What I would like you to take note of in this passage, though, is how quickly a miracle like this swept the world, because what we need to understand is that as we approach the end, these miracles will not only be occurring, but they have the potential of bringing a great mass of people into agreement very quickly. And we need to be aware that these end-time things can come very quickly. So we're going to flip on the television now and watch this just about a minute segment of a secular television show that's describing this miracle as it took place. ...by the Greek Orthodox Church as a miracle. No official word yet on this extraordinary event that literally swept the world. On September 22, 1995, eyewitnesses in India began reporting accounts of Hindu statues drinking milk. The word spread quickly. Before long, the Delhi and Bombay stock exchanges were closed, so the traders could see the statues. Then the federal government closed down. Within 72 hours, statues were reportedly consuming milk by the meter in Hindu communities around the world. Millions flocked to temples and shrines in the United States, Hong Kong, Canada, and Indonesia. In London, it was at the Vishwa Temple that the tiny marble statue of Nandi, the cosmic bull, began drinking milk. Tom Leonard, a reporter for London's Evening Standard, was more than just a witness. I held the spoon up. A man, an assistant, was holding it slightly for me. Now, he tipped the spoon slightly when it reached the elephant's mouth, but not enough to justify what then happened with the milk just sucked up completely from the spoon. Now, the second time, I actually asked if I could just hold the spoon myself, and I did, and no one held my hand then, and it still got sucked up. Patricia Miller of Miracles Magazine believes this was definitely a miraculous event. Brothers and sisters, whatever the statues drinking milk is supposed to signify in the Hindu world or anywhere, I'm not sure, but I am sure of this, that in 72 hours, this event swept the world, and it's unexplainable by human standards. For more information, visit www.fema.org