Seems to be more of a philosophical argument (imprecise connections between Hagee's premises and conclusions) against Hagee's contention that the blood moons are connected with significant Jewish events, rather than an statement of whether or not these blood moons are the signs the Joel the prophet referred to. That is the more salient question if you ask me. I guess we do not for sure but they (the blood moons) certainly look like red "wonders in the heavens above" to me.
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Jermaine SullivanApril 16, 2014
Seems to be more of a philosophical argument (imprecise connections between Hagee's premises and conclusions) against Hagee's contention that the blood moons are connected with significant Jewish events, rather than an statement of whether or not these blood moons are the signs the Joel the prophet referred to. That is the more salient question if you ask me. I guess we do not for sure but they (the blood moons) certainly look like red "wonders in the heavens above" to me.
Bob PowelsonApril 16, 2014
Strange reasoning? Why
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