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Do you think Nostradamus is right about the world ending in May? Has everything he predicted came true?
Tags: about, came, ending, everything, Nostradamus, predicted, right, think, true, world
Posted in End of the World on July 25th, 2010 by RoswellUFOs.comI watched a program once about Nostradamus on T.V. and I have not looked into it. I saw a article though, and it said Nostradamus predicted the world would end in May [I forget the date]. Do you think it's true? How much of what he has predicted, has come true? I know people have been saying for a long time now that the world is going to end but it has never happened yet.
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July 25th, 2010 at 8:47 am
Everything Nostradamus predicted has come true.
But only because everything he said was so vague we can interpret it any way we want.
July 25th, 2010 at 8:58 am
It is BS
July 25th, 2010 at 9:39 am
no it's not going to happen…. no one can predict the end of the world
July 25th, 2010 at 9:45 am
It seems to me that his predictions were sufficiently vague enough so that they could be interpreted to mean a number of different things. I think that's the case with a lot of so-called seers.
July 25th, 2010 at 10:43 am
Thats silly, everyone knows the world ends on March 34th
July 25th, 2010 at 11:37 am
read the bible nkj version that is the closest translation so i have been told only god knows when the world will end
July 25th, 2010 at 11:48 am
He was a smart man and used common knowledge and human nature's trends to predict the future. He has been pretty accurate, but I think this is one prediction where he'll fail. A lot of people attempt to predict judgment day or the end of days and all have been wrong so far. The world will end when you die. Much like it will end for me when I die. That's a fact you can bank on.
July 25th, 2010 at 12:29 pm
They said that the world was going to end in 2000. It's now 2008…. you do the math.
July 25th, 2010 at 12:43 pm
how can Nostradamus predict the end of the world? The Bible says that Jesus doesn't know the time and date. Only God. And Jesus created the world. I think his predictions are so vague it can be interpreted many different ways.
July 25th, 2010 at 1:04 pm
Not even the Son knows, only God…
July 25th, 2010 at 2:02 pm
this is all copy and paste
What you are about to read is an objective examination of the practices and prophecies of Nostradamus. The reader is encouraged to lay down all preconceived biased opinions and consider only the facts. Truth based on the evidence should be your only consideration when evaluating this man and his ability to foretell events. The following quotes primarily come from the books entitled, The Prophecies of Nostradamus by Erika Cheetham published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons of New York, New York, copyrighted in 1973, hereafter abbreviated PON and The Nostradamus Encyclopedia by Peter Lemesurier published by St. Martin's Press of New York, New York, copyrighted in 1997, hereafter abbreviated NE. [All bold emphasis is my own.]
——————————————————————————–
Nostradamus is the Latinized form of Michel de Nostredame, the French astrologer, who lived from 1503 to 1566. His great popularity is apparent when one ponders that he is one of the few authors whose work has never been out of print for over four hundred years!
His family converted from Judaism to Catholicism when he was 9 years old. Regarding Roman Catholicism:
He approved the Ceremonies of the Roman Church and remained faithful to the Catholic faith and religion, holding that outside it there was no salvation. He gravely reproved those who, having withdrawn from its embrace, were prepared to let themselves be fed and watered by the easy-going freedoms of damnable foreign doctrines. Their end, he asserted, would be evil and nasty (NE, p. 43).
Furthermore:
It is important to remember the Jewish element of Nostradamus’ childhood when trying to decipher the Prophecies, as he was greatly influenced by occult Jewish literature (PON, p. 5).
Nostradamus had accurate predictive abilities in knowing a future Pope:
Legends about Nostradamus’ prophetic powers also start to appear at this time. Apparently when in Italy he saw a young monk who had been a swineherd pass by him in the street, and immediately knelt down and called him ‘Your Holiness’. Felice Peretti became Sextus V in 1585, long after Nostradamus’ death (PON, p. 8).
