70 Sevens

Home
70 Sevens Prophecy
The Millennium Chronology
Christ in the Clouds (1)
Christ in the Clouds (2)
Christ in the Clouds (3)
Q & A
a) Reincarnation
b) Was Jesus Reincarnated after the Crucifixion?

Prophecy & Revelation

EiffelTower.jpg

A prophecy about an event we agree will happen is only meaningful if it forecasts a precise time to watch for the event. 

Suppose I make this prediction: "the Eiffel Tower will collapse some day. Watch for this event." Such a prediction is meaningless because eventually the Eiffel Tower will collapse if we wait long enough. We agree it will happen some day--the Tower won't remain forever. The only question is when it will fall. The prophecy is meaningless because we believe it can happen at "any moment."  Now, assume I predict the Tower will collapse on an “October 13 date in the future, but the year is unknown.” The prophecy becomes meaningful because people now know precisely when to watch every year. 

This is the problem with Bible prophecy about the return of Christ or end of the world.  Any prediction about the return of Christ or an event preceding it is only meaningful if it foretells a precise time to watch for it.  I discuss this in The Millennium Chronology.

Email me (Doug Peterson) here.

Other linked sites of interest:

The strange equation c = gT

Sundial

  

The Millennium Chronology

In my book The Millennium Chronology I claim Jesus taught that he would return at the end of some unknown millennium counted from a biblical creation date in 3852 BC. I describe the book in more detail on this site. 

(For the record, I do not believe the earth is only 6,000 years old. Rather the biblical creation year dates the origins of the Jewish ancestry to 6,000 years ago.)

Did the Bible Predict When Christ Would Appear?