As shown in Thomas Gibson's Prophecies
at http://prophetic-word.org
As Interpreted by Rev. Jack Barr
________________________________________________________________________
Last update - 1/8/2004
It must be stated that there has never been, nor will there ever be, any Prophecy that will, or can, replace any part of the Word of God as given to us in God's Holy Bible. The Prophecies are a supplement, an additional word from God, that will, if from God, reinforce the message that God has given us in His Bible and by which the Bible itself will be the key to understanding any and all prophecies. Any Prophecy, from any source, that is in conflict with God's Word in the Bible, is not of God.Rev. Jack Barr
Many prophecies from Thomas Gibson have multiple prophecies or parts within each numbered prophecy. Therefore, the part fulfilled does not include everything in the numbered prophecy, but only the one part listed here.
1995 11 04.1 change in the things that are occurring as far as earthquakes, natural disasters, many other disasters of natural occurrences
Fulfilled. Many changes in patterns and an increases in disasters of all kinds, storms, fires, floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, drought.
1996 11 15.1 storms of greater fierceness than before in the recent memory of men
Fulfilled before Jan. 6, 2004. There has been more unusual and killer storms in the last 10 years than in the previous 100 years. See also 1998 12 23.2 notes below, for information on some of the worst storms in man's history which happened in 1999.
1994, July Georgia, Alabama 32 dead
1995, March California 15 dead
1996, January Northeastern US 15+ dead
1996, December -
1997 January Northwestern US 29 dead
1997 March Ohio River Valley 35 dead
1998 February California to Tijuana 30+ dead
1998 August South Texas to Mexico 16 dead
In the previous 10 years, 1984-94 there were 4 major floods.
In the previous 10 years, 1974-84 there were 4 major floods.
In the previous 10 years, 1964-74 there were 3 major floods.
In the previous 10 years, 1954-64 there were 0 major floods.
In the previous 54 years, 1900-54 there were only 6 major floods.
Storms:
In the 5 years since this prophecy, there has been 9 major storms in the United
States. There were only 29
major storms in the previous 93 years. An increase of 6 times the average. This
category includes
blizzards, ice, hurricanes.
1994 November, South Florida, storm Gordon, 839 dead.
1995 October, Florida, Alabama, hurricane Opal, 59 dead
1996 January, Northeastern United States, Blizzard, 100 dead
1996 July, Eastern United States, hurricane Bertha, 15 dead
1996 August/September, N. Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, hurricane Fran, 28 dead.
1996 November, Texas to Missouri, ice, 26 dead.
1997 July, Southeastern Michigan, Storms, 16 dead.
1998 February, Kentucky, West Virginia, blizzard, 10+ dead
1998 September, Florida Keys-Gulf Coast, hurricane Georges, 600+ dead
In the previous 10 years, 1984-94, 2 major storms.
In the previous 10 years, 1974-84, 3 major storms.
In the previous 10 years, 1964-74, 6 major storms.
In the previous 10 years, 1954-64, 8 major storms.
In the previous 10 years, 1944-54, 2 major storms.
In the previous 10 years, 1934-44, 3 major storms.
In the previous 34 years, 1900-34, 5 major storms.
Tornadoes:
In the 5 years since this prophecy, there has been 10 major tornadoes in the United
States. There were
only 38 major tornadoes in the previous 60 years. An increase of 3 times the average.
1994 March, AL, TN, GA, NC, SC (series), 52 dead.
1995 May, Southern Oklahoma, Northern Texas, 23 dead.
1997 March, Central Arizona, 26 dead.
1997 May, Jarrell, Texas, 27 dead.
1998 February, Central Florida, 42 dead.
1998 March, Northeast Georgia, 12 dead.
1998 March, Eastern Indiana, 145 dead.
1998 April, Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, 39 dead
1998 April, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, 10 dead.
1998 May, Spencer South Dakota, 6 dead.
In the previous 10 years, 1984-94, 7 major tornadoes.
In the previous 10 years, 1974-84, 3 major tornadoes.
In the previous 10 years, 1964-74, 8 major tornadoes.
In the previous 10 years, 1954-64, 5 major tornadoes.
In the previous 10 years, 1944-54, 10 major tornadoes.
