Friday, June 12, 2026

The Spirit Of Antichrist:


The Spirit Of Antichrist: Humanity Is Increasingly Looking For Answers, Hope, And Salvation From Sources Other Than The Creator



Anti-Christ: Opposite of Christ or Instead of Christ? The greatest deception of the last days may not be the rejection of God, but the acceptance of substitutes for God. “Children, it is the last hour; and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour” (1 John 2:18).

Is the Antichrist alive today? Will he be European? How much of today’s technology is capable of fulfilling Revelation 13? These are questions I have been asked just this week. Yet while these questions are important, they often miss a deeper truth about the spirit of antichrist already at work in the world.

Most people think “antichrist” means someone who stands in direct opposition to Christ. While opposition is certainly involved, the Greek meaning carries another powerful implication: instead of Christ.

Humanity is increasingly looking for answers, hope, security, wisdom, and salvation from sources other than the Creator. The spirit of antichrist is conditioning mankind to trust something—or someone—instead of God.

Trusting Technology Instead of God

On July 23, 2025, the White House released Winning the Race: America’s AI Action Plan, a roadmap designed to secure American dominance in artificial intelligence. The stated goal was clear: to usher in a new era of human flourishing, economic competitiveness, and national security through AI.

To support this initiative, three executive orders were issued that accelerated AI infrastructure, expanded governmental adoption of artificial intelligence, and promoted American leadership in AI worldwide.

Among the priorities were:

• Massive expansion of data center infrastructure

• Government standards for AI deployment, eliminating all “woke” AI.

• Global leadership and influence through artificial intelligence

The message is unmistakable: technology will solve our problems, secure our future, and elevate humanity. Scripture warns us that mankind has always sought salvation through human achievement. From the Tower of Babel to the coming Beast system, humanity repeatedly attempts to build a future apart from God.

Artificial intelligence itself is not the antichrist. Technology is not inherently evil. However, when society begins placing its faith in technological solutions rather than God’s wisdom, it reveals a heart posture that is increasingly comfortable with living instead of God.

In recent years, scientists have issued alarming warnings about population decline.

Some forecasts predict a dramatic reduction in global population by the year 2064. These predictions dominate headlines and influence public policy discussions around the world.

The Bible also speaks of a future period, the Tribulation, of unprecedented death and suffering. However, Scripture identifies the source not as random demographic trends but as the judgments associated with the coming Tribulation period.

The world eagerly listens to scientific predictions about the future while largely ignoring biblical prophecy. The issue is not whether scientists possess useful information. The issue is where humanity places its ultimate trust. When people accept scientific forecasts as certain truth while dismissing God’s revealed Word, they are choosing authority instead of God.


Another example can be found in the growing influence of international organizations.

Recent concerns surrounding Ebola outbreaks in Central Africa prompted urgent declarations from global health authorities. Headlines warned that “the world is not ready for another pandemic.”

World leaders repeatedly emphasize that another worldwide health crisis is not a matter of if, but when. Fear drives people toward centralized solutions. Crisis creates opportunities for expanded authority. Emergency conditions often lead populations to surrender freedoms in exchange for promises of security. Again, the issue is not whether medical professionals should respond to disease outbreaks. The issue is where people ultimately place their confidence.

The world increasingly looks to international institutions for protection, guidance, and hope while giving little thought to God’s sovereignty over nations, disease, and history itself.

The pattern is becoming clear: trust the experts, trust the institutions, trust the systems—but do not trust God. That is the spirit of antichrist.

The Real Preparation for Revelation 13

Many prophecy students focus on identifying the future antichrist. Yet the more pressing question may be: Is the world being conditioned to accept him? Revelation 13describes a global leader who will command unprecedented political, economic, and spiritual influence.

Such a figure cannot emerge overnight.

The world must first become accustomed to looking for solutions from human systems.

People must become comfortable trusting centralized authority. They must learn to seek security from technology, governance, and global institutions. In short, they must learn to live instead of God.

The coming Antichrist will not merely oppose Christ.

He will offer humanity an alternative. A substitute savior, a substitute kingdom, a substitute hope, and a world already conditioned to trust substitutes may eagerly embrace him.

