Any other explination?
Such as lack of oxygen or some form of static electricity?
I been there, it feels like a tazer without ampare.
And i do not consult magicians, adressing your tubevideo...
Now if you heard the story about those fainting of the touch of michael jackson you will hear their testemoney of energy flowing through their bodies causing them to collapse, sometime that has had a fatal outcome when they been trampled to death by the audience.
When I belonged to a baptist communion there was a older women giving praise to Jesus, she was the informal leader of the communion. I could feel the same flow of energy when she touched my hand after giving praise to Jesus. I would not try to explain that with hypnosis or group pressure, it felt like a voltage shortout without the ampere. I would still say that it is unexplainable to science, I don't find your explination satisfying.
My own 2c.
I might be able to provide some unique perspective on this as I used to be a deeply religious person and I know exactly what you're talking about. You have in my opinion, perhaps unknowingly, touched upon the very foundation of religion, that of the feeling of religious exaltation. It's the same rarifired quality you might find visiting an ancient monastery or in the tomes of William James' Varieties of Religious Experience or Kempis' The Imitation of Christ. That sense of the divine other, the Shekinah. The feeling that what I'm doing at this moment is
right, that something greater than myself is present and I might even be in contact with it. Such a sentiment is present in every temple, church, mosque, mass, ritual, and has a litany of examples in every religious tradition; it's part of the human makeup. I can think of no better explanation for why humans have created so many different mutually exclusive religions throughout our history. The feeling of 'Christ being present with you' while in the rapture of prayer is not unique to Christianity. People of other religious faiths feel the same emotion of 'rightness' just as strongly and believe their religious teachings with just as much fervor. There are hundreds of different spiritual disciplines, all expressing the same human emotion/theme uniquely through their own cultural/personal prism.
In my own opinion, people are loathe to question this feeling and whether there really is anything deeper to it other than the surface value. It's also why religion, in some form, will always be a part of humanity and is ineradicable. My own case provides an easy and continual example. I was a bible believing Christian for many years; I prayed the sinner's prayer, read the Bible cover to cover, went to church etc... and yet once I started really questioning it, once I let in just one doubtful question, the whole thing fell apart (though it certainly took a good many long days and nights to completely fall apart). Just because we feel something is true,
know it's true down to our bones, doesn't make it true.