{"id":1252,"date":"2016-08-15T23:07:04","date_gmt":"2016-08-16T04:07:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/warning-warnings\/"},"modified":"2016-08-15T23:07:04","modified_gmt":"2016-08-16T04:07:04","slug":"warning-warnings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/warning-warnings\/","title":{"rendered":"Warning, Warnings"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>The Leash Goes Slack<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Robert, an experienced sky diver, was readying himself for a jump when he spotted another man outfitted to dive wearing dark glasses, carrying a white cane and holding a seeing-eye dog by a leash. Shocked that the blind man was also going to jump, Robert struck up a conversation, expressing his admiration for the man\u2019s courage. Then curious, he asked, \u201cHow do you know when the ground is getting close?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>\u201cEasy,\u201d the blind man replied. \u201cThe leash goes slack.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Contributed by Taylor Yu Zhong, Reader\u2019s Digest, July, 1996, p. 66<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Batman Outfit<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Americans are getting warned to death. Manufactures are growing increasingly wary of being sued when their products are misused, so they are attaching warning labels to hundreds of items.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>For example, a Batman outfit bears this caveat: \u201cParents, please exercise caution\u2014FOR PLAY ONLY. Mask and cape are not protective; cape does not enable user to fly.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Our Daily Bread, March 20, 1998<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Mount St. Helens<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Many residents of Washington remember exactly where they were and what they were doing on the morning Mount St. Helen\u2019s blew wide-open. The shock wave rattled windows for hundreds of miles around.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Prior to the eruption, scientists monitoring the peak didn\u2019t know when it would go off or how big the blast would be. But all the signs of a live volcano were evident. It was just a matter of time.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Local media issued warnings and faithfully reported St. Helen\u2019s vital signs. But as time elapsed and the big eruption did not occur, people became less wary and more bold. Campers, photographers, and others moved in to get a closer look.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Then on May 18, 1980, the mountain that had been dormant since 1857 spewed ash skyward and killed at least thirty people. They had failed to heed warnings, and they died needlessly.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Christine Dallman, The Quiet Hour, December, 1997, February, 1998, p. 77<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The Winter 1991 issue of the University of Pacific Review offers a chilling description of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster:<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>There were two electrical engineers in the control room that night, and the best thing that could be said for what they were doing is they were \u2018playing around\u2019 with the machine. They were performing what the Soviets later described as an unauthorized experiment. They were trying to see how long a turbine would \u2018free wheel\u2019 when they took the power off it.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>Now, taking the power off that kind of a nuclear reactor is a difficult, dangerous thing to do, because these reactors are very unstable in their lower ranges. In order to get the reactor down to that kind of power, where they could perform the test they were interested in performing, they had to override manually six separate computer-driven alarm systems. One by one the computers would come up and say, \u2018Stop! Dangerous! Go no further!\u2019 And one by one, rather than shutting off the experiment, they shut off the alarms and kept going. You know the results: nuclear fallout that was recorded all around the world, from the largest industrial accident ever to occur in the world.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The instructions and warnings in Scripture are just as clear. We ignore them at our own peril, and tragically, at the peril of innocent others.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Tom Tripp, Colusa, California, quoted in Leadership, Fall Quarter, 1993, p. 56<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Hurricane Warning<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The following story is told by E. Schuyler English:<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>A man who lived on Long Island was able one day to satisfy a lifelong ambition by purchasing for himself a very fine barometer. When the instrument arrived at his home, he as extremely disappointed to find that the indicating needle appeared to be stuck, pointing to the sector marked \u2018HURRICANE.\u2019 After shaking the barometer very vigorously several times, its new owner sat down and wrote a scorching letter to the store from which he had purchased the instrument. The following morning on the way to his office in New York, he mailed the letter. That evening he returned to Long Island to find not only the barometer missing, but his house also. The barometer\u2019s needle had been right\u2014there was a hurricane!\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>P.R.V. Our Daily Bread, April 28<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>If You See Me Running\u2026<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>My brother detonates explosives for the police department\u2019s bomb squad. He came to my house one day sporting a distinctive T-shirt. The front read: \u201cHazardous Device Technician.\u201d When he turned around, I read the back: \u201cIf you see me running, try to keep up!