Partial Fulfillment of Thomas Gibson's Prophecies

As shown in Thomas Gibson's Prophecies
at http://prophetic-word.org
As Interpreted by Rev. Jack Barr


Last update - 1/12/2004

It must be stated that there has never been, nor will there ever be, any Prophecy that will, or can, replace any part of the Word of God as given to us in God's Holy Bible. The Prophecies are a supplement, an additional word from God, that will, if from God, reinforce the message that God has given us in His Bible and by which the Bible itself will be the key to understanding any and all prophecies. Any Prophecy, from any source, that is in conflict with God's Word in the Bible, is not of God.

Rev. Jack Barr

Many prophecies from Thomas Gibson have multiple prophecies or parts within each numbered prophecy. Therefore, the part fulfilled does not include everything in the numbered prophecy, but only the one part listed here.


PROPHECIES PARTIAL FULFILLED

 

1995 09 22.1 Earth's ozone layer will not only deplete dramatically. Such as occurring now, but it will continue to deplete at an ever increasing rate.
1996 11 15.1 If you think the atmosphere has depleted ozone now, wait till years down the road. There has been almost none compared to what will take place in the coming decades.

The following articles shows how the Ozone hole at the Anartic has been growing larger from a very small one when found in the 1980's to one large enough to cover the contintal United States in recent years. And in some years has reached, and covered, part of South America. The Ozone hole at the Arctic is smaller, but has shifted at times to pose a danger to Canada and Europe, opening over these places. While these prophecies have been partially fulfilled by the end of 2003, they are not yet fully fulfilled, and will not be until there is little or no Ozone layer left on the earth.

NASA News Archive, September 25, 2003
2003 Ozone 'Hole' Approaches, But Falls Short Of Record This year's Antarctic ozone hole is the second largest ever observed, according to scientists from NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the Naval Research Laboratory.

The size of this year's hole reached 10.9 million square miles on September 11, 2003. It was slightly larger than the North American continent, but smaller than the largest hole ever recorded, on September 10, 2000, when it covered 11.5 million square miles. Last year the ozone hole was smaller, covering 8.1 million square miles

the Antarctic ozone hole should disappear in about 50 years.

2003 Antarctic Ozone 'Hole'
By mid-September 2003, the ozone thinning already extended over 28.2 million square kilometers (10.9 million square miles). The maximum area in 2000 reached 29.2 million square kilometers, the largest on record.

The ozone hole grew larger throughout the late 1980's and early 1990's, as shown in this time series of maximum areas from 1979 to 2002 (excluding 1995). This year the hole reached nearly the same size as 2000 and 2001, larger than the North American continent.