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  2. John Paul Jackson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Paul_Jackson

    In what Jackson referred to as a revelation from the Lord, he released a statement in 2008 called The Coming Perfect Storm. [5] In this statement, he spoke of a time coming to America and the world in which economic, military, religious, political, and geophysical issues and events would occur in a relatively small period of time to make up a perfect storm of calamity.

  3. God of the gaps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_of_the_gaps

    The expression, "God of the Gaps," contains a real truth. It is erroneous if it is taken to mean that God is not immanent in natural law but is only to be observed in mysteries unexplained by law. No significant Christian group has believed this view.

  4. Sacred mysteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_mysteries

    Sacred mysteries are the areas of supernatural phenomena associated with a divinity or a religious belief and praxis. Sacred mysteries may be either: Religious beliefs, rituals or practices which are kept secret from the uninitiated. Beliefs of the religion which are public knowledge but cannot be easily explained by normal rational or ...

  5. Paschal mystery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paschal_mystery

    Paschal refers to the passage of God's destroying angel on the night of Passover. The angel "passed over" the houses of the Israelites but killed the firstborn child in the houses of the Egyptians. [6] Catholicism says that a sacred mystery is a divine mystery which cannot be grasped by mere human reasoning and can only be revealed by God ...

  6. St. George Jackson Mivart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._George_Jackson_Mivart

    St. George Jackson Mivart FRS (30 November 1827 – 1 April 1900) was an English biologist. He is famous for starting as an ardent believer in natural selection and later becoming one of its fiercest critics.

  7. Argument from reason - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_reason

    3. So, human reason cannot come from non-reason (from 2). 4. So human reason must come from a source outside nature that is itself rational (from 1 and 3). 5. This supernatural source of reason may itself be dependent on some further source of reason, but a chain of such dependent sources cannot go on forever.

  8. Argument from desire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_desire

    The most prominent recent defender of the argument from desire is the well-known Christian apologist C. S. Lewis (1898–1963). Lewis offers slightly different forms of the argument in works such as Mere Christianity (1952), The Pilgrim's Regress (1933; 3rd ed., 1943), Surprised by Joy (1955), and "The Weight of Glory" (1940).

  9. Andrew Jackson Davis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson_Davis

    Davis was much influenced by Swedenborg and by the Shakers, who reprinted his panegyric praising Ann Lee in the official work Sketch of Shakers and Shakerism (1884). [3]In writing his 1845 short story "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar", Edgar Allan Poe was informed by Davis's early work after having attended one of his lectures on mesmerism.

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    related to: natural mysteries that cannot be explained by god by john paul jackson