\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Contributed by Jodie L. Nida Reader\u2019s Digest, May, 1995, p. 132<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Sometimes the Way Up Is Down<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Sometimes the way up is down. John Moorlach learned that lesson.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>In June of 1994, he ran against incumbent Robert L. Citron for the post of treasurer of Orange County, California. During the campaign, Moorlach condemned Citron\u2019s risky investments. At the time, Moorlach\u2019s warnings were written off as campaign rhetoric, and Citron won his seventh four-year term by a 3\u20132 vote ratio.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>When Citron\u2019s investment of county funds suffered severe losses and Orange County went bankrupt, Moorlach sounded like a prophet. The man who had lost the election was unanimously appointed by the Orange County Board of Supervisors to serve as treasurer.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Today in the Word, September 16, 1995, p. 23.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Hurricane Warning<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>In 1969, in Pass Christian, Mississippi, a group of people were preparing to have a \u201churricane party\u201d in the face of a storm named Camille. Were they ignorant of the dangers? Could they have been overconfident? Did they let their egos and pride influence their decision? We\u2019ll never know.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>What we do know is that the wind was howling outside the posh Richelieu Apartments when Police Chief Jerry Peralta pulled up sometime after dark. Facing the Beach less than 250 feet from the surf, the apartments were directly in the line of danger. A man with a drink in his hand came out to the second-floor balcony and waved. Peralta yelled up, \u201cYou all need to clear out of here as quickly as you can. The storm\u2019s getting worse.\u201d But as other joined the man on the balcony, they just laughed at Peralta\u2019s order to leave. \u201cThis is my land,\u201d one of them yelled back. \u201cIf you want me off, you\u2019ll have to arrest me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Peralta didn\u2019t arrest anyone, but he wasn\u2019t able to persuade them to leave either. He wrote down the names of the next of kin of the twenty or so people who gathered there to party through the storm. They laughed as he took their names. They had been warned, but they had no intention of leaving.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>It was 10:15 p.m. when the front wall of the storm came ashore. Scientists clocked Camille\u2019s wind speed at more than 205 miles-per-hour, the strongest on record. Raindrops hit with the force of bullets, and waves off the Gulf Coast crested between twenty-two and twenty-eight feet high.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>News reports later showed that the worst damage came at the little settlement of motels, go-go bars, and gambling houses known as Pass Christian, Mississippi, where some twenty people were killed at a hurricane party in the Richelieu Apartments. Nothing was left of that three-story structure but the foundation; the only survivor was a five-year-old boy found clinging to a mattress the following day.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Christian Values Qs Quarterly, Spring\/Summer, 1994, p. 10<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Obeying the Laws of the Light House<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>In U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, the magazine of the Naval Institute, Frank Koch illustrates the importance of obeying the Laws of the Lighthouse:<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>Two battleships assigned to the training squadron had been at sea on maneuvers in heavy weather for several days. I was serving on the lead battleship and was on watch on the bridge as night fell. The visibility was poor with patchy fog, so the captain remained on the bridge keeping an eye on all activities.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>Shortly after dark, the lookout on the wing reported, \u201cLight, bearing on the starboard bow.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u201cIs it steady or moving astern?\u201d the captain called out.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>The lookout replied, \u201cSteady, Captain,\u201d which meant we were on a dangerous collision course with that ship.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>The captain then called to the signalman, \u201cSignal that ship: \u2018We are on a collision course, advise you change course twenty degrees.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>Back came the signal, \u201cAdvisable for you to change course twenty degrees.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>The captain said, \u201cSend: \u201cI\u2019m a captain, change course twenty degrees.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u201cI\u2019m a seaman second-class,\u201d came the reply. \u201cYou had better change course twenty degrees.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>By that time the captain was furious. He spat out, \u201cSend: \u2018I\u2019m a battleship. Change course twenty degrees.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>Back came the flashing light, \u201cI\u2019m a lighthouse.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'>We changed course.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>In the Eye of the Storm by Max Lucado, Word Publishing, 1991, p. 153<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Red Flag<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Some years ago a fearful railroad wreck took a dreadful toll of life and limb in an eastern state. A train, loaded with young people returning from school, was stalled on a suburban track because of what is known as a \u201chot-box.