In the previous 10 years, 1934-44, 5 major tornadoes.
There you have it, a dramatic increase in all types of storms immediately after God gave Ray prophecy 361. While there are prophecies about storms in general and storms around the world, this is the only prophecy about storms in the United States out of 1200 prophecies. The figures above do not include any from the last ice storms and blizzards that just happened across out nation. All of God's prophecies happen just as God said it would.
Rev. Jack Barr
1-12-99
Fulfilled: year of 1999 was considered one of the worst years for storms in US, Damage and loss of life
In January 1999, a record 216 tornadoes were reported in the United States.
Record-breaking weather stormed across the United States in 1999, killing hundreds of people and wreaking havoc to the tune of billions of dollars in property damage. From drought to hurricanes, the evidence is clear as day in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's weather wrap-up for the year.
Come rainfall, come snowfall
The U.S. saw less precipitation in 1999, with a national average of 30.60 inches,
some 1.05 inches below
the average annual mark, according to the National Weather Service.
However, La Nina brought an ocean of precipitation, resulting in heavy rainfall for the Pacific Northwest. Areas in western Washington reported their wettest February and nearly their wettest year on record. Cold temperatures led to a record-setting snow pack in the northern Cascade Mountains. Mount Baker, part of Washington's Cascade range, received 1,140 inches of winter's blanket, a record for the most snowfall recorded in the U.S. in a single season.
On July 8, a series of purposeful thunderstorms dumped 1.5 inches to more than 3 inches of rainfall across the desert valley of Las Vegas, sending floodwaters across nearly every part of the sprawling metropolitan area. The flooding claimed one life, and property damage exceeded $23 million.
A rare June snowfall in Los Angeles County left three inches on Mount Laguna, California, the latest seasonal snowfall on record at the site. Late-season snow in Southern California occurs only a few times each century.
Disastrous hurricanes
As predicted by National Weather Service scientists, the U.S.
experienced an
inordinately busy hurricane season with 12 tropical storms, eight of which
became hurricanes.
Even the weaker storms caused deaths and tremendous damage due to
extensive
inland flooding. A capsule of the most devastating hurricanes of 1999: Bret
was only the 16th Category 4 storm to hit the U.S. and the fourth to strike the Texas
coast since the state
began keeping track.
On Aug. 2, Hurricane Bret struck land at Padre Island, Texas. The hurricane drifted westward, dumping copious rainfall over southern Texas and causing a car accident that claimed four lives. Bret also caused $34 million in damages.
After lashing the coast of North Carolina as a hurricane, Dennis meandered about 100 miles off the coast as a tropical storm before regathering and turning back on the state's Outer Banks. The storm made landfall the second time, blowing 70-mph winds into north central North Carolina before dissipating through south central Virginia Sept. 6. In Dennis' wake, intense rains caused significant flooding in the mid-Atlantic states and the Northeast. Seven deaths were attributed to the storm.
Hurricane Floyd was one of the most accurately predicted but destructive hurricanes of the 20th century in the U.S. From Sept. 13 through Sept. 17, Floyd's heavy rains caused massive inland flooding, prompting 2.6 million people to flee their homes. An average of 10 inches to 20 inches of rainfall blanketed North Carolina, Virginia, New Jersey, New York and New England, claiming lives and leaving a broad swath of destruction.
Hurricane Irene brought heavy rains from the Florida Keys northward to central Virginia from Oct. 14 to Oct. 17. Parts of eastern North Carolina and eastern Virginia received more than 12 inches of additional rain, exacerbating the flooding initiated by Floyd. News sources reported that agricultural losses alone in Miami-Dade County, Florida, due to flooding associated with Irene could top $100 million.
Hurricane Lenny, an unusual low-latitude hurricane, battered portions of the Caribbean between Nov. 13 and Nov. 22. Lenny was the second strongest storm of the 20th century to hit the Virgin Islands, upstaged only by Hurricane David in 1979. The storm was responsible for 13 deaths. One of the survivors was a St. Maarten man who survived for two days on a life raft buffeted by 100-mph winds and 30-foot seas.
