| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
narrator
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Family |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Narrator meets the pastor; pastor comments on the role of Jews in Charismatic Christianity. | Church | View |
| 2025-11-19 | N/A | Attendance at 'rock and role healing services'. | Church | View |
| 2025-11-16 | N/A | Church service where the pastor introduces the mother of the boy he accidentally killed. | Church | View |
This document appears to be page 129 of a memoir or manuscript, stamped with a House Oversight Committee identifier. The text describes a Jewish narrator attending a Charismatic Christian church with their sons, witnessing a sermon about forgiveness involving a pastor who had accidentally killed a child, and subsequently experiencing speaking in tongues. While part of the Epstein document cache (likely related to the Maxwell family history), this specific page details personal religious experiences rather than criminal activity.
This document appears to be page 126 of a manuscript or memoir, part of a House Oversight Committee production. The text is a personal reflection by a parent discussing their sons' conversion to religious fundamentalism, comparing it to broader societal trends involving educated middle-class youth (referencing the 9/11 bombers and Richard Reid). The author explores theological concepts, quoting Paul Holmer and referencing Abraham Abulafia, while expressing personal pain regarding their estrangement from their children's new spiritual paths.
This document appears to be page 94 of a memoir or philosophical manuscript included in House Oversight evidence. The narrator, likely a psychoanalyst, reflects on personal misery, family dysfunction, and existential dread while comparing Buddhist, Jewish, and Catholic perspectives on suffering and death. The text references living in West Los Angeles, interning at Ochsner Foundation Hospital in New Orleans, and cites the 1992 book 'The Adapted Mind'.
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