Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Most Misunderstood Third of the Bible:


The Most Misunderstood Third of the Bible

 Joe Hawkins


For a topic that occupies nearly a third of the Bible, the end times remain one of the most misunderstood areas of Scripture. Many Christians care deeply about God’s Word, attend church faithfully, and read their Bibles regularly, yet still feel uncertain when the conversation turns to prophecy. For some, the subject feels intimidating. For others, it feels divisive. For many, it simply feels overwhelming.

Conversations about the Rapture, the Tribulation, the Antichrist, the Millennium, or the eternal state can quickly become technical or emotionally charged. Instead of clarity, believers often walk away with more questions than confidence. But this confusion did not originate in Scripture itself. The Bible is not unclear about the future. The uncertainty has developed largely from how prophecy has been taught, presented, or avoided.

When something is fragmented, debated loudly, or treated as mysterious by default, sincere believers can begin to assume that it must be inaccessible. Over time, prophecy starts to feel like a specialized field reserved for scholars and chart-makers rather than something meant for the average Christian sitting in the pew.

Fragmented Teaching Produces Fog

For decades, believers have often encountered prophecy in fragments. A verse from Daniel is quoted. A passage from Revelation is referenced. A section of the Olivet Discourse is highlighted. While each piece may be true and meaningful on its own, the broader sequence and storyline are rarely explained clearly.

Charts are sometimes introduced before the narrative foundation is laid. Symbols are emphasized before their meaning is established. Timelines are debated before readers understand where those events fit within the larger redemptive story. The result is predictable: prophecy feels complicated and disjointed.

Yet Scripture never presents prophecy as an insider’s subject. Moses spoke of “the latter days” (Deuteronomy 4:30). The prophets repeatedly warned of “the day of the Lord” (Joel 2:1; Zephaniah 1:14). Jesus delivered extended teaching about future events on the Mount of Olives (Matthew 24–25). Paul instructed ordinary churches about the Lord’s return (1 Thessalonians 4:13–18; 2 Thessalonians 2:1–8).

Prophecy was not delivered to academic elites. It was given to shepherds, farmers, merchants, elders, young converts, and small congregations navigating real-world pressures. It was never meant to intimidate believers.It was meant to steady them.

Prophecy Was Given to Be Understood

God does not reveal the future to confuse His people. Throughout Scripture, prophecy functions as preparation, warning, and comfort. When God speaks about what is coming, He does so because He wants His people to be ready, not rattled.

Amos wrote, “Surely the Lord God does nothing, unless He reveals His secret to His servants the prophets” (Amos 3:7). Jesus told His disciples, “See, I have told you beforehand” (Matthew 24:25). Later He added, “These things I have told you before they come, that when they do come to pass, you may believe” (John 14:29). Prophecy strengthens faith by removing surprise. When events unfold exactly as spoken, belief is reinforced rather than shaken.

The book of Revelation begins not with obscurity, but with blessing: “Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written in it” (Revelation 1:3). That blessing assumes engagement and comprehension. God does not bless confusion; He blesses those who read, hear, and obey.

Unfortunately, many believers have quietly concluded that prophecy is too complex to grasp. Some were told it would all make sense later. Others were warned that studying the end times might lead to fear or speculation. As a result, entire congregations have grown up hearing very little systematic teaching about what Scripture says concerning the future.

Ironically, this avoidance has produced the very fear prophecy was meant to eliminate. Where God intended confidence, uncertainty has taken root. Where He intended watchfulness, indifference has grown.

What Happens When Prophecy Is Ignored

When prophecy is neglected, something essential is lost. The Bible’s story does not end with personal morality or private salvation alone. It culminates in restoration, justice, and the visible reign of Christ (Revelation 19:11–16; 21:1–5).

Peter described the prophetic word as “a light that shines in a dark place” (2 Peter 1:19). Prophecy provides a framework for interpreting the times. It does not eliminate darkness, but it gives direction within it.

When that framework is absent, believers attempt to interpret world events through headlines rather than Scripture. Wars intensify. Moral decay accelerates. Hostility toward biblical truth increases. Technological power expands rapidly. Without prophetic grounding, anxiety often fills the vacuum where understanding should be.

Jesus warned of “wars and rumors of wars” and increasing lawlessness (Matthew 24:6, 12). Paul described perilous times marked by deception and moral confusion (2 Timothy 3:1–5). Isaiah records the Lord declaring, “I am God… declaring the end from the beginning” (Isaiah 46:9–10). The future is not unfolding randomly. It is unfolding according to divine decree. When that truth is internalized, fear begins to loosen its grip.


How Confusion Took Root

The confusion surrounding the end times developed gradually. One significant cause is the tendency to approach prophecy without regard to sequence. Passages are grouped by topic rather than chronology. A verse from Revelation may be paired with one from Daniel and then connected to a statement from Jesus without explaining how they relate in time. The pieces are true, but the order is unclear, making the whole picture difficult to assemble.

