Thursday, May 22, 2014

A GREAT METEOR SHOWER RE-VISITED

I said this to a FB buddy who also a blog buddy:
That (meteor shower of 1833) was said by Joseph to be a herald the coming of the Lord. Well it has been 180 years and still no Lord. Or....did it? The Lord came suddenly to His temple 2 1/2 years later in Kirtland. Could it be that this will herald the Lord coming suddenly amongst the people again in 2 1/2 years at the end of the events in Jerusalem? Time will tell.
Here is the narrative of the event:
On one occasion Joseph was preaching in Kirtland sometime in the fall of 1833. Quite a number of persons were present who did not belong to the Church, and one man, more bitter and skeptical than others, made note with pencil and paper of a prophecy uttered on that occasion, wherein Joseph said that 'Forty days shall not pass, and the stars shall fall from heaven.'
      Such an event would certainly be very unusual and improbable to the natural man, and the skeptic wrote the words as a sure evidence to prove Joseph to be a false Prophet.
      On the thirty-ninth day after the utterance of that prophecy a man and brother in the Church, by the name of Joseph Hancock... and another brother were out hunting game and got lost. They wandered about until night, when they found themselves at the house of this unbeliever, who exultingly produced this note of Joseph Smith's prophecy, and asked Brother Hancock what he thought of his Prophet now, that thirty-nine days had passed and the prophecy was not fulfilled.
      Brother Hancock was unmoved and quietly remarked, 'There is one night left of the time, and if Joseph said so, the stars will certainly fall tonight. This prophecy will all be fulfilled.'
      The matter weighed upon the mind of Brother Hancock, who watched that night, and it proved to be the historical one, known in all the world as 'the night of the falling of the stars.'
      He stayed that night at the house of the skeptical unbeliever, as it was too far from home to return by night, and in the midst of the falling of the stars he went to the door of his host and called him out to witness what he had thought impossible and the most improbable thing that could happen, especially as that was the last night in which Joseph Smith could be saved from the condemnation of 'a false prophet.'
      The whole heavens were lit up with the falling meteors, and the countenance of the new spectator was plainly seen and closely watched by Brother Hancock, who said that he turned pale as death, and spoke not a word.

 I am excited to see how this turns out!  Tomorrow and in 2.5 years.....

1 comment:

  1. I would love to see it myself. But I doubt it. Rainy season has started and even if it were the dry season I'm a bit too close to the equator.

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