I honestly thought that the current locust swarming
would have stopped by now, or at the very least lessened, but just the
opposite is taking place. It is increasing in intensity, with the
locusts eating the food of 35,000 people in a single day. Interestingly,
the locust swarms seem to be affecting nations that reject the God of
the bible who commands the locusts at His will.
“If I shut up heaven that there be no rain, or if I command the locusts to devour the land, or if I send pestilence among my people;” 2 Chronicles 7:13 (KJB)
“Hast thou entered into the treasures of the snow? or hast thou seen the treasures of the hail, Which I have reserved against the time of trouble, against the day of battle and war?” Job 38:22,23 (KJB)
The book of Job
tells us that God uses the weather as a weapon, and it is more powerful
than anything the militaries of the world can command. Read the book of
Revelation sometime and see how God is going to use weather to judge
this world. Hydrogen bombs are nothing more than mere firecrackers
compared to what God will rain down upon this earth in the coming time
of the great Tribulation.
I am starting to think that this relentless locust plague is more than a
seasonal outbreak, as it is rapidly approaching biblical territory.
Birth pangs, perhaps? Time will tell.
Plague of locusts threatens East African economies as UN sounds emergency alarm
FROM CNBC:
In recent days, locust swarms have begun to impact South Sudan, Uganda
and Tanzania, having already decimated crops throughout Ethiopia, Kenya
and Somalia, Eritrea and Djibouti. The Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) of the United Nations earlier this week called the situation
“extremely alarming.”
The UN warned of an
unprecedented threat to food security in a part of the world where
millions face hunger, and the FAO estimated that 70,000 hectares of
crops in Kenya and around 30,000 hectares in Ethiopia had been infested.
It added that locusts had attacked coffee and tea crops that account
for approximately 30% of Ethiopia’s exports.
The FAO also estimated that around 8.5 million Ethiopians and 3.1
million Kenyans already face food insecurity. The locusts have now
begun breeding along both sides of the Red Sea in Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea
and Saudi Arabia.
Desert locusts can travel up to
150km (95 miles) a day, and a one-square-kilometer swarm can devour as
much food as 35,000 people in a single day, according to the UN.
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