Persistent drought
Severe drought conditions persisted from the southeast U.S. into
the northeast from
July 1998 to September 1999. The drought had a devastating effect on crops
and brought public
water supplies to dangerously low levels. From April through July,
New Jersey,
Delaware, Maryland and Rhode Island were the driest they've been since NOAA's
National Climatic Data
Center began keeping record 105 years ago. Connecticut, Massachusetts, New
York and West
Virginia experienced their second-driest growing season. In
addition, April through
July ranks as the second driest such period on record for the Northeast as a whole.
(The driest was
in 1965.)
Summer Heat Wave
The latter half of July produced a heat wave over much of the
eastern two-thirds of the
country, with temperatures ranging from 90 degrees Fahrenheit to more than
100 degrees
Fahrenheit over wide stretches. By Aug. 3, 256 heat-related deaths
had been reported
nationwide.
Tornado outbreaks
The costliest outbreak of tornadoes in American history ravaged the States in 1999.
The deadliest of the year leveled parts of Oklahoma and Kansas on May 3
and 4. In less than
21 hours, 74 tornadoes touched down across the two states, many at the same
time. An F-5 tornado, the strongest on the Fujita Tornado Scale, cut a 38-mile
path from
Chickasha to Oklahoma City and its suburbs: Bridge Creek, Newcastle, Moore, Midwest
City and Del
City. The Oklahoma City tornado was the most expensive in history, damaging 8,000
buildings and
causing nearly a billion dollars of damage. Combined, the tornadoes killed 46 people
and injured 800.
Wildfires
It was a long, hot and furious fire season in many parts of the U.S., including
Alaska. Florida experienced
major wildfires in the spring, towering infernos that darkened the skies over Miami
at mid-day. Even the
mid-Atlantic states saw a large number of wildfires in 1999. Out
west, the Great Basin
and northern Nevada in particular faced the worst fire season in 35 years. Wildfires
consumed more than
1.4 million acres of land and brush in less than a week in August. Nevada
alone accounted for
nearly one-third of the 5.6 million acres consumed by wildfires across the 50 states.
In California, several
major forest fires that started in late summer burned for more than two months.
The fire season was alive and well into November as wildfires burned from eastern Oklahoma to Kentucky. Large prairie fires, including the largest in Nebraska's history, consumed tens of thousands of acres across the central and northern plains.
If there is a happy story to be found in all the tragedy, it is the strides made in weather forecasting thanks to Doppler radar. NOAA scientists and other researchers adapted the airborne radar developed by the U.S. military during World War II for forecasting. The result is the Doppler weather radar system currently in use.
Storm of the Century: The 1999 Tornadoes: broke world-record
--------------------------------------------------
Weekend News Today
Lead: Faith
Source: TLC.Discovery.com
--------------------------------------------------
Sat Feb 16,2002 -- On May 3, 1999, the fastest wind speed ever recorded on the surface of the planet was clocked at 318 mph - just inside the city limits of Oklahoma City, Okla. Equal in force to a shock-front nuclear explosion, this inconceivable blast of air was generated by an F-5 tornado that scoured a trough of destruction through the suburb of Moore before turning north to chew through the capital city's SW edge. In addition to being a rare F-5 of record-breaking wind speed on an improbable course through a major metropolitan area, this tornado was remarkable for how fast it wasn't. At 318 mph, it was at the top end of the wind-speed spread for an F-5. One mile an hour faster, and this would have been an F-6 tornado - which, until recently, had been hailed as "inconceivable" by climatologists.
A trip down memory lane..Starting in Chickasha, Okla., 45 miles southwest of the capital, use the map below to track the course of this monster storm.
By the Numbers
+ 66 tornadoes throughout Oklahoma
+ 52 tornadoes in the Oklahoma City metro area
+ 42 fatalities
+ 675 injuries
+ 20,000+ automobiles damaged, destroyed or "written off"
+ 8,000+ buildings damaged or destroyed
+ 7,000+ homes
+ 260 business damaged or destroyed, including 53 stores at one Stroud, Okla., strip
mall, 5 churches, 2
schools, 11 public buildings.
