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Pisces: Prepare for the seering agony of the rapture.

Capricorn: Jesus likes you!

Virgo: I can't believe you are still a virgin.

Libra: Remember you can't take it all with you to heaven, so maybe you should divorce a couple of your seven wives.

2006-07-18 04:30:31 · 9 answers · asked by Lucifer T. Chick 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

9 answers

it's fairly well known that whatever you put on the star scolls will statistically be right for several people. but the prophecies in the Bible are right. 100 percent. and many of them in great detail.

2006-07-18 04:33:45 · answer #1 · answered by God's Servant 3 · 0 0

Biblical prophecies are just that biblical. Star gazing and Astrology is not in the bible as political correct. I personally believe the word of God because everything that it says is coming to pass. The bible is true and the words in it have been a blueprint for generations. Of course people would say that you can look at the stars and know your future, but only God knows your future. Only he numbers your days. He knows what tomorrow holds.
And I honestly can't get with you on the sign thing that you did with the capricorn and virgo and libra, but I know for sure that the old testament prophets preached against this. So I say that the Bible prophecies are more accurate than anything I have seen and the rapture is the only prophecy to be fulfilled.

2006-07-18 11:38:22 · answer #2 · answered by Loveisthekey 2 · 0 0

True prophecy is 100% accurate where those that you see in the stores are nowhere near accurate. You may get up to 80% to 90% in any predictions but only the true prophecy will get 100%. So the biblical ones are the ones you need to pay attention to.

2006-07-18 11:38:01 · answer #3 · answered by ramall1to 5 · 0 0

Nope... Biblical Prophesies are NOT more or less.
Biblical prophecies are 100 % accurate.

I have not studied any of the supermarket scrolls like you have so I am unable to comment.

2006-07-18 11:36:57 · answer #4 · answered by whynotaskdon 7 · 0 0

What happened now and I write down tomorrow and claimed it was written 500 years ago.

When you read my work a century later, which was translated/ edited it is a prophecies.

2006-07-18 11:37:19 · answer #5 · answered by Ah Seow- The Mad Chimp 2 · 0 0

Some of your answers suggest that Bible is 100% correct. Let's check and see it that's true.

God says that if Adam eats from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, then the day that he does so, he will die. But later Adam eats the forbidden fruit (3:6) and yet lives for another 930 years (5:5). 2:17

As a punishment for killing Abel, God says Cain will be "a fugitive and a vagabond." Yet in just a few verses (4:16-17) Cain will settle down, marry, have a son, and build a city. This is not the activity one would expect from a fugitive and a vagabond. 4:12

God promises Abram and his descendants all of the land of Canaan. But both history and the bible (Acts 7:5 and Heb.11:13) show that God's promise to Abram was not fulfilled. 13:15, 15:18, 17:8, 28:13-14

How long was the Egyptian captivity? This verse says 400 years, but Ex.12:40 and Gal.3:17 say 430 years. 15:13

"In the fourth generation they [Abraham's descendants] shall come hither again." But, if we count Abraham, then their return occurred after seven generations: Abraham, Isaac (Gen.21:1-3), Jacob (Gen.25:19-26), Levi (Gen.35:22-23), Kohath (Ex.6:16), Amramn (Ex.6:18), and Moses (Ex.6:20). 15:16

God promises Abram's descendants the land of Canaan from the Nile to the Euphrates. But according to Acts 7:5 and Heb.11:13 God's promise to Abram was not fulfilled. 15:18

God promises to make Isaac's descendents as numerous as "the stars of heaven", which, of course, never happened. The Jews have always been, and will always be, a small minority. 26:4

God renames Jacob twice (32:28, 35:10 ). God says that Jacob will henceforth be called Israel, but the Bible continues to call him Jacob anyway (47:28-29). And even God himself calls him Jacob in 46:2. 32:28, 35:10

God calls Jacob Jacob, though he said in Gen.32:28 and 35:10 that he would no longer be called Jacob but Israel. 46:2

God promises to bring Jacob safely back from Egypt, but Jacob dies in Egypt (Gen.47:28-29) 46:3

The tribe of Judah will reign "until Shiloh," but Israel's first king (Saul) was from the tribe of Benjamin (Acts 13:21), and most of the time after this prophecy there was no king at all. 49:10

"He washed his garments in wine ... His eyes shall be red with wine."
Did Judah really wash his clothes in wine? Were his eyes bloodshot from drinking too much? Or is this a prophecy of Jesus? (I didn't know Jesus had a drinking problem.) 49:11-12

Contrary to the prophecy in 48:21, Joseph died in Egypt, not Israel. Gen.50:24
Exodus

God promises to cast out many nations including the Canaanites and the Jebusites. But he was unable to fulfill his promise. 33:2

In this verse God says he will write on the stone tablets, but in 34:27 he tells Moses to do the writing. 34:1
Numbers

"If there be a prophet among you, I the LORD will ... speak unto him in a dream." Now there's a reliable way to communicate with someone! 12:6
Deuteronomy

God promises to cast out seven nations including the Amorites, Canaanites, and the Jebusites. But he was unable to fulfill his promise. 7:1

God says that the Israelites will destroy all of the peoples they encounter. But according to Joshua ( 15:63, 16:10, 17:12-13) and Judges (1:21, 27-36, 3:1-5) there were some people they just couldn't kill. 7:24

Those who do as God says will never be infertile (neither will their cows!) and will never get sick. 7:14-15

Prophets and dreamers are to be executed if they say or dream the wrong things. 13:1-5

False prophets are to be (you guessed it) executed. How do you know who is a false prophet? By whether or not their predictions come true. (Watch out Jehovah's Witnesses!) 18:20

Misquoted in Rom.10:8. 30:14

God promises to "destroy these nations before thee." That he didn't keep his promise see Jos.15:63, 16:10, Jg.1:21, 1:27-36, and 3:1-5. 31:3-6
Joshua

God promises to give Joshua all of the land that his "foot shall tread upon." He says that none of the people he encounters will be able to resist him. But later we find that God didn't keep his promise, and that many tribes withstood Joshua's attempt to steal their land. 1:3-5

Joshua tells the Israelites that God will "without fail" drive out the Canaanites and the Jebusites. But later, the Bible tells us that he could not drive them out. 3:10

This verse says that Ai was never again occupied after it was destroyed by Joshua. But Nehemiah (7:32) lists it among the cities of Israel at the time of the Babylonian captivity. 8:28

God promised the Israelites that he would drive out all the inhabitants of the lands they pass through. But this verse shows that he didn't keep his promise since he couldn't drive out the Jebusites. 15:63

"And they drave not out the Canaanites." Once again God fails keep his promise to destroy all the people the Israelites encounter. 16:10

The Israelites, contrary to God's promises to them, could not drive out the Canaanites. 17:12-13

Joshua tells Manasseh that he will be able to drive out the Canaanites, but it turns out (see Jg.1:27-28) that he couldn't do it. 17:17-18

According to these verses, God fulfilled his promise to give the Israelites all of the lands that they encountered. But in several places the Bible tells us that these promises were not kept. 21:43-45

2006-07-18 11:41:01 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

So far they (scriptures) are 100% accurate

2006-07-18 11:36:37 · answer #7 · answered by williamzo 5 · 0 0

You are joking right?! You can't even compare the two.

2006-07-18 11:34:05 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

less

2006-07-18 11:34:03 · answer #9 · answered by Wounded duckmate 6 · 0 0

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