| |
Men in White Apparel

To see inside, click book. |
Author:
Ann Ree Colton |
Pages:
202 |
Pub Date:
1961 |
ISBN:
0-917187-10-5 |
Binding:
HC |
List Price:
$12.95 |
| AUDIOBOOK: Contains 3 cassette tapes. ISBN:
0-917189-28-0.
List Price:
$18.95 |
Previous Book ||
List of Books || Next Book
|
Description:
A rare and comprehensive book containing vital revelations about death and life after
death. Men in White Apparel prepares individuals for the death experience and
explains how they may sensitively minister to the dying, the dead, and the bereaved. Ann
Ree Colton writes of the Men in White Apparel and other spiritual beings who watch over,
instruct, and shepherd the dead. She describes with penetrating insight such subjects as
telepathy between the dead and the living, purgatory and the caverns of mercy, the death
wish, possession by earthbound entities, angel-ministrations to the dead, and Gods
Equation. Men in White Apparel can make a wonderful gift for those experiencing
the loss of a loved one, providing comfort, understanding, and peace.
Table of Contents:
Excerpts:
"No one is ever the same after having grieved for the dead. Grief is a powerful
catalyst, changing the perspective, illuminating the mind, and making more sensitive the
hardened places within the heart. To one of a materialistic nature, the loss by death is a
harsh and disciplinary experience. To one who has unclarified faith, grieving for the dead
is a somber and maturing experience. To one who has spiritual awareness, loss by death is
an experience of initiation and revelation.
Grief has the power to change and to transform a selfish nature into a more magnanimous
temperament. Grief has the power to give insight, and to extend the buds of sympathy.
Grief also has the power to draw men closer to heaven and to the reality of heaven. During
intense grief, the soul expands one's thoughts as to the meaning of life and death, heaven
and earth."
"Death is a soul-experience. To gain the greater soul-experience in death, one
must die not only to his theoretical or theological beliefs concerning the life after
death. When the one who dies limits himself to doctrinal religious beliefs, atheistic
beliefs, or materialistic beliefs, he interferes with the soul's experience in
death."
"In the scientific age, men are in danger of offending the death ethic. As painful
and incurable diseases appear in the world, men with scientific skills are sometimes
tempted to apply their skills to render euthanasia or mercy death. When a person
precipitates the death of another by his own hand, the commandment, "Thou shalt not
kill," is offended. Also, when any human agent seeks to extend life beyond the time
limit as ordained by the soul, dying persons become victims of blind mercy. When life is
extended beyond the timing of the soul, the one dying is subjected to a painful
purgatorial experience while yet in the body."
Previous Book || List of Books || Next Book
©2010 Ann Ree Colton Foundation of Niscience, Inc. All
Rights Reserved.
For information on Niscience, please contact the Niscience
Foundation. |