Re: True Crime: Holy cats this youtuber LDS related
Posted: Thu Oct 19, 2023 6:15 am
Props to you, Jersey Girl. You called it. The True Crime podcasters and the former Mormon podcasters started comparing notes, and what they’ve figured out is amazing and disgusting.
Jodi Hildebrandt, Maurice Harker, Tim Ballard, LifeStar — they all trace back to EternalCore — an organization dedicated to putting God in therapy. There are videos of at least of its conferences. And they are jaw dropping.
And the founder of Eternal Core? He is the subject of Lori Vallow’s favorite book — a book that Chad Daybell talked about at the conference where they met.
The book is Visions of Glory. It’s about a man who claims to have had three NDEs, which opened up an ability to access the spirit world. He could know everything about a person just by looking at them. People’s personal objects, like a hairbrush or an ottoman would talk to him and reveal everything about their owners. Often what he learned about involved sex.
He could travel out of his body with spirit guides. He could see the spirits of the 1/3 of pre-mortal spirits that followed Satan in the LDS war in heaven. In one of his out of body experiences, he watched someone access porn on the internet. He saw the evil spirits crowd around, trying to enter his body so they could feel what he was feeling. Whipped up to a frenzy, the spirits were able to enter his body through an opening in the crown of the man’s head.
In another, he went into a bar where people were dancing. He knew their thoughts, which were all about depraved sex. Same description of spirits fighting to get inside peoples heads. Some got in. They followed people home.
The book contains a detailed visions of the end times. In the vision he was a translated being — one of the 144,000 — gathering the saints to Zion in the post tribulation world. These beings would develop God-like powers. They could tell at a glance which people were too far gone in sin to repent, and would kill then lest they add to their ledger of sin.
Translated beings. Like Lori and Chad.
The man with the visions started telling people in his ward about his visions. Neal A Maxwell was in his ward, and told him that his visions were highly personal and that he should not try to interpret them or tell others about them. But he didn’t listen. He found a kindred spirit, who wrote Visions of Glory, telling the man’s story using a pseudonym.
The man began telling his story at fireside, saying that he was the subject of the book. There’s a recording of one such fireside. That got him hauled in for church discipline. But no action was taken after he wrote a letter claiming the author (who had died of cancer) had ignored the edits he had sent him and backing away from claiming the events in the book were real.
He stopped talking publicly about his visions. And he was made a Bishop. And, as a licensed therapist, he got up on a stage and said that the dead relatives of his patients would appear to him and tell him how to treat the patient. He “cured” a friend of intrusive sexual thoughts by suggesting that God put them there to prepare him for a calling that involved youth and social media. And on and on.
Tim Ballard described him as a”brain specialist “ that OUR hired to help fix the psychological trauma of the child trafficking victims he rescued. And, today, the church uses him as the consultant to evaluate whether young people with mental health issues are fit to serve a mission. And his book is wildly popular among Mormon preppers who fill online boards with shared stories of visions, NDE’s and elaborate attempts to discover hidden clues to the end times.
There is a diagnosis for people who claim that inanimate objects talk to them: schizophrenia. How in the world did this man practice as a licensed therapist, become a bishop, become a consultant for treating trafficking victims, and the go to guy for evaluating the mental health of prospective missionaries? And how much influence did he have in creating the phony LDS financed “sex addiction” therapy industry.
That’s just a sketch of the eight hours of the joint podcast I linked above. This rash of seemingly unconnected crimes is the fruits of a sick subculture within Mormondom. And the church leaders have paid to support it and turned a blind eye toward the insanity.
Watch it all Jersey Girl. It’s everything you predicted. And more.
Jodi Hildebrandt, Maurice Harker, Tim Ballard, LifeStar — they all trace back to EternalCore — an organization dedicated to putting God in therapy. There are videos of at least of its conferences. And they are jaw dropping.
And the founder of Eternal Core? He is the subject of Lori Vallow’s favorite book — a book that Chad Daybell talked about at the conference where they met.
The book is Visions of Glory. It’s about a man who claims to have had three NDEs, which opened up an ability to access the spirit world. He could know everything about a person just by looking at them. People’s personal objects, like a hairbrush or an ottoman would talk to him and reveal everything about their owners. Often what he learned about involved sex.
He could travel out of his body with spirit guides. He could see the spirits of the 1/3 of pre-mortal spirits that followed Satan in the LDS war in heaven. In one of his out of body experiences, he watched someone access porn on the internet. He saw the evil spirits crowd around, trying to enter his body so they could feel what he was feeling. Whipped up to a frenzy, the spirits were able to enter his body through an opening in the crown of the man’s head.
In another, he went into a bar where people were dancing. He knew their thoughts, which were all about depraved sex. Same description of spirits fighting to get inside peoples heads. Some got in. They followed people home.
The book contains a detailed visions of the end times. In the vision he was a translated being — one of the 144,000 — gathering the saints to Zion in the post tribulation world. These beings would develop God-like powers. They could tell at a glance which people were too far gone in sin to repent, and would kill then lest they add to their ledger of sin.
Translated beings. Like Lori and Chad.
The man with the visions started telling people in his ward about his visions. Neal A Maxwell was in his ward, and told him that his visions were highly personal and that he should not try to interpret them or tell others about them. But he didn’t listen. He found a kindred spirit, who wrote Visions of Glory, telling the man’s story using a pseudonym.
The man began telling his story at fireside, saying that he was the subject of the book. There’s a recording of one such fireside. That got him hauled in for church discipline. But no action was taken after he wrote a letter claiming the author (who had died of cancer) had ignored the edits he had sent him and backing away from claiming the events in the book were real.
He stopped talking publicly about his visions. And he was made a Bishop. And, as a licensed therapist, he got up on a stage and said that the dead relatives of his patients would appear to him and tell him how to treat the patient. He “cured” a friend of intrusive sexual thoughts by suggesting that God put them there to prepare him for a calling that involved youth and social media. And on and on.
Tim Ballard described him as a”brain specialist “ that OUR hired to help fix the psychological trauma of the child trafficking victims he rescued. And, today, the church uses him as the consultant to evaluate whether young people with mental health issues are fit to serve a mission. And his book is wildly popular among Mormon preppers who fill online boards with shared stories of visions, NDE’s and elaborate attempts to discover hidden clues to the end times.
There is a diagnosis for people who claim that inanimate objects talk to them: schizophrenia. How in the world did this man practice as a licensed therapist, become a bishop, become a consultant for treating trafficking victims, and the go to guy for evaluating the mental health of prospective missionaries? And how much influence did he have in creating the phony LDS financed “sex addiction” therapy industry.
That’s just a sketch of the eight hours of the joint podcast I linked above. This rash of seemingly unconnected crimes is the fruits of a sick subculture within Mormondom. And the church leaders have paid to support it and turned a blind eye toward the insanity.
Watch it all Jersey Girl. It’s everything you predicted. And more.