The Tucker Carlson Show - Lee Strobel: Possession, Miracles, Visions, and Encounters With Angels & Demons
Episode Date: September 1, 2025There’s a lot that science can’t explain, including most of what actually matters. Lee Strobel on the overwhelming evidence that the supernatural world is entirely real. (00:00) Introduction (...03:02) Strobel’s Encounter With an Angel (11:30) Do We Have a Guardian Angel? (25:31) What Are Demons? (40:03) Why Did the Pharisees Hate When Jesus Performed Miracles? (59:59) The Mystical Dream Phenomenon Happening in the Middle East (1:09:42) Visions, Psychoactive Drugs, and Hallucinations Paid partnerships with: Dutch: Get $50 a year for vet care with Tucker50 at https://dutch.com/tucker Pique: Go to https://piquelife.com/tucker to get up to 20% off for life when you start your first month TCN: Watch the full series as soon as it premieres: tuckercarlson.com/the911file Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So we're told there's no state religion in the West, certainly not in the United States, but in fact there is.
It's scientism. It's the worship of science. It's the belief, and all of us learn this at a young age, that everything around us, everything we experience can be measured by people in white coats. That's science. If it can't be measured, it's not real.
The problem with this religion is that our life, our daily experience, contradicts it. Constantly, all of us are seeing
hearing, tasting, feeling things that can't be measured by science. But it doesn't make them any less
real. These are, by definition, supernatural. Supernatural experiences are a feature of everyone's
life. And if we're honest, we'll admit that. So what do they mean exactly? Well, Lee Strobel was
a reporter. He worked for the Chicago Tribune and left and became a pastor. So he has religious faith,
but also a grounding in empiricism, the desire to prove things.
He is the perfect person to write the book that he did about the supernatural.
That would be dreams, mystical dreams, near-death experiences, miracles, ghosts.
We set down to hear just how common these experiences are and what they mean.
Lee Strobel.
So you've written a book.
I don't do a lot of book interviews.
I couldn't resist this one.
Seeing the supernatural,
investigating angels, demons,
mystical dreams,
near-death encounters,
and other mysteries of the unseen world.
I think a lot of a sense or know on some level.
In fact, I think everybody knows on some level that there is a world that science can't measure or quantify.
Yeah.
That there is, you know, that there's stuff that we can't explain.
Yeah.
But that it's no less real for our inability to explain it.
So let's go through the list.
Yeah.
You know, by the way, I was an atheist.
I'm trained in journalism and law.
And so I'm always looking for corroboration.
I'm looking for evidence.
I'm looking for facts.
And so you're right.
I think there's an intuitive sense that most people have that there's something beyond what we can see touch and put into it in a test to.
Eight out of ten Americans believe that.
But how do we know?
What is the evidence?
And that's why I try to get into in the book.
How can we be sure through corroborated evidence that indeed there are such things as miracles, as near-death experiences, at deathbed encounters and mystical dreams and things like that?
Yeah, atheism is the leap of imagination.
It is.
That's true.
It's hard to be an atheist.
It's very true.
I admire them in a way, though.
It feels sorry for them.
Anyway, okay.
Angels.
Yeah.
It's an angel.
Fascinating.
You know, angels are created by God before humankind was created.
They are spirit beings, so they're not omniscient like God is.
They're not omnipresent like God is.
They are, they don't age because there's no physical body.
They don't marry because there's no physical body.
They're very intelligent, very smart.
art. And they are, according to the Bible, they are to serve not only God, but also his people.
And what's interesting, the Christian Bible with the Hebrew Old Testament makes references.
Is there any culture in the world that doesn't believe in some form of angel?
It's pretty universal. Yeah. It is pretty universal.
Like every culture. Yeah, just virtually every culture.
Yeah, the Inuit, all the way to the Maya.
That's right. That's right. Canaanites.
And what's interesting about the Christian interpretation of angels is that it says in the book of Hebrews in the Bible that we should anticipate the possibility that we would encounter an angel.
In other words, it says sometimes when you're providing hospitality to someone, unbeknownst to you, it's an angel.
And so there's an anticipation that perhaps there could be angelic encounters.
And so what I try to look at in the book are cases in which we have angelic encounters.
people actually encounter an angel.
I'll give you an example.
There was a missionary named John G. Payton, P-A-T-O-N, from Scotland.
And he went to an island in the South Pacific to be a Christian missionary.
And he and his wife were living in a cottage there.
And he's talking about Jesus.
Well, the local tribes people didn't quite like that.
And so one day a mob of them came to burn down their house and kill them.
So they see this mob forming.
And he and his wife are in their house.
And what can they do?
they start to prays like God protect us help us um they're going to kill us they're going to burn
our house down what do we do and they prayed all night long and by dawn the mob began to dissipate
a year later he led the head of that mob to faith in jesus christ and they're having a conversation
and john said to him by the way do you remember that day when you all came to burn down our house
and kill us why didn't you do it and the man said well who were all those men you had
there. He said, no, no, man. It was just my wife and I. He said, no, no, no. Your house was surrounded
by these muscular men in white garments withdrawn swords. There's no way we could have hurt you
that night. Well, what's the explanation for that? I think it could very well have been an
angelic encounter that God had sent angels to protect him. And there's multiple numbers of
cases like that. Give me another. Well, I had an encounter myself.
when I was 12 years old. I was, it was the only dream I remember as a child. It was more of a vision
than a dream. An angel appeared to me and started extolling heaven. How beautiful and wonderful heaven is.
And I looked at him kind of offhandedly and said, well, you know, I'm going to go there someday.
And he looked at me and said, how do you know? And I was shocked by that. How do I know?
And I started to kind of stumble around to justify my goodness. I said, well, I obey my parents pretty
much and I get good grades in school and my friends like me and I'm trying to justify why I would
get into heaven. And he looked at me and he said, that doesn't matter. And this chill went through
my spine. How can this not matter? And he said, someday you'll understand. And then disappeared.
Well, I kind of wrote it off as being a bad pizza and ultimately became an atheist. But 16 years later,
as an atheist, my wife brought me to a church. And I heard the gospel
for the first time. That salvation, that the doors of heaven are not flung open based on how nice you are to your parents or how good grades you get in school. It's based on the grace of God. It's not something we earn. It's a free gift of God's grace. And I heard that message for the first time and my mind flashed back to that dream. And I thought, wait a minute. That's what he was trying to tell me back then.
Have you thought a lot about that dream in the subsequent years? It would come to me every once in a while. I think about it. I'd just suppress it. I was a bad pizza, you know.
But then I thought there's two forms of corroboration there.
Number one, that angel told me something when I was 12 years old that I did not already know that salvation is by grace.
And secondly, he made a prophecy, a prediction that someday I would understand that came true 16 years later.
I think that may have been an angelic encounter that I had.
I can't prove it.
But that corroboration tells me maybe it really was.
So we see cases like this around the world.
And it's more than 200 references of angels in the Bible.
There's not...
200?
Yeah, yeah.
So lots of evidence that indeed this is part of God's creation.
Interesting.
I've been to church.
I don't know that I've probably the wrong kind of church,
but I don't know that I've ever heard anyone refer to anything.
It's so funny you say that because I was giving a talk the other day and I said,
you know, I've been a Christian now since November the 8th of 1981.
I have never heard a sermon on the topic of angels.
ever ever why i don't know and i go and so in this book i delve into it and i learn some new things
for instance do we have a guardian angel well there's actually two passages in the bible that suggests
maybe we do have a guardian angel in one passage jesus is talking to a group and there's some
children there and he said do not despise these little ones because their angels see the face
of god every day in heaven well who are their angels and then secondly peter
when he escapes from prison, goes to a home where some Christians had gathered and he knocks on the door.
And the servant says who's there and he says, Peter, and she recognizes his voice and she calls out to the other people and says, hey, Peter's here.
Well, I said, can't be here. He's in prison. Peter can't be here. It must be his angel.
So based on those two passages, there are Christians who believe that we have an angel assigned to us.
In fact, I believe in the Orthodox Christian tradition, they believe an angel is assigned to you at the time you're
baptized. I don't know. They're Christians who deny that, but it could be. But the other thing I learned in my investigation of angels, I thought, you know what? I don't think it's appropriate to pray to angels. I don't believe we're taught to do that. I think there's a slippery slope if you pray to angels that it might slip into worship of angels, which would be blasphemous. But there's nothing wrong with praying to God about angels. Martin Luther in the small Categism,
has a prayer, an evening prayer that says, Lord, send your holy angels to protect me from the
evil one. And so I never used to do this, but I now make part of my prayer that God would
send angels to protect me and my family, my ministry, my grandchildren, and so. I think that's
totally appropriate to do.
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We're going to get to demons in a second, but you use the phrase, the evil one.
Yeah.
So at, you know, the foundational Christian prayer is what we call the Lord's Prayer,
handed down by Jesus himself.
Right.
And at the end of it, after, you know, we seek forgiveness and forgive those who've sinned against us,
lead us not in temptation, but deliver us from evil is the way that most, I think, Americans learn the prayer.
Yeah.
But there's another interpretation that says delivers from the evil one.
That's right.
Yeah.
And I didn't know that until later in life.
but I suspect that that was kind of toned down because the evil one is a little bit too, too supernatural?
Yeah.
Well, you know, there is an embarrassment in American culture towards some of these supernatural phenomena.
In other words, American Christians often want to be accepted and seen as normal by their neighbors.
Oh, yes, I go to church and yes, I believe in Jesus.
But, you know, you won't catch me talking about angels or demons or miracles or any of this weird stuff.
They want to be accepted as being normal by other people.
And so I think there's a lot of people that just don't delve into these.
There's a de-emphasis in many churches and in many Christian lives.
And yet, Jesus clearly believed not only in angels, but he was an exorcist.
You know, even skeptics will admit, according to the Gospels, that Jesus was an exorcist.
So he believed in Satan.
He believed in demons.
Well, it was one of the primary activities of his life on earth.
Exactly.
Look at the Gospel of Mark.
I think half of his activity is related in some way to fighting demons.
So this is something as a Christian that we ought to believe and then consider what are the implications of this?
If this is true, if there is a demonic realm, if there is an angelic realm, what are the implications to me today?
Well, I would put it in another way.
Has there, are you aware of any society in the known history of the human race that didn't be?
believe that there was a supernatural realm filled with good and evil. Yes, it's virtually universal.
I've never heard of any culture that didn't believe that, except post-war West. Yeah.
Drop the atom bomb, get rid of the supernatural. Right. Because we're God now. Yeah, that's right.
But before then, I mean, I just think this was taken as a matter of course, right? Of course, yeah,
naturally. So if every society in known history reaches the same, a version of the same conclusion,
Yeah. It suggests maybe there's something there?
It sure does. It sure does.
Why would you come up with that?
Exactly. You know, it's funny. People will say, well, you need extraordinary evidence to prove an extraordinary claim, which I don't think is legitimate. I don't think that stands up to scrutiny.
