Not exact matches
I've listed this several times, but apparently Atheists seem to want the clouds to open up for them for proof of God's existence, but
prophecy fulfillment is excellent proof for the divine authorship of Scripture... I could talk about
prophecies regarding Israel's captivity to Babylon, Cyrus called out
by name hundreds of years before his birth as the one that will rescue Israel from Babylon, the destruction of Babylon
foretold, the destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple
foretold, the destruction of Tyre and specifically how it was to be done, how the city of Petra would be destroyed... These are just a few verifyable examples...
Regardless of loyalty, the arrival of the Pevensies looks like the fulfillment of an ancient
prophecy foretelling her doom at the hands of four humans who would come to assist Aslan (voiced
by Liam Neeson), the rightful ruler.
After all, once
prophecies as
foretold by sick young girls begin to come true, eclipses happen in the nick of time, and jaguars pounce on cue, what's one more coincidence to pile on to the fable?
Directed
by Alex Proyas from a flamboyantly moronic screenplay
by Ryne Pearson, Juliet Snowden and Stiles White, Knowing tells of MIT astrophysicist John Koestler (Cage), who stumbles across a
prophecy that
foretells major disasters and possibly the end of the world.
It seems that a
prophecy in this world, called Narnia
by its inhabitants,
foretells of a group of four humans that would arrive into the land and become rulers.
The plot gets moving when Emmett stumbles across a free spirit mini-fig with a bright streak of pink hair named WyldStyle (Elizabeth Banks), and in his lovelorn distraction accidentally finds The Piece of Resistance, an ancient artifact she is seeking out as part of the
prophecy foretold by Vitruvius (Morgan Freeman), a wise wizardly mini-fig leading the underground resistance against President Business.
Centuries ago, in a blood - soaked land ruled
by legendary gods and warring men, a
prophecy foretold of a high king who would come to reign over all of the north.
In times of war, chase down the child of
prophecy, a living weapon of power,
foretold by ancient elven legends.
Its fantastic storyline, which involves a
prophecy that
foretells a Warrior of Light that would prevent global demise, was written
by Kazushige Nojima, the author of both Final Fantasy VII and X.
The story of the five foretellers and the Master of Masters takes place prior to KH1 in the distant past, where the Master of Masters vanishes but leaves behinds the tomes of the book of
prophecies to his disciplines, the five foretellers, who in turn read the future within the tomes and tries to prevent the
prophecy foretold within them
by creating unions.
The accompanying script, which appears in different colors that correspond to those of each scene, speaks of the man's fear of the sea, feelings of emptiness, hope and failure, a yearning to know what future a
prophecy might
foretell, and an ominous reference to a line in T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land, which tells the story of Phlebas the Phoenician, who died, apparently
by drowning.