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One pastor and author, who has studied and examined over 1,000 accounts of near-death experiences, believes that these types of incidents further prove God and the Bible.

Its when someone clinically dies their heart stops, they have no brain waves, Burke, author of the new book Imagine the God of Heaven: Near-Death Experiences, Gods Revelation, and the Love Youve Always Wanted, told CBN Digital in a recent interview. And yet either modern medicine or miracle brings them back minutes later, sometimes its hours.And when they come back, they talk about experiencing the life to come, and they talk about how its more real than anything theyve ever experienced in this world, he continued.

According to CBN News, Burkes latest book includes scores of interviews of people worldwide whove faced near-death experiences.

They are seeing and experiencing the God of Scripture, he said. And were looking, not only at His love story told throughout history in the Bible, but also his heart and characteristics, the mystery, the majesty of God.

At the same time, however, Burke notes that there are many others who remain skeptical of these types of stories. He said one reason is a failure to understand these are testimonies that give evidence of God while another reason is the limited human understanding of near-death experiences.

The way I like to describe it is: imagine if all of our existence is being lived on a flat black and white painting on the wall of your home, Burke said. Death means separation. Your soul separates from your body. So, imagine at death, you peel off that two-dimensional black-and-white painting, you come out here into a three-dimensional world of color, and then imagine getting pressed back in and you have to describe three dimensions of color in two-dimensional black and white terms.

The pastor explained that people who went through near-death experiences are witnessing Gods reality in an extra-dimensional way. He contended that the similarities in these experiences support the Bible and offer evidence to unbelievers.

When I first heard about this, I was an agnostic, Burke said. So, hearing these experiences as an engineer got me thinking, ‘Maybe this is evidence,’ and then it got me into the scriptures and then I started to see the evidence, and I came to faith.

Not only does Burke hope that non-Christians would see God through these experiences, he hopes Christians can learn important biblical lessons through them, such as God’s love for humanity.

Image credit: iStock/Getty Images Plus/Yuri_Arcurs

Milton Quintanilla is a freelance writer and content creator. He is a contributing writer for CrosswalkHeadlines and the host of the For Your Soul Podcast, a podcast devoted to sound doctrine and biblical truth. He holds a Masters of Divinity from Alliance Theological Seminary.

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‘An enigma’ to the end: John le Carré’s son on his father – and how his legacy lives on

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'An enigma' to the end: John le Carré's son on his father - and how his legacy lives on

Writing 26 books and a memoir in his lifetime, John le Carré is widely considered to be one of the best spy novelists of all time.

His son, Simon Cornwell, told Sky News: “I think there was only one thing that was more important to him than his family and that was his writing.”

Rory Keenand and Mat Betteridge in The Spy Who Came In From The Cold. Pic: Johan Persson
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Rory Keenand and Mat Betteridge in The Spy Who Came In From The Cold. Pic: Johan Persson

Tom Hiddleston returns in season two of The Night Manager. Pic: BBC/Ink Factory/Des Willie
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Tom Hiddleston returns in season two of The Night Manager. Pic: BBC/Ink Factory/Des Willie

First gaining attention in 1963 with his breakout novel, The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, cementing his reputation 10 years later with Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, his work is now enjoying a resurgence.

The Spy Who Came In From The Cold has been adapted for the stage for the first time, with confirmation of a TV series to follow, while another of his works, The Night Manager, premieres its second season starring Tom Hiddleston in the new year.

There are further productions waiting in the wings, plus an unfinished le Carré play with the potential to be developed.

And archives of le Carré’s work – containing over 1,200 boxes of material – have gone on display at the Bodleian Libraries at the University of Oxford.

Writing under a pen name, le Carré, who was born David Cornwell, died in December 2020.

More on Tom Hiddleston

His elder sons, Simon and Stephen, now manage the film, TV and stage rights of his work through their studio The Ink Factory, while his youngest son, Nick, expands the George Smiley universe.

(R-L) Nick Harkaway, John Le Carré, and Simon, Stephen and Tim Cornwell. Pic: Clare Cornwell
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(R-L) Nick Harkaway, John Le Carré, and Simon, Stephen and Tim Cornwell. Pic: Clare Cornwell

Smiley’s continuation ‘could have gone horribly wrong’

One of le Carré’s most well-known creations, Smiley was the antidote to James Bond – bespectacled, balding and a little out of shape – and a recurring character in le Carré’s books.