But let's take it for a moment on face value and say, you need extraordinary evidence to prove an extraordinary claim.
Well, the claim that there are demons is not an extraordinary claim.
I was just thinking that. Because 95% of humanity through history has believed in it.
So if you're an atheist, the onus is on you.
I agree.
You must present the extraordinary evidence that the demonic does not exist.
Well, there are also moments in the life of every person who's awake and not on fentanyl,
maybe even people who are in fentanyl, I hope,
where you know that you are being acted on by an outside force of some kind.
You have no idea what it is.
But there are moments when you are much better than yourself, much more empathetic.
And there are other moments where you're seized by the desire to destroy for the sake of destruction,
which also doesn't make any sense.
There's no kind of evolutionary biological accounting for that.
Why would you want to destroy something for no reason?
Another person, an object, but the impulse to destroy clearly the hallmark of evil, right?
It is, and it's consistent with the Christian teaching that the demonic realm exists,
that it is intent on luring us away from him and luring us down a pathway that is dark and that is dangerous.
but people feel that you don't have to be a Christian to have felt that if you're if you're
honest with yourself there are moments where you're like why did I do that yeah yeah right and yet
we do have cases where um we have evidence that there is a demonic realm all right so let's go
let me ask you one last angel question because I'm trying to faithfully go in order based on because
you can judge a book by its cover I've decided um so you said that angels in the
In the New Testament, and perhaps also in the old, but angels are described as present in our world.
Yes.
We will mistake angels for people.
Could very well.
That's right.
That's predicted.
So do you think that happens?
Yes.
And if so, can you give us an example?
And what would be the purpose of that?
Yeah.
You know, it's interesting in the book of Hebrews, it says that we will do it unbeknownst to ourselves.
So in other words, the implication is that we will have angelic encounters, but we won't
realize they're angels.
And I think that does happen.
Now, I have a couple of cases in my book.
One is a pastor who is driving his car in Ohio.
He loses control of the car.
He hits a telephone or an electric transformer kind of a pole type of thing.
The wires fall down on his car.
The doors are jammed shut.
The electricity is coursing through the car.
So much so that the windshield starts to melt.
And he's trapped in this car.
He don't know what to do.
And he begins to pray.
God, I'm stuck.
I don't know what to do.
And a man, scruffy kind of guy, comes walking up to the car.
And he opens the car, whose doors were jammed.
He opens the door.
He reaches in.
He lifts out this pastor and takes him about 50 yards away from the car, which then explodes.
And he says to the pastor, he says, you're going to be okay.
you're okay now but the police are on their way and i can't be here when they get here so you just know
that you're okay and he walked away and disappeared now the people the medics who came the
emergency technicians and so forth that came as a result of the accident and they look at the car
and say they can't explain how this is possible that somebody could have opened that car door
and not been electrocuted and rescued this pastor and yet it happened and the pastoral and the
pastor says, I believe it was an angel.
Well, maybe, could have been.
How do you prove something like that?
But, I mean, how do you explain it away naturally?
How do you explain it a way that he's able to come, grip the car door, and open up this car that had been jammed shut?
So I think, yeah, there are cases where I think the logical explanation, the most reasonable explanation, if you don't rule out the supernatural of the outset, is that it was an angelic encounter.
amazing amazing um but they're probably more subtle experiences too yes no doubt where you learn something
you encounter somebody out of nowhere who tells you something or who tests your your compassion
yeah yeah could very well be and even the the incident i had that seemed to as an atheist here i am
in this church nearly 30 years old hearing this um understanding
the gospel anyway for the first time, and that encounter I had with an angel is something to help
open my heart to the truth of the gospel.
Amazing.
Of course, I had to spend two years of my life investigating it from a, you know, to just kind of conclude
that it really was true, but it did propel me down that road toward God.
What are demons?
Demons are fallen angels.
The Bible, the Bible is a little bit vague on this, but apparently what happened, there was
say um and it's kind of funny if i could just pause this is my totally ignorant read of it yeah
but when the supernatural host when you know all these supernatural beings are referred to in the
bible there's almost a sense in which the the writer is assuming the reader already knows all this
yes that's right it doesn't it doesn't have a passage just by the way right yeah let me explain
all this to you know it doesn't do that which is interesting um because the the the
I mean, the culture at the time was familiar with this.
And there was kind of no debate that there was a supernatural world.
It's sort of like the soul.
I have a chapter in the book on the existence of the soul.
And because a lot of scientists today will deny that the soul exists.
The Bible doesn't say, by the way, you have a soul and here's, let me define it for you.
It presumes that we have a soul.
Scientists will deny the soul exist.
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it's like kind of a soulless experience well if there's no human soul then how is murder wrong well exactly
and they'll say free will is impossible so there is no free will uh yeah it's crazy it's crazy but demons
it started out with lucifer um whose name means morning star and he was kind of first among angels
Name means morning star?
Yeah, Lucifer.
He becomes Satan, and the name Satan literally means adversary.
And so the implication of Scripture is that this very prominent angel named Lucifer wanted to be worshipped.
He's the one who wanted the worship.
And so his pride is what resulted in him falling from the angelic realm, becoming Satan, becoming someone.
And you think about this.
When Jesus encounters Satan, what is it?
that Satan wanted from him. Worship. Satan wanted Jesus to worship him. And that's what
Lucifer wanted. It was pride that got in the way. He becomes Satan. And a certain percentage
of the angels accompanied him in this fall. This happened before the fall of humankind in the
Garden of Eden. So this predates that. We don't know how many angels accompany him, but there are a lot
of angels. In Revelation chapter 5, there's a scene of Jesus on the throne being worship. And
if you do the math, because it talks about it a little cryptically, it was a hundred million
angels worshipping him at that time. So there's a lot of angels. And a percentage of them fell
with Lucifer, he became Satan, and angels became his minions, so to speak. Now, Satan is limited
in his power. He's not omniscient like God is. He's not omnipresent like God is. In other words,
a guy was telling me, he said, there's probably never a time.
when you and Satan have both been in the same zip coat
because he's only in one place at a time
and so he's got things he's doing
he probably never been the same zip code you have
but his demons probably have been
and they carry out his will
which is to pull people away from God
to discourage people in finding God
and to drag as many people to hell with him as they can
now his existence
he's sort of on a lead
by God at this point.
His ultimate destination in the lake of fire is already predicted.
So he has no future, really.
But he has influence.
And he has certain powers.
And he and the demon is very intuitive.
You'll think they know more than they know.
And they go after people.
I tell the story in my book about a very prominent psychiatrist named Richard Gallagher,
educated Ivy League University.
I have a quote from the former president of the American Psychiatric Association, calling him highest integrity, totally trained and prominent in his feel of psychiatry.
Of course, he's a medical doctor because he's a psychiatrist, just extolling him as an individual and as a scientist as a psychiatrist.
And about 25 years ago, he had two cats.
and they got along great.
They slept together, they played together.
I think it was fine.
Until one night, the cats started to attack each other, viciously.
I mean, they're trying to kill each other.
They're clawing each other.
They're snarling each other.
They're biting each other.
It was unbelievable.
And they pulled them apart and put them into separate rooms and thought,
what in the world was that all about?
At 9 a.m. the next day, the doorbell rings.
And it was a pre-set appointment.
A Catholic priest was bringing by a woman to be examined by
Dr. Gallagher.
She claimed that she was a high priestess of a satanic cult.
And he wanted her to be examined.
Was she demonically possessed?
Was she just crazy?
Or what is this all about?
So at 9 a.m., the doorbell rings for his appointment.
And Dr. Gallagher opens the door.
And here's this woman who claims to be a high priestess of a satanic cult,
who kind of looks up at him and sneers at him and says,
So, how'd you like those cats last night?
Ooh, yeah.
there's something going on and that took him on a journey where he as a psychiatrist who understands what mental illness is and understands comes to understand what demon possession and demon oppression is like he spends the next 25 years as kind of the go-to guy in the in the medical realm for exorcists of the catholic faith and has witnessed amazing things that he documents and i quote him in the book
cases where we have a woman who in front of eight eyewitnesses levitates off a bed for 30 minutes.
Another case where people are speaking in Latin and other languages that they don't know,
where they spontaneously are bruised and clawed, where one petite woman picked up a 200-pound
Lutheran deacon and threw them across a room.
I mean, these are things, as he said, they go beyond psychiatry.
he believes these are actual demonic possessions now a true Christian cannot be demonically
oppressed and the reason is a true Christian is indel by the Holy Spirit and you can't be
endowed by evil and good like that in the same way at the same time so Christians cannot be
possessed but they can be oppressed they can be hector they can be bothered they can be
attacked by demons and there are some amazing examples
of that. I just mention a couple of people who are hectored or bothered by demons.
Now, for Christians, the book of James says to, if you rebuke Satan, he'll go away.
So if you're a Christian, you don't have to be afraid that, you know, these demons are going to
somehow possess you or kill you or whatever.
Greater is he who is in you than he who is in the world, the Bible says.
And so you can, the Bible says if you, if you shun Satan, he has no choice.
He's got to, he's got to leave you.
So for a Christian, you're protected.
But I fear for those that don't have that kind of protection.
There are cases of demon possession that, as Dr. Gallagher and others have documented,
are corroborated in ways that I don't think they can be.
denied. How can you corroborate a supernatural event? I think by the, when there's, when there's
no naturalistic explanation for what occurs. So you have a woman, for instance, in front of eight
eyewitnesses, levitating off a bed for 30 minutes. I don't know what the natural explanation for
that would be. That's right. You know, so I think it points towards something beyond that. For me,
as I investigate, another area I investigate in the book, are miracles. And for me, if you have
have solid documentation, medical documentation, if you have multiple eyewitnesses with no motive
to deceive, if you have no natural explanation that seems logical that can account for the
phenomenon, and if it takes place in the context of prayer, then I think it's logical to conclude
that a miracle has taken place. Yes. And there have been miracles published in peer-reviewed medical
journals. I talk about one in my book. Here's a woman who was blind for 12 years within
a curable condition. She went to a school for the blind. She learned to read braille. She walked
with a white cane. And she married a Baptist pastor. And one night, they're getting ready to go to
bed. She's already in bed. He comes over to her and he puts his hand on her shoulder and he
begins to cry. And he begins to pray and he says, Lord, I know you can heal my wife. I know you can
heal her right now. And I pray that you do it tonight. And with that,
She opened her eyes to perfect vision.
She said, I was blind when my husband prayed for me.
I opened my eyes.
I can see.
It's a miracle.
That was researched by multiple medical researchers and published in a medical journal as a case study.
What do you do with that?
What do you do with that?
I think it kind of leaves it up to the reader to say, what's your conclusion?
I bet they were upset by it.
Yeah, but certainly does point toward a supernatural event.
But here's what's interesting.
