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Armageddon : Appointment with Destiny

Armageddon : Appointment with Destiny

List Price: $13.99
Your Price: $13.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I think that most be a good book
Review: Grant has out-done himself with this re-write. His inside information about the Ark of the Covenant and it's possible return to Israel is amazing. I loved his understanding of the battles of Gog and Magog. This book is a must read for those who hunger to understand God's prophetic word!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: year of christ's birth
Review: Grant Jeffrey's appendix documents the reasons he believes Christ's birth was in 1 BC rather than 3-4 BC as most scholars believe. I also beleive 1BC BETTER FITS WITH SCRIPTURE, especially the verse in Luke which says Jesus' ministry started when he "was about 30 years of age". As pointed out, this was the first passover of his ministry in 29AD. The phrase "about 30" cannot scripturally or logically be stretched as everyone seems to do. As Luke was an excellent historian as well as inspired by God his account should take precedence over any other historian's comment (such as Josephus).

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: year of christ's birth
Review: Grant Jeffrey's appendix documents the reasons he believes Christ's birth was in 1 BC rather than 3-4 BC as most scholars believe. I also beleive 1BC BETTER FITS WITH SCRIPTURE, especially the verse in Luke which says Jesus' ministry started when he "was about 30 years of age". As pointed out, this was the first passover of his ministry in 29AD. The phrase "about 30" cannot scripturally or logically be stretched as everyone seems to do. As Luke was an excellent historian as well as inspired by God his account should take precedence over any other historian's comment (such as Josephus).

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Theories of moderate interest, not much else offered.
Review: Grant R. Jeffrey whips out a calculator and the Bible and gives the reader a dizzying amount of verse quotation and fuzzy math to show how biblical prophecy follows Jewish Holy days. His theories are certainly interesting, but the style of writing in the edition I read was stiff and headache inducing (Mr. Jeffrey seems to have matured somewhat as a writer, if the few excerpts I have read from his other books can be taken as good examples). Fans of this style of Bible prophecy investigation will no doubt find something of interest, but others might feel that a square peg is getting brutally hammered into a round hole.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, but Sounds Like a Conspiracy Theory in Places
Review: Jeffery has updated his 1990 book and re-released it. There isn't a whole lot of new information, but it's still good stuff. He talks about prophecies and ideas that no one even touches (i.e., the Magog/Israli war and the Second Exodus), but parts of it sound like a conspiracy theory novel (the location and return of the Ark of the Covenant). Still, on the whole, not a bad read and really informative.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, but Sounds Like a Conspiracy Theory in Places
Review: Jeffery has updated his 1990 book and re-released it. There isn't a whole lot of new information, but it's still good stuff. He talks about prophecies and ideas that no one even touches (i.e., the Magog/Israli war and the Second Exodus), but parts of it sound like a conspiracy theory novel (the location and return of the Ark of the Covenant). Still, on the whole, not a bad read and really informative.


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