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About the Author

Includes the names: Jemima Paul Ph D, Jemima Paul Ph D

Works by Jemima Paul

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Amazon (2) to-read (1)

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Canonical name
Paul, Jemima

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This is a story about dreams two sisters had that convinced them of the truth about the existence of Heaven and Hell. The book does not claim to be a “scientific methodological approach to the psychological interpretation of dreams”; however, believes the correlation between dreams and the existence of Heaven and Hell is factual. There are Bible references throughout the book to make a point. Readers are sometimes provided with the verses and sometimes with there is encouragement that readers should search the verses themselves. The book delves into the interpretation of these dreams, taking individual segments to explain what they mean.

The dreams are interpreted based on Bible verses that, while sleeping, the sisters were brought to Heaven by angels and shown Hell by Jesus. The structure is easy to follow because the dreams are explained before sections are interpreted. The book is literal in its interpretations. Since the sisters are raised in a religious household, it is possible their dreams combined the teachings of the Bible and presented themselves into a narrative they could explain once awake since they are extremely young. While it is an interesting fact they dreamt of the same Heaven and Hell, their dreams were not always at the same time so influence could have played a part in their subconscious. As a result, the interpretations seem far-fetched, reaching for any verses in the Bible to justify the events that took place.

This is overall an endearing story to read, enabling readers – particularly Christians – comfort in the prospect of Heaven and Hell. Personally, dreams are subjective and are opportunities for the brain to make sense of problems and questions one might have during the day. The sisters are four and two years old so their dreams will understandably be clear and structured in a narrative way.


I received a free review copy. Thank you to OnlineBookClub and author.
… (more)
 
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Louisesk | 1 other review | Jan 26, 2024 |
This is a story about dreams two sisters had that convinced them of the truth about the existence of Heaven and Hell. The book does not claim to be a “scientific methodological approach to the psychological interpretation of dreams”; however, believes the correlation between dreams and the existence of Heaven and Hell is factual. There are Bible references throughout the book to make a point. Readers are sometimes provided with the verses and sometimes with there is encouragement that readers should search the verses themselves. The book delves into the interpretation of these dreams, taking individual segments to explain what they mean.

The dreams are interpreted based on Bible verses that, while sleeping, the sisters were brought to Heaven by angels and shown Hell by Jesus. The structure is easy to follow because the dreams are explained before sections are interpreted. The book is literal in its interpretations. Since the sisters are raised in a religious household, it is possible their dreams combined the teachings of the Bible and presented themselves into a narrative they could explain once awake since they are extremely young. While it is an interesting fact they dreamt of the same Heaven and Hell, their dreams were not always at the same time so influence could have played a part in their subconscious. As a result, the interpretations seem far-fetched, reaching for any verses in the Bible to justify the events that took place.

This is overall an endearing story to read, enabling readers – particularly Christians – comfort in the prospect of Heaven and Hell. Personally, dreams are subjective and are opportunities for the brain to make sense of problems and questions one might have during the day. The sisters are four and two years old so their dreams will understandably be clear and structured in a narrative way.


I received a free review copy. Thank you to OnlineBookClub and author.
… (more)
 
Flagged
Louisesk | 1 other review | Nov 25, 2023 |

Statistics

Works
3
Members
9
Popularity
#968,587
Rating
4.0
Reviews
2
ISBNs
1