Tibetan Death (Jason Steeves) For Discount

Description
I was inspired to write this book when my attention was drawn to the Tibetan art of living and dying. After purchasing and reading the Tibetan Book Of The Dead extensively, I learnt that this esoteric Buddhist cult had some very twisted views on the methods of death, dying, and the afterlife. This small country of Tibet
and the Tibetan people have been pitied greatly after the Chinese occupation gained control of the Tibetans and forced them out, gaining full political control of the land. This act not only left many homeless and to die but threatened the ancient belief of Tibetan Buddhism that was actually spawned and encouraged by the Chinese government itself. Few actual practitioners remain anywhere in the modern world but The Emperor, more commonly known as the Dalai Lama, is well and alive in the United States Of America.
I personally can t say I join in the suffering of these religious people simply due to the fact that I strongly disagree with anyone and will not support anyone who rejects the Son of Man. Though I don t support the Chinese in any way either, I do believe that their actions which led the Tibetan religion much worse off was a
direct result of their constant annihilation of the truth. God uses nonbelievers to fulfill His plans also.
For those of you who don t follow the major cults of the world, the Tibetans basically believe that when you die, you are required to correctly fulfill a timed astrological puzzle, the result for which will either reincarnate you into a body of your choice, or a random body. The uttermost extremes are that you ll reach Nirvana which is a heaven of their own creation where they become Buddhas, or gods, if you will. On the other hand, you will enter into an eternal hell of twisted and demented proportions.
This then is the rendition of the actual book written in the Tibetan language, The Tibetan Book Of The Dead in English in its entirety followed by a comprehensive Christian comparison of the same topics and themes as presented by the Almighty God Himself in the Living Bible. Contrary to Tibetan theology, as
Hebrews 13:1 says, Let brotherly love continue.
52 pages
Additional Information
Media | Download, USB Stick, Print |
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