Man and the moon: Difference between revisions

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    [[Image:596px-Aldrin Apollo 11 original.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Astronaut Buzz Aldrin on the moon in 1969.]]
    In 1958, and again in 1962, William Branham said that man would never make it to the moon.  This statement is contrary to documented history.   
    In 1958, and again in 1962, William Branham said that man would never make it to the moon.  This statement is contrary to documented history.   



    Revision as of 18:26, 6 August 2012

    Astronaut Buzz Aldrin on the moon in 1969.

    In 1958, and again in 1962, William Branham said that man would never make it to the moon. This statement is contrary to documented history.

    Prophecy

    What's the meaning of these sputniks in the skies? What's the matter? What is this modern Babylon that we're trying to build a machine to take us to the moon? You'll never make it. (Sermon: Handwriting on the wall, March 9, 1958, Jeffersonville, Indiana).
    Oh, now they're all wanting to make a whole lot of these astronaut cans so they can get into it. And the--the atomic age comes, they're going to bust up the world; they just pull this and all go over on the moon, taking a trip to the moon, and have it all over with, and so they'll just make them another economy on the moon. They ain't going to get there. I don't believe, with all my heart, they'll ever get there. See? (Sermon: Countdown, September 9, 1962, Jeffersonville, Indiana)

    History

    In September 1959, the Soviet Union's unmanned Luna 2 Mission reached the moon. On July 1969, after William Branham's passing, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed the United State's Apollo 11 on the surface of the moon. Only twelve men have ever landed on the moon.


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