There's a woman with a Ph.D. from Harvard, who's a professor at Indiana University, major secular university.
And she said, I'd like to test whether miracles are possible.
How can we scientifically test that?
So here's what she did.
Miracles tend to cluster in places where the gospel is just breaking in.
And so we see them in China, in Mozambique, in Brazil, places where the gospel is taking root.
We see miracles taking place in a disproportionate number.
So she says, I'm going to put it to the test.
So she sends a team of scientists to Mozambique and researchers to Mozambique.
And they go into the bush and they say, bring us all your deaf and blind.
So they bring all the people deafblind or with severe hearing or vision problems.
They bring them and they test them scientifically right there.
What is your level of vision?
What is your level of hearing?
They get that scientifically established.
Then, immediately, they are prayed for in the name of Jesus
by people who tend to have a track record of God using them that way.
And then, immediately after that, they're tested again.
Guess what they found?
Improvement in virtually every case.
In fact, get this.
The average improvement in visual acuity was tenfold.
There was a woman named Martine.
When they first encountered her, she could not hear the equivalent of a
a jackhammer next door.
After 10 minutes of prayer, she could now hear normal conversations.
Well, this team is flummoxed by this.
It's like, something is going on here.
Virtually every person improves some of them, dramatically so, like Martine.
Let's see if we can replicate it.
So we'll go to another place where miracles are breaking in.
Brazil, they did the same test.
They got the same results.
In fact, there was a woman in Brazil.
She couldn't see me holding up three fingers from nine feet away, and after prayer for her healing, she could read the name tag of the person praying for her.
Tucker, this was published.
This is a scientifically rigorous study that was published in a peer-reviewed secular scientific medical journal, major medical journal, the Southern Medical Journal, published this.
And I interview in my book, I interviewed the scholar that did that study.
I say, what do you make of this?
And she said, something's going on.
She said, we're not playing on people's emotions.
This is not some televangelist trying to get people to send in their money.
This is not some people at a predisposition for anything.
Something is going on.
And I think she's right.
I think it's miraculous.
It sounds it.
And I think every person who's awake has experienced something that just doesn't have a natural explanation.
percent. I did a study. I hired a public opinion firm to do a scientifically accurate study of American adults. And I asked the question, have you ever had one experience, at least in your life, that you can only explain a way as being a miracle of God? Thirty-eight percent of American adults said yes. And by the way, let's say 99 percent of them are wrong. Let's say they think it was a miracle, but it was just a big coincidence. So let's just wipe out 99 percent and say, no, no, no,
you thought it was a miracle, it really wasn't. Let's wipe away 99%. Guess what? That would still
mean there would be a million miracles nearly in the United States alone. So you're right.
So many people have experienced something in their life that they can only attribute to being a
miracle of God. The official story on 9-11 is a complete lie. The 9-11 report is a joke.
You have CIA following two men all over the point.
and then eventually, even to America, right?
And you don't tell the FBI.
Nine and the Commission, cover it.
So what did happen?
What did the government know?
What did foreign governments know?
There was a cover-up.
Why?
It's been nearly 25 years in his time Americans learned what actually happened.
We're going to tell you, we're releasing one episode per week.
You're not going to want to wait.
If you're a member, you don't have to.
You get all five episodes the day it drops, right then, ad-free.
Our first episode airs Thursday, 9-11, September 11th.
You will not want to miss it.
Join us now at Tucker Carlson.com.
When Jesus performs miracles healing people,
making the lame walk, fixing the man with a withered hand.
Yeah.
even when he casts out demons from the man in the cemetery on the Sea of Galley.
The reaction he gets from particularly religious authorities, the Pharisees, but they hate it.
Yes.
They hate it.
Yes.
They do.
It's funny to say that.
Why is that?
Well, yeah, I wrote a novel once, fiction, book of fiction.
It was like a John Grisham thriller.
Nobody read it.
It was a big bomb.
Nobody bought my book.
But in that book, I have a politically ambitious pastor.
And there's a miracle. Is there anything worse? Yeah, that's right. And there's a miracle that happens in his congregation. And a reporter comes to question him about it. And the reporter's thinking, oh my gosh, the evidence is overwhelming something. And the pastor is downplaying it. No, no, no, no, no. That's just a coincidence. That can't be true. The pastor's true. Because why? Because he wants to be. He doesn't want to be seen as being weird by the community at large. And it would poison his political chances. So I
There is something true to that in Americans that we tend to suppress it.
Yeah, but I mean, this is an account from 2,000 years ago.
No Americans in the New Testament, and they had the same reaction.
But the religion, they did not like Jesus.
They did not like his message.
They did not like who he was.
I get it.
Yeah.
I think they'd be happy that the lame man can walk after 30 years.
At least they could say, hey, good for you.
That's great.
By the way, we don't like this Jesus guy.
But no, they didn't.
They just said, we don't like this Jesus guy.
No, actually, they plotted to kill the man he healed.
And they did. Yes, exactly.
So there's a couple references, at least a couple references in the New Testament to Satan being the ruler of the earth.
Yes.
What does that mean?
It means that in this realm, he in many ways has his way.
In other words, he has access to be able to influence people and point them away from the one true hope that there is, which is God.
And so he prowls about, as the Bible says, as a lion, hoping to tear people apart spiritually.
I mean, if that's not true, then explain the First World War.
Yeah.
I mean, there's just no, there's no explanation.
Even now, over 100 years later for why that war started.
Oh, you know, Archduke Ferdinand got shot to that in Sarajevo.
Really?
Okay, that's not a real explanation, actually.
Why did Christian Europe commit suicide?
Yeah.
And there are many other wars and many other tragedies in all of our lives.
You know, that doesn't make any sense.
That's clearly, you know, supernatural forces are acting in people.
I agree.
And so what I tried to do is say, okay, what evidence is there that there's more than what we can see in touch?
And because I'm fascinated by this.
And the reason I say that, Tucker, is because if this is true, if demons do exist,
we ought to be heads up about it because the two biggest mistakes we can make about the demonic realm, number one, is to deny that they exist and number two, to see a demon behind every bush and think they're more powerful than they are.
Right.
They're both problems, but I think the biggest problem in our culture is to deny that there is a demonic realm, pretend like there isn't.
So what are the hallmarks of it then?
Well, I think some things you mentioned, we see manifestations of it in ways that defy natural explanations.
And I think that's probably the best way of disorder, distraction, chaos, violence, hate division.
And you think if Satan were smart, which he is, would he go around the country and around the world trying to possess or bother average everyday people?
Well, you know what, much more efficient to go to Hollywood and to influence a bunch of people there who are very influential in, let's say,
entertainment industry. And let's say he encourages them to create films and television shows
that are funny and that are creative and they're fun. But there's an underlying message to them
that there's a normalization of immoral activity that makes it normal. Because, you know, when we
laugh, it opens us up to various possibilities. When we laugh, our defenses come down. So I'm
thinking of a wonderful, funny TV show like Friends. Remember Friends, the TV show was on TV
For years. Very popular show. Only America who never saw it. But yeah. But underlying that is a very
ugly sexual ethic that normalizes multiple sexual partners and that sort of thing. The kind of thing
that Satan would love to inculcate into American culture. And you know what? I think it's much
more efficient for Satan to influence movie makers and TV makers in Hollywood to create products
that feed us stuff that without us even realizing it. Open us up to the occult. Open us up
to immoral activity. Normalize it in ways that will have monocon to do that on friends. I can certainly
have sex on the first date with this guy I meet. So the way I is a non-theological, ignorant person
and try and figure out whether something's good or bad,
because it is an open question very often.
It's like, is that good or bad?
I'm not sure.
Yeah.
Are the people doing it at peace and joyful, happy?
Are they tormented?
Yeah.
And I know a lot of people in Hollywood, a lot of people I like, actually,
not too many happy people.
Yeah.
So really tormented people.
It's true.
For real, string of wrecked relationships, kids who hate them,
trans kids, drug problems.
Like, there's so much of that.
Yeah.
Do you think that's a fair way to assess?
I think because it is logical that if Satan were to try to influence a culture in a mass way, that that is a logical way that he would do it.
And oh, guess what?
By the way, look at all the dysfunction we see in that community.
It does seem to match up.
So if evil is acting through you, you are harmed to?
Generally, I would say, yes.
You're going to be someone who's trying to influence others.
You may not realize the full reasons why.
But it destroys you. Yeah, it does destroy you.
It certainly seems to.
Yeah, I think so.
Who would, you know, God created us so we could have a relationship with him.
So he taught us how we can live in a way that maximizes who we are.
And when we stray from that in egregious ways, as many people have and do, there are implications for us.
If I were trying to subvert and destroy, I would go,
to religious leaders.
Yeah.
I'd have them like molest kids
or get freaky sex lives
or steal money from the church.
Yes.
And I've always noticed
that the leadership
of Christian churches
in just like numerically
way more likely
to be screwed up
than the people in the pews.
Interesting.
Do you know what I mean?
You see these sex scandals
with pastors and you're like
how many people who are going to church
every Sunday have sex lives like that
probably not very many,
but a pretty high percentage of pastors
and I feel like that is outside influence.
Like teachers, too.
Teachers who young kids look up to, you know,
you can imagine when you were kindergarten,
first grade, second grade, you looked up to your teachers.
Not one time.
There's not one teacher I liked.
Oh, really?
Nope.
Oh, I sure did.
I never know.
I felt it was a authoritarian situation.
I was totally opposed from kindergarten on until I left college.
There was not one day where I respected or liked any of them, not a single one.
That is so funny.
I'm serious, too.
That is so funny.
I happen to go to public school growing up, and yet back then in the 50s and 60s, most of the teachers are Christians.
Yeah.
And so, no, I had some wonderful teachers that taught me great lessons about life.
So I –
You grew up in a better America than I did.
In Southern California in the 70s, I thought they were all buffoons, freaks.
I wasn't taking orders from them.
I really disliked them.
Sorry, excuse me.
That's funny.
But if you want to lead people astray, you subvert their leaders, I guess.
Yes, very much so.
I mean, yeah, just put yourself in Satan's place.
How are you going to impact the maximum number of people?
You're going to want to go after leaders.
You're going to want to go after religious leaders.
You're going to want to go after children and influence them at a young age.
We see all of that.
I often think this is such a wonderful country despite all its problems.
I'm totally convinced it's the best country, having been to a lot of countries.
Yeah.
But our leadership is the worst.
Yeah.
They're the worst.
They're like the worst people I've ever met.
And maybe that's not accidental.
Yeah.
I mean, could it be, I'll just raise the question, could it be that some people have received
some assistance from demonic meetings in terms of achieving what they've achieved?
How many happy political, I don't know how many political leaders you know, but how many happy
ones have you met. Gosh. Not a lot I trust, put it that way. Right, but they're all like
tormented. Sweaty and nervous and afraid. Don't you think those are signs? I do. I do.