Another factor is an overemphasis on symbolism without recognizing that Scripture frequently interprets its own imagery. Daniel was told the meaning of the beasts he saw (Daniel 7:16-18). Revelation identifies lampstands as churches, and stars as angels (Revelation 1:20). When everything is treated as mysterious or metaphorical, readers begin to wonder whether anything can be taken plainly.

Additionally, theological traditions that blur distinctions Scripture appears to maintain—particularly concerning Israel and the Church—can make the prophetic storyline harder to follow. Paul insisted that “the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable” (Romans 11:29). When that conviction is minimized, continuity in the narrative becomes difficult to trace.

Finally, debate fatigue has played a role. End-times discussions sometimes devolve into arguments over charts and dates. Jesus warned against date-setting (Matthew 24:36; Acts 1:7). Paul cautioned believers not to be “soon shaken in mind or troubled” (2 Thessalonians 2:2). For some, disengagement felt easier than navigating controversy. But avoidance leaves believers unprepared.

Chronology Changes Everything

One of the most effective ways to restore clarity is to read prophecy in chronological order. When Scripture is allowed to unfold sequentially, confusion begins to lift. Events build upon one another. Promises are fulfilled in stages. Judgment follows warning. Restoration follows wrath.

Daniel outlined a timeline of seventy weeks (Daniel 9:24–27). Jesus described birth pains leading to greater tribulation (Matthew 24:8–21). Revelation progresses through seals, trumpets, and bowls (Revelation 6–16). Chronology is not imposed upon the text; it emerges from it.

When read this way, prophecy becomes a coherent story rather than a collection of isolated predictions. The God who promised redemption in Genesis 3:15 completes it in Revelation 22:3-5. The covenant-keeping Lord fulfills His promises (Romans 11:25–29). Christ returns as King (Revelation 19:11–16). Scripture does not introduce a new plan at the end of time; it completes the one that has been unfolding from the beginning.

Prophecy Is Not About Fear

A persistent myth suggests that studying prophecy produces fear. In reality, fear thrives in uncertainty. Understanding produces stability.

Paul wrote, “God did not appoint us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Thessalonians 5:9). Jesus said, “When these things begin to happen, look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near” (Luke 21:28). The tone of biblical prophecy toward believers is not terror but anticipation.

Yes, judgment is real. Yes, deception increases (2 Thessalonians 2:9-11). But evil does not triumph. Satan is defeated (Revelation 20:10). Christ reigns. Creation is restored. The end times are not the unraveling of God’s plan; they are its fulfillment.


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Parts of Beirut will ‘look like Gaza’ if Lebanon doesn’t stop Hezbollah, warns senior official


Parts of Beirut will ‘look like Gaza’ if Lebanon doesn’t stop Hezbollah, warns senior official

 Times of Israel is liveblogging Thursday










Lebanon’s Hezbollah says it launched missiles at a Military Intelligence base in the suburbs of Tel Aviv early Thursday, the Iran-backed terror group’s latest claim in a major operation against Israel it announced hours earlier.

Hezbollah operatives “targeted the Glilot base (the headquarters of the 8200 Military Intelligence unit)… in the Tel Aviv suburbs with a barrage of advance missiles,” the terror group says in a statement.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said earlier that they had carried out a joint missile operation with ally Hezbollah against targets in Israel.




As Hezbollah continues its rocket fire on Israel, a senior Israeli official tells The Times of Israel that Hezbollah strongholds will be destroyed unless Lebanon’s government acts.

“The Lebanese government needs to get a grip on their country,” says the official, “or Hezbollah parts of Beirut will soon look like Gaza.”




Hezbollah fires at least 150 rockets at north, Iran launches missiles in ‘integrated operation’


Hezbollah fires at least 150 rockets at north, Iran launches missiles in ‘integrated operation’'


Lebanese terror group Hezbollah blasted rockets and drones at northern Israel for hours, repeatedly sending hundreds of thousands of Israelis to shelters on Wednesday evening.

It marked the largest Hezbollah attack on Israel since hostilities intensified earlier this month, as the terror group began attacks to support its sponsor, Iran, which is under intense attack from a joint US-Israel air campaign that began on February 28.

An opening salvo of 100 rockets was launched around 8 p.m. as a missile from Iran targeted the central region of the country, in what Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said was a coordinated attack. More Iranian missiles targeted the north and south of the country.

The Iranian missiles were successfully intercepted by air defenses, which also worked to thwart the Hezbollah attacks. However, several impacts were reported, causing fires, and two people were lightly injured.

The Magen David Adom ambulance service said the two, a 35-year-old woman and a man in his 50s, were hit by “flying objects” following an impact. They were taken to a hospital.

