Ok - one example I recall was on a TV program about all this when a group of people were taken out on a walk in the desert in the US under some pretext. They were all wearing bodycams and so everything they saw was recorded. On this walk they went past a staged situation where there was some 'keep out' tape, a few bits of metal and one person in a military uniform stood behind the tape. There was no explanation and no comment about it made by the TV people. A week later they were brought together again and as part of that they talked about what they saw. They agreed that they had seen wrecking of an crashed UFO that they had been threatened by armed guards and some had even seen alien bodies on the site. They were then showed the bodycam footage and found out they were wrong.
So are you saying that encountering Christ is a collective experience?
Did no one conclude that the wreckage could have been military? So the artifacts, the soldier, and the tape were ‘real’ or convincing, but the alien aspect was conjured by the minds of some but not all.
I can’t say any more than that really but the nearest thing I can offer is Derren Brown’s conversion of an audience member to Christianity. I understand the person “converted” realised later she had been manipulated and directed mentally. What went unsaid though was where Brown was directing the audience mentally given the elephant in the room. Namely that Brown is a professional television illusionist, so we have to question what of it was staged.
I was talking about personal testimony of visions of Jesus or similar not 'belief in God the Son'.
I’m still not clear what your understanding of the term vision is.