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Meta Raybans Unlock Miracle Capture That Has Integrity

When documenting divine healing becomes invisible to participants, we capture authentic supernatural reality instead of religious performance

I've been thinking about how to document miracles without destroying them.

The problem with traditional filming is obvious. Pull out an iPhone during a healing session and everything changes. People become self-conscious. They perform instead of participate. The very act of recording corrupts what you're trying to capture.

Meta Raybans might solve this problem completely.

The hypothesis of Brenda and I is that when I wear smart glasses, nobody knows I'm recording. There's no visible camera, no obvious equipment, no production crew making people aware they're being watched. Early tests suggest the healing environment stays pure.

The results have been promising enough that we believe Meta might want to sponsor this work corporately. If invisible documentation truly preserves authentic miracle manifestation, this could revolutionize how supernatural reality gets captured and shared.

This matters more than most people understand. Research shows that being recorded activates the Hawthorne effect within minutes—people modify their behavior when they know they're observed. In healing contexts, this creates performance pressure that interferes with the authentic faith needed for supernatural manifestation.

But genuine miracles happen in environments of childlike trust. When someone thinks they're on camera, they start calculating how they look instead of opening their heart to divine power. They second-guess their responses. They worry about seeming foolish rather than believing for the impossible.

Meta Raybans could eliminate this interference. The apostle can lay hands without wondering if the camera caught their technique. The person receiving prayer can respond naturally without performing for an audience. Everyone in the room can focus entirely on what God is doing instead of how they appear.

The theological implications are profound. If healing flows through pure faith and childlike expectation, then invisible documentation preserves the spiritual environment where miracles actually occur. You capture authentic supernatural reality instead of religious theater.

This isn't about deception. It's about integrity. When Apostle Delmar Coward Jr. heals cancer through laying on of hands, the most honest documentation shows what really happens—not what happens when everyone knows they're being filmed.

Traditional documentary crews destroy the very thing they're trying to capture. They turn sacred moments into content opportunities. They make participants perform Christianity instead of experience it.

Smart glasses let you witness apostolic ministry as it actually unfolds. No performance. No self-consciousness. Just raw supernatural power operating through genuine faith.

We need this documentation because the world requires evidence of divine reality. Atheism collapses when confronted with undeniable supernatural demonstration. But that demonstration has to be authentic—not the religious performance that cameras typically produce.

Meta Raybans give us both integrity and evidence. They preserve the spiritual environment where real miracles happen while providing the documentation that skeptics demand.

The question isn't whether divine healing works. The question is whether we can capture it honestly.

Smart glasses finally make that possible.