Last Days Timeline
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- captain of 100
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- captain of 1,000
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Re: Last Days Timeline
Quoting is working just fine for me. It appears that you deleted the first line of the quote from the two messages you responded to.
- BeNotDeceived
- Agent38
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Re: Last Days Timeline
Good question.
It is physicaly impossible for everyone in the world to simultaneously experience a common hour, or day for that matter. The Book of Mormon tells us, that it’s written for the last days, and the Lord doth speak using our language, in the context of our culture. No wonder no one can know the day or the hour as you have observed, as that is information supplied via the Bible, so a single day or hour can not be common to both.
Sure it’s the Lord’s timeline, but he hath told us much about it, and unfolds events according to our expectations or hope. Hope means we rightfully expect that which we hope for. Faith and hope, builds one upon another and we are promised that we may attain a perfect knowledge gained from our life experience, to each according to their faith. If you expect to know nothing, then surely you may, for God will not force anyone, but doth welcome the sincere seeker.
- Craig Johnson
- captain of 1,000
- Posts: 1991
- Location: Washington State.
Re: Last Days Timeline
My wife and I were thinking about moving to this area. What is the weather like there in the different seasons?EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 16th, 2017, 6:28 pmWe live 1 1/2 hours from Adam-ondi-Ahman, and we go there frequently, including last Saturday. The valley is planted in crops every spring by the non-LDS farmers who live in the area - the entire valley is leased out by the Church to local farmers as farmland. There are a few picnic tables up on the hill/overlook area, with a restroom (yay!), and a path with markers and big rocks with plaques explaining why the area is significant, etc. Other than this, there is nothing there. Of all the dozens of times we've been there, we've only ever run across non-LDS farmers working around, who also live there - they have all been very nice people. At least, this is what it was like last Saturday when my husband and I drove down for the afternoon, as we often do.DesertWonderer wrote:Not really sure what the articles you posted proved.kittycat51 wrote:http://www.deseretnews.com/article/9775 ... tml?pg=all" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;DesertWonderer wrote:I'm calling Mormon Myth on that^^^ There had been nothing of any consequence done at AOA. If you have another example ("There will also be many things happening that the average Latter day saint won't have a clue about. ") I'd like to hear it.
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/8656 ... lives.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Apology accepted.
Like I said. Nothing of consequence has been done there, no infrastructer, etc...: https://www.google.com/search?q=adam+on ... UQ_AUIBygC" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
or this: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Adam- ... 93.9762222" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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- Level 34 Illuminated
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Re: Last Days Timeline
Winter is cold, windy, and gray - not a ton of snow, usually, but enough to mess up the roads - and ice, too. Lasts a good solid 4 months or more, and sometimes an entire week or two goes by without seeing the sun even once. Spring is nice, but volatile and short. This is when tornadoes start and are likely, and then possible, until late fall. Summer weather, which starts in May, is very hot and humid. I absolutely hate summer in the Midwest - very buggy, muggy, no breeze, no air, stifling - lasts till October. Fall is nice, but short - can go from hot one day to freezing the next. To me, the only decent weather months in the upper Midwest are April and October, and a couple weeks on either side, usually. From October thru April, everything is brown and gray. Summer is pretty and green, but not worth the horrible heat and humidity, to me anyway.Craig Johnson wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 9:37 amMy wife and I were thinking about moving to this area. What is the weather like there in the different seasons?EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 16th, 2017, 6:28 pm We live 1 1/2 hours from Adam-ondi-Ahman, and we go there frequently, including last Saturday. The valley is planted in crops every spring by the non-LDS farmers who live in the area - the entire valley is leased out by the Church to local farmers as farmland. There are a few picnic tables up on the hill/overlook area, with a restroom (yay!), and a path with markers and big rocks with plaques explaining why the area is significant, etc. Other than this, there is nothing there. Of all the dozens of times we've been there, we've only ever run across non-LDS farmers working around, who also live there - they have all been very nice people. At least, this is what it was like last Saturday when my husband and I drove down for the afternoon, as we often do.
- Craig Johnson
- captain of 1,000
- Posts: 1991
- Location: Washington State.
Re: Last Days Timeline
Well, we have officially stopped thinking about that for now!EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 10:42 amWinter is cold, windy, and gray - not a ton of snow, usually, but enough to mess up the roads - and ice, too. Lasts a good solid 4 months or more, and sometimes an entire week or two goes by without seeing the sun even once. Spring is nice, but volatile and short. This is when tornadoes start and are likely, and then possible, until late fall. Summer weather, which starts in May, is very hot and humid. I absolutely hate summer in the Midwest - very buggy, muggy, no breeze, no air, stifling - lasts till October. Fall is nice, but short - can go from hot one day to freezing the next. To me, the only decent weather months in the upper Midwest are April and October, and a couple weeks on either side, usually. From October thru April, everything is brown and gray. Summer is pretty and green, but not worth the horrible heat and humidity, to me anyway.Craig Johnson wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 9:37 amMy wife and I were thinking about moving to this area. What is the weather like there in the different seasons?EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 16th, 2017, 6:28 pm We live 1 1/2 hours from Adam-ondi-Ahman, and we go there frequently, including last Saturday. The valley is planted in crops every spring by the non-LDS farmers who live in the area - the entire valley is leased out by the Church to local farmers as farmland. There are a few picnic tables up on the hill/overlook area, with a restroom (yay!), and a path with markers and big rocks with plaques explaining why the area is significant, etc. Other than this, there is nothing there. Of all the dozens of times we've been there, we've only ever run across non-LDS farmers working around, who also live there - they have all been very nice people. At least, this is what it was like last Saturday when my husband and I drove down for the afternoon, as we often do.