And you look at if Satan's going to go after children, what is all this stuff about libraries
doing children's readings of and drag shows to little kids? Why? Why would that happen? You know what?
Because if you can capture the mind of a child very young, it could influence them for the rest of their
life um what happens because we put up with that yeah we do a healthy society would not put up with
that's true for five minutes that's true yeah sorry they'd drive them out of the temple immediately
with a whip right yeah sorry excuse me um so you think that um you believe that demons roam the earth
yes how do you protect yourself uh the bible talks about in ephesians talks about the full armor
of god and and and i talk about that's in a book i have a half a chapter of the
looks at ways that we can protect ourselves. I think the key number one way is to be
knowledgeable about scripture. Because if the Bible is really from God, then that is the
plum line of truth. And if it's the plum line of truth, we can measure everything against it.
And so if we're tempted by something that violates that plum line of truth, then we can be
assured that's not from God. And so I think being familiar with what are the teachings of
the Bible so that we can deter any effects, any attempts by Satan to lead us down a path that's
clearly not biblical. So I think that's probably the number one way. I think prayer is important.
I think honestly, and I say this granted as an evangelist who wants to drag as many people
of heaven with me as I can, that's my life goal now as a former atheist. I will say the best way
to protect yourself is to come into a relationship with God through Jesus Christ.
Because if you are endowed by the Holy Spirit, you can't be possessed by Satan.
And you can tell Satan to flee, and the Bible says, he will flee.
What is the Holy Spirit?
Holy Spirit, you know, the God is one what and three who's.
The Bible teaches there is one God.
That's clear.
But it also teaches that the Father is God, that the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God.
and so we have three we have one what which is god and three persons um and so the holy spirit um
being disembodied and so forth comes into the life of someone when they repent of their sin
receive forgiveness through christ um john 112 says but as many has received him to them he gave the
right to become children of god even to those who believe in his name but in practical terms like
what is the holy spirit so the holy spirit comes into you then what happens yeah the holy spirit
end dwells you, now you've got a plumb line inside of you, so to speak, and you recognize,
I'm sure you see things in your life now as a Christian that you did before you were Christian.
You say, why did I even do that?
What was I messing with that?
I certainly have those examples because now being indwelling by the Holy Spirit as a follower of Jesus,
I have that plum line to tell me what's godly and what's not.
And so it aids our conscience in understanding that.
And by being indelled by the Holy Spirit, it means we cannot be possessed by Satan as we see these demon possessions.
And those are increasing in numbers.
The Catholic Church has just added a whole bunch of people who are trained in exorcisms.
You see in charismatic ministries, deliverance ministries, I think we're seeing an increase in demonic activity and in demons hectoring and harassing and oppressing and possessing people.
I think we're seeing an increase in that.
Are there certain places?
I mean, there are physical places I have been where the hair on my arms go up.
Yeah, me too.
And without any, you know, for knowledge.
Yeah.
Not like, there's a really spooky place.
Watch this.
It's like some place.
I can think of a few of them in my life where it's like, ooh, I don't know what this is about.
What is that?
I'll think of Haiti.
I've been to Haiti.
I feel that strongly.
I have a good friend who has a minister.
in Haiti, and that's a place that has opened itself up to the demonic through human sacrifice,
through voodoo, through all these things. And it is a place where you palpably feel evil often.
I was in some remote parts of India and felt the same thing in many places. So I think there is,
just as miracles tend to break out in a positive way in places where the gospel is breaking in,
I think we probably see pockets around the globe where Satan has.
as a stronghold.
And I would think that...
Physical places.
Physical places, yeah.
Like, I think Haiti is a good example of that.
I've been in some places in the U.S. where I felt that really strongly.
I've been...
I was in a house once.
I lived in a house once as a child.
We're part of the house.
There's something so wrong with it.
And every person I lived in the house knew that.
Interesting.
Could be.
Could be.
Could be an occultic thing.
Yeah.
what's a mystical dream
mystical dreams I talk about these in the book
is so fascinating to me
we have seen more Muslims
become Christians in the last couple of decades
than in the 1400 years since Muhammad
and it's been estimated that
according to a third of them
before they became a Christian
had a Jesus dream
now what's interesting about that
is that these are corroborated dreams
I'll tell you what I mean
by that. First of all, a devout Muslim has no incentive in a, let's say in a closed country or
it's even illegal to share the Christian gospel. They have no incentive to have a dream as a product
of their subconscious mind about Jesus, the Jesus of Christianity, because it might lead
them to into apostasy. It might lead him to a death sentence in certain countries. So there's no
incentive for a devout Muslim to have a dream about Jesus. And yet, we are seeing this all over
the Middle East in close countries, in oppressive countries where Christians are persecuted and so
forth. But here's what I found most fascinating. In these cases, people are not going to sleep as a
Muslim having a dream about Jesus and waking up as a Christian. That's not how it works. There is always
something that points to a phenomenon or an event or a person outside the dream that corroborates
the dream. Let me give an example to clarify it. There was a woman named Nor in Cairo,
mother of eight, devout Muslim. She goes asleep. She has a dream and which Jesus visits her.
It's unlike any dream she's ever had. And she feels the love and the grace and the beauty of Jesus in such a
profound way. She said, here I am a woman in the presence of a man for the first time
my life. I didn't feel shame. I felt love. And she's just overwhelmed by this. And they're
walking along a lake shore. And she says, Jesus, why do you appear to me? I'm just a poor
mother of eight in Cairo. And Jesus said, my friend will tell you tomorrow. And she said,
who's your friend? And Jesus gestures to a man, she didn't even realize was walking with them
along the lake shore because she was so mesmerized by Jesus she didn't notice this guy and he says
my friend will tell you tomorrow she wakes up the next day she goes to the crowded marketplace in
Cairo on a Friday afternoon and she sees the man from her dream she goes up to him say you're the
one you're the one you're the same glasses same face same clothes you're the one he said did you have a
dream about Jesus last night she said yes turned out he was an
underground church planter.
He didn't want to go to the crowded marketplace in Cairo on Friday afternoon.
It's chaotic, but he felt God had an assignment for him.
So he went that day, nor encounters him from the dream.
He pulls her aside, opens the Bible, and shares the gospel with her.
That's the external corroboration that I'm talking about.
It's not just something that takes place in your subconscious mind.
There is an external factor to it.
I'll give you another example.
So one of the miracles, there are at least two in the story you just told.
Yeah.
And one of them is that the pastor felt the call to go to the marketplace on a Friday and you obeyed.
Exactly.
Have you had that experience in your life where you just feel like you're being told to do something and you obediently do it?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I remember as a new Christian, I felt a really strong urging.
I believe it was from God to empty our bank account and send a night.
anonymous cashier's check to a woman, a single woman in our church, sent it anonymously,
and to do it on Friday. I don't know why, but to do it on Friday. My wife and I both prayed
about it said, yeah, we're both feeling this. It's odd, but we feel it's legit. So to empty your bank
account and said to a stranger. We emptied a bank account. It's odd. Yeah. Well, that is, Lee, that is
odd. Yeah, fair. Hey, it was only $500. But still, for us, that was a
a lot of money back then.
So we sent this check.
Did you know the woman?
Yeah, we knew her.
Yeah, nice woman.
She had come to faith.
She had actually had a lot of negative experience with Christians growing up, but she
ended up coming to faith through a debate on Christianity.
We did in our church between an atheist and a Christian.
And so I knew who she was and so forth.
So on Monday morning, she calls me out of the blue.
And she's crying.
She said, Lee, I don't know what to do.
I said, what, what's going on?
She said, my car broke down over the weekend.
they say it's going to cost $500 for me to fix my car.
I don't have $500.
I'm going to lose my car.
I'm going to lose my job because I got to have my car for the job.
Would you pray for me that I would get this $500 somehow?
And I said, absolutely, I'll pray for me.
Let's pray.
And sure enough, that afternoon, because I'd meal on Friday, Monday afternoon,
she gets this anonymous $500 check.
Does she ever tell her?
No, she doesn't.
Now, unless she's listening, maybe she's still around?
Oh, yeah, she's still, yeah.
She actually quit her nursing job and joined the staff of our church.
She used to deliver my mail every day at the church.
Wow.
So I guess if she's listening, now she'll know.
You've never told her.
What year was that?
No.
Oh, gosh, this was why I was a new Christian at the church.
It was probably 1987 somewhere in there.
Yeah, yeah.
Almost 40 years ago?
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah, I think that does happen where God influence.
influences you. Do you try to be open to that? I do. When I pray, I try to leave time at the end of the
prayer. Say, God, I'm just going to be quiet for a while. If there's anything you want to tell me,
anything you need to alert me to, any way you want to lead me, I'm just going to be quiet. I'm just going to
listen. And I just spend, and normally there's nothing. That day, there was $500. But normally,
I don't feel anything that specific. But it's okay. Because what's important,
is saying, I'm open, God, to anything you want me to do or what you want me to do.
I'm open to it.
Of course, anything.
The Bible says, test the spirits.
So if I'm feeling something, I want to test it to make sure it's scriptural because God's
not going to tell me to, you're not going to go tell me to poison my neighbor, right?
So it's going to be consistent with scripture.
But I want to leave myself that opportunity to open myself up and say, God, I'm listening.
And just pause for a while and see, is there something?
And on that day, there was something.
It doesn't happen that often, but every once in a while something will take place like that.
Amazing.
So you, I'm sorry for the coldest act there.
You believe there has been an uptick in mystical dreams.
Oh, definitely in Middle East.
In fact, get this, in Cairo, there's often an ad in the newspaper.
And the ad says, call this number and we'll tell you about the man in white you've met in your dream last night.
Really?
Because there's so many of these.
interviewed for my book, Seeing the Supernatural, I interviewed Tom Doyle, who's the world's leading expert on this, and Tom said, Lee, I could pick up the phone right now, and I could call Syria. I could call Iraq. I could call Iran. And I'll give you five more stories. They are so common. I'll give you one from my church in Houston, Texas. So I'm part of a church. I live part-time in Houston, part of a church there used to be on the staff. And there was a woman who was born in the Middle East, in a close
country where you can't share the gospel legally and she had a dream when she was about 16 years old
and she said it was unlike any dream ever had because it was like a projector was projecting an
image of of Jesus and it influenced her it touched her but she didn't know what to do with it and she said
I was having problems in my life I called out for help and that's what happened well she ended up marrying
a Muslim gentleman who was transferred to Houston Texas because of the oil industry
so she moves into near our church and she has another dream and in this dream she's up to her waist in a body of water
and there's a man with her with a book that's open and the man is weeping and she's thinking what does that mean
what is that supposed to be about well a neighbor of hers goes to our church and she invited her to come to
Easter services at our church because her husband was out of town so she came to Easter services
She's sitting on the aisle in the auditorium, waiting for the service to begin,
and she sees the man who was with her in the pond, with the book.
And she said, that's the guy.
He was one in my dream when I was in this pond for no reason whatsoever.
