An ancient
Egyptian statue at the Manchester Museum, England, made the headlines
after it was captured on video seemingly rotating on its own. The museum curator,
Campbell Price had wondered who had changed the statues position in its locked
glass case; but a while later he observed that the orientation had changed yet
again. He decided to set up a camera,
which consequently captured the statue doing a major turn around over an
11-hour period.
While some
physicists have been invited to study the phenomenon, preliminary reasonings
are that the rotation might be as a result of subtle vibrations, especially
since, as someone observed, "the statue only seems to spin during the day
when people are in the museum."
The statue, made
from serpentine, shows what is likely an official with "priestly
duties," according to Price, wearing a shoulder-length wig and knee-length
kilt. The hieroglyphs on the back of the
statue spell out, "bread, beer and beef," a "prayer for
offerings for the spirit of the man," Price told the Sun. http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/ancient-egyptian-statue-mysteriously-rotates-museum-141331675.html
A scientific
reason may well be found for this, or it may reflect the increasingly more conducive environment for
manifestation of demonic powers as the end-time clock approaches midnight. One thing is sure however, this is NOT the
first recorded instance of a religious image moving as it were, on its
own. Read the story of Dagon before the
ark of the LORD in I Samuel 5: 2-4.
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