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End
of the world in 2013?
New book recalculates Newton's endtimes clock
Source: http://worldnetdaily.com
The Hadron Particle Collider did not destroy
the world last week, and scientists at CERN outside
Geneva are sipping champagne and celebrating.
But if the No. 1 best-selling author of a new
book is correct, they might want to re-cork the
bottle.
In "Temple at the Center of Time : Newton's
Bible Codex Deciphered and the Year 2012," by
David Flynn, a book that has skyrocketed up the
best-seller charts following its release this
month, the author makes a correction to Isaac
Newton's research, pointing to the year 2013
as "the time of the end."
In 2003, the Daily Telegraph in London published
a front-page story declaring that, according
to Isaac Newton, the world would end in 2060.
This was the first time that this calculation
of Newton became widely known. However, various
biographers and researcher of Newton's theology
had encountered it since 1991 when most of his
manuscripts were released on microfilm at the
Jewish National and University Library in Jerusalem.
According to Flynn, in the 1660s when Newton
believed that the end of days was imminent, there
seemed no reason to work out the approximate
year in which it would occur. With the Great
Plague, the fire of London and the apocalyptic
fervor of the times, it seemed obvious to Newton
that the end time had already arrived. But over
the ensuing decades of his life, Newton became
increasingly aware that his convictions had been
premature. Near the year 1705, when Newton was
in his sixties, his concern for preventing the
repetition of the same error compelled him to
invest his considerable knowledge to setting
the matter of the time of the end to rest. The
paper in which Newton recorded this calculation
was the subject of the article in the London
Daily Telegraph in 2003. Very few readers understood
Newton's reasoning for the date, not being scholars
of end time prophecy themselves. Newton wrote
concerning it:
This I mention not to assert when the time
of the end shall be, but to put a stop to the
rash
conjectures of fanciful men who are frequently
predicting the time of the end, & by doing
so bring the sacred prophesies into discredit
as often as their predictions fail. Christ comes
as a thief in the night, & it is not for
us to know the times & seasons which God
hath put into his own breast.
Newton
arrived at the year 2060 in a straightforward
manner. He believed that the last world empire
at the coming of the Antichrist would be a revived
Roman Empire, a concept wholly embraced by eschatologists
in modern times as well. He also believed that
this had actually occurred in A.D. 800 through
the coronation of Charlemagne by Pope Leo III
as ruler of the revived Roman Empire in the West.
As described by the prophet Daniel, and John
in Revelation, the revived Roman Empire will
rule for one "week," a period of seven
times 360 days, or 2,520 days total. In the midst
of this week, at 1,260 days, the Antichrist will
desecrate the future temple in Jerusalem. Following
the day/year guideline, Newton assigned 1,260
years of the Revived Roman empire before Antichrist's
desecration of the temple. This he did realizing
that the rebuilding of the temple and the judgments
of Revelation did not follow the rebirth of the
Roman Empire in A.D. 800. None of the prophecies
of the End of Days followed the coronation of
Charlemagne as Emperor of the revived Roman Empire
after 1,260, nor for that matter, any of the
years up until Newton's day. Therefore, he established
each day with a year from A.D. 800, arriving
at the year A.D. 2060.
In a manuscript number 7.3g, f. 13v. of the
Yahuda collection, Newton was even more specific
about the 2060 date.
So then the time times & half a time are
42 months or 1260 days or three years & an
half, reckoning twelve months to a year & 30
days to a month as was done in the Calendar of
the primitive year. And the days of short lived
Beasts being put for the years of lived [sic
for "long lived"] kingdoms, the
period of 1260 days, if dated from the complete
conquest
of the three kings A.C. 800, will end A.C.
2060.
But
Newton's prediction of Charlemagne's revived
Roman Empire starting in A.D. 800 and existing
until the return of Christ was contradicted in
1806 when Napoleon forced the Empire's dissolution.
"But," says Flynn, "there remains
a valid aspect of Newton's calculation. There
is reason to believe he was correct in his assumption
that there would be 1,260 years until the return
of Christ at the rebirth of the Roman Empire,
but that the year he chose was incorrect. There
is actually a better date based on the founding
of Rome and the methodology of Daniel's prophecy."
Flynn explains: "The Romans had fixed the
birth of the city of Rome and the Empire in 753
B.C. It was believed that the patriarch of the
city, Romulus, had marked out the boundaries
for the wall of Rome in this year. Known as Ab
Urbe Condita (literally, from the founding of
the city) the Roman calendar began with 753 B.C.
according to the dating of Marcus Terentius Varro
(116–27 B.C.) who lived at the time of
the Empire itself.
Because of how the prophet Daniel divided the
prophetic week in half, Flynn believes the original
founding date for the empire of the prophecy,
Rome, would follow this pattern and be bisected.
Therefore, correcting Newton's date, the year
753 B.C. designates the founding of the physical
Rome while A.D. 753 establishes the rebirth of
spiritual Rome. Counting 1,260 years forward
from A.D. 753, one arrives at the year 2013.
Additional significance can be attached to this
finding when considering that 2013 follows the
end of the great cycle of the Maya calendar and
the planetary cycle of the Aztec calendar, which
concludes Dec. 21, 2012. This date has raised
apocalyptic fears in corners around the world.
According to "The Bible Code," the
world will end on this date due to a collision
with a meteor, asteroid, or comet. Another theory – the "Novelty
Theory" – claims time itself is a "fractal
wave," which will end abruptly in 2012.
Even the popular television program X-Files speculated
that colonization of the earth by "aliens" would
occur in December 2012.
The Maya themselves describe past visits of
Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent, descending
through a "hole in the sky" on a rope
ladder. They believe at the end of 2012 the serpent
rope will emerge again from the center of the
Milky Way, and Quetzalcoatl will return, heralding
a new era at the start of 2013. Another version
of the story has Quetzalcoatl sailing down on
a winged ship, causing some to speculate that
a UFO armada or "mother ship" could
descend and take up position over earth on that
date.
Besides this type of speculation, an unusual
number of important events will occur beginning
in 2012. NASA is predicting the next Solar Maximum
will arrive in 2012 and will be the strongest
in 50 years. At the same time, the sun will align
with the center of the Milky Way for the first
time in 26,000 years, on the exact date of the
end of the Mayan calendar, Dec. 21, 2012. This
will also be the year when the United States
and the United Nations elect a new president
and a new secretary general, considered by some
to be the two most powerful "thrones" on
earth, and the seat from which prophecy experts
say the Antichrist will rule or receive power.
On a video
here, well-known preacher
Jack Van Impe says that the year 2012 and the
end of the Mayan Calendar could mark the return
of Jesus Christ.
Based on his research into the Jewish Feasts,
Pastor Mark Biltz of El Shaddai Ministries (as
laid out in a series of two
DVD teachings produced by WND Videos called "The Feasts of the Lord ") believes this time frame between
2012-2015 could be prophetic and may signal the
return of Christ. He says for people who believe
in a "pre-tribulation rapture," this
would make the year 2008 very important. For
those who believe in a mid-tribulation rapture,
2012 may mark their departure. And on his website,
he adds "if you're prewrath, then 2014 might
be interesting [and] if you're a posttribber,
2015 is the date to watch for."
Get "Temple at the Center of Time : Newton's
Bible Codex Deciphered and the Year 2012," by
David Flynn
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