But I saw him.
Well, his name is Alan Splann.
Alan is our pastor of baptism.
Alan comes over.
They introduce her.
This woman ends up receiving Jesus Christ as her forgiver and leader.
She becomes a Christian.
and she learns about baptism.
And sure enough, Alan Splann takes her to the pond on our property where we baptize new believers
and with her water up to her waist and with Alan, with a Bible open, and weeping at the joy,
baptizes her in the name of the father, son, and Holy Spirit.
So there's a case in my own church in Texas like that.
What did her husband say when he got home?
He doesn't know to this day.
He doesn't know.
No, because she can't tell him.
She said he would, he would, who knows what he would do?
She can't, she can't, so she keeps, she has a Bible that we gave her.
She keeps it hidden.
And she doesn't go to church because she can't.
So she has to keep it hidden from her husband.
Wow.
It's sad.
But again, she didn't do nothing about baptism.
What kind of, what kind of a mystical dream you're standing up to your waist in water with a guy with a book who's crying?
I mean, what the world is that all about?
How do you tell a difference between a conventional dream and a mystical dream or all dreams mystical?
I mean, we don't know what dreams are just for the record as a matter of science.
I mean, no one's ever been able to explain what that is.
You know, it's interesting.
God is in control of all.
And so in a sense, everything is spiritual, right?
I mean, God rules and so forth.
So in a sense, any dream is spiritual.
I think to me a mystical dream is one that has a strong spiritual overtones.
and there's no natural explanation to say this could come from your subconscious mind.
You know, I think sometimes people will write off a dream as saying,
well, that's just something that came from your subconscious.
Maybe you saw something on television, didn't even realize it,
and it was in your subconscious.
But when you have examples like the one I gave, that doesn't make sense.
I'll give you another example.
There was a guy named Omar.
And Omar grew up in a refugee camp in the Middle East, hated Jewish people.
hated Jewish people.
His life goal was to murder as many Jews as he could.
And so he wanted to join Hamas.
This is about a dozen years ago.
He wanted to join Hamas.
So he makes arrangements to meet with some leaders of Hamas.
So he's walking down the road toward that meeting,
and he's blocked by a vision of Jesus,
who stops him and says,
Omar, this is not the plan I have for your life.
I want you to turn around
I want you to go home
this is not what I want for your life
well it freaks him out right
and so what does he do he turns around
he goes home
that afternoon he lived in an apartment building
that afternoon an American family
was moving into the apartment across the hall
and he goes over there and he says
I just had this vision
of Jesus telling me that
and he explained the vision and he said
as a Christian, can you tell me what it means? And this Christian man said, well, let me just do
this. And he opens the Bible and he shares the gospel with him. And Omar not only becomes a
Christian, but today he himself is an underground church planter in the Middle East. Omar's not his
real name, by the way. So there you have, again, external corroboration. The image, the vision he had
appointed him ultimately towards somebody else who then explained the gospel. That to me tells me
this is more than a subconscious manifestation of something in our heads. Yes. And that's what,
as someone trained in journalism and law, I'm looking for those kind of instances of corroboration.
Visions are something we associate with hallucinogenic drugs. Yes.
what is that what are the visions produced by ayahuasca and there there are um what i would call
naturalistic visions in other words visions that are caused by things that we can determine our natural
i mean natural uh medically natural in other words chemicals i'll give you an example in 2011
i had a condition to go hyponitremia hyponitremia is um a severe drop in your blood sodium level
and it causes your brain to expand in your head.
Well, there's no room for your brain to expand very much.
And so you have hallucinations and almost died as a result of it.
Just out of the blue you had this.
Well, it was a combination of several things I had.
I was allergic to a drug that they had given me because I'd lost my voice and they gave me a steroid and I was allergic to the steroid.
I didn't know I had pneumonia, which could be a factor.
I'd lost a kidney, which I wasn't aware of.
and that regulates sodium.
So I had all these weird things going on.
This was the Job period.
Yeah, it was a Job period.
That's right.
So here I am.
I had hallucin.
I saw demons.
I saw weird things.
Do I believe they were from God?
No.
Do I believe there's from Satan?
No.
Do I believe they were a product of the medical problem I had of my sodium dropping so low.
How long did this go on?
And where were you when you saw these visions?
I was at home.
And I finally fell unconscious.
They called the paramedics.
I woke up in the emergency room, and the doctor looked down at me and said, you're one step
away from a coma, two steps away from dying.
And then I went unconscious again.
That was the message that doctor gave pretty reassuring.
I know.
You think he could have sugar-coated it a little.
The last thing you heard was you're dying?
Yeah, I know.
It's like, hey, give me it sugar-coded first.
But the problem is they have to raise the sodium level very carefully because 25% of people
with this condition end up mentally or physically disabled.
Oh.
So they have to raise it.
So I was in a hospital about a week and they had to gently, slowly raise the-
One potato chip at a time.
Exactly.
So do I think those were mystical?
Do I believe I really saw a demon?
Probably not.
I think that was a medically induced phenomenon.
I don't have any external corroboration other than to say it was these low sodium that
it's known to cause hallucinations.
and I had hallucinations.
So I think there are medical things that can cause that.
There are drugs that can cause hallucinations.
Now, God is overall, I get that.
But as a skeptic, I'm always looking for those cases where we have evidence that it's true beyond the experience itself.
There are certain forms of what we refer to as mental illness, which is like a phrase invented by people pretty recently.
And clearly there are forms of mental illness, I think.
I guess, whatever that is.
But there are certain people who have visions that are very unpleasant.
Yes.
And that bear like almost a precise resemblance to the demonic possession described in the New Testament.
And they may be demonic.
I don't know.
I have to evaluate each one to try to determine.
Of course.
These are broad brushes.
But you do.
Is it fair to conclude that maybe not everything that,
the shrink tells you is mental illness.
They can never describe where it comes from or how to fix it.
They have no idea.
But whatever.
They know nothing, to be clear.
But is it fair to assume that maybe some of that is spiritual?
Yes, I think it can very well be.
I would look at, you know, all of the factors involved.
Where we have the external corroboration like people left with scratches on them
or bruises that cannot be explained, where we have levitation, where we have people speaking
in a language they don't know, spontaneously speaking Latin, things like that. Then that is the
external corroboration to me that there's something demonic going on. It doesn't mean it couldn't
be demonic. I'm just saying those are the cases I'm more comfortable in concluding that they're
demonic when I've got that kind of external corroboration. But speaking in languages you don't know
also can also be as described as in the acts of the apostles as a manifestation of the Holy Spirit
of God indwelling. That's right. There are other languages people speak, but not when they're
spitting at clergy who are trying to exercise. Oh, is that a sign? Yeah, that could be a sign.
When you're cringing before a crucifix and you're trying to bite people. But what about
glossolalia? What about speaking in tongues? Yeah, that is a spiritual gift. There are Christians who
believe that those gifts have ended with the apostolic age and are no longer applicable.
There are other Christians who believe they are still active in this world. I believe they
are still active. I've met Christians who speak in other tongues and others who interpret that.
So I believe it's a gift that still takes place. I have not experienced that personally,
but I have credible people who do and have experienced that. There are other Christians, though,
who say no, no, no, that ended with the apostles. So that's one of those side issues
theologically that when we get to heaven, we can raise our hands and ask God, hey, what about
that? Speaking in tongues thing. Yeah, no, I know that there is a debate over it. I have no
idea what I think about it, but it is, I guess just as a factual matter, it's true that there
are people who seized by some unseen force begin speaking in languages they have never learned.
Yes, and often this is a generally, I would say, this is not a language that other people speak.
It is a...
Or have ever spoken?
Yeah, it's a spiritual language.
But then there's someone, and this is a good corroboration, someone who can interpret that.
And they understand it, this language, even though it's a spiritual language.
It's not Latin.
It's not Greek.
It's a spiritual language.
And that someone else is able to hear, and they have a gift as well to interpret what is being said.
I got to take it on one other back alley here really quick.
So both the Hebrews and the early Christians wrote extensively about the concept of a name.
Yeah.
God's name.
Holy be your name.
Yes.
In the name of God, the name of Jesus.
What does that mean exactly?
Why the name?
It means a couple things.
I mean, to do things in the name of God, Yahweh, in the name of God, is to do
something consistent with how God is leading you and how scriptures would suggest that you act.
So, in other words, to act in God's name is to do something consistent with his character.
So if I do something charitable to my personal loss and yet to someone else who's in great need,
I do that in God's name.
I do that because this is what the Bible teaches me.
That should be generous and helpful toward people are hurting.
Right.
names you know names in scripture you know you look at the name of Jesus is called Emmanuel
well he's never called Emmanuel well said it was his name but what that means in in the ancient
language is that he's that he is God with us that's what Emmanuel means God with us and that
was the name given to Jesus but that wasn't the name he was called but it was a name that was
associated with Jesus. So names have all kinds of implications in ancient Judaism and early Christianity.
Sure seems that way. Now we just name people according to what everybody's...
What we see on friends. Yeah, yeah, that's right. But I mean, you know, observing Jews do not
spell out the name of God, right? They leave the vowels out because the name is itself holy, just the name.
Yes, that's right. The name, that's right. They would, and they would talk.
talk around the name. There's a verse in Luke 15 where it says that there is
rejoicing in heaven. How does it go? Yeah, I can't think of the exact terminology. But
basically, it's a way of saying there's rejoicing in heaven whenever a person becomes a
Christian without saying the name of God rejoicing. It kind of talks around that a bit.
There's a hesitation, in fact, something you didn't want to do in ancient Jewish world is to use the name of God that was forbidden.
Like at all.
Yeah, you wouldn't use it.
And you wouldn't spell it out.
You talk around it.
Because it's so powerful.
So holy.
It could hurt you.
So near-death experiences.
Walk toward the lightly.
What's a near-death experience?
A near-death experience is when a person is clinically dead.
that is generally no brain waves, no respiration, no heartbeat, yeah, they're clinically dead.
Yet, they're going to be revived.
And so they're dead for a period of time, clinically dead, but they're not permanently dead.
So the body will be revived at some point.
So by the measurements of science, they're dead.
Yeah, that's right.
So maybe right there, if we just pause, like maybe right there we have further evidence that science well useful, of course, and life improving in some way.
ways, does not have the tools to measure the totality of the experience?
Well, you know, it is.
So they're actually like, that's the failure.
Like, they're obviously not dead.
Yeah, that's right.
They are coming.
That's right.
All the signs are that they're dead.
But, you know, the Bible says that, and Christianity teaches that when a person dies, their
spirit separates from their body.
And this is what we see in a near-death experience.
This is evidence for the soul, for the spirit.
So the physical body is clinically dead.
There's no sign of life in the body.
They're still working on you.
Has once again, has there ever been a culture that we're aware of in the entire span of human history that did not believe in the soul?
They all did.
In fact, people just meet puppets.