Many have heard that Nostradamus accurately predicted the assassinations of JFK and RFK 400 years in advance, but did he really make such a prediction or are his fans trying to make his prophecies fit history and thereby unduly exalt his predictive powers? Dear reader, carefully ponder the following for yourself. This is supposed to be the Kennedy assassination predictions:
The great man will be struck down in the day by a thunderbolt. An evil deed, foretold by the bearer of a petition. According to the prediction another falls at night time. Conflict at Reims, London, and pestilence in Tuscany (PON, p. 33).
Please note that the facts reveal that there was no specific mention of the name Kennedy as you might have thought, or of his time frame or century, neither was it stated that it would be the brother or even a relative who would “fall at night time.” Furthermore, as we look back into history, how did the Kennedy assassinations trigger pestilence in Tuscany? In spite of all of this, however, one of his devotees wishes to understand this quatrain as meaning:
The first three lines here may apply to the assassinations of the two Kennedy brothers. John F. Kennedy was shot down (thunderbolt) in broad daylight at Dallas, Texas on 22nd November 1963 by the psychopath, Lee Harvey Oswald. The other man linked with him who is killed at night, was his brother Robert F. Kennedy who was shot down on 5th June 1968 in the early morning while celebrating his victory in the presidential primary elections at a hotel. Line 2, the fact that the assassination had been told by the bearer of a petition may refer to the many death threats John F. Kennedy and his brother received during their terms of office. The troubles in France, England and Italy would refer to the world repercussions of these assassinations (PON, p. 33).
Dear reader, isn’t it clear from the evidence that the predictions that Nostradamus allegedly made about the Kennedy assassinations are contrived! If you stopped someone at random on the sidewalk who never heard of Nostradamus and gave him this actual quatrain, do you sincerely think he would say it predicted the Kennedy assassinations? Never! Furthermore, if RFK was to be the other man who falls at night time, why does the record instead show he was shot in the early morning?
Did Nostradamus Predict Hitler?
In the actual quatrain written by Nostradamus we do not read of “Hitler” but instead of a different person or thing called Hister. This fact is concealed in this English translation of this famous quatrain:
Beasts wild with hunger will cross the rivers, the greater part of the battlefield will be against Hitler. He will drag the leader in a cage of iron, when the child of Germany observes no law (PON, p. 82).
This is what that supposedly means:
One of Nostradamus’ most remarkable series of quatrains, with the name Hitler given in anagram as Hister. There can be little doubt that Hitler is implied; who else could be so well described by the last line, the German who observed no law? In 16th-Century handwriting the resemblance is even closer with the use of the long s, Hifter. Commentators before 1930 understood the Hister to be the river Danube, from its latin name Ister. But Hitler recognized himself in these quatrains by the mid 1930s and Goebbells made great propaganda out of them in the pre-war party years. Evidence of this is found in many sources, chiefly Ellic Howe’s book ‘Nostradamus and the Nazis’. During the first year of the Second World War the development of the war was to a great extent dependent upon the rivers crossed by the Germans who came into Europe in a never-ending stream looting and pillaging (farouches de faim) (PON, p. 82).
Notice: it is admitted that before 1930 it was understood that Hister (not Hitler) was the subject of the quatrain!
Nostradamus’ Failed Prophecies
Without a doubt, at least some of the times Nostradamus failed in his prophecies. This is candidly admitted by a devotee:
He believed himself to possess certain powers, although there is reason to believe he could not draw on these to order. They certainly sometimes let him down in the Prophecies (PON, p. 14).
That last sentence is very important for it factually declares that Nostradamus made false prophecies! But the author admits to more:
I can dismiss ninety-five per cent of Nostradamus’ predictions as historical coincidence (PON, p. 14).
The July 1999 End of the World False Prophecy
Though many of Nostradamus’ prophecies were vague and obscure, at least the following one was exact as to the timing of a major event which was supposed to occur in July 1999:
In the year 1999, and seven months, from the sky will come the great King of Terror. He will bring back to life the great king of the Mongols. Before and after War reigns happily (PON, p. 417).
