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Show About Christian- ty And Prophesy THE NEXT NINE YEARS An Analysis and a Prophecy by Winy Anderson First Printing, July 1938 THE CHRISTIAN Prophecies based on this Bible are too numerous to examine exam-ine in detail. The Seven Day Adventists have recognized the Bible as a prophecy and their interpretation is enlightening. The writer laughed at a Seven Day Adventist friend when, in 1914, this friend stated that the war then declared would last four years and would be but a dress rehearsal for a longer and far more destructive war a generation later. A prophecy which which seemed preposterous at the time, was fulfilled when the Pope regained limited temporal power. Today the Catholic Catho-lic Church is recognized as a state, with the privileges of ambassadors am-bassadors to other nations, just as the larger states., I see today to-day the verification of every prediction of my friend. The Morrrfons (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints) have inspiration and prophecy as the very corner stones of their faith and the President of the church is their chief seer and prophet. "The-World-ls-Flat" Voliva of the Christian Catholic Apostolic Apos-tolic Church of Zion, of Zion City, Illinois, has been shouting prophecies from the house tops and over the air for all to hear. His laughable ideas on Cosmogony will prejudice most of us in our evaluation of his ideas of the future, but the fact remains -that the writer possesses a brchure issued in 1915 by this organization, or-ganization, breath-taking in its accuracy. An interpretation, based entirely upon the Bible, bears witness that he, with a sincere desire to be a light in dark places, will be given light whether the instrument used, as a divining tool, be a Bible, astrology, mathematics, cards, tea leaves or what not. Judge Rutherford, leader of Jehovah's Witnesses, is a prophet of no mean ability. We have but to look about the world today to see the fulfillment of many of the auguries of this religious sect. The British-Israel Movement throughout the British Empire Em-pire and the Angol-Saxon Federation of the United States, both have voluminous literature on the Great Pyramid as a prophecy in stone. Using the measurements of the pyramid passages as a yardstick of time, and A. D. 1 as their known date, they have worked out a system which looks plausible upon up-on examination. The Bible is used as a key in the interpretation interpreta-tion of pyramid measurements. There seems little doubt that A. D. 1 was chosen by early Christian writers for its astronomical import as a date for the birth of their Savior. These men were well versed in astronomy, astron-omy, astrology, and cyclic law and did indeed embody a prophecy proph-ecy in the books of the Bible. But without a key to the cosmic cycles an interpreter is lost when trying to time the events forecast in the Book of Revelation and other books of the Bible. |