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Thank you, David for your reply.  Count me as another who was irritated by
this.  If this were true, more of us would be at the altar and cured.  This
makes light of those who are working so hard to just maintain themselves.
Like someone said to me the other day, "Well, Christopher Reeves says by
really working hard he might walk again.  Maybe that's what you should do."
I pray Christopher Reeves walks again, but what he has and what I have is
two different things.  If prayer and hard work did it, this entire list
would be cured.
 
At 04:24 AM 12/4/95 -0800, you wrote:
>>Here is a testimony from Randy Clark's conference in Tennessee last week
before
>>coming to Philadelphia (he gave us permission to post this). Pray for all
of us
>>in Philadelphia that the local inner-city community would be touched in the
>>renewal meetings here.
>>================================================================
>>===============
>>Anne Harrison, age 49, was healed of advanced stage of Parkinson's disease
>>November 28, 1995 at Trinity Music City, Hendersonville, Tennessee. She felt
>>strongly impressed by the Holy Spirit to attend the Renewal Meeting led by
>>Randy Clark when she saw the announcement in the paper.  Having never heard
>>of Randy or of the Toronto Blessing she simply felt impressed of God to go to
>>the meeting and have Randy pray for her.
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>How self-serving of Randy to give permission to post news of a "miracle"
>that he "just happened to take part in". (insert saracastic tone here)
>
>"It riles them to believe
>that you perceive
>the web they weave
>and keep on thinking free"
>
>- The Moody Blues "On The Threshold Of A Dream"
>
>
>When I was in 2nd grade, I was diagnosed with "leg perthes".  Perthes is a
>degenerative bone disease. The cure for this situation was to walk on
>crutches with my right leg supported from 3-4 years while the bone got
>stronger. As you could imagine at 7 years old, adjusting to the fact that
>my world had turned upside down and I had to simply adjust with the
>situation was not easy at first though I made it through that time.
>
>About a year after I'd been on crutches, I was watching television one
>Sunday morning and saw a show where "miraculous healing" was taking place.
>People with walkers, in wheelchairs, and in various states of distress were
>one by one relieved of their suffering. I remember crying and wondering if
>places like this existed and if this sort of thing was on the up-and-up,
>why couldn't I be taken there so that I could run again or ride bikes like
>my friends or not have to be carried down the school steps by the janitor
>during fire drills? I digress.
>
>I learned then and as I grew older that all is not as it seems...I learned
>about "rigged games" or "illusions". I've learned not to put all my hopes
>in one spot or wear my heart on my sleeve. Disappointments can come hard at
>any age.
>
>The post disturbed me for many reasons. Hendersonville, TN is as prone to
>this type of event as it is to moonshine and snake-handling (I grew up in
>Memphis). Regenerated brain cells instantly?.....I don't think so. I feel
>that this type of  unverified information is too cruel to mention this to
>the PD newsgroup where many of us dream of that type of thing.  Also,
>because for a second, I was a little boy again wishing I too could have my
>physical distresss removed forever.....
>
>David Boots
>37/5.5
>
>
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 Helen Ormsby   [log in to unmask]
 
 "Silence is the voice of complicity"
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