+ $1.2 billion estimated damage
Editor's Note: With Spring coming, and scientists saying another El Ninyo on the way, plus the weird & record weather of our day, you never know what's ahead. Remember how big the 1999 tornadoes were on the news as weather news was THE top news during that time, and scientists and meteorologists were totally amazed, surprised, and awed at the force and unusual manner of these supercell storms. They used the word 'unprecedented' quite a bit. It set several records, and the weather forecasters were saying how odd the whole storm system and tornadoes were, in the number of the many high-end destructive tornadoes, some of their unusual paths, and more. And it was during those back-to- back years of world record weather events hitting the globe during such a destructive El Ninyo/La Ninya, as well as so many years of all-time record hottest years. As God sends us more and more PREwarnings & PREshadows of things to come, for true heart believers there is nothing to be afraid of, as Scripture says we're to instead encourage one another that going by the Biblical signs of the times, Jesus is coming soon.
Fulfilled
Fulfilled: In Alberta, January was the warmest and driest on record. Records have been kept since the 1880's.
2001 06 29.1 Western Canada .. if they do not repent, that the drought shall be severe and shall be strong upon the land. Fulfilled: The drought continued to the end of 2002. 2002 06 22.1 drought in Western Canada shall continue
Fulfilled: drought has continued to end of year 2002. The area through central Alberta and Saskatchewan has been experiencing a severe drought this year, as well as past years.
Fulfilled: I assume that this refers to the increase of storms.
In 2000 terrorist attacks the USS Cole, and an American Embassy. In Sept 11, 2001 World trade Center Buildings destroyed by Terrorist with airplanes, fear growing greatly since, and much worse by end of 2003.
1999 09 06.2 For on the city of Red Deer, on the towns that surround...a tornado upon it and through the area that will be utterly devastating
Fulfilled on July 14, 2000 by a Tornado, 9 dead, 130 injured, classed as an F3, the second worst in Alberta Canada history. See prophecies 2000 07 15.1, 2000 07 18.1
2000 07 18.1A correction to my last comment. Alberta has had 6 F3 tornadoes (counting the Pine Lake one of July 14, 2000), in the last 17 years. The others hit sparsely populated areas and did not result in any significant number of deaths. Also we had one F4 tornado which was the one in Edmonton in 1987, which resulted in 27 deaths. This makes the Pine Lake the second worst in Alberta history.
Fulfilled, fires, storms,
* Jan. 8, Charlotte, N.C.: A US Airways Express/Air Midwest commuter plane, Flight 5481, crashed moments after takeoff at Charlotte Douglas International Airport. All 21 people aboard were killed.
* Feb. 1, Tex.: The Columbia Space Shuttle, on its 28th mission, broke up as it
reentered Earth's
atmosphere, killing all
* Feb. 17, Chicago, Ill.: In an early morning fatal stampede from the second floor of
a Chicago night club,
21 people were trampled. The club had numerous building code violations.
* Feb. 14-18, eastern U.S.: A blizzard moved through the Midwest and up the East
coast of the U.S.
burying cities in record snowfall amounts, stranding travelers, and costing millions
in cleanup and lost
revenues. The storm claimed the lives of 42 people. Estimated cost 130 million.
* Feb. 20, Warwick, R.I.: A fire, caused by a pyrotechnics display, engulfed a Rhode
Island nightclub,
The Station, killing 100 and injuring more than 150.
* Feb. 25, south-central U.S.: Snow and freezing rain in the south-central states
caused the deaths of 14
people and closed highways across the region. The storm moved eastward causing
widespread electrical
outages and 2 deaths. Estimated cost 230 million
* Apr. 27, Buzzard's Bay, Ma.: An oil spill in Buzzard's Bay in southern
Massachusetts shut down the
shellfishing industry and killed hundreds of birds. A barge owned by Bouchard
Transportation, Inc.
leaked an estimated 98,000 gallons of oil from a gash in the hull. This estimate, a
month after the disaster,
was seven times greater than the original estimate of 15,000 gallons. Estimated cost
40 million.
* May 1- 11, United States: A series of tornadoes battered the Midwest and Southern
states during May.
In the first 11 days there were more than 380 tornadoes which broke the previous
record in 1999 of about
200 tornadoes in a 10-day period. Estimated 3.1 billion.