I quote experts in the book that talk about that, that there has every civilization believed in the spirit, a spirit, a soul that continues to live on after we die.
Our leaders don't believe that.
Well, that's not only tragic, it's dangerous.
Because if you believe we are only our brain, we're only neurons that are firing, that means technically we have no free will.
And seriously, you're saying we don't have free will.
How do you punish someone for doing something wrong if they really didn't have free will?
Well, it also means we have no inherent rights.
We have no right and wrong.
Does a rock have a right?
No.
Exactly.
Right.
So maybe that should be the acid test.
For leadership, if you don't believe human beings have souls, if that's not the basis of the way you understand other people, is a separate person with a distinct and unique soul.
Right.
If you don't believe that, you can have no power.
Yeah.
In our society, is that fair?
I like that.
I like that.
I never thought of that before, but I certainly wouldn't trust a person personally, morally, if they believe only that we are able to.
I wouldn't give a driver's license.
That's scary.
It is scary.
You don't think other people have souls?
Exactly.
What?
You're a psychopath?
Exactly. I have an interview in my book with a Ph.D. from Cambridge University, a neuroscience,
who says the evidence is so persuasive that, yes, indeed, we do have a soul. We do have a spirit.
Thank you. Yes. Thank you, neuroscientist.
Yeah.
From Cambridge. What's interesting is that we have cases where people are clinically dead,
their spirit separates from their body, and they see or hear things.
It would have been impossible for them to see her here if their spirit had not actually separated from their body.
So this is confirmation that the soul exists.
Interesting.
And let me give you some examples.
So it was a woman named Maria.
She was dying in a hospital in London, England.
And but she said, I was conscious the whole time.
And so here they are working on her body, trying to bring her back.
She said, my spirit floated out of my body.
I met a divine being.
but mainly I'm looking down from the ceiling of the hospital room at the resuscitation efforts.
I'm watching them trying to revive my body.
And then at some point, the reviving works and the spirit returns to the body.
And she says, by the way, see the ceiling fan here in this room, the hospital room?
There's a red sticker on top of one of the blades of the ceiling fan.
Now, you couldn't see it from the room because it's on the top of one of the blades of the ceiling fan.
But she saw it because from her perspective near the ceiling, watching resuscitation, she was looking down.
So they got a ladder.
They went up there.
Sure enough, on the top of this blade, here's the sticker exactly as she has described it.
That tells me that she really did have an out-of-body experience just as the Bible describes.
and this is extremely common.
We have a woman, woman, she was a young girl.
She was nine years old, so I recall eight or nine.
She drowned in a swimming pool, a YMCA.
It's horrible, horrible.
Her brain had swelled.
She had no respiration, no heartbeat.
She was clinically dead.
So they brought her to the hospital to keep her body alive mechanically
until they decided what to do, you know.
And they continued to try to revive her.
but as it turns out, three days later, she was revived and with no brain damage.
And she said, by the way, I was...
Seriously.
Yeah.
And she said, I was conscious the whole time.
And they said, well, that's not possible.
And so the doctors who were skeptical said, here, here's a piece of paper in a crayon.
Why don't you draw the emergency room where we took you when you were dead?
So she picks up the cranes.
She draws the emergency room exactly as it appears.
And then she said, by the way, one night, when my parents...
visited me in the hospital. I followed them home. And I watched as my mom, she was making
chicken soup with rice on the stove. And my dad was sitting in a certain chair and he was looking
in a certain direction. And her brother, she said, was playing with a G.I. Joe Jeep in his bedroom
and these are the clothes that they were wearing. Everything was exactly correct. How do you
explain that if she didn't have an authentic out-of-body experience while she was clinically dead.
So this is affirmation that near-death experiences do point toward a spirit, a soul that separates
from our body at the time of death. Now it can return to our body if we're revived, and that's
what happens in these cases. Interestingly, there was a study done of 21 blind people,
either blind since birth or shortly thereafter.
They were able to see or had visualized-like perceptions
during their near-death experiences.
So there's a woman named Vicki.
Wait, what?
Yeah.
Vicki Umepeg, 26 years old, she's blind, virtually since birth.
She is killed in a car crash.
She's a passenger in a car, she's killed.
But she said later, I was conscious the whole time.
And her spirits floated out, and she watched the, she's able to see
the resuscitation efforts.
She was able to see
childhood friends
who she'd never seen in person
but she knew intuitively
who they were.
Oh, that's Mary, that's Jimmy.
She sees birds for the first time.
She sees trees and so forth
and then when her body is revived
and her spirit returns to her body,
she's blind again.
Medical researcher said
this is impossible
based on current medical knowledge.
How does this happen?
So there's a
phenomenon here that tells me that there's corroboration, that there's something to this idea
that we have a soul, a spirit that is different than our physical brain and body.
And I'll add this, this is really important.
John Burke is, I interview him from my book, John Burke is a Christian pastor who, with an engineering
degree in science background, who studied 1,500 cases of near-death experiences.
in depth. He has video interviews with people and so forth. And here's his conclusion. He said,
Lee, if you look at not how people interpret what happens, because we all interpret things to our
worldview. If you're a Muslim, if you're a Hindu, you're going to interpret things differently.
Forget that. Set that aside. Just look at what actually takes place during a typical near-death
experience. That is consistent with the Christian Bible. And what is it that's consistent?
Well, things like encountering a divine being, things like encountering people who had preceded you in death, things like a life review, where your life is reviewed, and you not only experience with this divine figure next to you who's encouraging you, it's not a judgmental kind of a way, it's you're judging yourself, you're, you're, you're, um, um, um, um, um,
You're reviewing every little action you took, but you're able for the first time to see the ripple effects of that.
So I may have done something that hurt you years ago, and I never realized the impact that had on you and how that caused you to do this, that, and the other thing.
And yet in this life review, you see not only what you did and you did good and you did bad, but the ramifications of it.
Yes.
That takes place.
Now, you're not permanently dead.
The Bible says in Hebrews, we're appointed once to die and then the judgment.
So you would think that, biblically speaking, you would die and then you would encounter judgment.
Well, you're not permanently dead.
You're coming back.
This is not your permanent death.
So this is kind of a taste, a foretaste of what death is like.
But you're not permanently dead.
You're just clinically dead.
But you still have some of the attributes of what the Bible talks about in terms of a judgment.
So I think that's reassuring for Christians like me who used to think, oh, that's new age stuff, near-death experience, that's weird.
There have been, Tucker, 900 scholarly articles written about near-death experiences in medical journals and scientific journals over the last 50 years.
This is a very well-researched area.
And they have concluded that there is no natural explanation that can account for all of the aspects of a near-death experience.
experience. It's a fascinating area. And so I interview, as I said, John Burke, who's an expert on
them, to give examples of this sort of thing. What about pre-death? Yes, this is, death visions.
This is, ah, this is, this is new. Can I just add one editorial comment? Yeah. I'm so filled with
rage, I have to do it, that our culture systematically excludes conversation, real conversations
about death. Obviously, we're very pro-death. You know, kill your baby.
euthanize your parents, whatever.
We're all about death.
But the actual experience of death is kind of cloaked for most people.
And I don't think they have any idea what it is when someone dies, the process of dying.
And so this is a welcome conversation.
Tucker, it's fascinating these deathbed visions.
The difference between a near-death experience and deathbed vision is in a near-death experience, a person is going to come back.
Right.
In a death-bed vision, this is a vision someone has just before they die.
They're not coming back.
They're permanently going to die.
But we see a biblical example of this in the book of Acts.
We see Stephen, who is described as being full of the Holy Spirit, who is on the verge of being
stoned to death, and he looks up, and he sees the heavens open up, and he sees the Father and
the Son together.
So this has a biblical precedent.
But what is fascinating, and I think what you said is so true, people don't like to talk about
it.
At all.
Yeah, at all.
Because if you have one of these experiences before you die, they're going to think, they're
going to think I'm, I've got dementia. They're going to think I'm nuts. They're going to,
they're going to think, you know, so a lot of people don't like to talk about it. So there's
a researcher. He went to a huge hospice facility in New York State. And they went to all the
dying people and they said, please, as a favor, if you have a vision, a dream unlike any
you've ever had, tell us. Would you tell us? And so 88% of those, you're going to, you're
dying people had a pre-death vision that they reported on before they died, 88%.
I think the other 12% probably had one, but they died before they were able to say anything.
Or they were so high on morphine, they couldn't talk.
That's true.
People get drugged up.
That's true.
So there's that.
I mean, obviously, you don't want people to suffer.
You want to alleviate suffering and alleviate pain.
I'm totally for that.
I want to be clear about it.
But there's also this custom, which has grown to ubiquity.
Now it's just, it's everybody who dies, gets.
from the hospice nurses, they kill you with morphine.
I mean, that's no one wants to say that out loud,
but I've seen it, they kill you with morphine.
Yeah.
And, okay, first, we should just be honest about what's happening, always.
But second, we should be clear about the cost.
So if people, if everybody on the way out is getting visions of some kind,
maybe there's a purpose to those visions.
Exactly.
Maybe we shouldn't short-circuit that.
And, Tucker, there's also corroboration.
for these. So in other words, they did one study of 3,000 of these, and they determined this is
not just something coming from the subconscious mind. There is something else here. And I'll give
you the example of the corroboration. There was a woman named Doris. She's dying on her
deathbed. And she has a pre-death vision. And she sees the heavens open up and she sees angelic
beings. And she sees her father, who had died several years earlier. And he's kind of almost welcoming her
to the next realm.
But then she gets this confused look on her face, and she says,
wait a minute, why is Vita with my father?
What, why would Vita be there?
It makes no sense.
Why would Vita be there?
And then she died.
Vita was her sister.
Her sister had died two weeks earlier, but no one had told Doris because she was so ill,
they didn't want the news to kill her.
So they withheld the news that her sister Vita had died.
And yet, on her deathbed, she said,
sees Vita in the world to come. That is fairly common. It actually happened with my father-in-law.
So that to me is a corroboration. Another form of corroboration, get this, in the Bible,
in Luke 16, there's a story of a rich man and a beggar who both die. Yes. And the rich man goes
for a place of torment. And the beggar goes to a place of bliss. The rich man, by the way,
has walked past the poor man every day. That's right. And ignored him. And ignored him.
So the beggar, according to Jesus, in verse 22, is accompanied by angels to heaven.
That angels accompany him to heaven.
And what's particularly fascinating is people who have pre-death visions often see angels coming for them,
just as Jesus suggested in that parable.
So, for instance, the most famous skeptic in Canada, Charles Templeton.
Charles Templeton was the pulpit partner of Billy Graham.
He was going to be the great evangelist.
But then he went to a liberal seminary.
He lost his faith.
He wrote an ugly book called Farewell to God,
My Reasons for Rejecting the Christian Faith.
And I got to know him.
He became a friend.
I actually wrote a book called The Case for Faith
where I answered all his objections to Christianity.
