The thing was that she wasn't even an atheist to begin with, and hardly a religious skeptic:
So she had a medical procedure which many Christians call a grave sin and "baby murder," which made her feel guilty for having it done, so she saw herself as a sinner who would never be loved by God. So there was god belief there to begin with, and this NDE just followed her idea of heaven, namely:
What, no sensation of floating above your body or flying down a tunnel of light? She just "woke up" in heaven? Further proof that NDE's aren't real and are all just hallucinations.
Quote:'I saw a lot of things that children shouldn't see,' she told WFAA. 'I always believed that God had abandoned me, that he didn't save me, that he didn't love me and I questioned if he was real.'
Then, when she was a teenager, she had an abortion. A choice she believed cemented her position as a sinner.
'After that abortion I thought, "I've done it now - if he was real, he could never love me now,"' she told The Blaze.
So she had a medical procedure which many Christians call a grave sin and "baby murder," which made her feel guilty for having it done, so she saw herself as a sinner who would never be loved by God. So there was god belief there to begin with, and this NDE just followed her idea of heaven, namely:
Quote:McVea says she was in a more peaceful place. After closing her eyes in the hospital, the next thing she remembers is waking up in heaven.
'I was standing in the most gorgeous light and instantly I recognized where I was. I knew who I was, I knew where I was...' she recalls.
What, no sensation of floating above your body or flying down a tunnel of light? She just "woke up" in heaven? Further proof that NDE's aren't real and are all just hallucinations.
Christian apologetics is the art of rolling a dog turd in sugar and selling it as a donut.