Tina Hines suffered a nearly fatal heart attack. She was effectively dead for 27 minutes and claims she saw Jesus during that time.
In February 2018, Hines was getting ready to
go hiking. Instead, she suffered a heart attack, and her husband Brian jumped
to the rescue. He called the ambulance, but it appeared that Tina’s faith was
sealed.
The woman from Phoenix was revived six times
and spent almost half an hour effectively dead. That’s when she saw the
afterlife.
When she finally woke up, she asked for a pen
and paper. Her husband recalls, “She just started making marks, and I couldn’t
tell what it was, and I was almost shaking. I was fixed. I just held the book
steady because I didn’t want it to drop.
He added, “We figured out that she wrote
I-T-S-R-E-A-L. ‘What’s it’s real?’ And I go, ‘The pain? The hospital?’… Eyes
are closed. She’s fully vented. She’s moving all this. No, and then my daughter
goes, ‘Heaven?’ And she goes – she nods yes.”
Tina spoke about the experience, “I just
wanted to share that I saw Jesus face to face, and the unbelievable rest and
peacefulness of what I was experiencing was Jesus standing there with his arms
open wide, and right behind Jesus standing there was this incredible glow it
was the most vibrant and beautiful yellow.”
She confidently claims, “Jesus is real.
Heaven is real.”
Tina Hines’s niece, Madie Johnson, said, “Her
story is too real not to share and has given me a stronger confidence in a
faith that so often goes unseen.”
The near-death experiences are rare but not
that uncommon. The University of Virginia described it as “intensely vivid and
often life-transforming experiences, many of which occur under extreme
physiological conditions such as trauma, ceasing of brain activity, deep
general anesthesia or cardiac arrest in which no awareness or sensory
experiences of any kind should be possible according to the prevailing views in
neuroscience.”
NDE or near-death experiences are often
life-changing. In 2008, Eben Alexander was induced into a coma. He said he
experienced “rebirth” in another reality, with “‘waterfalls flow[ing] into
crystal pools” and people dancing.
Betty J. Eadie saw a figure telling her,
“It’s not yet your time.”
It was also suggested that people have a
flashback of their lives before they die. Ajmal Zemmar speculated if the brain
did a flashback, “it would probably like to remind you of good things rather
than the bad things.”
He concluded: “I think there’s something
mystical and spiritual about this whole near-death experience.”
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