Simon says Nick, who has two more Smiley books in the pipeline, was “taking on a big risk” developing the character, but insists, “he is the only person who could have done it and done it that well”.

He goes on: “He could find my father’s voice… he grew up talking every day to my dad, as we did, and he just knows at an instinctive level what’s important…

“There are so many ways in which it could have gone horribly wrong, and it went brilliantly right.”

Nick Harkaway with his first Smiley continuation novel, Karla's Choice. Pic: AP
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Nick Harkaway with his first Smiley continuation novel, Karla’s Choice. Pic: AP

‘A family enterprise’

Explaining how they all work together – calling it a “family enterprise in the best of ways” – Simon explains: “A lot of authors, when they die, they leave very strict instructions to their children, their estate as to how things should be managed and lots of rules and restrictions and everything else. My dad didn’t do that.”

Le Carré’s fourth son, Tim, sadly died aged 59 in 2022, shortly after editing a collection of his father’s letters, titled A Private Spy.

Le Carré is by no means the only author whose legacy lives on via others.

Announcing a staggered retirement, Lee Child passed his hit creation Jack Reacher on to his younger brother Andrew in 2020.

PG Wodehouse’s much-loved Jeeves and Wooster stories have been rewritten this Christmas by celebrity fans including Frank Skinner and Alan Titchmarsh, half a century after his death.

Daniel Craig at the No Time To Die world premiere in 2021. Pic: Reuters
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Daniel Craig at the No Time To Die world premiere in 2021. Pic: Reuters

Staying part of the conversation is key

While Ian Fleming’s James Bond has been continued by 15 authors so far, and spilling into the young adult genre, capturing a whole new generation of readers.

Mark Edlitz, intellectual expert and author of The Many Lives Of James Bond, told Sky News such continuations are essential to the survival of the work.

Author Mark Edlitz has written about the Bond continuation novels
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Author Mark Edlitz has written about the Bond continuation novels

“We have seen all these detectives and spies who don’t have a movie series or a TV series to bolster their eyeballs, and then they fade from public view.

“These books and movies help keep the author’s work present and viable and part of the public conversation.”

Sarah Baxter, senior contracts advisor for The Society of Authors, says remaining relevant and visible has another big benefit too.

“That kind of partnership can go on to give a whole new lease of life to works that may have been written many, many years ago, and it can go on to generate a lot of income for a literary estate.”

Le Carré - an enigma, even to his family, to the end. Pic: AP
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Le Carré – an enigma, even to his family, to the end. Pic: AP

‘An enigma’

More than 60 million copies of Le Carré’s books have been sold worldwide, with new adaptations likely to boost those sales further.

But Simon Cornwell says the investment in his father’s work is about more than just profits.

“We became very, very close as a family because he was very keen to be a proper dad and we were working with him and his material as well, so it was particularly towards the end of his life. It was a beautiful, thrilling thing.”

A master storyteller, the moral ambiguity of the fictional world he constructed reflected back on to its creator.

Simon says: “He remained an enigma. I think in some ways he was probably an enigma to himself…

“He was an extraordinary man to be close with, but do you ever understand somebody like that? Probably not.”

His work more widespread than ever, but the man himself – still a mystery.

The Spy Who Came In From The Cold is at @sohoplace in London’s West End to 21 February before embarking on a UK Tour.

John le Carré: Tradecraft is at the Bodleian Libraries at the University of Oxford until 6 April.

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Astronomers Observe Star’s Wobbling Orbit, Confirming Einstein’s Frame-Dragging

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Astronomers have detected a remarkable wobble in the orbit of a star being torn apart by a black hole, offering one of the clearest confirmations yet of Einstein’s frame-dragging effect. By tracking repeating X-ray and radio signals every 20 days, researchers captured spacetime twisting around a rapidly spinning black hole—revealing powerful insights into extreme …

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Galaxy Collisions Found to Activate Supermassive Black Holes, Euclid Data Shows

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Astronomers using ESA’s Euclid telescope and AI analysis have found that merging galaxies are significantly more likely to host active supermassive black holes. The gravitational chaos of a collision drives gas toward the galactic core, igniting AGN activity. This discovery strengthens the link between galaxy interactions and the energetic processes that shape galac…

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