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Annalee Skarin : ウィキペディア英語版 | Annalee Skarin
Annalee Skarin (July 7, 1899 – January 17, 1988), born Nansela Mathews, the granddaughter of "Wild Bill" Hickman, was a popular New Age/Metaphysical author, originally raised in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She gained fame by claiming to believe in the possibility of attaining immortality through the ardent pursuit of Christian principles, which she summarized as ''gratitude, praise, and love''. In Mormonism, it is believed that some individuals, such as Enoch and Moses underwent ''translation'', where they are "changed from a mortal state to one in which they are temporarily not subject to death."〔McConkie, Mark L. (1992), ( "Translated Beings" ), in Ludlow, Daniel H. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Mormonism, New York: Macmillan Publishing, p. 1485-86〕 Skarin claimed to have invented a meditation technique by which anyone could ''translate'' themselves directly into Heaven, although her definition is more closely related to the Christian idea of ''ascension'' than the ''translation'' doctrine of the LDS Church. ==Writings==
In her writings she rejects the regular Christian doctrine that physical death is inevitable. While she accepts the Christian doctrine that virtuous people can die and be later admitted to Heaven, she regards this path as "the dreary backdoor entrance", and asserts that the path to true glory involves Ascending to Heaven with one's physical body alive and intact, via a process she called (using the term commonly used by Mormons) "translation" (overcoming of bodily death). She also claimed to be able to visit the spirit world at will and spoke in her books about looking down and observing Earth from the spirit world.
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