And we became friends.
Anyway, he ended up coming back to faith in Christ before he die.
And then he's on his deathbed.
And he calls out to his wife, Madeleine.
Madeline, what, what, Chuck?
Can you see them?
What are you talking about?
They're in the room.
You can't see them.
They're right here in this room.
They're the angels.
They're coming for me.
Oh, they're so beautiful.
Look at them.
The singing is so beautiful.
They're coming for me.
I'm going to heaven.
I'm going to be with God.
That is incredibly common that people will see angels coming for them in that vision they
have before that.
Now, now here's another bit of corroboration.
Children who are dying will see angels, but not like you would expect them to be seen.
In other words, let's say a five-year-old who's dying.
What is their image of an angel?
Well, it's a furry thing with, or feathery thing with big wings, right?
It's a cartoon, right?
It's a cartoon, they all have big wings.
And so there's a case from a doctoral dissertation I read of a little girl who's dying,
and she says, mommy, mommy, can you see the angels?
they're coming for me. Oh, they're so beautiful. They're so beautiful. Their eyes, look at their
eyes. And the mother didn't want to disappoint her. So she said, oh, yeah, yeah, I see them.
Look at their big wings. And a little girl said, oh, mommy, they don't have wings. And she was
able to describe them in vivid detail before she died. Wow. You would think if a child of that age
was going to have just a vision from their imagination of angels coming for them, they would have big
wings. They don't. It would be the hallmark version. That's right. And in case after case,
they don't see the big wings. And by the way, the Bible doesn't say that all angels have wings.
So that to me is another very interesting dynamic of these pre-death visions.
Not all people on their deathbed have joyful visions. That's right.
Or reunited with loved ones in the next world. Yes.
There are many people who are in terror. Yes.
and horrified.
Yes.
And can you describe that and what is it?
Yes.
We have this in near-death experiences and in deathbed visions where people who are about to die
have a glimpse, I believe, of a hellish experience to come.
And they are frightened beyond belief and scared beyond words.
I'll give you an example of a near-death vision where this happened.
There's a man named Howard Storm.
Howard was an atheist.
He was a professor of art at a secular university,
chairman of the art department,
and he was visiting France, and he died of a heart attack.
So here he is, he's in a French hospital, he's dead.
But he said later, I was conscious the whole time.
It was a near-death experience.
His spirit had separated from his body.
And there were some people in the hallway say,
Howard, we've been waiting for you.
Come with us, come with us.
So he does.
And he's walking down the hallway.
His spirit is walking down the hallway with these people.
And it goes on and on and on, and it gets darker and darker.
And then they're becoming abusive.
And they're saying, come on, come on.
Why are you so slow?
And then they start to attack him.
And he said, they, he said, no horror movie can ever capture the horror of what they did to me.
I mean, he was absolutely mulled.
He said, I was roadkill.
And he said, I called out to God.
Like physically mulled.
Yes.
Eyes gouged.
out, ears ripped off, just horror. And he calls out to Jesus, and Jesus rescue me. And this white
orb comes and brings him and rescues him from that. And he is restored. Well, ultimately,
his body is revived. His spirit returns to his body. This is such a profound experience that
he not only renounced his atheism. He not only quit his tenured position as chairman of the
art department at a secular university, he not only became a Christian, he went to seminary,
he became a pastor, and today he's a pastor of this little church. I think it's in Kentucky or
Oklahoma or somewhere, in the middle of nowhere, serving God. That's how transformative this
experience was. Amazing. But there are multiple cases of people having horrific. In fact, one study
of near-death experiences said it was 24 percent had negative experiences, not positive.
doesn't feel like a good sign no no i mean what it does to me is it's affirmation that you know what
what the bible tells us is true there is a heaven there is a hell and every society ever has thought
that yeah every society um and i think everyone intuitively knows that yeah i've never had a near-death
experience but the one time i thought i was going to die many years ago was in a plane crash i was filled
with sadness i i had no peace at all yeah yeah none only regret
yeah um so i i did take that as a as an indication i should change the way i was living and i did
oh god used it in your life well i felt that i felt that way and certainly in retrospect i think that
yeah but i remember thinking wow i'm going to die i was certain of it and and then i thought later
i thought that when people knew they were going to die they were filled with like peace and warmth
walked toward the light that was not my experience at all it was like man i can't believe i did a few
things um oh and i've really felt sad about it so uh well that's the reality well but i guess it's yeah
well it was the reality that i experienced for sure but i also think that it's what a blessing
yes to have an opportunity to um you know to to to turn back yeah and change that's the thing
about these near-death experiences that um you have another chance um you don't have it in deathbed
vision but you're going to be revived and then you have a choice to make it's that's
The road I continue to want to go down.
The first thing I did was quit drinking and then had a fourth child.
Wow.
It's awesome.
It was awesome.
It was awesome.
It was awesome.
It was literally awesome.
I think that there's something real there.
And it does seem like a crime of some kind to deprive people of that with drugs.
I know.
If everyone experiences, it just like anything else.
Like maybe there's a reason.
Yeah.
It's not random.
Maybe.
You know, I'd encourage people who are watching or listening to this podcast.
Next time you have a big family get together with the cousins and the uncles and the aunts and everything, ask people, do we have any family stories about deathbed visions or near-death experiences?
I betcha you'll find, oh, Uncle Bob had that experience or cousin Jim had that experience.
I was having dinner with seven people in Oklahoma City, and four of them, we talked about this, four of them had relatives who had pre-death visions.
I'm not surprised
It's incredibly common
I've never asked that question
At a dinner party
But I have asked
Has anyone seen a ghost
Yeah
100% of time
There's some of the table
Who has 100%
Yeah
What is that?
I have a chapter on ghosts
And psychics in a book
The technical definition
of a ghost
Is someone who dies
But refuses to go into the afterlife
Their spirit refuses
To go into the next life
I don't see that in the Bible
so I don't think that ghosts per se are from God I think most likely an apparition that we interpret as being ghosts is most like a demonic apparition
I think people feel that I think so those have a bad rep yes yeah no one is summoning ghosts it's not like Casper who's gonna bring you some flowers generally people are anti-ghost yes ghost ghost stories yes yeah yes
Ghosted. Yeah, it's not a good connotation. So I don't think that surprises anyone.
So I do talk about ghosts and I talk about psychics and the tricks that they use to convince people that they're more...
Are you pro-psychic? Sorry?
Are you pro-psychic?
I'm anti-psychic. Yeah, I am too. Why are you anti-psychic?
Because the Bible says, do not consult mediums. Do not consult psychics. I mean, it's very clear. Multiple places in Scripture, do not do it.
Oh, well, among the ancient Hebrews, that was a...
death penalty offense.
Exactly, it was.
And so you just, it's not something we wanted to mess with.
And I think there's got to be a reason for that.
I think it because it opens a door to the demonic, that you're trying to consult the dead.
You're trying to, you're trying to find out something apart from what God might reveal through a psychic, through a medium who supposedly has a cultic,
um, um, um, um, um, wherewithal and is able to take you down that pathway.
It's dangerous.
Um, and, um, I talk in the book about, um, um, I talk in the book about.
the tricks that they use to, you know, there's things like cold readings and warm readings
and hot readings where people who want to fool you into thinking they know more about you
than they do will employ that and they think, oh my gosh, this person knows all about me.
No, they don't.
There's just very clever people who are able to read certain things about you.
No, I mean, of course, there's a lot of BS gypsy tricks.
But I'll tell you one case, but it's also true in the Bible that, at least in my read of it,
that they're taken seriously.
Well, there are cases...
That's why it's a death penalty offense,
not because it's fake, because it's real.
Because it can be real.
And that's a good way to argue it.
There is a case in contemporary times
where President Carter was president,
and a two-engine aircraft went down and crashed in Africa,
and the United States government was trying to find it.
I don't know why, but they wanted to find that aircraft.
And they had satellites, repositioned, looking for...
They could not find.
find the wreckage of this airplane. And so, um, the Stansfield Turner, who was ahead of the CIA,
uh, consulted a medium, a psychic in California. She went into a trance and she gave the
longitudinal and, um, latitude of where to find the plane. They went, they reoriented the
satellites and boom, there was a wreckage of the plane just as she had said. What do you do with that?
That tells me she was in connection with something.
thing there. Now, if the Bible says, don't be connecting with the psychics. It was probably demonic.
And why would she do that? Because now she's got credibility. Now the next time they want to know
something, let's go to that woman in California told us where that plane was. She seems to have these
abilities to know the future, to know things that we don't know. And now she has credibility.
I think that was a way for Satan to give her credibility so that we'd be fooled into thinking into the
future to take advantage of her psychic power. Yeah, best not to play with that stuff. No.
No, it's best to stay away from that.
So contacting dead relatives through a medium, Ouija boards, all that stuff, scary, bad.
Yeah.
On the other hand, I mean, that's my position.
Yeah.
I'm sure it's yours.
Yeah.
I came to that position through experience, not just guessing, it's bad.
However, I know a lot of decent, God-faring people who have said, well, I really feel like I was contacted by a dead relative, a dead loved one.
Yeah, that's an interesting.
And I have a couple of cases I talk about in the book of that.
that seemingly are corroborated.
What do you do with that?
How is that inconsistent with your theology?
On the one hand, there are a couple of cases in Scripture
where the dead have come back like that.
Elijah came back, the Transfiguration.
So there's an example of a dead person coming back.
There's the other example in the Old Testament
of a going to a medium and a dead person coming back,
not because of the power of the medium,
because she was surprised it happened,
but through the power of God,
he allowed that dead person to come back.
So there are a couple of perhaps precedents in Scripture
of dead people coming back.
One of the reasons I'm skeptical is because when Jesus was talking about,
in Luke 16, about the rich man who died and the beggar who died,
he talked about a gulf between the living and the dead that concerns me so that raises some
questions in my mind i think the transfiguration and the incident with what's called the
medium of endor in the old testament may be one-offs and those are unusual circumstances so i'm
Tucker i don't i'm not quite sure what to do with it because i talk about a couple of cases in the book
where a dead relative returns and a person talks to that relative and then they disappear
and then their child comes in, eight-year-old child, and says, I just saw grandpa.
I just talked to him.
So he experienced the same vision.
Well, that's pretty weird.
Is that corroboration and so forth?
Well, here's my concern.
So many times people have contact with these dead people, these are people.
these are people that lived ungodly lives and yet they say everything's fine i'm fine
everything's good just take care of the family tell everybody i love them i'm good don't worry about me
that's the general message people get well what does that say to someone who is thinking about what do
i need to do to live a life that will bring me to heaven and to god well uncle tom came and told me
He's fine. He was a adulter and he never came to faith in Jesus. He's a, you know, bad guy. And yet he says he's fine in the afterlife. Wouldn't that be something that a demon might want to imitate to send a false message? I think maybe. So I guess I'm giving you two answers. One is there is some biblical precedent for a dead coming back, but I think they may be one-offs. I'm not sure. I think there be a good motive for Satan.
to counterfeit that, you know, says Satan can appear as an angel of light, as a counterfeit.
