died for 28 minutes, told about his experiences - that basically dictate the Mormon religion. I read a couple of chapters and quickly realized that this was a big promotion for the Mormon faith, so I discarded that one, too. These were blatant advertisements for religions.

  So, I'm not telling to not to read any books on after death experiences, but take the highly religiously slanted ones with a grain of salt. I'm not denying these people died and came back. I'm simply saying that after their experience they deeply integrated their religious beliefs into their books (except in the case of the boy's experience, where the preacher wrote it).

MY CAUTION: If some book about an afterlife experience practically quotes things from a religious text or a religion, then it's not worth reading. It's likely been written to promote the religion and not the experience.

2 comments:

  1. I strongly agree with Rob on the connection between religion and the afterlife. There IS NO connection. I commented at length on my own blog: https://bluejeansdoctor.blogspot.com/ and also linked Rob's latest book to the Amazon web page and also his blog page. If you're interested in my perspective on the subject, and why I agree with Rob; please check out my blog.

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