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- Level 34 Illuminated
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Re: Last Days Timeline
Haha, yeah, some people don't mind it, but after 30 years of living here, I don't know too many people who live here because they like the weather - most just complain about it year round. We only live here because of my husbands job. Once he retires, we're outta here the next day, literally. To me, the only benefit of living here is the close proximity to many Church history sites - and as that is one of my favorite subjects, I've enjoyed that - but I've seen them all a hundred times by now, so...Craig Johnson wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 10:56 amWell, we have officially stopped thinking about that for now!EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 10:42 amWinter is cold, windy, and gray - not a ton of snow, usually, but enough to mess up the roads - and ice, too. Lasts a good solid 4 months or more, and sometimes an entire week or two goes by without seeing the sun even once. Spring is nice, but volatile and short. This is when tornadoes start and are likely, and then possible, until late fall. Summer weather, which starts in May, is very hot and humid. I absolutely hate summer in the Midwest - very buggy, muggy, no breeze, no air, stifling - lasts till October. Fall is nice, but short - can go from hot one day to freezing the next. To me, the only decent weather months in the upper Midwest are April and October, and a couple weeks on either side, usually. From October thru April, everything is brown and gray. Summer is pretty and green, but not worth the horrible heat and humidity, to me anyway.Craig Johnson wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 9:37 amMy wife and I were thinking about moving to this area. What is the weather like there in the different seasons?EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 16th, 2017, 6:28 pm We live 1 1/2 hours from Adam-ondi-Ahman, and we go there frequently, including last Saturday. The valley is planted in crops every spring by the non-LDS farmers who live in the area - the entire valley is leased out by the Church to local farmers as farmland. There are a few picnic tables up on the hill/overlook area, with a restroom (yay!), and a path with markers and big rocks with plaques explaining why the area is significant, etc. Other than this, there is nothing there. Of all the dozens of times we've been there, we've only ever run across non-LDS farmers working around, who also live there - they have all been very nice people. At least, this is what it was like last Saturday when my husband and I drove down for the afternoon, as we often do.
- Craig Johnson
- captain of 1,000
- Posts: 1991
- Location: Washington State.
Re: Last Days Timeline
Points we did not even think about. thanks for the info!EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 11:01 am Haha, yeah, some people don't mind it, but after 30 years of living here, I don't know too many people who live here because they like the weather - most just complain about it year round. We only live here because of my husbands job. Once he retires, we're outta here the next day, literally. To me, the only benefit of living here is the close proximity to many Church history sites - and as that is one of my favorite subjects, I've enjoyed that - but I've seen them all a hundred times by now, so...
- Durzan
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- BeNotDeceived
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Re: Last Days Timeline
Nope ASHH ends 2025-2040.DesertWonderer wrote: ↑February 15th, 2017, 8:41 amAre you saying the period of "silence in the heavens" ends then? How did you come to that conclusion?BeNotDeceived wrote:Bad times begin the first week of April 2024.
7yrs prosperity proceeded as per my hypothesis, but then Biden blew it.
2448 doth continue to stand out.
Time will be the teller.
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Re: Last Days Timeline
How far is it to OKC?EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 11:01 amHaha, yeah, some people don't mind it, but after 30 years of living here, I don't know too many people who live here because they like the weather - most just complain about it year round. We only live here because of my husbands job. Once he retires, we're outta here the next day, literally. To me, the only benefit of living here is the close proximity to many Church history sites - and as that is one of my favorite subjects, I've enjoyed that - but I've seen them all a hundred times by now, so...Craig Johnson wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 10:56 amWell, we have officially stopped thinking about that for now!EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 10:42 amWinter is cold, windy, and gray - not a ton of snow, usually, but enough to mess up the roads - and ice, too. Lasts a good solid 4 months or more, and sometimes an entire week or two goes by without seeing the sun even once. Spring is nice, but volatile and short. This is when tornadoes start and are likely, and then possible, until late fall. Summer weather, which starts in May, is very hot and humid. I absolutely hate summer in the Midwest - very buggy, muggy, no breeze, no air, stifling - lasts till October. Fall is nice, but short - can go from hot one day to freezing the next. To me, the only decent weather months in the upper Midwest are April and October, and a couple weeks on either side, usually. From October thru April, everything is brown and gray. Summer is pretty and green, but not worth the horrible heat and humidity, to me anyway.Craig Johnson wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 9:37 am
My wife and I were thinking about moving to this area. What is the weather like there in the different seasons?
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- Level 34 Illuminated
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Re: Last Days Timeline
We've made the trip a couple of times (my brother used to live in Tulsa), and it's approx. 550 miles or so. Took us about 7-8 hours, when the roads weren't icy/no storms.BeNotDeceived wrote: ↑January 7th, 2023, 5:04 pmHow far is it to OKC?EmmaLee wrote: ↑February 26th, 2018, 11:01 am Haha, yeah, some people don't mind it, but after 30 years of living here, I don't know too many people who live here because they like the weather - most just complain about it year round. To me, the only benefit of living here is the close proximity to many Church history sites - and as that is one of my favorite subjects, I've enjoyed that - but I've seen them all a hundred times by now, so...