Dave Watchman
Active Member
React now, and get a $10.00 discount before July 2022.
I wonder why you say 2022?
And then specifically July.
I know you're joking around but,
According to Newton, you are out by some 27 years.
Just check your calculations again.
In 1704, Isaac Newton Predicts the World Will End in 2060 | Open Culture
Now we're getting somewhere.
I pick your post as the winner.
Newton is the man.
Newton knew before it could be known.
Newton knew without knowing.
Because Newton knew about the time when these walls were set:
And the cries from these stones are reaching their crescendo now.
They initiated the timeline.
It's amazing how the empirical was kept hidden until 1969, really 1991.
2060 was just a smokescreen, fake news, to throw cold water on a group of date speculators that had risen up in Isaac's day.
I know this because of what Newton wrote in his Daniel 9 commentary. Daniel 9 is the only place where it spells out the timing of the coming of Messiah the Prince. With the seven weeks being the compass of a Jubilee.
And it happened already. We have the primary template to study. Newton knew that it was NOT going to be in 2060. He was witness to the first of the two modern day decrees to restore and to rebuild Jerusalem.
Newton knew it would be sooner than 2060, but he sat on the data. And the data was sealed until the time of the end. But it's remarkable how the 2060 still fulfills it's purpose right now.
"This I mention not to assert when the time of the end shall be, but to put a stop to the rash conjectures of fancifull 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 wch God hath put into his own breast. - Isaac Newton.
Why is news of Newton’s prophetic studies only coming out now?
Newton’s theological and alchemical papers were kept from public scrutiny by the Portsmouth family until 1936, when they were sold at Sotheby’s in London. The largest single collection of the theological papers was acquired by the Jewish scholar Abraham Shalom Ezekiel Yahuda. When he died in 1951, he left them to the newly-founded State of Israel.
His will was contested and thus the manuscripts did not arrive in Israel until 1969, when they were brought to the Jewish National and University Library in Jerusalem. It was only after this point that scholars had access to this particular collection of papers. But the manuscripts were only conveniently accessible to scholars after the majority of Newton’s scientific, administrative, theological and alchemical manuscripts were released on microfilm in 1991.
Since 1991, there has been a revolution in Newton scholarship as the theological manuscripts began to be assessed in earnest by a small group of specialist scholars. A significant element of this revolution was the founding in 1998 of the Newton Project, based at Imperial College, London and the University of Cambridge.
This project has already begun the process of transcribing Newton’s unpublished theological manuscripts in order to make them accessible to the world.
Statement on the Date 2060
Newton’s theological and alchemical papers were kept from public scrutiny by the Portsmouth family until 1936, when they were sold at Sotheby’s in London. The largest single collection of the theological papers was acquired by the Jewish scholar Abraham Shalom Ezekiel Yahuda. When he died in 1951, he left them to the newly-founded State of Israel.
His will was contested and thus the manuscripts did not arrive in Israel until 1969, when they were brought to the Jewish National and University Library in Jerusalem. It was only after this point that scholars had access to this particular collection of papers. But the manuscripts were only conveniently accessible to scholars after the majority of Newton’s scientific, administrative, theological and alchemical manuscripts were released on microfilm in 1991.
Since 1991, there has been a revolution in Newton scholarship as the theological manuscripts began to be assessed in earnest by a small group of specialist scholars. A significant element of this revolution was the founding in 1998 of the Newton Project, based at Imperial College, London and the University of Cambridge.
This project has already begun the process of transcribing Newton’s unpublished theological manuscripts in order to make them accessible to the world.
Statement on the Date 2060