How to Interpret Dreams and Visions Perry Stone
their ability to predict what was coming, why didn’t at least one foresee the future and say, “I see in the future we are going bankrupt…get out of debt!” This is about as ludicrous as a story I heard in the mid-1990s while I was preaching in Modesto, California, about a selfacclaimed psychic who sued a hospital for millions of dollars, alleging that the hospital did an MRI on her brain and she lost her ability to see into the future.2 If I had been the hospital’s attorney, I would have placed the psychic on the stand and asked, “So you can prove you could reveal the future before the MRI?” If she replied yes, then I would ask, “If you were a real revealer of the future, why didn’t you know that you would lose your power after you had the MRI?” Case closed! Most of these networks were actually staffed by men or women operators on the other end who claimed gifts they did not have and who read from scripts while attempting to hold the caller on the line and collect as much money as possible. However, while the majority of these phony psychics could be arrested for false impersonation, there are some individuals who appear to have some form of an ability to read a person’s mind or to reveal detailed information that is not normally known.
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