That was understood in 1973 and earlier to mean the following:
In his gloomy prediction Nostradamus seems to foresee the end of the world at the Millennium, the year 2000. He was greatly influenced in this by medieval thinking which held all millenniums in great dread. From the verse it appears that first we must suffer the Asian antichrist ‘the King of Mongols’ before the advent of this new and terrifying figure. Note that Nostradamus expects war both before and after his coming (PON, p. 417).
Time is the enemy of false prophets. This is no exception with Nostradamus and his failed prophecy of July 1999. Clearly, Nostradamus was a proven false prophet, and not "the prophet" as Peter Lemesurier calls him (NE, p. 43), because he made at least one false prophecy. But even Lemesurier unwittingly admits to one of Nostradamus' false prophecies:
Indeed, the seer predicts that the Pope's flight from Rome in the year 2000 … will be accompanied by the appearance of just such a comet as this verse seems to describe (NE, p. 152).
But this prophecy is also false. Nostradamus is further indicted by the facts that he was an occultist who used divination for his prophecies and was himself demon possessed. Regarding the latter and the gift of fortune-telling, please ponder the following Scripture:
One day, as we were going to the place of prayer, we met a slave-girl who had a spirit of divination and brought her owners a great deal of money by fortune-telling. While she followed Paul and us, she would cry out, “These men are slaves of the Most High God, who proclaim to you a way of salvation.” She kept doing this for many days. But Paul, very much annoyed, turned and said to the spirit, “I order you in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her.” And it came out that very hour. But when her owners saw that their hope of making money was gone … (Acts 16:16-19, NRSV).
From the above Scripture, it should be clear that demon spirits can predict the future to some degree of accuracy or that demon possessed slave girl couldn’t have made a great deal of money for her owners. We should remember this as we evaluate Nostradamus and his predictive powers, which came from spirit beings. Moreover, remember this: a false prophet can make true prophecies (Dt. 13:1-10), but when a false prophecy is made, that person is always a false prophet (Dt. 18:21,22):
You may say to yourselves, "How can we know when a message has not been spoken by the LORD?" If what a prophet proclaims in the name of the LORD does not take place or come true, that is a message the LORD has not spoken. That prophet has spoken presumptuously. Do not be afraid of him (Dt. 18:21,22)
Also, remember that the "prophet" Nostradamus claimed his own revelations were of Divine origin:
His revelations, he [Nostradamus] constantly claimed, were of Div
July 25th, 2010 at 2:25 pm
Actually, nothing has ever really come true that this charlatan said. He said very few people would be alive in the 18th Century. WRONG! He did a horoscope and predicted aa man's date of death. He was 20-25 years off. Other charlatans mistransalate this 16th Century charlatan to try to make it appear he predicted the future. He wrote a quatrain about the 7th month in 1999. Some imbecile said that predicted 9/11/01. that is reaally absurd. I am certain the world will not end in May. I'll bet $1000 it won't. It sounds as if another con man has mistransalated morre of Nostril Dumb @$$' obscurantist raving.
July 25th, 2010 at 2:45 pm
Interesting question. Although he was a scholar, if the world ends he he "predicted" it to end, then maybe I'll hit the lottery for millions tonight too!
July 25th, 2010 at 3:13 pm
Nostradamus did not have any sort of "vision" of the future, like many thought he did. Nostradamus enthusiasts have credited him with predicting numerous events in world history, from the Great Fire of London, by way of the rise of Napoleon I of France and Adolf Hitler, to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. However, his prophecies are very vague, so others would interpret base on what "they" thought it meant, which is pretty much bias. I believe Nostradamus had intentionally wrote his prophecies in such a way for open interpretations that anyone could have applied his prophecies to any typical disastrous situation, and credit him for "seeing the future." He was a very clever guy!