\u201d The limited was soon due, but a flagman was sent back to warn the engineer in order to avert a rear-end collision. Thinking all was well, the crowd laughed and chatted while the train-hands worked on in fancied security. Suddenly the whistle of the limited was heard and on came the heavy train and crashed into the local, with horrible effect.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The engineer of the limited saved his own life by jumping, and some days afterwards was hailed into court to account for his part in the calamity. And now a curious discrepancy in testimony occurred. He was asked, \u201cDid you not see the flagman warning you to stop?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>He replied, \u201cI saw him, but he waved a yellow flag, and I took it for granted all was well, and so went on, though slowing down.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>The flagman was called, \u201cWhat flag did you wave?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>\u201cA red flag, but he went by me like a shot.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>\u201cAre you sure it was red?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>\u201cAbsolutely.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Both insisted on the correctness of their testimony, and it was demonstrated that neither was color-blind. Finally the man was asked to produce the flag itself as evidence. After some delay he was able to do so, and then the mystery was explained. It had been red, but it had been exposed to the weather so long that all the red was bleached out, and it was but a dirty yellow!<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Oh, the lives eternally wrecked by the yellow gospels of the day\u2014the bloodless theories of unregenerate men that send their hearers to their doom instead of stopping them on their downward road!<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Illustrations of Bible Truth by H. A. Ironside, Moody Press, 1945, pp. 62-63<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>It Pays to Heed a Warning<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Argentinean race driver Juan Manuel Fangio discovered that after the opening lap of the 1950 Monaco Grand Prix. As he approached a dangerous bend for the second time, Fangio noticed that something was wrong. The faces of the spectators, which he usually saw as a whitish blur as he drove by, were all turned away from him. \u201cIf they are not looking at me,\u201d Fangio thought, \u201cthey must be looking at something more interesting around the corner.\u201d So he braked hard and carefully rounded the bend, where he saw that his split second assessment had been accurate. The road was blocked by a massive pileup.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Today in the Word, February 9, 1993<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Storm Signal Ignored<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>I was in the north of England in 1881, when a fearful storm swept over that part of the country. A friend of mine, who was a minister at Evemouth, had a great many of the fishermen of the place in his congregation. It had been very stormy weather, and the fishermen had been detained in the harbor for a week. One day, however, the sun shone out in a clear blue sky; it seemed as if the storm had passed away, and the boats started out for the fishing ground. Forty-one boats left the harbor that day.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Before they started, the harbor-master hoisted the storm signal, and warned them of the coming tempest. He begged of them not to go; but they disregarded his warning, and away they went. They saw no sign of the coming storm. In a few hours, however, it swept down on that coast, and very few of those fishermen returned. There were five or six men in each boat, and nearly all were lost in that dreadful gale. In the church of which my friend was pastor, I believe there were three male members left. Those men were ushered into eternity because they did not give heed to the warning. I lift up the storm signal now, and warn you to escape from the coming judgment!<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Moody\u2019s Anecdotes, pp. 115-116<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Ship Sunk by Missile<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>During the 1982 war in the Falkland Islands between England and Argentina, the Royal Navy\u2019s 3,500-ton destroyer HMS Sheffield was sunk by a single missile fired from an Argentine fighter jet. It caused some people to wonder if modern surface warships were obsolete, sitting ducks for today\u2019s sophisticated missiles. But a later check revealed that the Sheffield\u2019s defenses did pick up the incoming missile, and the ship\u2019s computer correctly identified it as a French-made Exocet. But the computer was programmed to ignore Exocets as \u201cfriendly.\u201d The Sheffield was sunk by a missile it saw coming and could have evaded.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Today in the Word, May 12, 1992<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Danger of Drugs<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Teenagers are much more inclined to take warnings about steroids seriously if the drugs\u2019 muscle-building benefits are acknowledged in the same speech, say doctors at Oregon Health Sciences University. That was the case when the doctors lectured nine high school football teams on the effects of steroids. They found that football players who heard a balanced presentation on steroids were 50 percent more likely to believe that the drugs could harm their health than those who were told just of the dangers. This isn\u2019t the only instance where scare tactics have been known to fail. In spite of a massive, ongoing campaign on the hazards of cigarette smoking, millions continue to light up. Health experts might be more successful if they acknowledged smoking\u2019s pleasurable aspects. Then once they had a smoker\u2019s attention, they could let loose on why it\u2019s time to quit.