Morality: Difference between revisions

3,561 bytes added ,  12 years ago
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
{| style="width:800px"
{| style="width:800px"
|[[Image:Freudenberg-LouisJulius 05.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Male and female swimsuits in the United States, circa 1916.]]
|[[Image:Freudenberg-LouisJulius 05.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Male and female swimsuits in the United States, circa 1916.]]
In June 1933, William Branham experienced a series of 7 prophetic visions.  The fifth vision dealt with the morality of America, and the World.  Just as scientific advancement was represented by a car in the fourth vision, the decline of morality was represented by women in the fifth vision.  William Branham saw women cutting their hair, acting and dressing like men, and finally almost completely abandoning their garments.  
William Branham told about a series of eight prophetic visions he experienced in June 1933In the sixth vision, William Branham saw women cutting their hair, acting and dressing like men, and finally almost completely abandoning their garments.  


<span style="font-variant:small-caps">'''This vision is being fulfilled.'''</span>
==1964 retelling of 1933 prophesy==
 
:''The fifth vision had to do with the moral problem of our age, centering mostly around women. God showed me that women began to be out of their place with the granting of the vote. Then they cut off their hair, which signified that they were no longer under the authority of a man but insisted on either equal rights, or in most cases, more than equal rights. She adopted men's clothing and went into a state of undress, until the last picture I saw was a woman naked except for a little fig leaf type apron. With this vision I saw the terrible perversion and moral plight of the whole world.''  (Church Age Book, Chapter 9, by William Branham)
The last part of this prophecy began to be fulfilled with the invention of the Bikini by fashion designer Jacques Heim in Paris in 1946. Instead of the U.S.A banning this garment, it was promoted by the film industry, and today is accepted by most Christian Americans as acceptable beachwear. The apron-only style garment at the end of the prophecy is much like the autonomous car of the fourth vision - mainstream production and acceptance of this product has not begun, yet, but it exists and can be seen in magazines and advertisements. 


The U.S.A. remains one of the few "Christian" nations not to allow topless bathing (although unoffically acceptable in certain areas). In many European nations and Australia, public topless bathing is common today.  William Branham's prophecy suggests that the U.S.A.'s moral laws will go the way of prohibition.
==Problems with the prophecy==
In the Laodicean Church Age book, William Branham says, “Now let me say this. Can anyone prove any of those visions wrong? Were they not all fulfilled?” Almost 80 years after 1933, we now have the benefit of hindsight in our ability to confirm the accuracy of these prophecies.


===1933 vs 1964===
William Branham mentions that these visions that he received in 1933 were “Thus Saith the Lord”. The prophecy was written down, so each retelling of it should have been consistent.  However, William Branham only mentions this part of the 1993 vision in 1964, when he refers to an article published in Life Magazine that included a photograph of a woman in a transparent gown with a small lower covering.


==1964 retelling of 1933 prophesy==
===The fig leaf covering===
:''The fifth vision had to do with the moral problem of our age, centering mostly around women. God showed me that women began to be out of their place with the granting of the vote. Then they cut off their hair, which signified that they were no longer under the authority of a man but insisted on either equal rights, or in most cases, more than equal rights. She adopted men's clothing and went into a state of undress, until the last picture I saw was a woman naked except for a little fig leaf type apron. With this vision I saw the terrible perversion and moral plight of the whole world.''
The morals of the human race have never been that great, and Americans are no different. The fig-leaf analogy is sensational, but people have been wearing immoral clothing of this type since, well, Adam and Eve.  The bikini itself was invented by fashion designer Jacques Heim in Paris in 1946, and was popularized in America long before William Branham mentioned the immorality of American clothing as part of the 1933 prophecy.  


Taken from "The Church Age Book", Chapter 9, William Branham
===Changes in the story===
The Church Age Book includes "women cutting their hair" as part of this prophecy - which is absent from the recorded sermons.


*pre-1964: Nothing.
*1964: Women would wear fig-leaf type transparent skirts, and garments like a man.  <ref>Did you see the new bathing suits they brought out? Do you know my prediction that women would finally come to fig leaves, thirty-three years ago? And now they got them that's dressed in fig leaves, transparent skirts. The Word of the Lord never fails. See? And that was to take place just before the end time, come to a fig leaf again. I was reading it in Life magazine. That was said thirty-three years ago, before women took their fall. It was told how they would do it in this day, and here they are. How they'd wear garments like man, and how they'll... The immorals of the woman would drop in this nation.(July 19, 1964, Jeffersonville, Indiana) </ref>
*1964: Women would wear man’s garments, and put on fig leaves.  <ref>Look at 1933, how it say the women would act in this last days…And how that women would wear garments and look like man, even like their underneath clothes; and would finally come to putting fig leaves, like, on them. How the immoral act, how they would act in this day. Look what they've done. And it's right before you, then… And I said, "Then the morals of our women is going to fall in such a degraded things, till they're going to be a disgrace to all nations. They're going to wear man's clothes. They're going to keep taking off their clothes till actually they come down like they got their underneath clothes on, that's all. And, finally, they'll come to wearing just a fig leaf." And if you notice, in last month's Life magazine, they had the woman with the fig leaves on. And that's the new evening frock, or gown, what they wear of the evening; transparent, can see through it, only the fig leaves just hides a certain spot of her body; with strapless, or strap, unstrapped bathing suits, the top of it, exposed body. And how that those things has happened! (July 26, 1964, Jeffersonville, Indiana) </ref>
*1964: Women will never go completely nude, but will wear underneath clothes and something like a fig leaf. <ref>Yes, that's... That's right, sister. Yes, sir. The women... I said the women would become so immoral in the last... Now, you know thirty years ago how they dressed. Said they'd become so immoral, till they'd walk down the street with--till like--just like their underneath clothes on. And I said, "Then will come to pass, that they'll even be so disgraceful, till they'll wear something look like a fig leaf." I saw it, and they've got it; and they're wearing it. (August 23, 1964, Jeffersonville, Indiana) </ref>
*Church Age Book: Women everywhere would cut their hair, adopt men’s clothing, and undress down to a fig-leaf style apron.  <ref>The fifth vision had to do with the moral problem of our age, centering mostly around women. God showed me that women began to be out of their place with the granting of the vote. Then they cut off their hair, which signified that they were no longer under the authority of a man but insisted on either equal rights, or in most cases, more than equal rights. She adopted men's clothing and went into a state of undress, until the last picture I saw was a woman naked except for a little fig leaf type apron. With this vision I saw the terrible perversion and moral plight of the whole world. (Church Age Book)</ref>


==Moral Decay of the Modern Woman==
==Moral Decay of the Modern Woman==
Line 82: Line 90:
==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
<references/>
<references/>


{{7 Visions}}
{{7 Visions}}