Hello,
John and Doves,
It may
be reassuring to realize that the Earth is, among other things, a giant
gyroscope.
At the
Equator, the Earth spins at just over 1,000 miles per hour.
A lot
of force would have to come to bear on the Earth for a very short time in order
to cause
any
sudden shift of the entire planet, or even just its
landmasses.
The
magnitude of power likely needed to effect a sudden catastrophe would be akin to
what
some
scientists believe created the moon from a primordial Earth having been
attacked by a
hurtling asteroid.
Since
I have not heard, nor seen any evidence in the Scriptures for a second moon
around the
Earth,
we'll just have to assume that Wormwood is a little [or a lot] smaller than your
average
asteroid.
Sweet
dreams!
In
HaShem,
Mike
C.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Rowina
(4 March 2011)
"Donna, those
Enoch verses"
Donna, thanks for giving us those quotations
from the Book of Enoch,
with footnote relating to the book of James.
These verse do seem to
possibly describe a pole shift.
I am puzzled
as to what a pole shift entails. I gather that it means the
removal
of magnetic north to magnetic south, and vice versa. It is
described
as happening even now, as the north pole moves, although
gradually.
So it could finish either gradually or suddenly. But does
it mean the
earth turns upside down? I am entirely unsure of that.
Anyone
know?
There would be high winds, also, according to some. Up to
300
miles an hour, stronger at the equator than in the areas far from
the
equator. It could explain the predicted rearrangement of the
seas,
which will have a different configuration than before the
shift. Water
will exist permanently where it didn't recently
exist--not just temporarily.
Various maps of possible reconfiguration of
continents are startling.
On one map I saw last night, Tucson would still
be above water but
not Phoenix. Part of the reconfiguration would be
caused by subsidence,
as high areas collapse.
Most maps show the
Rocky Mountains as above water. Some show most
of the eastern half of
the US gone, but other maps show only part of it gone.
The Gulf Coast is
gone on all maps I have seen.
Mariel