Anyone interested in Bible prophecy unfolding around us in current events is probably aware of two books by Rabbi Jonathan Cahn - The Harbinger - and - The Shemitah. The Harbinger is a fictional story of a warning to America with parallels to ancient Israel. In the Harbinger, Cahn didn't clearly suggest financial disaster in mid-September 2015 - but readers could have followed the progression of the pattern of divine warnings and assumed as much. In The Shemitah, Cahn very clearly analyzed the financial collapses America has experienced in seven year cycles, with major stock market crashes on the last day of the Hebrew calendar year (Elul 29) every seven years. If these events were divine warnings to America (for abandoning biblical morality; for piling on ever-increasing debt instead of addressing it every seven years as ancient Israel did) that Cahn argued that perhaps we should expect the greatest financial chastisement yet around September 13, 2015. That being a Sunday, maybe the next day. Even non-religious people paying no heed to prophecies thought it might be self-fulfilling, because so many readers expecting a crash could sell stocks ahead of the anticipated date. But we still hear crickets. The stock markets had an uneventful week. Epic fail?
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The Expected Shemitah Crash Did Not Happen on…
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Anyone interested in Bible prophecy unfolding around us in current events is probably aware of two books by Rabbi Jonathan Cahn - The Harbinger - and - The Shemitah. The Harbinger is a fictional story of a warning to America with parallels to ancient Israel. In the Harbinger, Cahn didn't clearly suggest financial disaster in mid-September 2015 - but readers could have followed the progression of the pattern of divine warnings and assumed as much. In The Shemitah, Cahn very clearly analyzed the financial collapses America has experienced in seven year cycles, with major stock market crashes on the last day of the Hebrew calendar year (Elul 29) every seven years. If these events were divine warnings to America (for abandoning biblical morality; for piling on ever-increasing debt instead of addressing it every seven years as ancient Israel did) that Cahn argued that perhaps we should expect the greatest financial chastisement yet around September 13, 2015. That being a Sunday, maybe the next day. Even non-religious people paying no heed to prophecies thought it might be self-fulfilling, because so many readers expecting a crash could sell stocks ahead of the anticipated date. But we still hear crickets. The stock markets had an uneventful week. Epic fail?