HIS BONES BEGAN CRACKING! | |
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Leigh Bishop suffered several accidents about twenty years ago. A drunk driver hit him. Later, the brakes of the cement truck he was driving failed, causing him to crash into a rock face. Still later on with a partial disability he fell about 100 feet while surveying. This left him partly crippled with spinal damage, etc. He has been on a disability roll and experienced pain when simply trying to stand up. He could not turn his head, or do many basic things. He also had a handicapped permit for his car. At our church healing meetings people around him began to hear his bones cracking. When we called him to the front, the sound continued. We didn’t even pray or lay hands on him till later. We just blessed him. It was a sovereign work of God! (It is on video tape!) He was completely healed! He went home and told his family. They couldn’t believe it! He picked up his twelve year old son to prove it and actually banged his boy’s head in the ceiling because he didn’t realize his new found strength! The next day I saw him RUNNING down the street with his daughter behind him telling him to slow down!! Praise Jesus!! Pastor Terry Somerville River Of Life Foursquare Gospel Church 403 5th Ave. Campbell River B.C., V9W-3X5 Dead Sea Scrolls complete after 54 years of study Half a century after the first of the Dead Sea Scrolls were found in desert caves, archeologists are celebrating the near com-pletion of the publication of the ancient texts. “Today we are very happy to say that all this is completed,” said Emmanuel Tov, the project’s editor-in-chief. “After 54 years of excitement, expectation, tribulation, much criticism and a little praise, with the help of much inspiration and even more perspiration, the publication has been finalized.” The scrolls, which date from 250 B.C. to A.D. 70, were discovered between 1947 and 1956 in 11 caves overlooking the western shores of the Dead Sea. For decades, access to the complete scrolls was tightly guarded by a small group of international scholars. After the release of bootlegged copies of some of the texts and an archive of scroll photographs, a new group of nearly 100 scholars took charge of the scrolls in 1991. The 900 scrolls and commentaries in 37 volumes were primarily written in Hebrew and Aramaic on more than 15 000 leather and papyrus documents. They were found near the ruins of the ancient settlement of Hirbet Qumran in the West Bank. Religion Today |