|
Tsunami hit the Solomon Islands 1st April 2007 |
| Written by Alasdair Laurie | |
| Tuesday, 03 April 2007 | |
|
Describes the tsunami that hit the Solomon Islands in the context of a prediction for a tsunami to hit the East Coast of the USA A tsunami hit the Solomon Islands on 1st April 2007 following a large earthquake in the region. This follows substantial evidence pointing to a tsunami predicted to hit the East Coast of the USA on the same date. Solomon has been shown to be the 666th name in the Bible, the number of the beast. Solomon was famed for his wisdom, and April Fools’ Day (foolishness being the opposite of wisdom) had been predicted as a Biblically significant date. A tsunami is still expected to hit the East Coast of America. The date is unknown, but is expected to be Biblically relevant within the context of the information provided on http://www.worldends.co.uk. The most likely date is Easter Sunday (8th April) which celebrates the resurrection of Jesus. I believe that God has given the Americans an extra warning for this event. This tsunami will happen following an eruption of the volcanic island of La Palma, causing part of the unstable island to fall into the sea. This is in agreement with predictions in the Bible concerning the fate of Babylon. North America has been shown as the Biblical Babylon through the picture of the Whore of Babylon riding on the Scarlet Beast outlined by Hudson Bay and Labrador (Canada). Other parable-based evidence includes a volcanic eruption on Sicily exactly one month before April 1st, along with a lunar eclipse that turned the moon red. |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Agriculture Automotive Books / Publishing Books /Publishing Business Computer Consumer Design Education Employment/Careers Engineering Environment Events/ Trade shows Finance/Money Gaming Government Home and Family Industry Insurance Latest News Legal and Law Lifestyle Maritime Media Medical Misc Music News Non Profit Politics Religion Science and research Self Help Society Sports Technology Telecoms News Trade Transportation Travel/Hospitality Wine
Bookmark with:
What are these?