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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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Philippines blocks Coinbase, Gemini amid wider crackdown on unlicensed VASPs

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Philippines blocks Coinbase, Gemini amid wider crackdown on unlicensed VASPs

Internet service providers (ISPs) in the Philippines began blocking major crypto trading platforms as regulators moved to enforce local licensing rules on crypto service providers. 

Users reported that as of Tuesday, access to global cryptocurrency exchanges Coinbase and Gemini was unavailable in the Philippines. Cointelegraph independently confirmed that both platforms were inaccessible across multiple local ISPs. 

A report by the Manila Bulletin said the ISP blocks followed an order from the National Telecommunications Commission, which directed providers to restrict access to 50 online trading platforms flagged by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), the central bank, as operating without authorization.

The central bank did not publish a full list of the platforms hit by the order. However, the change signals an ongoing shift by local regulators from informal tolerance to enforcement, making local licensing the deciding factor for crypto market access in the Philippines.

Crypto exchange Coinbase is now inaccessible in the Philippines. Source: Cointelegraph

Coinbase, Gemini join Binance in Philippines access block

While the Philippines has only recently blocked Coinbase and Gemini, the country has made enforcement moves against unlicensed crypto exchanges in the past. 

In December 2023, the country started a 90-day countdown, giving Binance time to comply with local regulations before enforcing a ban on the crypto trading platform.

The Philippines Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said the period was meant to allow Filipinos to remove their funds from the exchange. 

On March 25, 2024, the NTC ordered local ISPs to block Binance. Nearly a month later, the SEC ordered Apple and Google to block the exchange’s application from their stores.

After the ban was enforced, the Philippines SEC said it could not endorse ways for Filipinos to retrieve their funds.

More recently, the SEC identified 10 exchanges, including OKX, Bybit and KuCoin, operating without licenses.

Related: Grab deepens stablecoin push with StraitsX Web3 wallet and settlements

Regulated players roll out crypto products

While the country cracks down on unregulated platforms, compliant companies have been rolling out crypto-related infrastructure in the country. 

On Nov. 19, regulated crypto exchange PDAX partnered with payroll provider Toku to let remote workers receive their salaries in stablecoins. This allows workers to convert earnings to pesos without wire fees or delays. 

On Dec. 8, digital bank GoTyme rolled out crypto services in the Philippines following a partnership with US fintech firm Alpaca. With the rollout, 11 crypto assets can be bought and stored through the platform’s banking application.