The Tomorrow People are depicted as an evolutionary step forward in humanity, gifted with teleportation, telepathy and telekinesis. Normal humans if they knew, would be frightened to death of Tomorrow People. You can watch this engaging 2013 pilot free on TUBI, based on the original series in 1973. As a trained electrical engineer, I was fascinated by machinery that could stop time, allowing a dead man to enter a timeless Limbo.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2660734/
Saint Padre Pio who died in 1968 was an Italian Franciscan priest who manifested all the supernatural gifts of the Tomorrow People and more, even to having predicted the exact year of his death five decades earlier.
“People flocked to see this living saint and mystic. He began to manifest the charisms of healing, bilocation, levitation, prophecy, numerous miracles, and the gift of tongues, in which foreign visitors heard him speak in their own language. He had the ability to read hearts, would spend weeks at a time eating nothing but the Holy Eucharist, and would sleep very little or not at all. Miraculous and profound conversions resulted from his ministry.”
“Here’s a partial list of Catholic saints who could bilocate or levitate in ecstasy during elevation of the Host. Joseph of Cupertino, Francis Xavier, Martin de Porres, Theresa de Avila, Francis of Assisi, Gemme Galgani, and Alphonsus Liguori.
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1829074780600151
Meet St Joseph of Cupertino:
I hasten to clarify that Roman Catholicism has no monopoly on saintliness, though I often like to think it does. Supernatural gifts such as bilocation, levitation, telepathy. and healings are not exclusively gifted to Catholics, but may endow anyone regardless of his religion. Furthermore, manifesting powers is no guarantee of true holiness. In fact, perverted individuals using such powers for evil, demonic purposes justify the exorcism rites.
In The Autobiography of a Yogi, Yogananda describes visiting a reclusive Hindu saint known to levitate. Here’s an excerpt from Chapter 7: “The sage’s eyes twinkled. ‘My rule of seclusion is not for my own comfort, but for that of others. Worldly people do not like the candor which shatters their delusions. Saints are not only rare but disconcerting. Even in scripture, they are often found embarrassing!’”
Don’t expect The Yesterday People in your life to accept the existence of dimensions beyond their capacity to perceive. “Hamlet has been told by the night watch that the ghost of his father has appeared to them. Hamlet and his friend, Horatio, go up to the battlements and the ghost appears. Horatio is a practical, down to earth scholar and he is stunned by this – he doesn’t believe in ghosts. He says: “O day and night, but this is wondrous strange.” Hamlet replies: “There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” He is suggesting that the human imagination is limited and that there are many things we don’t know, things that haven’t been discovered and, in fact, things we haven’t even dreamt of.” Act 1, Scene 5

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