As believers, we should not fear technology, science, or world events. We should understand them through a biblical lens. The answer to the challenges facing our world is not found in artificial intelligence, global institutions, scientific forecasts, or political leaders. The answer remains the same as it has always been: Jesus Christ.

As the world increasingly searches for answers in every direction except heaven, Christians must point people back to God’s Word. The signs of the times are not merely revealing the approach of the antichrist. They are revealing humanity’s growing desire for solutions apart from God.

That is why the Church must remain vigilant. The spirit of antichrist is not only coming. It is already preparing the world to accept a counterfeit savior. May we be found proclaiming the true Savior while there is still time: “…that is, the one whose coming is in accord with the activity of Satan, with all power and signs and false wonders…” (2 Thessalonians 2:9).



Thursday, June 11, 2026

Iran’s Foreign Ministry says large part of deal with US finalized, but no decision made yet


Iran’s Foreign Ministry says large part of deal with US finalized, but no decision made yet


Iran has not yet made a final decision on a possible agreement with the US and will not compromise on its “red lines” in negotiations, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei says, according to Iran’s IRNA ​news agency.

Baghaei says reports regarding a time and place of signing the agreement remain speculative, and that nothing had been finalized. He adds that a large part of the negotiating text has been finalized, but the US repeatedly changed its positions during the talks.

Netanyahu says Israel not party to Iran deal, but praises Trump for ‘commitment’ to thwarting nukes

Netanyahu reportedly not given heads-up about Trump’s announcement, was caught off guard

Could a war of words between Turkey and Israel escalate toward a new crisis? - analysis


Could a war of words between Turkey and Israel escalate toward a new crisis? - analysis


Turkey and Israel appear to be heading towards increasing chances of a confrontation in the region. This confrontation has so far played itself out primarily as a war of words.

For instance, Turkey’s interior minister, Mustafa Ciftci, said he hoped to see the “liberation” of Jerusalem. He compared this to recent conflicts between Armenia and Azerbaijan and in Syria, where areas had been liberated from adversaries.

On June 7, Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz wrote on social media, “To the Turkish Interior Minister who dreams of administering Jerusalem and hurls threats, I say this: Jerusalem is not Constantinople, and the State of Israel is not a crumbling Crusader Empire. Israel is a strong and resolute state that has proven its capacity to defend itself against any threat.”

Katz went on to note to the Turkish official that “Jerusalem has been the capital of the Jewish people for 3,000 years and will remain Israel’s capital forever. You and the Ottoman Empire that Erdogan dreams of, on the other hand, have collapsed and will never return.

“Unfortunately, you have learned nothing from the legacy of Atatürk, who worked to transform Turkey into a modern state; on the contrary, you are working to drag Turkey back into a dark and backward era.”

Ankara has talked about liberating Jerusalem in the past. It has been a theme of some rhetoric going back years, and it has become more common under the multi-decade rule of the AKP in Turkey.

The AKP party has roots in the Muslim Brotherhood and political Islam. It is the more conservative and right-wing of the parties in Turkey, compared to the more secular and nationalist Republican People’s Party (CHP), which once dominated Turkish politics.


“Just as we witnessed the liberation of Damascus, Aleppo, and Karabakh, God willing, one day we will also witness the liberation of Jerusalem,” Ciftci said in a speech at an AKP Party conference in the city of Corum.

Now, Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan has appeared to increase the rhetoric by saying on Wednesday that Israel’s attacks on Syria and Lebanon had reached a point where they also threaten Turkey, Reuters noted. Turkey’s president condemns Israeli aggression in the region.


Turkey has been increasingly concerned that Israel is becoming a regional superpower. From Turkey’s point of view, the multi-front war after October 7 has led Israel to a much stronger position in the region. This has led to Israeli strikes on the Houthis in Yemen, on Iran, and also Israeli operations in Lebanon and Syria.

What’s interesting about Turkey’s view is that it is partly projecting its own policy on Israel.


Turkey and Israel are among the strongest military powers in the region. Both are allies of the US. Both have strong defense industrial complexes. They also have very different ideologies: one is led by a right-leaning Jewish party with increasingly religious-nationalist elements, and the other is led by a conservative, populist, Islamic-leaning party.