According to rescue services, a rocket that struck a home in the northern town of Bi’ina injured one of the two victims. Four others were treated for acute anxiety at the scene.

As the Israel Defense Forces instructed residents of the north to stay close to shelters, Hezbollah continued firing rockets alongside drones, with sirens set off across the Galilee and in Haifa, as well as in communities up to 50 kilometers from the border with Lebanon.

In all, the terror group fired at least 150 rockets at the north over the course of several hours, according to IDF assessments.

A number of long-range rockets fired by Hezbollah also struck open areas. Because the rockets were heading for open areas, no sirens were activated by the military. Sounds of explosions were reported by residents of central Israel amid the attack.

Footage shows Hezbollah's large rocket barrage on northern Israel this evening. Around 100 rockets were fired, according to IDF assessments.

The attacks continued into early Thursday, with suspected drone infiltration and rocket alerts sounding in Nahariya and a number of Western Galilee communities, as well as Acre and some of Haifa’s northern suburbs. Hezbollah also fired long-range rockets, setting off sirens in Tel Aviv and surrounding towns, amid which the IDF announced the detection of an Iranian ballistic missile, which triggered alerts in central Israel, the Jerusalem area and parts of the south.

Some of projectiles were intercepted, according to initial military assessments. Police reported damage was caused by an impact in central Israel. Fragments following the interceptions also reportedly fell in several areas.

The IDF, meanwhile, launched heavy airstrikes on Hezbollah’s strongholds in southern Beirut, while an Israeli official said the military could begin hitting civilian infrastructure if the Lebanese government fails to rein in Iran-backed Hezbollah.

The IDF earlier warned that Hezbollah would likely attempt to increase its rate of rocket and drone attacks on Israel.

Hezbollah’s opening barrage of rockets was launched from several areas in Lebanon. The terror group, in a statement, said that “in response to the criminal aggression against dozens of Lebanese cities and towns and Beirut’s southern suburbs,” its fighters targeted sites in northern Israel “with dozens of rockets” as part of a new operation announced a short time earlier.

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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Experts warn: Iran's new leader is 'obsessed' with end times, believes himself to be prophesied figure paving way for the Mahdi


Experts warn: Iran's new leader is 'obsessed' with end times, believes himself to be prophesied figure paving way for the Mahdi


With Mojtaba Khamenei, the Iranian regime elevated a dangerous ideologue who is obsessed with the end times – and even believes he is a prophesied figure playing a key role in bringing about the return of the Mahdi, according to several experts.

This isn’t particularly surprising considering that “Iran is a theocracy in which the mosque is the state, the Qur’an provides constitutional logic, and eschatology shapes foreign policy,” as Ali Siadatan has recently explained on AIN.

Nevertheless, the new supreme leader, who has yet to appear in public, is particularly radical, even compared to his own father, warned Jaber Rajabi.

He is a former Iranian operative who participated in the creation of Iran’s proxy forces in neighboring Iraq, and studied with the new Supreme Leader in the Shia seminaries in Qom in his youth.

Speaking on ArabCast, Rajabi noted that the elder Khamenei wasn’t as obsessed with the end times, nor was he a racist like his son, who believes in “Persian supremacy.”

“He (Mojtaba) says the Persians are the true companions of the Imam of the Time, the Awaited Mahdi. Persians first… Mojtaba, from the beginning, has been a hardline Shia extremist.”

In a recent interview with The Atlantic, journalist Graeme Wood recounted that Rajabi had told her that while the elder Khamenei “demonstrated a willingness to bend and reach out to allies to ensure his regime’s survival… Mojtaba, by contrast, is calculating and ideological, and willing to cause terrible destruction to the world just to prove a point.”

Over the past few months, Rajabi has given several interviews, warning that his former study partner is much more dangerous than his father, and had predicted that he would grab power long before he was chosen to succeed his father.

In The Atlantic, Rajabi recounted that during their studies, “he came to view the supreme leader’s son as a brilliant zealot, much more extreme and uncompromising than his father, and a uniquely dangerous potential successor.”

He described Mojtaba as “apocalypse-obsessed” at this time, adding that “He thinks there are milestones on the path to the end of the world and he himself will have a special part in hastening humanity down that path.”

Mojtaba Khamenei was born in Mashhad, a holy city of Shia Islam that lies in the far east of Iran, near the Afghan border in a neglected region known as Khorasan.

According to Shia eschatology, the return of the Mahdi, a Muslim messianic figure who precedes the end of days that is heralded by the return of Jesus (known as Isa), will be announced by the appearance of three mythological figures: The Yamani, the Sufyani – and the Khorasani.

Among radical regime circles and IRGC operatives, some believe the Yamani (literally meaning a man from Yemen) to be Abd-al-Malik al-Houthi, leader of the Houthi terrorists, while the Sufyani, who is expected to emerge from Damascus, is often identified with Ahmed al-Sharaa, the new leader of Syria.

