The Certainty of Eternity: The Story of Australia's Greatest Medium
Reports of physical mediumship go back centuries, and physical mediums such as D. D. Home, Franek Kluski, Leslie flint, and more latterly, David Thompson, are household names in psychical research. Experiments such as Scole and Professor W. J. Crawford's Goligher Circle have demonstrated that physical psychic phenomena does indeed exist. One medium not so well known in the West is Australia's Stan Walsh. Stan was arguably that country's most talented physical medium during the early part of the 20th century. His mission began in 1919 when he and a group of friends got together in a Melbourne suburb and tried to communicate with the spirit world. Walsh was a deep-trance medium, a rare breed, then and now. The communicators were generally Christian in tone, and at one point they advised Walsh and his sitters to no longer refer to themselves as Spiritualists, "since frauds and charlatans are bringing the religion into disrepute." The guides suggested they simply call themselves 'followers of the truth of God'. The communicators often claimed to be biblical characters, such as John the Baptist, King David, Samuel, John the Most Beloved, Mary Magdalene, and others. The New Testament advises us "Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world." 1 John: 4.1. Walsh's sitters tested the spirits and most became convinced the communicators were who they said they were. In 1927 L. C. Danby joined the circle and became a regular sitter for many years. This book is his account of those years, and the incredible mediumship of Stan Walsh.
"1119616484"
The Certainty of Eternity: The Story of Australia's Greatest Medium
Reports of physical mediumship go back centuries, and physical mediums such as D. D. Home, Franek Kluski, Leslie flint, and more latterly, David Thompson, are household names in psychical research. Experiments such as Scole and Professor W. J. Crawford's Goligher Circle have demonstrated that physical psychic phenomena does indeed exist. One medium not so well known in the West is Australia's Stan Walsh. Stan was arguably that country's most talented physical medium during the early part of the 20th century. His mission began in 1919 when he and a group of friends got together in a Melbourne suburb and tried to communicate with the spirit world. Walsh was a deep-trance medium, a rare breed, then and now. The communicators were generally Christian in tone, and at one point they advised Walsh and his sitters to no longer refer to themselves as Spiritualists, "since frauds and charlatans are bringing the religion into disrepute." The guides suggested they simply call themselves 'followers of the truth of God'. The communicators often claimed to be biblical characters, such as John the Baptist, King David, Samuel, John the Most Beloved, Mary Magdalene, and others. The New Testament advises us "Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world." 1 John: 4.1. Walsh's sitters tested the spirits and most became convinced the communicators were who they said they were. In 1927 L. C. Danby joined the circle and became a regular sitter for many years. This book is his account of those years, and the incredible mediumship of Stan Walsh.
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The Certainty of Eternity: The Story of Australia's Greatest Medium

The Certainty of Eternity: The Story of Australia's Greatest Medium

by L C Danby
The Certainty of Eternity: The Story of Australia's Greatest Medium

The Certainty of Eternity: The Story of Australia's Greatest Medium

by L C Danby

Paperback

$15.99 
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Overview

Reports of physical mediumship go back centuries, and physical mediums such as D. D. Home, Franek Kluski, Leslie flint, and more latterly, David Thompson, are household names in psychical research. Experiments such as Scole and Professor W. J. Crawford's Goligher Circle have demonstrated that physical psychic phenomena does indeed exist. One medium not so well known in the West is Australia's Stan Walsh. Stan was arguably that country's most talented physical medium during the early part of the 20th century. His mission began in 1919 when he and a group of friends got together in a Melbourne suburb and tried to communicate with the spirit world. Walsh was a deep-trance medium, a rare breed, then and now. The communicators were generally Christian in tone, and at one point they advised Walsh and his sitters to no longer refer to themselves as Spiritualists, "since frauds and charlatans are bringing the religion into disrepute." The guides suggested they simply call themselves 'followers of the truth of God'. The communicators often claimed to be biblical characters, such as John the Baptist, King David, Samuel, John the Most Beloved, Mary Magdalene, and others. The New Testament advises us "Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world." 1 John: 4.1. Walsh's sitters tested the spirits and most became convinced the communicators were who they said they were. In 1927 L. C. Danby joined the circle and became a regular sitter for many years. This book is his account of those years, and the incredible mediumship of Stan Walsh.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781910121344
Publisher: White Crow Books
Publication date: 05/28/2014
Pages: 206
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)
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