This is related to this post:
Josua
(23
Aug 2011) -"Something
unique about the number 37"
Ever since I saw this picture (the first one), I
have the feeling the numbers formed by the Delta
IV Heavy Rocket's smoke are related to the date of
the Rapture.
The Rocket was launched, a TOP
SECRET launch, on January 20 this
year (2011: See article below).
Looking from the bottom up,
I see a bird (a dove?), then the number 3,
followed by the number 7 and 3 2's in a row: 3
- 7 - 2 - 2 - 2.
The bottom part of the number 3 looks like a
big bird. I believe both the small bird
(dove) and the big one represent the Church
going up in the sky to meet the Lord Jesus: HE
is the light (Sun)
surrounded by a Rainbow
(the reddish circle around the light) and a Cloud (Revelation 10:1:
And I saw another
mighty angel (
Jesus)
come down from Heaven, clothed with a
cloud,
and a
rainbow was on His head, and
His face was as the
sun, and His
feet as pillars of
fire.)
At
the top (the last number 2) I see something
falling down. Maybe something related to
the "Sudden Destruction"?, or the devil being
cast down to earth? Or both?
THIS IS JUST MY OPINION. Any comments
(or explanations)
from any of the DOVES, for the benefit of all of us who
are eagerly waiting for Our Lord Jesus to
come SOON, are welcomed.
Any ideas of what this numbers, and the
picture, might mean: 37
* ( 2 + 2 + 2 ) = 222
?
BY THE WAY:
This 3-in-One huge rockets were launched "using a pad called Space Launch Complex 6
at Vandenberg -- "Slick
Six" to those who know it. SLC-6
was meant to be used for military launches of
space shuttles,
but was heavily modified to fit the Delta IV
Heavy." >>>
Complex 6 times three rockets = 6 6 6
(another coincidence?)
http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Delta-IV-Heavy-Rocket-Launch/ss/events/sc/012111rocket
DELTA IV
HEAVY ROCKET LAUNCH
23-STORY
ROCKET BLASTS OFF IN CALIFORNIA
Fri Jan.
21, 2011, 10:34 am ET
If you were in
Southern California
on Thursday afternoon and
happened to notice what looked like a skyscraper
darting across the
sky, you weren't seeing things. That was
the
Delta IV Heavy Launch Vehicle,
the largest rocket ever to launch
from the West Coast.
The
three-engine rocket is thought to
carry a top-secret U.S. spy satellite, the Times
said, that is
"capable of snapping pictures detailed enough to
distinguish the
make and model of an automobile hundreds of
miles below."
2011 photo released by
United Launch Alliance
In
this
Thur. Jan.20, 2011 photo
released by United Launch Alliance showing the
Delta IV Heavy Launch
Vehicle sits on the launch pad in preparation
for it's launch
Thursday, Jan. 20,2011, at
Vandenberg
Airforce Base, in Vandenberg,
Calif.
The classified national security payload is
scheduled to be
lofted into orbit by the largest rocket ever
launched on the West
Coast.
SPY
SATELLITE LAUNCH SHAKES UP CALIFORNIA
DELTA
IV HEAVY ROCKET LAUNCHED FROM
VANDENBERG
AIR FORCE BASE
The United States launched a
classified spy
satellite from Vandenberg
Air
Force Base in California this
afternoon -- and for a
top-secret launch, the government
was actually pretty open about it.
The “satellite” --
publicly designated NROL-49
-- was mounted atop
a rocket 230
feet
tall, known
as a Delta
IV Heavy. It is
currently the tallest rocket
in America's
fleet of launchers, and when it leaves a
launch pad,
generating two million pounds of thrust (To
push or drive with force; to drive, force, or
impel; to shove),
it is hard to miss.
It was the largest rocket ever launched from
the West Coast. The
Saturn V moon rockets and the space shuttles
were built to generate
more thrust, but they only launched from Florida.
"Launches like this have been seen all up and
down the coast,
as far as Los Angeles," said Mike Rein, a
spokesman for the
United Launch Alliance, which ran the launch for
the National
Reconnaissance Office. "And, of course, it
leaves a vapor trail
too."
Vandenberg is about 150 miles northwest of
the Los
Angeles basin.
Officers at the base closed nearby roads and a
park, did tests to
make sure the vibrations from the launch would
not break windows, and
announced the planned launch time well in
advance so that people
would not think they were caught in an
earthquake.
WHAT WAS THE ROCKET CARRYING? (GOOD
QUESTION!!!)
The launch team would not say, beyond a coy
phrase on the ULA
website that "this launch supplies the
military's national
defense mission."
Independent analysts, though, said the
payload is a billion-dollar
high-resolution spy satellite.
Ted Molczan, an amateur sky watcher from Toronto, said it
was an
"imagery intelligence satellite" capable of
spotting
objects from orbit that are as small as four
inches in diameter.
He said it is probably an updated version of
a satellite called
KH-11, first launched in 1976.
"KH-11s provide high resolution imagery,
useful for strategic
and tactical purposes," Molczan wrote in an
e-mail to ABC News.
"They have the highest resolution of any such
spacecraft in
orbit, and are among the NRO's most important.
NROL = National Reconnaissance Office
Launch. [= NEW
REALITY ORDER (New World Order)?].
L = San Francisco, CA.
Examples of hot spots that they monitor are North Korea (its
nuclear and ICBM programs) and Iran and its
nuclear program."
"I would be hard-pressed to disagree with
him," said
John Pike, who runs the website
GlobalSecurity.org
and often writes
about space and national security.
NASA and the Air Force have been launching
Delta rockets since
1960, but have been steadily upgrading them over
the years.
The Delta IV Heavy is actually three
booster stages strapped
together, generating enough thrust to put
payloads of 24 tons in
low Earth orbit.
Four of them have been
launched since 2004, all from
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
This is the first from
California. It is using a pad called Space
Launch Complex 6
at Vandenberg -- "Slick Six" to those
who know it. SLC-6 was meant to be used for
military launches of space shuttles,
but was heavily modified to fit the Delta IV
Heavy.