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dennis mann

Lord Jesus, please send rain and salvation, preachers and evangelists, revival and a good soaking rain.
More rain than we deserve is what we want, Dear Good Lord.
and we praise Your beautiful Name.
Who is the Rain-God?...............Jesus!





http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071015/ap_on_...thern_drought_1


Drought tightens its grip on Southeast

By GREG BLUESTEIN, Associated Press Writer 2 hours, 19 minutes ago

BUFORD, Ga. - If there's a ground zero for the epic drought that's tightening its grip on the South, it's once-mighty Lake Lanier, the Atlanta water source that's now a relative puddle surrounded by acres of dusty red clay.
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Tall measuring sticks once covered by a dozen feet of water stand bone dry. "No Diving" signs rise from rocks 25 feet from the water. Crowds of boaters have been replaced by men with metal detectors searching the arid lake bed for lost treasure.

"This lake is a survivor," Jeff "Buddha" Powell told a worried customer at his bait shop along the barren banks.

"If you panic, you don't help Mother Nature," he added. "It's going to rain when it rains."

But little rain is in the forecast, and without it climatologists say the water source for more than 3 million people could run dry in just 90 days.

That dire prediction has some towns considering more drastic measures than mere lawn-watering bans, including mandatory rationing that would penalize homeowners and businesses if they don't reduce water usage.

"We're way beyond limiting outdoor water use. We're talking about indoor water use," said Jeff Knight, an environmental engineer for the college town of Athens, 60 miles northeast of Atlanta, which is preparing a last-ditch rationing program as its reservoir dries up.

"There has to be limits to where government intrudes on someone's life, but we have to impose a penalty on some people," he added. "The problem is how much and who. That gets political. But it's going to hurt everyone. We're all going to share the pain."

About 26 percent of the Southeast is covered by an "exceptional" drought — the National Weather Service's worst drought category. The affected area extends like a dark cloud over most of Tennessee, Alabama and the northern half of Georgia, as well as parts of North and South Carolina, Kentucky and Virginia.

The only spots in the region not suffering from abnormally dry conditions are parts of southern and eastern Florida and southeast Georgia.

Government forecasters say the drought started in parts of Georgia and Alabama in early 2006 and spread quickly. Sweltering temperatures and a drier-than-normal hurricane season contributed to the parched landscape.

Now residents are starting to feel the pinch.

Restaurants are being asked to serve water only at a customer's request, and Gov. Sonny Perdue has called on Georgians to take shorter showers. The state could also impose more limits within the next two weeks, possibly restricting water for commercial and industrial users.

In North Carlina, Gov. Mike Easley stopped short of imposing statewide water rationing but asked people to stop watering lawns and washing cars.

"A bit of mud on the car or patches of brown on the lawn must be a badge of honor," Easley said Monday. "It means you are doing the right thing for your community and our state."

As conditions worsen, the Army Corps of Engineers has become a favorite target of lawmakers in Georgia, Florida and Alabama, where the drought has intensified a decades-old feud involving how the Corps manages water rights.

"I particularly am disappointed that the Corps has allowed so much water to drain out of our reservoirs, out of our lakes, as they have," said Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, a Republican. "It's not that we haven't had enough water. It's more a function of allowing so much of it to go downstream."

On Friday, Perdue threatened to take legal action if the Corps continued to let more water out of a north Georgia water basin than it collects. And the president of the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce said on Monday that businesses could also line up behind a legal challenge.

"We have an ongoing water crisis in metro Atlanta. And it is the biggest and most imminent economic threat to our region," said Sam Williams, the chamber's president.

Scientists have little reason to hope the drought will ease anytime soon.

The Southeast Climate Consortium warns that a La Nina weather system is forming, which could bring drier and warmer weather for Florida and most parts of Alabama and Georgia.

"When we need to recharge our water system, this is what we don't want," said state climatologist David Stooksbury, who predicted that it will take months of above-average rainfall to recoup the losses.

In Atlanta, officials are nervously watching the dropping level of Lake Lanier, the sprawling north Georgia reservoir that provides water for 1 in 3 Georgia residents. The latest measurements have become a fixture on nightly television newscasts in Atlanta, where the drought is often the top story.

There is a silver lining of sorts in the middle of the drought: Guides say the lake's fishing is as good as ever, if not better.

"Less water, less places to hide, I guess," said Chuck Biggers, a guide who has roamed the lake's waters for four years.

___

Associated Press Writer Steve Hartsoe in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

U.S. Drought Monitor: http://www.drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html
leia
Hello from the drought stricken South!

God is in control. This is HIS land down here and we know He is on His throne and is in control. We find out that if it were not for that upper level high keeping the storms away, instead of drought we would have had the leveling floods that Texas and Ohio got! God chooses for us and He is correct.

We stand in faith no matter the distress.

I live in the buckle of that Bible Belt and proud of it. We've got a church in every corner and on Sunday the streets are bare and we are in "meeting" worshipping our first love. It will rain.

Love you all for being concerned. It is good to be tested!

leia
Father Onesimus
May the Lord send relief. +
dennis mann
QUOTE(leia @ Oct 16 2007, 12:50 PM) [snapback]124445[/snapback]

Hello from the drought stricken South!

God is in control. This is HIS land down here and we know He is on His throne and is in control. We find out that if it were not for that upper level high keeping the storms away, instead of drought we would have had the leveling floods that Texas and Ohio got! God chooses for us and He is correct.

We stand in faith no matter the distress.

I live in the buckle of that Bible Belt and proud of it. We've got a church in every corner and on Sunday the streets are bare and we are in "meeting" worshipping our first love. It will rain.

