You can find his books on Amazon just search Praying Medic and each one gives a description. He seems to border on the line of those charismatic heretics that flop around on tv claiming to be getting demons out and healing grandma while also throwing in a mix of some new-age blasphemy like "How to appear in the courts of heaven" "How to know when you're being accused"
Jesus healed and cast out demons from numerous people, and commissioned his followers to do the same. How is this blasphemous? You sound like the Pharisees who accused Christ of performing miracles through Beelzebub. I've personally witnessed and experienced miraculous healing and deliverances myself.
I don't know much about the courts of heaven concept but there was indeed a heavenly court in Zechariah 3 where Satan functioned as the accuser. In fact, Satan was called the "accuser of the brethren" in Revelation. That's why Jesus is our mediator before God the judge. He's our defense attorney, so to speak. Sounds Biblical to me.
Because these televangelists and most charismatics do not want you to go to the doctor to confirm the healing, many many many people die because of this. Christ healed people, he didn't fake it and if hospitals like today were around back then he would encourage the people to keep seeing the doctors.
Personally, I've never believed televangelists but can you provide source for the "many many many" people who died?
I've read one of Praying Medic's books on healing and he never said not to go to the doctor. The guy actually worked in the medical field as a paramedic for several decades. That was how he got his nickname "praying medic", because he'd often pray for his patients as he transported them to the hospital.
Anyway, you threw around a lot of wild accusations without having read any of Praying Medic's books. Q told us to "research for yourself." Looks like you skipped the research part.
This is a good point that should NOT be overlooked.
The self proclaimed spiritually gifted high profile and profitable groups and individuals do correlate to spiritual abuse in one form or another. I'm not saying PM is a specific case, but its a common phenomenon among the charismatics. Why? They assume the written Word is not enough for life and godliness, and that experiential divine encounters are necessary for the next level. This typically appeals to the emotional side and the sensuous side of human behavior (what is experienced with the senses is "really real", therefore, God) and a number of pitfalls and painful experiences can and will result from that eventually. Caveat emptor. Be careful who you follow.
You can find his books on Amazon just search Praying Medic and each one gives a description. He seems to border on the line of those charismatic heretics that flop around on tv claiming to be getting demons out and healing grandma while also throwing in a mix of some new-age blasphemy like "How to appear in the courts of heaven" "How to know when you're being accused"
Definitely blasphemous, defiantly demonic.
Jesus healed and cast out demons from numerous people, and commissioned his followers to do the same. How is this blasphemous? You sound like the Pharisees who accused Christ of performing miracles through Beelzebub. I've personally witnessed and experienced miraculous healing and deliverances myself.
I don't know much about the courts of heaven concept but there was indeed a heavenly court in Zechariah 3 where Satan functioned as the accuser. In fact, Satan was called the "accuser of the brethren" in Revelation. That's why Jesus is our mediator before God the judge. He's our defense attorney, so to speak. Sounds Biblical to me.
Because these televangelists and most charismatics do not want you to go to the doctor to confirm the healing, many many many people die because of this. Christ healed people, he didn't fake it and if hospitals like today were around back then he would encourage the people to keep seeing the doctors.
Personally, I've never believed televangelists but can you provide source for the "many many many" people who died?
I've read one of Praying Medic's books on healing and he never said not to go to the doctor. The guy actually worked in the medical field as a paramedic for several decades. That was how he got his nickname "praying medic", because he'd often pray for his patients as he transported them to the hospital.
Anyway, you threw around a lot of wild accusations without having read any of Praying Medic's books. Q told us to "research for yourself." Looks like you skipped the research part.
For more info, do some research on "New Apostolic Reformation and spiritual abuse".
This is a good point that should NOT be overlooked.
The self proclaimed spiritually gifted high profile and profitable groups and individuals do correlate to spiritual abuse in one form or another. I'm not saying PM is a specific case, but its a common phenomenon among the charismatics. Why? They assume the written Word is not enough for life and godliness, and that experiential divine encounters are necessary for the next level. This typically appeals to the emotional side and the sensuous side of human behavior (what is experienced with the senses is "really real", therefore, God) and a number of pitfalls and painful experiences can and will result from that eventually. Caveat emptor. Be careful who you follow.
Cool they can be heretics of heretics of heretics of schismatics.
SophiatheCopt: Agreed.