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- Since it was within Gods will to allow me to witness a horror described as explained in the scream, I would know due to the extraordinary and rare occurrence that there is a reaction which God himself was allowing me to experience which involved the deceasedā¦
- The next item I would consider is the nature of the communication. With ease and quickly the answer is very clear. The nature of the communication is a plead. Otherwise it simply would not of happened to myself. I would be comfortable with this portion of evaluation.
- We also know from the inspiring message of Our Lady of Fatima that āGod wishes man to pray for the many souls who do not have anyone to pray for them . God wants to save all the souls in hellā These are exact words of apparition 4 I think.
Any alternate translation for myself would be interfering with something which could only demonstrate a self need with no fruitfull outcome. There is no fruitful outcome in the indifference of plead from another. I think I will follow the words of Our Lady⦠There may be no one else whoās prayer have as much power I may consider, as a third virtuous reality is required and as well serves to my best interests in being humble of heart.
**Of course I would be thinking about the power of forgiveness in above **. Until a formal genuine effort to fully follow the Divine lead was accomplished I would not feel right, as though Iām denying something which I fully expect myself one final dayā¦forgiveness. How can this God forgive me a mere mortal I would think, if I canāt see way way clear to this plead?
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Your reply was rather long, so Iāve snipped it, and kept what seems to me to be the central bits viz. that my fatherās apparition was a plead, and that the core of it was an issue of forgiveness.
All right. During the conversation, part of it went like this - āSon, youāve got to forgive me!ā
I snarled back, āYou treated me like dirt for twenty years, and now you want forgiveness!!?ā
He replied, with a look of anguish, ā**Son, itās not for me. Itās too late for me. Itās for you. ** If you donāt youāll destroy yourself!ā
There are a couple of issues here. The first is that he was pleading for forgiveness, but it was not for him. ** In his own words, āIt was too late for (him)ā. **
Now Iāll admit I struggle with forgiving him, because he had a
deliberate policy for 20 years to destroy my confidence.
And I still remember the scream at the very end. If anything, he seemed to be brought even closer so that I would get the full message. I was an atheist myself at the time (in case anybody thinks I was having a quasi Christian thought projection), and not living a particularly good life in some ways.
So Iāll accept your thoughts about it being a plead for forgiveness, but at the same time I make no bones about the sheer terror of his final scream. He could see something coming, and it terrified him to the core.
Sorry, but thatās what happened. I still remember the way something woke me up with a shake on the back since I often sleep face down, the way I turned over, the way he materialised near the bedroom door with a look of surprise on his face, the way he mainly hung around the foot of the bed, the way I could both see him, but also through him if I chose, even to the point of seeing the old sagging bookcase behind him. At one time he was right over me, when Iād tried to accuse him of something that was really my own decision. His eyes were like black pits, and he shouted, āDonāt blame me for that! That was **YOUR **decision!ā Then he temporarily disappeared, and when I recovered, he was back at the foot of the bed, looking very discouraged. That was pretty close to the end.
Just before he screamed, he turned to my left, his right, and he could see something coming. Then he screamed in sheer terror, and simply disappeared.
And that was it. Iāll admit I have to work on this issue of forgiveness. As my old pastor commented, āI think the reason you find it so hard to forgive him is that he did it deliberately.ā But make no bones about judgement. Itās there all right.