He can fool us into thinking he's something he's not.
Would that be to his advantage to do, to mislead people?
I think it could be.
So I'm not quite sure where I'm at.
Are UFOs, what we call UFOs spiritual entities?
I don't know.
I didn't get into UFOs in the book.
It's a fascinating topic.
Maybe I'll do another book on that.
But so I didn't research it thoroughly.
Having said that, though, it would not be an affront to my faith
if indeed we found intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.
The Bible doesn't say that we are unique in that.
No, it doesn't.
But I wonder.
Could they be spiritual is a question?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It could be, yes.
Is it?
I don't know.
I'm just not as knowledgeable on that.
to be able to give a strong opinion.
Last question, miracles.
Yeah.
What is a miracle?
A miracle is an event brought about by the power of God
that is a temporary exception to the ordinary course of nature
for the purpose of showing that God has acted in history.
So in other words, a lot of people skeptics...
Nice definition.
Thank you.
That's from Robert Pertil, who was a philosopher.
I thought that was the best definition I'd heard.
here's the problem. A lot of skeptics will say, I don't believe in miracles because you can't
violate the laws of nature. So by definition, a miracle is impossible. We haven't even settled on
the laws of nature. They're so dumb. But here's how I answer it. Like the laws of nature, really,
science every day challenges the laws of nature. And especially with quantum physics and everything. Exactly.
But I say, look, I have a glass of water here. If I were to drop it, the law of gravity would say it would hit the floor.
Yeah. But if I drop it and you reached in and grabbed it before hit the floor, you're not violating the law of gravity. You're not overturning the law of gravity. You're just intervening. And that's what a miracle is, is God intervening temporarily into his creation. He brought it about. So, of course, he could intervene. And, man. But again, our understanding of nature and its laws changes every day.
And it's so shallow. It's so shallow what we know.
Yeah, but I mean, our, I mean, our view of what is natural is different now from what it was five years ago.
Yeah.
And what it will be five years from now.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So that's just the silliness and the shallowness of claims like that kind of shocked me.
It does.
So miracles, but, you know, at the extent we can know, like, this is so unusual.
Like, this couldn't have happened accidentally.
Can I give an example?
Yeah, please do.
And this is one I personally investigated and has been, um, one.
widely documented. A woman named Barbara, she was diagnosed at the male clinics. We got all
those records with multiple sclerosis as a teenager. And it was progressive. She got worse very
quickly. Yeah. So she just got worse and worse and worse, multiple hospitalizations to the
point where the doctor said, look, and her parents said, look, next time she gets pneumonia,
which she would get on a regular basis, we're just going to let her die.
Let her go, yeah. Because we're just postponing the inevitable.
here she is on her deathbed. She hadn't walked in seven years, so her muscles had at atrophy.
Her fingers were, she was curled up like a pretzel. Her fingers were touching her wrists.
Her feet were permanently extended. Her diaphragm was, one diaphragm was paralyzed, so
one lung was collapsed. The other lung was at half full. She had a tube in her throat that
went to oxygen canisters in the garage. She was in hospice at home so she could breathe. So she got a tube in her
throat. She had lost her urination and bowels and control of those. She'd lost her eyesight, so all she
saw was gray shapes. And she's on her deathbed. She's dying. Well, some people said,
wait a minute, let's call WMBI, the Christian radio station at the Moody Bible Institute in
Chicago, and ask people on the radio show to pray for poor Barbara. She's dying. So they did.
Well, we documented that at least 450 people began praying for Barbara, because they wrote
letters to Barbara saying I'm praying for you and to encourage her. So here we are in Pentecost Sunday
1981. She is in her bedroom and her aunt and two girlfriends are reading her some of these
encouraging letters from people praying for her. And from the corner of the room where nobody was,
she heard the voice of God. And the voice said, my child, get up and walk. Well, she hadn't walked
in seven years. She had no muscle tone in her legs. She pulled out. She pulled out.
the tube so she could talk. And she said, I don't know what you're going to think of this, but God
just told me to get up and walk. Go find my parents. I want them to be here. So they ran out,
but she couldn't wait. She jumped out of bed. She told me, she said, Lee, the first thing I noticed,
my feet were flat in the floor. And they hadn't been flat for years. They've been rigidly
extended, but they were flat in the floor. Second thing I noticed, my hands had opened up, like flowers,
and they hadn't opened up in years. And then she said, the third thing I noticed, I could see.
She said, wouldn't you think that'd be the first thing I'd notice?
It was actually the third thing I noticed.
She was instantaneously completely healed of multiple sclerosis.
Her mother came running in, fell to her knees, and grabbed her calves, and said,
Your muscle tone has come back.
It was Pentecost Sunday.
There was a service at their church, Wheaton, Wesleyan Church.
They decided to go and thank God that she was fine.
She's dancing, literally dancing around the house with her father.
so they go to church they're in the back the pastor gets up and says does anybody have any announcements
Barbara comes walking down yeah that's a good announcement Barbara comes walking down the center aisle
people freaked out because they haven't seen her except in a wheelchair for seven years they began
singing spontaneously amazing grace I once was blind and now I see totally healed she goes the next day
to her doctor one of her doctors he said later he said I saw her walking down the
hallway toward my office. My first thought was, oh, she died, and that's a ghost. He said,
this is medically impossible. And it is medically impossible. She was instantaneously, totally
healed of multiple sclerosis. She ended up marrying a pastor that little Wesleyan church in Fredericksburg,
Virginia. And I got to know her sweetest woman. Is she still alive? She just recently,
this happened in 1981, lived perfectly healthy all these years. She just died in Florida. They just
retired just a few months ago.
So she'd find incredible.
Completely heal.
So, okay, that's a...
What do you do with that?
What do you do with that?
Well, that's a challenge to like the most basic understanding of everything.
Yes.
Right.
Yep.
So if she's on her deathbed from MS, which is a well-studied disease, you know, like you
would think that, you know, Harvard Medical School would just like, see, he's operation.
until they figured out what that was.
I know.
You know, I mentioned to my doctor, I said, I told him the story.
He said, it'd be interesting to know, because there's plaque that develops in the brain
in multiple sclerosis.
It'd be interesting to know, did that plaque disappear?
And I said, which is the greater miracle that the plaque would disappear or that God would
totally heal her with the plaque still there?
I don't know which a greater miracle would be.
I guess my question is, was how could we in an advanced country allow a case like that?
to go unnoticed.
And unstudied.
I know.
It was the next day, it was in the Chicago Tribune, which most newspapers don't cover stuff like
that.
I mean, it's too speculative.
But did she get, yeah, but that's not speculative.
No.
I mean, so she had a team of physicians saying it's time for her to go.
And then she's dancing and singing Amazing Grace and marrying a pastor.
So like, but were doctors calling in to say, I want to study this case?
There are two doctors who wrote books about it.
Root books about it.
Root books about it.
Well, they wrote books and in the books, they talked about her.
her case. Yes. So two of her physicians actually wrote about it in their books. That's incredible.
I know. I know. And it's not the only one. I don't know. We don't have much time. Give you a real
quick one. Yeah. There's a kid who was born, a little baby kept vomiting. Couldn't keep down food.
Kept vomiting, vomiting, vomiting. And they realize this baby has what's called gastroporesis, which is a
paralysis of the stomach. It's an incurable condition. It happens from time to time. You can't,
you can't live that way. No. So they operated. And they put
tubes in so the food would go directly into the small intestine. I don't know if it went through the
stomach that was paralyzed or whatever, but that way he was able to live. And he lived that way
for 15 years, 16 years. He lived that way. There were restrictions on what he could eat. It was
uncomfortable, but at least he was alive, right? They bring him one day to a church. And they ask
the pastor, would you pray for him? Pastor puts his hand on his shoulder, begins to pray. And the
kid said later, I felt an electric shock go through me at the time he was praying.
And he was instantly healed of gastroporesis.
There has never been a documented case of anyone ever healed of gastroporesisus, a paralyzed stomach.
He was totally normal.
They went in.
They took the tubes out.
And today he's totally healthy.
He's a business guy doing great.
I just emailed with him the other day.
that again this was researched by multiple medical researchers and published as a case study in a medical journal
and in the medical journal it's probably like here's what happened you know so that's an incredible
story the girl being cured of MS is an incredible story everything you've said is amazing
but so many of the things you've said are also instantly recognizable yeah to everyone listening
whatever their religious faith or lack of religious faith as things that do happen actually.
It's real.
We all know that there are things that happen to us and people we know well and love that are
outside the ability of science to explain.
God is still active.
That are super natural.
Yeah.
So my final question to you, Lee Strobel, this has been amazing.
Thank you.
Oh, my pleasure.
Is why do we keep ignoring it?
Yeah.
I think it goes back to what I said earlier.
I think we're embarrassed sometimes by the.
supernatural that we're going to think people can think we're nuts but if that's real and it clearly
is real then like it puts everything else in a perspective yeah when you take it seriously and when
you look at it like how could you not take it seriously well i agree grow up in a culture that tells
you none of it's real and yet it's super obvious that it is super obvious yeah that it's real in some
most general sense yes yeah the supernatural is real yeah sorry
Yeah. Then why don't people talk about it all the time?
Yeah. Yeah. I think the fact that I've been a Christian since November the 8th of 1981, and I've never heard a sermon on the topic of angels in my life, tells you something.
I think we shy away because we want to be accepted as normal.
I don't know why else.
Why would you get out of bed on Sunday to sit in a church where they're like pretending that nothing they say.
say is true.
It's a good point.
If it's not supernatural, like, why are you bothering?
Exactly. If you believe in Jesus, you've got to believe in angels.
You've got to believe in demons. You've got to believe in Satan. You've got to believe
in heaven. You've got to believe in hell. Because if you believe in Jesus, he taught
on all those things. So, my goodness, how could you not? I agree with you. How could you
not? Yeah. I mean, go on, move on to something else. Yeah. Go play tennis or something.
And if 40% of Americans have had an experience that they can only attribute to a miracle of God,
that means the other 60 percent probably know one of those 40 percent right and oh my brother had this
experience my cousin had and we kind of say what do we do with that and and i think what we ought to
do is look for that which is is corroborated and which is consistent with what we trust to be true
which for me are the christian scriptures if you just fight against distraction yeah consistently
for just a day or two.
Like, I'm not going to be distracted.
I'm just going to notice.
That's it.
That's all you do is just notice.
I'm just going to notice stuff.
Yeah.
If you do that as an exercise,
literally for 48 hours,
you will experience the supernatural.
I think you're right.
It's hard to do that.
Yeah.
At least trouble.
Thank you.
Hey, I enjoyed it.
Wonderful.
Great to meet you.
Thank you.
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