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Spokesman Review, 11\u201313-91, p. C1<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>First Major Victory of the War<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>During the Revolutionary War, a loyalist spy appeared at the headquarters of Hessian commander Colonel Johann Rall, carrying an urgent message. General George Washington and his Continental army had secretly crossed the Delaware River that morning and were advancing on Trenton, New Jersey where the Hessians were encamped. The spy was denied an audience with the commander and instead wrote his message on a piece of paper. A porter took the note to the Hessian colonel, but because Rall was involved in a poker game he stuffed the unread note into his pocket. When the guards at the Hessian camp began firing their muskets in a futile attempt to stop Washington\u2019s army, Rall was still playing cards. Without time to organize, the Hessian army was captured. The battle occurred the day after Christmas, 1776, giving the colonists a late present\u2014their first major victory of the war.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Today in the Word, MBA, October, 1991, p. 21<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Israel Bissel\u2019s Ride<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>Thanks to the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, everyone has heard of the \u201cmidnight ride of Paul Revere.\u201d But few have heard of Israel Bissel, a humble post rider on the Boston-New York route. After the Battle of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, Bissel was ordered to raise the alarm in New Haven, Connecticut. He reached Worchester, Mass., normally a day\u2019s ride, in two hours. There, according to tradition, his horse promptly dropped dead. Pausing only to get another mount, Bissel pressed on and by April 22 was in New Haven\u2014but he didn\u2019t stop there! He rode on to New York, arriving April 24, and then stayed in the saddle until he reached Philadelphia the next day. Bissel\u2019s 126-hour, 345-mile ride signaled American militia units throughout the Northeast to mobilize for war.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Today in the Word, October 1, 1991<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Didn\u2019t Believe the Barometer<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>On September 21, 1938, a hurricane of monstrous proportions struck the East Coast of the United States. William Manchester, writing about it his book The Glory and the Dream, says that \u201cthe great wall of brine struck the beach between Babylon and Patchogue (Long Island, New York) at 2:30 p.m. So mighty was the power of that first storm wave that its impact registered on a seismograph in Sitka, Alaska, while the spray, carried northward at well over a hundred miles an hour, whitened windows in Montpelier, Vermont.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>As the torrential 40-foot wave approached, some Long Islanders jumped into cars and raced inland. No one knows precisely how many lost that race for their lives, but the survivors later estimated that they had to keep the speedometer over 50 mph all the way.\u201d For some reason the meteorologists\u2014who should have known what was coming and should have warned the public\u2014seemed strangely blind to the impending disaster. Either they ignored their instruments or simply couldn\u2019t believe them. And, of course, if the forecasters were blind, the public was too.<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:3.0pt;text-indent:18.0pt;line-height: normal'>\u201cAmong the striking stories which later came to light,\u201d says Manchester, \u201cwas the experience of a Long Islander who had bought a barometer a few days earlier in a New York store. It arrived in the morning post September 21, and to his annoyance the needle pointed below 29, where the dial read, \u2018Hurricanes and Tornadoes.\u2019 He shook it and banged it against the wall; the needle wouldn\u2019t budge. Indignant, he repacked it, drove to the post office, and mailed it back. While he was gone, his house blew away.\u201d That\u2019s the way we are. If we can\u2019t cope with the forecast, we blame the barometer. Or ignore it. Or throw it away!<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:right; line-height:normal'>Source unknown<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;line-height:normal'><b>Quotes<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-top:0cm;margin-right:0cm;margin-bottom:0cm; margin-left:18.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent:-18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u2022&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On a laser in a physics laboratory: \u201cDon\u2019t look into laser beam with remaining eye.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-top:0cm;margin-right:0cm;margin-bottom:0cm; margin-left:18.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent:-18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u2022&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On Arkansas farmer discourages trespassers with this admonition: \u201cPlease do not trample the poison ivy or feed the bull.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Leash Goes Slack Robert, an experienced sky diver, was readying himself for a jump when he spotted another man outfitted to dive wearing dark glasses, carrying a white cane and holding a seeing-eye dog by a leash. Shocked that the blind man was also going to jump, Robert struck up a conversation, expressing his &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/warning-warnings\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Warning, Warnings&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1252","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1252","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1252"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1252\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1252"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1252"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1252"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}