* May 4, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, and Tennessee: A series of tornadoes ripped
through four states,
Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, and Tennessee causing at least 38 deaths and extensive
damage to buildings
and homes. The hardest hit area was Lawrence County, Missouri. Officials from Federal
Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) reported sightings of more than 80 tornadoes in parts of
central and
southeastern United States. Strong storms and tornadoes continued to hit the South
and Midwest through
the week, bringing the total number of deaths to more than 45. Some towns in Missouri
closed schools for
the year.
* June 17-July, nr. Tuscon, Arizona: The Aspen wildfire on Mount Lemmon northeast of
Tuscon burned
more than 80,000 acres and destroyed 333 structures in and around the vacation
community of
Summerhaven Estimated at 30 million.
* July 15, Gulf Coast, Texas: Hurricane Claudette, a Category I hurricane, packing
winds up to 85 mph,
killed two people and left battered buildings, trailers, and downed trees in its
wake. Claudette was the first
hurricane of the 2003 season. President Bush declared nine counties as disaster
areas.
*Aug. 14-15, Northeast, U.S. and Canada.: The largest power blackout in U.S. and
North American
history swept across Ohio, Michigan, and Canada and then spread to Connecticut, New
Jersey, and New
York, leaving 50 million without electricity for 24 hours and longer. 4 - 6 Billion
dollars estimated
damage and revenue loss.
* Sept. 18 East Coast U.S. : Hurricane Isabel hits
My Notes: Oliver Schmidt,
The 11-year period from 1978 to 1989, natural disaster losses in the United States
amounted to $7 billion,
jumping to $39 billion in the 3-year period from 1999 to 2002.
1. Event overview
An F0 tornado touched down at 635 pm several miles west of Deshler in Thayer county
and tracked east
and dissipated just northwest of town at 650 pm. A second F2 tornado developed at 652
pm near the
southeast side of town and then tracked west through the south side of Deshler and
then turned southwest
before dissipating around 705 pm...see map. Unfortunately one fatality (the first
tornado related fatality in
Nebraska since 1988) and 7 injuries occurred with this second tornado in Deshler. In
addition over 100
homes were damaged including 20 destroyed. 9 businesses were damaged or destroyed.
This tornadic
supercell remained stationary for several hours over Thayer county which led to
tremendous rainfall as
shown here in our WSR-88D Storm Total Precipitation estimate (official measurements
as high as 10.62
inches at Lovewell dam and unofficial measurements of 12.5 inches in Hebron) which
led to significant
flooding over much of Thayer county.
In Aurora in Hamilton county, giant hail fell across the west and northwest side of
town. Hailstones were
reported to be the size of volleyballs...which was not far from the truth given the
enormous impact craters
left in the ground...some as large as 12 inches and over 3 inches deep on grass
lawns. One gentleman
risked life and limb to grab the largest known hailstone to fall in Nebraska by
grabbing this monster,
which had a diameter of 6.5 inches, circumference of 17 3/8 inches and weighed 1.33
pounds.
Another stone hit his garage, punching this large hole in the structure. Incredible
indeed.
From the Pensacola News Journal, Dec 26, 2003 8:11 PM EST
6 Dead, 10 Missing in Calif. Mudslides
By ALEX VEIGA
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -- Searchers slogging through waist-high muck found six
people dead
Friday and looked for at least 10 others missing after mudslides engulfed two camps
in the San
Bernardino Mountains in a terrifying torrent of soil, boulders and tree trunks.
The mudslides were set off on Christmas Day after a torrent of rain fell on hillsides
that had been stripped
of vegetation by wildfires in October and November. With nothing to hold the soil in
place, trees and
rocks went roaring down the hillsides, along with the dark-brown mud.
Tornadoes, flash flooding and giant hail on Sunday Evening,
June
22nd 2003
During the late afternoon and evening of June 22, 2003, severe storms produced
tornadoes and destructive
flooding in Thayer and Jewell counties and giant hail in Hamilton County. The
storms initiated
in conjunction with an intensifying low level jet that developed during the evening
along an outflow
boundary that had developed earlier Sunday morning in association with convection
across northern
Nebraska. Extreme instability developed during the afternoon Sunday as a result of
continued deep
moisture advection originating from the Gulf of Mexico, intense surface heating, and
strong wind shear.
Two primary supercells formed, one across northern and central Hamilton county, and
another over
Thayer, Jewell and Republic counties.
Associated Press Writer