Love you all for being concerned. It is good to be tested!

leia



Wow!

i've never seen such great faith in all Israel!

i bot a water-filter (PUR, i think) , so, i can drink from a dirty water source if it becomes necessary.

consider buying a BERKEY WATER FILTER from Jim McCanney's website.............jim says that BERKEY is the filter that the RED CROSS uses all over the world.

the drought is moderate at my home, but extreme at Atlanta.
and where i live, our COUNTY WATER SYSTEM is very reliable.........the water source is 200 foot deep acquifers, which are clean and dependable.

but , who knows what will happen in the ENDTIMES, with Jesus, satan, terrorists, russians, koreans, democrats on the loose!?!
and AL GORE!
diverteach
QUOTE(Father Onesimus @ Oct 16 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]124446[/snapback]

May the Lord send relief. +


While I don't know how my area compares to Atlanta in terms of the drought, I do know that here in NW Florida we've been having our own. Ponds and lakes are drying up left and right and people with wells have been having to abandon them or go deeper to find water.

The Lord is sending us some relief and it looks destined for Atlanta after it moves through here. We're expected to get 5 inches of rain today and tomorrow. WOO HOO!
dennis mann
Many thanks to the Rain-God!

PTL!
OneOfHisHandmaidens
Here is a very helpful site that monitors drought throughout the U.S. If you scoll down, you'll find a 12-week animation of the changes in the past 12 weeks.

http://www.drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html
dennis mann

http://www.biblegateway.com/keyword/?searc...lewordsonly=yes


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Search for DROUGHT in Topical Index | Dictionary
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1. Deuteronomy 28:22
The Lord will smite you with consumption, with fever and inflammation, fiery heat, sword and drought, blasting and mildew; they shall pursue you until you perish.
Deuteronomy 28:21-23 (in Context) Deuteronomy 28 (Whole Chapter)
2. Job 24:19
Drought and heat consume the snow waters; so does Sheol (the place of the dead) those who have sinned.
Job 24:18-20 (in Context) Job 24 (Whole Chapter)
3. Psalm 32:4
For day and night Your hand [of displeasure] was heavy upon me; my moisture was turned into the drought of summer. Selah [pause, and calmly think of that]!
Psalm 32:3-5 (in Context) Psalm 32 (Whole Chapter)
4. Psalm 78:17
Yet they still went on to sin against Him by provoking and rebelling against the Most High in the wilderness (in the land of drought).
Psalm 78:16-18 (in Context) Psalm 78 (Whole Chapter)
5. Isaiah 58:11
And the Lord shall guide you continually and satisfy you in drought and in dry places and make strong your bones. And you shall be like a watered garden and like a spring of water whose waters fail not.
Isaiah 58:10-12 (in Context) Isaiah 58 (Whole Chapter)
6. Jeremiah 2:6
Nor did they say, Where is the Lord, Who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, Who led us through the wilderness, through a land of deserts and pits, through a land of drought and of the shadow of death and deep darkness, through a land that no man passes through and where no man dwells?
Jeremiah 2:5-7 (in Context) Jeremiah 2 (Whole Chapter)
7. Jeremiah 12:4
How long must the land mourn and the grass and herbs of the whole country wither? Through the wickedness of those who dwell in it, the beasts and the birds are consumed and are swept away [by the drought], because men [mocked] me, saying, He shall not [live to] see our final end.
Jeremiah 12:3-5 (in Context) Jeremiah 12 (Whole Chapter)
8. Jeremiah 14:1
THE WORD of the Lord that came to Jeremiah concerning the drought:
Jeremiah 14:1-3 (in Context) Jeremiah 14 (Whole Chapter)
9. Jeremiah 17:8
For he shall be like a tree planted by the waters that spreads out its roots by the river; and it shall not see and fear when heat comes; but its leaf shall be green. It shall not be anxious and full of care in the year of drought, nor shall it cease yielding fruit.
Jeremiah 17:7-9 (in Context) Jeremiah 17 (Whole Chapter)
10. Jeremiah 50:38
A sword and a drought upon her waters, that they may be dried up! For it is a land of images, and they are mad over idols (objects of terror in which they foolishly trust).
Jeremiah 50:37-39 (in Context) Jeremiah 50 (Whole Chapter)
11. Jeremiah 51:43
Her cities have become a desolation and a horror, a land of drought and a wilderness, a land in which no one lives, nor does any son of man pass through it.
Jeremiah 51:42-44 (in Context) Jeremiah 51 (Whole Chapter)
12. Hosea 4:3
Therefore shall the land [continually] mourn, and all who dwell in it shall languish, together with the wild beasts of the open country and the birds of the heavens; yes, the fishes of the sea also shall [perish because of the drought] be collected and taken away.
Hosea 4:2-4 (in Context) Hosea 4 (Whole Chapter)
13. Hosea 13:5
I knew (recognized, understood, and had regard for) you in the wilderness, in the land of great drought.
Hosea 13:4-6 (in Context) Hosea 13 (Whole Chapter)
14. Zephaniah 2:14
Herds shall lie down in the midst of [Nineveh], all the [wild] beasts of the nations and of every kind; both the pelican and the hedgehog shall lodge on the upper part of her [fallen] pillars; the voice [of the nesting bird] shall sing in the windows; desolation and drought shall be on the thresholds, for her cedar paneling will He lay bare.
Zephaniah 2:13-15 (in Context) Zephaniah 2 (Whole Chapter)
15. Haggai 1:11
And I have called for a drought upon the land and the hill country, upon the grain, the fresh wine, the oil, upon what the ground brings forth, upon men and cattle, and upon all the [wearisome] toil of [men's] hands.
Haggai 1:10-12 (in Context) Haggai 1 (Whole Chapter)

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