Mojtaba Khamenei, Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic and commander of its armed forces, believes himself to be the prophesied figure of the Khorasani.

“Mojtaba puts a lot of weight on visions and dreams and these things. He sees them and says, ‘I saw them, and they say that you are al-Sayyid al-Khorasani’ … I mean, once he told me, ‘Adam, peace be upon him, came to him [in a dream and told me this]’,” Rajabi said in an interview with ArabCast.

Aimen Dean, a former al-Qaeda operative turned MI6 spy who now works as a security consultant, confirmed this view in a recent episode of his Conflicted Podcast.

“It became very clear that his entire research, and the papers he was studying, the books he was writing internally in the seminaries of Qom, focused a lot on putting together not only an understanding of the three people who would pave the way for the Mahdi… but also, he started to craft for himself that image, even among the religious figures within the seminaries of Qom, because many of the descriptions of the Khorasani seem to, in his mind, to fit him,” Dean said.

“He (the Khorasani) will be among those who would be fighting in the battles of Iraq – he (Mojtaba) fought in the Iran-Iraq war – and then he (the Khorasani) would advance himself further into Iraq – and he (Mojtaba) did so in the battles against Daesh (ISIS),” he added.

This view is apparently not limited to Khamenei himself, but Dean explained that even Qasem Soleimani, the legendary head of the IRGC Quds Force, who was assassinated by the U.S. in 2020 and himself seen as a leading candidate to succeed as supreme leader one day, saw Mojtaba as the prophesied Khorasani.

Regime outlets have already referred to Mojtaba Khamenei as a "living martyr" after he survived Israeli airstrikes at the start of the war, echoing another prophecy that the Khorasani would survive an enemy attack; and Rajabbi noted that the announcement of his appointment came on laylat al-qadr, the "Night of Power," a special day during the holy month of Ramadan.

“Mojtaba is trying to declare his presence on the Night of Power so as to grant himself a form of sanctity," he predicted several days earlier.

Like the mythical Khorasani, Mojtaba Khamenei is also reported to have participated in wars in Syria, playing a key role supporting Soleimani and the Iranian proxies in the civil war there.

The new supreme leader’s beliefs are important for Israel not just because of the current war, but because they embody the inherent danger posed by the radical Shia regime.

According to the prophecies, the Khorasani will pave the way for the Mahdi by leading his armies out of Iraq under his black banners (this is the inspiration for al-Qaeda’s and ISIS’ flags), but not just this, Dean noted, “The Khorasani would fix the black banner where? In Jerusalem!”

“He would defeat a great host of a Roman-Jewish alliance, and he would vanquish all the enemies and go all the way to Jerusalem,” explained Dean, adding that “eschatology is the narcotics of the mind among many young Muslims, whether Sunni or Shia.”

“Mojtaba is more dangerous than 50 nuclear bombs,” Rajabi concluded. 

He has been reported to have played a key role in the suppression of the large uprisings against the regime in the past few years.

“He is willing to kill 13,000 Iranians,” Rajabi said, “Why would he hesitate to kill 100,000 people in Tel Aviv?”

PLO Warns of “Passover Sacrifice” on Temple Mount, Threatens Violence


PLO Warns of “Passover Sacrifice” on Temple Mount, Threatens Violence


As Passover approaches, Palestinian leaders are sounding alarms that Jews intend to carry out the Biblical Passover sacrifice on the Temple Mount. 

The warnings have spread through official Palestinian channels and media outlets, framing the possibility of a Jewish ritual as a dangerous provocation and a threat to the “Islamic character” of the site. The rhetoric arrives amid heightened tensions in Jerusalem and follows years of similar claims that have repeatedly inflamed violence.

The Palestine Liberation Organization’s department for “Al-Quds affairs” issued a statement warning of what it described as plans by “settlers” to perform the Passover sacrifice during the upcoming holiday. The organization characterized the alleged plans as part of “systematic Israeli attempts to change the historical and legal status” of the Temple Mount.

According to the PLO statement, religious arguments are being used to justify “establishing facts on the ground.” The organization also claimed that right-wing elements within the Israeli government are backing efforts to allow Jewish prayer and ceremonies on the Temple Mount.

The PLO reiterated its claim that the entire compound is an exclusively Islamic place of worship and asserted that decisions by the United Nations and UNESCO support that position. Based on that inaccurate claim, it warned that any Jewish ritual conducted there would constitute a violation of international law.

The Temple Mount is the holiest site in Judaism. The Bible describes it as the location chosen for the Beit HaMikdash (Holy Temple), where the central rituals of the Jewish people were performed for centuries. Israeli law mandates religious freedom but allows the police to impose temporary restrictions based on security concerns.