Archive for June 3, 2010

Personal Research

Posted in Uncategorized on June 3, 2010 by gracemoore

I found this idea very interesting when i read about it. It’s an idea called the Dattoo. It’s kind of like making your body an information platform, meaning you’d have a computer on your body. They say that it’d be sort of trendy and a way to use technology as self-expression. Dattoo’s would be created on the body, on clothing, or on accessories, so that it would be with the user at all times. Dattoo’s would be designed so that at the end of they day, the user could just wash it off, then get another at the start of a new day.Dattoo’s would include tools like cameras, microphones and laser-loudspeakers.

There’s the link that leads to an interesting pic of a dattoo.

Isaac Newton: 2060 (personal research 10)

Posted in Uncategorized on June 3, 2010 by melitam

Question: Since Isaac Newton has predicted the world’s end in 2060, do you think it may be possible that the Rapture may not come till around that time? I say this because of two things. One Brother Newton was a genius and instead of a generation being 40 to 70 years, may it actually be 120 years. Moses had three 40 year periods… Egypt, Midian period and wandering in the desert. It took Noah 120 years to build the ark and then God closed the door. The Rapture of the saints is a type of door closing also, which is based on that very last person being saved and only God knows the number. However, we don’t know the time or date for the Rapture, so can it be that a generation is a 120 years. From 1948, 120 years, minus 7 will be very close to 2060. This is only a thought and I hope I am wrong. We should always be a watchman on the wall.

Answer: Sir Isaac took the year for a day concept from Ezekiel and applied it to a 1260 day prophecy out of Daniel making 1260 years. Newton believed that in 800 AD the Pope finally achieved supremacy over world affairs. He believed that the 1260 years corresponded to the duration of the corruption of the Church, so he added 1260 to 800 A.D. and arrived at 2060 as the date of the “fall of Babylon” or cessation of the apostate Church.

(more on the link. 🙂 )

http://gracethrufaith.com/ask-a-bible-teacher/sir-isaac-newtons-2060-prophecy/

Personal Research

Posted in Uncategorized on June 3, 2010 by gracemoore

The other books I read after Uglies were Pretties and Specials. They both have the same type of technology, all super advanced and high tech. All eco-friendly, by the way. They’ve got solar powered hover boards, crash bracelets, and they don’t believe in burning down trees for heat or anything like that. They never get sick, and pretty much everyone is perfect. There hasn’t been a war in ages for their city, because they get along with everyone. Everything is computerized and super advanced, so advanced that they don’t need to handwrite anything anymore because they can just type it out instead. I think Scott Westerfield has some pretty interesting thoughts on how the future could end up, and it’s a pretty realistic possibility.

Isaac Newton’s belief of 2060. (personal Research 9.)

Posted in Uncategorized on June 3, 2010 by melitam

Newton was a strong believer in prophetic interpretation of the Bible and considered himself to be one of a select group of individuals who were specially chosen by God for the task of understanding Biblical scripture.

Unlike a prophet in the classical sense of the word, Newton relied upon existing Scripture to prophesy for him, believing his interpretations would set the record straight in the face of what he considered to be, “so little understood”.

Though he would never write a cohesive body of work on Prophecy, Newton’s beliefs would lead him to write several treatises on the subject, including an unpublished guide for prophetic interpretation entitled, Rules for interpreting the words & language in Scripture. In this manuscript he details the necessary requirements for what he considered to be the proper interpretation of the Bible.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton’s_religious_views     <– The link.