godrulz
- Proverbs 12:15 The way of a fool [is] right in his own eyes,
But he who heeds counsel [is] wise.
Proverbs 26:12 Do you see a man wise in his own eyes?
[There is] more hope for a fool than for him. --- God
I believe your story is a hoax. I suggest that it will not be verifiable on account of several things.
I took some time and looked up some things on the internet. It seems that it's a practice that once you are determined to be brain dead, and that determination is rigorously tested to make sure there is no mistake, they stop life support after 5 hours because there is no hope for even regaining to a comatose state at that point.
There are several ways to know if your brain is dead, that is, it has stopped functioning. EEG, chemical, and radioactive tests. EEG for electrical signals from brain functions, chemical to cause a reaction in the brain to speed up heart rate that can not happen if the brain is dead, and radioactive blood flow to see if the brain is getting blood supply. Strangely, there was no mention of what sort of test they used.
But more strange is the report itself. Your report brazenly claims
- "This verifiable historical event is consistent with the biblical message. Miracles still happen and they do not always lead to unbelief."
"Verifiable"???
"Always lead to unbelief"???
- First, even YOU did not site the actual source you got your info from. You stated that it came from that paper, but did you read it yourself and personally copy the info from the paper to this website, or did you copy this info from another source? Exactly what was your source? If you have the paper, then please make it available for further investigation.
- There is mention that this Li Peng was a "patient". Which means about nothing. Where was he a patient? By the seriousness of the injury, it should have been in a most notable hospital or trauma center. And these places usually keep very clear records of their patients and the treatment as well... but for some (???) reason, no mention was even made. (???)
- Dr. Meakes states that the "patient" was brain dead for 7 days, he expected him to die, or live a vegetative state. Yet from a brief internet scan, the timetable I read about was that after 5 hours of being brain dead (they have had enough time to sufficiently determine that you are positively brain dead), then they know that you can not return to a functioning life because your brain, which controls all your bodies functions, no longer functions, it is dead. The only way you can keep living is by life support machines without which you would promptly die. Apparently after 5 hours of being brain dead, they let you become what you already are, dead. Yet strangely there was no mention of "life support", or the extent that was required and for how long. (???)
- The third bullet suddenly introduces a new character, a "wife", yet we are not told who this wife is.
- Forth bullet says, "whispered in patient's ear", and then proceeds to not say
what was said,
who said it,
or why this mention was supposed to mean something. (???) ("Very" godrulzish)
- Although the story does imply a very full recovery because he plans on attending a university, the only mention of any long term effects was that he does not remember the drowning. It would be helpful to state his diagnosis and ongoing health condition as a result of his stay at someone's care.
- They usually don't list the medical emergency facts only stories in the paper along with a religious spin. I don't care how conservative or reliable the paper, the fact that they had a picture of him getting his baptism in a church shows quite conclusively that this story was an editorial piece, and as such, is subject to artistic license and what sells and what does not sell.
Did you make up this story?
You are very quick to judge against believers in Jesus Christ who have a healthy dose of skepticism against false claims. But, when it comes to bible study on the subject of God doing miracles today, you "come up short" and you present false accusations against those who agree with what the Plot teaches. And we really don't care what "The Plot" teaches, we care about what the bible teaches and simply try to reflect and teach that!
The Plot does not invent it's own claims, it carefully observes that the BIBLE teaches that miracles should not be expected for today, and that they "overwhelmingly" do not tend to engender faith. Again the substance for these claims is the result of doing a massive bible study on the subject, recording the
VERIFIABLE results wherever they are explained in the bible!
Please explain the bible's overwhelming testimony that faith is not what miracles tend to foster. And why is it that faith is fundamentally eliminated when you experience a miracle as reality? Does it take faith to know that I am typing this out on my computer??? Or does it take simple acknowledgement of the fact, something more like being "conscious" instead of "faith"?
:doh: That's right, faith is for things not seen, things hoped for but not yet realized. But who cares if God's word overwhelmingly dictates that miracles do not tend to produce faith...
Suddenly your all quiet on the biblical issues,,, hu,,, how convenient for you "miracles are for today" types. And as to attacking dispensationalism, that is about as bogus as could be. Was God wrong for teaching dispensationalism? I don't think so, I think you are wrong for generally attacking what God clearly promotes.
In spite of this biblical lacking, somehow you come up sufficiently prepared with (subjective non-verifiable) miraculous account(s). And when we say
where's the verifiable evidence,
you attack our(!!!) objectivity and credibility AND even judge against us that we do not give God the glory that He certainly deserves! You are one arrogant (and subjective) person.
You made the claims, you said it was "verifiable", so if you are to be understood as credible, we will be able to verify this. Please help us do that, or remain generally against the biblical record on this issue with nothing but fictitious unverifiable claims.
You still have the source for your story, ,,, don't you?