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Can New Orleans’ voodoo queen Marie Laveau perform miracles from beyond the grave?

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In 2002, doctors told a 41-year-old New York woman that she should prepare to meet her maker. She’d been bed-ridden with meningitis and other ailments for some time, and it didn’t look good. But she didn’t give up and resign herself to her fate. Instead she got on a train to New Orleans (her illness prevented her from flying) and made an offering at the tomb of famed voodoo queen, Marie Laveau, who died in 1881, but went on to become the center of a far-reaching spiritist cult.

The woman, who asked local media to identify her simply as “Jackie,” made a near complete recovery.

In 2003, she made a another trip to Marie’s tomb to “close the circle,” as she put it. “If you believe there are spiritual forces with great power,” she said, “this is definitely the place to come.”

People are certainly coming. Tour guides say Marie’s grave, at St. Louis No. 1 Cemetery near the
French Quarter, is one of the most visited graves in the United States. It’s become the U.S. equivalent of Lourdes, the French town where miracle cures are said to have occurred.

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View CommentsCan New Orleans’ voodoo queen Marie Laveau perform miracles from beyond the grave?

  • Who knows? According to the Bible, the same original words used for miracles, signs and wonders that defy prevailing natural scientific laws are attributed to God to glorify Him, but also to other spiritual beings such as Satan who may use them to deceive and harm men. In the book of Job, for example, Satan was even able to control the weather, and in Revelation, the Antichrist’s sidekick ‘false prophet’ is able to work great miracles including calling fire down from heaven.

    God’s Miracles and occult ‘miracles’ may both appear similar on the surface, but are from different supernatural sources. Aside from the art of illusion for entertainment purposes, deceivers abound who do fake miracles where nothing supernatural occurs, or where occult signs and wonders are performed for temporal gain or in a way to appear good to men but ultimately work to their harm. It often takes considerable spiritual discernment in this area to know if something is truly good to the core, or if it is just candy-coated poison to be avoided.

    If this event truly happened, I strongly suspect it was not the work of Marie Laveau or any other human from beyond the grave, but from demons (angels against God) who are quite alive and well, and want to deceive people into thinking so.

  • karmapolice

    Marie Laveau is amazing

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Doktor Snake with skull Doktor Snake is a bestselling cult author, swamp voodoo bluesman, and voodoo spellcaster. His books include Doktor Snake's Voodoo Spellbook and Mary Jane's Hash Brownies. Discover more.

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