This site wont allow us to post over 200 fullfilled prophecies so you should go find a website that discribes them all.
2006-10-31 10:59:34
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answer #1
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answered by impossble_dream 6
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The prophecies of the bible as false. The King James Version for example (one of the oldest bibles) was written in the 17th century. So Any prophecies started happenning before this date are just made up ( I can write of many prophecies of the past using the knowledge of history today). So how many happened after the 17th century? Most of the wording is so vague you can use it to mane anything with 'imagination'. Why didn't the bible fortell about the most powerful events like The Holocaust, Nuclear bombing, or Pearl Harbor ( that would have prevented the event now wouldn't it?) I have some food for thought:
Here are 204 false prophecies in the bible:
http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/proph/long.html
2006-10-31 20:38:02
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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In the Book of Ezekiel, God declared to the Israelites, “I will gather you from the nations and bring you back from the countries where you have been scattered, and I will give you back the land of Israel again.” This prophecy was amazingly fulfilled as Israel, having been scattered in 585 BC, once again became a nation in 1948, and as it reclaimed all of its original land through the miraculous “Six Day War” in 1967 (during which it also retook Jerusalem as its capital). Remarkably, there has never been any nation that was abolished from the face of the earth and then later restored as was Israel!
Furthermore, the prophecies of Christ have proven to be flawless...In fact, a professor at Westmont College used 48 of the 456 prophecies in a mathematical experiment with his class and arrived at the extremely conservative estimate that the probability of 48 prophecies being fulfilled in one person is the incredible number 10^157. To put this in perspective, there are only 10 to the 80th power electrons in the whole universe, and any statistical odds greater than 10 to the 50th power are absolute impossible, per Dr. Emil Borel, the inventor of the Law of Probability. The professor concluded, “Any man who rejects Christ as the Son of God is rejecting a fact proved perhaps more absolutely than any other fact in the world.”
The best resource I could recommend is "100 prophecies fulfilled By Jesus" from Rose Publishing...
http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/product?item_no=947199&netp_id=333526&event=ESRCN&item_code=WW
2006-10-31 19:04:18
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answer #3
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answered by whitehorse456 5
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Sure.
These things need to happen first before the second coming of Christ.
-Isrel is reformed after almost 2000 years-1948
-people begin to become veterains and abstaine from marriage-now
-the world will be run by one governing body-the UN?
-the antichrist will make people worship his image, that he has made to talk somehow-come on that must be TV-
-three prophets will be killed in Jerusalem and the whole world will watch them lie in the strees for three days, that couldn't have been possible before 24hr satlite news-
and a whole lot of other stuff.
This stuff was written about 2000 years ago by men of that time.
It didn't make since when the wrote it. How could an Image talk?
TV
How could the whole world watch whats going on in Jerusalem with out the invention of 24hr news coverage.
How could Israel be reformed when it wasn't broken up at the time of writing?
These were simple men. The only way they could of changed the world the way that they did is because it was gods will.
Oh yeah and it says to those who are not chosen, Its will look like foolishness.
Remember that when men with guns check your right hand or forehead for the mark of the beast. Is it an tattoo to show that you've been inoculated? Or is it proof of citizenship to the world community? cant say, but it will all make perfect sense when you line up to receive it.
Jesus Christ is lord and savior of the earth.
2006-10-31 19:19:01
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answer #4
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answered by erickallen101 2
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There aren't any. Some of the things they claim are mere coincidence (if you throw a stick enough times you're bound to hit something).
The majority of the things most commonly referred to as fulfilled fall into one of three catagories:
1-Hearsay. Claiming Jesus fulfilled Hebrew prophecy, without any evidence of his existence, contemporary to his day, for example.
2-Written after the fact. The bible was written well after Christ supposedly walked the earth. Its rather easy to write about an event after it happened, and make it support what you want. The repeated translation of the bible supports this as well.
3-Vague writing. Like Nostradamus, some of the events foretold are written in such a vague language, that by stretching one's imagination after certain events, you can make the event fit the wording.
2006-10-31 19:04:37
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answer #5
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answered by Bill K Atheist Goodfella 6
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Here are two of them:
It was in the palace at Shushan that this same Artaxerxes, in his 20th year (455 B.C.E.), granted Nehemiah’s request to be sent back to rebuild Jerusalem and its walls. This marked the start of the “seventy weeks” of years of Daniel’s prophecy, which pointed forward to Jesus’ appearance as “Messiah the Leader” precisely on time in the year 29 C.E.—Daniel 9:24, 25; Nehemiah 1:1; 2:1-9.
Some documents written on papyrus in the Aramaic language were found at Elephantine, an island in Egypt’s Nile River. These documents demonstrate the accuracy with which the Bible writers Ezra and Nehemiah depict both conditions and official communication during Persian rule. In Biblical Archaeology, Professor G. Ernest Wright states: “Now . . . we are able to see that the Aramaic of Ezra is precisely that of its age, while the government documents are of the general type which we have become accustomed to associate with the Persian regime.” One of the documents contained a royal Persian order concerning the Passover celebration by the Jewish colony in Egypt.
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In vision, Daniel had seen Medo-Persia represented as a two-horned ram. Next, two centuries before it happened, he saw “a male of the goats coming from the sunset [the west]” and moving so fast that “it was not touching the earth.” The fast-moving he-goat proceeded to “strike down the ram and to break its two horns, and there proved to be no power in the ram to stand before it.” (Daniel 8:5-7) Does history show that this really happened to Medo-Persia?
Yes, in the year 334 B.C.E., Alexander the Great came out of Greece to the west. With lightning speed like that of a male goat, he swept through Asia, gaining victory after victory over the Persians. Finally, in 331 B.C.E., at Gaugamela, he scattered a Persian army of a million men. Its leader, Darius III, fled, later to be murdered by onetime friends. The fourth world power had been struck down, its horns being broken, and Alexander’s empire became the fifth of the great world powers of Bible history.
The Medo-Persian World Power had existed for just over two centuries—from the night it overthrew Babylon in 539Â B.C.E. until it fell to Alexander. This is about the same length of time that has passed since the French Revolution or the establishment of the United States of America. During such a relatively short period of time, the Medes and the Persians unintentionally had much to do with the outworking of Jehovah God’s purposes and the fulfillment of his unfailing prophecies.
2006-10-31 19:21:43
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answer #6
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answered by papavero 6
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2 Peter 3: 3-7
2006-10-31 19:29:23
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answer #7
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answered by linniepooh 3
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Start by doing a web search on fulfilled bible prophecy there will be more details and dates when something was prophesied and when it was fulfilled pay special attention to dates....when they were prophesied and when they were fulfilled..
2006-10-31 21:06:08
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answer #8
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answered by judy_derr38565 6
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Well if you're asking, it probably hasn't happened yet, dontcha think? duh dude, duh :)
2006-10-31 19:07:08
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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