"A third of your people will die of the plague or perish by famine inside you; a third will fall by the sword outside your walls; and a third I will scatter to the winds and pursue with drawn sword." Ezekiel5:12
Jeremiah 15:2 "And it shall be that when they say to you, 'Where should we go?' then you are to tell them, 'Thus says the LORD: "Those destined for death, to death; And those destined for the sword, to the sword; And those destined for famine, to famine; And those destined for captivity, to captivity."'
The following refers to the latest news regarding the H1N1 flu virus. The above references are the references from the Old Testament prophets that referred to these times as the end of an age, or a purging of the world from so much evil.
In my first book I go into depth regarding the prophecies of these prophets and how specific they are in describing these times. The sword (wars) would kill about 1/3 of the population, famine another third, and finally pestilence and plagues another third.
All native american prophecies also refer to these times with the same exact predictions about catastrophic wars (Hopi, Aztec and Mayan prophecies), world wide famines, and plagues as well.
The natural disasters are occurring world wide and will continue to increase in severity and number.
The HAARETZ, a well known Israeli publication predicts a major Israeli conflict with Syria, Iran and Lebanon probably before the summer. I believe it will begin this spring.
The cleansing of the planet is about to begin and it will not be pretty but a necessary thing in order to cleanse and purge this planet from so much evil.
The native americans call it the great purification, because this is exactly what is currently unfolding.
Currently we have roughly 6billion people living in the world today. According to all prophecy, about 90% of the world's population will be disappear within the next 25-50 years.
Mexico detects first mutation of H1N1 flu Posted:
04 March 2010 0834 hrs
MEXICO CITY: Mexican officials said Wednesday they have confirmed the first mutation of the A(H1N1) flu virus in a girl who survived the infection. Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova told Mexican journalists that the case was the first confirmed mutation of the H1N1 flu virus, though there were 423 other suspected cases. He said the girl was treated two months ago at a hospital in Mexico City for a respiratory illness and then returned with a case of severe pneumonia, from which she recovered. Cordova called on anybody with risk factors that could make them more susceptible to the virus to be vaccinated against it, warning that "these viruses can mutate at any time" with serious consequences. Officials said 1,088 people have died in Mexico from the virus since the pandemic first emerged in the country in April 2009. Nearly 16,000 people have died worldwide from the strain after it spread into 212 countries and territories. The World Health Organisation said last month it was too early to declare that the peak of the global flu pandemic had passed as infections were still rising in regions such as western Africa. - AFP/sc
MEXICO CITY: Mexican officials said Wednesday they have confirmed the first mutation of the A(H1N1) flu virus in a girl who survived the infection. Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova told Mexican journalists that the case was the first confirmed mutation of the H1N1 flu virus, though there were 423 other suspected cases. He said the girl was treated two months ago at a hospital in Mexico City for a respiratory illness and then returned with a case of severe pneumonia, from which she recovered. Cordova called on anybody with risk factors that could make them more susceptible to the virus to be vaccinated against it, warning that "these viruses can mutate at any time" with serious consequences. Officials said 1,088 people have died in Mexico from the virus since the pandemic first emerged in the country in April 2009. Nearly 16,000 people have died worldwide from the strain after it spread into 212 countries and territories. The World Health Organisation said last month it was too early to declare that the peak of the global flu pandemic had passed as infections were still rising in regions such as western Africa. - AFP/sc
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