| Topic: |
Sociology > Education |
| User: |
"Ernest Slyman" |
| Date: |
04 Jun 2006 06:59:14 AM |
| Object: |
How Fast Can Angels Fly? |
The Evangelical Spectator's has learned from accounts in Bristol, Tennessee
that angels have been clocked at over 60 mph and probably hit 90-100 mph in
glides and swoops. The angels have been observed over and the city and out
at Watauga Lake. They fly as high up 1 to 1/2 miles high, but usually less,
around 2-3,000 feet or so.
Angels have been observed to date only in the Bible Belt. And they are not
fast-flappers as birds go. It's seems the angels are propelled by forces not
of this earth. Celestial forces. They are constructed for gliding/soaring
flight and therefore use air currents, faith, determination, much more than
mere muscle.
During Christian holidays, for example, an angel can soar to a great height,
begin a gradual glide, or circular and not have to flap has much, repeating
this process over and over while covering hundreds of miles. (more at link
below)
--
The Evangelical Spectator
http://evangelicalspectator.typepad.com/
.
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| User: "Gray Shockley" |
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| Title: Re: How Fast Can Angels Fly? |
04 Jun 2006 11:11:15 AM |
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On Sun, 4 Jun 2006 06:59:14 -0500, Ernest Slyman wrote:
The Evangelical Spectator's has learned from accounts in Bristol, Tennessee
that angels have been clocked at over 60 mph and probably hit 90-100 mph in
glides and swoops. The angels have been observed over and the city and out
at Watauga Lake. They fly as high up 1 to 1/2 miles high, but usually less,
around 2-3,000 feet or so.
Angels have been observed to date only in the Bible Belt. And they are not
fast-flappers as birds go. It's seems the angels are propelled by forces not
of this earth. Celestial forces. They are constructed for gliding/soaring
flight and therefore use air currents, faith, determination, much more than
mere muscle.
During Christian holidays, for example, an angel can soar to a great height,
begin a gradual glide, or circular and not have to flap has much, repeating
this process over and over while covering hundreds of miles. (more at link
below)
--
The Evangelical Spectator
http://evangelicalspectator.typepad.com/
A truly amazing testimony.
It also rather lucidly reveals why those giant albino
vultures taste more like pork than like chicken.
Gray
.
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