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what is the correct order they go in?
what powers do they have or symbolize?
and doesnot one bring plague on the world or disease?
and how is one considered the anti-christ?

2007-10-27 06:26:29 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

10 answers

Pestilence, Famine, War & Death.
Plague, starvation, war & death.
Be sanitary.
One must wear the mark of the Beast.
Hope this helps. :)

2007-10-27 06:41:15 · answer #1 · answered by shadowgirl777 3 · 0 1

People above are generally correct about the Red, Black and Pale Horsemen.

The White Horseman, however, it symbolic of the false religion headed by the anti-Christ that has, since the close of the New Testament, been conquering almost the entire world. It is not symbolic of Christ, as some have suggested, since the rider carries a bow. Later on in Revelations it shows Christ as also riding a white horse, but a sword comes out of His mouth, which symbolizes the word of God or the Bible , which is the only way to rightly divide truth from fiction.

2007-10-27 15:18:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

in correct order: Ben, Adam, Hoss and Little Joe.

Ben is the father, the land-owner, the benevolent monarch of all he surveys. In later years, he led the Lost Tribes back to Earth. Praise him!
Adam is the fickel eldest son, the deceiver. He wears a wig to hide his baldness, and he is the first to flee, even though he could have inherited all. Many years later, he pretended to be a healer. He is the Fallen.
Hoss is the glutton, but the one with the heart of gold. He knows not the evil he does, but he makes amends with his kindly nature. But in the end, his gluttony killed him.
Little Joe is the true heir, the youngest and most foolish, but also the most brave and honest. He gre up to forsake his father's Glorious Kingdom to settle for raising a family in a little house, and later wandering the world doing good works. Praise him!

2007-10-27 13:38:25 · answer #3 · answered by kent_shakespear 7 · 1 1

Harry Stuhldreher, Jim Crowley, Don Miller and Elmer Layden

2007-10-27 13:32:01 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

The original line up did include the Anti-Christ, but for some reason he was replace with Pestilence, which makes the current line-up:

War, Famine, Pestilence and Death

2007-10-27 13:34:17 · answer #5 · answered by The Return Of Sexy Thor 5 · 1 1

white - conquest

Red - bloodshed and war

black - famine

pale - death

The antichrist will conquer the world and take control of everything. He will make people turn against eachother creating bloodshed and war. There will be an extreme loss of food (supposedly global warming has to do with this), resulting in many many deaths.

2007-10-27 13:49:36 · answer #6 · answered by Petina 5 · 1 1

The four horsemen are derived from Greek philosophy, and represent the four elements. Their colors are white, red, "pale," and black.

2007-10-27 13:37:00 · answer #7 · answered by NONAME 7 · 2 0

The Four Horsemen

4 For example, in the sixth chapter of Revelation, the apostle John describes a dramatic vision: “I saw, and, look! a white horse; and the one seated upon it had a bow; and a crown was given him, and he went forth conquering and to complete his conquest.” (Revelation 6:2) Who is this victorious horseman? None other than Jesus Christ, installed as King of God’s Kingdom and riding to conquer his enemies. (Psalm 45:3-6; 110:2) Jesus’ triumphant ride began back in 1914, at the very beginning of the Lord’s day. (Psalm 2:6) His very first conquest was the casting of Satan and his demons to the earth. The result for mankind? “Woe for the earth and for the sea.”—Revelation 12:7-12.

5 There follow in the vision three grim figures: a fiery-colored horse symbolizing war, a black horse symbolizing famine, and a pale horse whose rider was named “Death.” Of this fourth horse, we read: “I saw, and, look! a pale horse; and the one seated upon it had the name Death. And Hades was closely following him. And authority was given them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with a long sword and with food shortage and with deadly plague and by the wild beasts of the earth.”—Revelation 6:3-8; Matthew 24:3, 7, 8; Luke 21:10, 11.

6 True to the prophecy, mankind has suffered terribly from war, famine, and disease since 1914. But the fourth horseman also kills by means of “the wild beasts of the earth.” Has this been a notable feature since 1914? Consideration of a similar prophecy by Ezekiel helps to put this aspect of the prophecy into perspective.

7 Writing perhaps five years before the destruction of Jerusalem in 607 B.C.E., Ezekiel prophesied a terrible punishment for the Jews because of their unfaithfulness. He wrote under inspiration: “So, too, it will be when there will be my four injurious acts of judgment—sword and famine and injurious wild beast and pestilence—that I shall actually send upon Jerusalem in order to cut off from it earthling man and domestic animal.” (Ezekiel 14:21; 5:17) Was this fulfilled literally back then? Undoubtedly Jerusalem suffered from famine and warfare as its end drew near. And famine usually causes disease. (2 Chronicles 36:1-3, 6, 13, 17-21; Jeremiah 52:4-7; Lamentations 4:9, 10) Was there also a literal plague of wild beasts at that time? Likely there were cases of humans being dragged off or perhaps even killed by animals, since Jeremiah also foretold this.—Leviticus 26:22-33; Jeremiah 15:2, 3.

8 What about today? In the developed lands, wild animals are not the dangerous problem that they once were. In other countries, however, wild animals continue to claim victims, especially if we include snakes and crocodiles among “the wild beasts of the earth.” Such tragic deaths are seldom reported in the international press, but they are notable. The book Planet Earth—Flood speaks of the many in India and Pakistan who “have died in agony from the bites of venomous snakes” while trying to escape from floods. India Today reported on one village in West Bengal where an estimated 60 women have lost their husbands because of tiger attacks. Such tragedies may become even more common in the future when human society breaks down and when famine increases.

9 But Ezekiel alluded to another kind of “animal” when he said: “There is a conspiracy of her prophets in the midst of her, like the roaring lion, tearing prey. A soul they actually devour . . . Her princes in the midst of her are like wolves tearing prey.” (Ezekiel 22:25, 27) So humans can act like animals too, and how mankind has suffered from such predators during our century! Many have died at the hands of animalistic criminals and terrorists. Yes, in more than one way death has claimed a rich harvest of victims from “the wild beasts of the earth.”

10 The listing of war, famine, disease, and wild beasts in John’s vision helps us to see that the agonies endured by Jerusalem in 607 B.C.E. were to be paralleled on many occasions during our day. The Lord’s day has thus already meant suffering for the world, largely because mankind’s rulers have refused to submit to that first Horseman, the enthroned King, Jesus Christ. (Psalm 2:1-3) What, though, about God’s people? What has the Lord’s day meant for them?

2007-10-27 21:14:01 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

white is righteous warfare, red is unnatural death caused by warfare and such, black is stark famine, and the pale is death. and all of these colors are the colors of the horses. if you need more info, email me. or go to www.watchtower.org

2007-10-27 13:56:10 · answer #9 · answered by no name 4 · 1 1

none are the anti-christ

grey, black, red, and some other color

they represent death, war, famine and something else

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Horsemen_of_the_Apocalypse


lost.eu/21618

2007-10-27 13:31:15 · answer #10 · answered by Quailman 6 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers