Biblical prophecy

  • End-Time Predictions That Failed: From Nero to Hitler to Today

    From Nero and Hitler to today’s prophecy scares, history shows that end-time predictions fail again and again. The church is called not to panic, but to sober hope in the risen Christ.

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  • This article challenges the popular Pre-Tribulation Rapture view, not as heresy, but as a modern and misguided teaching that distorts the gospel’s bigger story. By recovering a historic and biblical vision of Christ’s return, it calls the Church to endurance, witness, and resurrection hope—not escapism.

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  • Many read Ezekiel 38–39 as a forecast of an end-times military invasion. But what if Gog and Magog aren’t about Russia or Iran at all? This essay explores Ezekiel’s vision not as a war map but as a dramatic, theological proclamation of God’s victory over cosmic evil—then, now, and at the end of the age.

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  • Babylon In Manila

    Babylon the Great is not just ancient history—it is alive in the Philippines today through systemic corruption. Revelation 17–18 calls us to resist and live as citizens of God’s kingdom.

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  • Dispensationalist theology deeply shapes evangelical support for Israel and U.S. policy in the Middle East. While rooted in biblical prophecy, this influence can heighten conflict and challenge peace efforts. Filipino believers are called to balance hope with humility, praying for all and pursuing justice in a complex world.

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  • What were Second Temple Jews really waiting for? Not escape to heaven—but for God to return, restore justice, and end the exile that never truly ended. Their hope wasn’t abstract—it was political, physical, and deeply theological. And it still speaks today. This essay explores how that ancient longing shapes a richer, more grounded faith for…

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