Although we are thankful for rain here in northern California, the clouds last 
night and early this morning obscured the predicted "strong showing" of the 
annual Leonid meteor shower. On November 13, 1833 it was wildly spectacular, so 
much so that many observers thought the Day of Judgment had come. They knew 
what Jesus had said in Matthew 24:29: "Immediately after the tribulation of 
those days [the horrid persecutions of the Dark Ages, fresh in memory] shall 
the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall 
fall from heaven." Revelation also tells of the same thing: "And I beheld when 
he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; ... and 
the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig tree casteth her 
untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind" (6:12, 13).
Christian people of different churches saw the fulfillment of these prophecies: 
the worst earthquake of known history took place in Europe on November 1, 1755; 
people still living witnessed in New England the [to them] mysterious "Dark 
Day" of May 19, 1780; and people still living after that saw this "falling of 
the stars" in 1833--all in one generation. And, on top of all that excitement, 
a simultaneous interest aroused all over the world in the prophecies of Daniel 
and the Revelation.

Science and history now debunk those miraculous events: there have been other 
great earthquakes; the "dark day" was caused by forest fires; and the falling 
of the stars was merely the cosmic debris of a comet that whacks us every 33 
years. Those people were naive, says science. But wait a moment: those events 
were spectacular. The seven seals of Revelation did make sense; to those people 
in their context those events did fulfill the prophecies in a remarkable way; 
the result was not fanaticism, but sober, disciplined study of the Bible and 
reformation of life, and a phenomenal worldwide interest in the second coming 
of Christ. God used an almost incredible succession of natural events to arouse 
multitudes to serious spiritual revival.

Now today, we don't need a meteor shower or an earthquake to wake us up. Any 
sober person can realize that the end of the world must be near. But the 
history of those "signs" laid the foundation for faith in the second coming of 
Christ. It makes sense.

--Robert J. Wieland

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