“The ‌attacks ⁠by (Israeli Prime Minister ⁠Benjamin) Netanyahu and his network of murder on Lebanon and Syria have brought the issue to a point where it also threatens Turkey,” Erdogan told lawmakers from his ruling AK Party in parliament, Reuters said this week.

He also accused Israel of destabilizing African countries, a reference to Israel’s recognition of Somaliland. Turkey has forces in Somalia and has backed Somalia for years.

Erdogan also accused Israel of creating “discord” in the Eastern Mediterranean and referenced Israel-Cyprus ties. Turkey backs Northern Cyprus, which it recognizes as a country. Turkey invaded Cyprus in the 1970s to support Turkish Cypriots. This led to the division of the island.

Israel has increasingly warm ties with Cyprus and Greece. This challenges Turkey’s role in the Eastern Mediterranean.

“These ‌small entities, whose ambitions far exceed their size, have boarded Israel’s boat of mischief, taken on the role of Zionist subcontractors, and are pursuing some pipe dreams in the Eastern ‌Mediterranean,” Erdogan said. “Nobody should chase adventures...”

“I want everyone to ⁠know that if ⁠the rights of Turkey and Turkish Cypriots are violated in the Eastern Mediterranean, our response will be very clear and very strong,” he stated.

The comments in recent days have raised eyebrows in Jerusalem and Ankara.

It is clear that Turkey and Israel, under their current leadership, will have rhetorical clashes. The question is whether this may one day lead to larger tensions in Syria or the Eastern Mediterranean.


US takeover of Iran’s Kharg Island might be quick but would pose risks to troops, experts say


US takeover of Iran’s Kharg Island might be quick but would pose risks to troops, experts say


 US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that he wants to take over Kharg Island, Iran’s oil infrastructure hub. Analysts say the US military could seize the island quickly, but the move could leave US troops in great peril and prolong rather than shorten the war.

Kharg Island sits 16 miles (26 kilometers) from Iran’s coast in the northern end of the Gulf, about 300 miles (483 kilometers) northwest of the Strait of Hormuz. It lies in waters deep enough to enable the docking of tankers that are too large to approach the Iranian mainland’s shallow coastal waters.

The island handled 90 percent of Iran’s oil exports before the war started on February 28. Seizing it would severely disrupt Iran’s energy trade and place enormous pressure on Tehran’s economy. Iran is the third largest producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, known as OPEC.

US forces carried out strikes against Kharg in March and April, and Trump said they “totally obliterated” all military targets there and that they could next target oil infrastructure. US officials told Reuters at the time the administration was weighing whether to send ground forces to the island.

Kharg has not been attacked since then, amid a fragile and inconsistent ceasefire, though the United States has targeted oil tankers near the island as it maintains a blockade on Iranian ports.

Trump on Thursday said he would like to seize the oil hub, though he did not indicate clear plans to do so and said his citizens might oppose it.

“My preference has always been – take Kharg Island … my preference would be that. I don’t know that America has the stomach for it,” he told Fox News.

US troops could likely seize the island relatively quickly, but that would not necessarily lead to a quick and decisive end to the war, experts said.

“A seizure and occupation of Kharg Island is more likely to expand and extend the war than it is to deliver any sort of decisive victory,” Ryan Brobst and Cameron McMillan of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies wrote in March.

They said US troops would be exposed to missile and drone attacks, including, potentially, camera-wielding “first-person view drones” that are already used by the millions in Ukraine and have posed a festering and lethal threat to Israeli troops in Lebanon.

“Upon any successful strikes, the Iranian regime would be expected to release videos of those attacks online, using the graphic deaths of American service members as propaganda,” they said.

A former commander of the US Central Command, Joseph Votel, told TWZ.com in March that while only 800 to 1,000 troops would be needed to hold Kharg Island, they would require logistical backup that would need protection as well.

Votel said the troops would be very vulnerable and doubted that taking the island would provide any particular tactical advantage. He said it would be an “odd” thing to do, although the US could do so if it had to.

Live Updates: Trump cancels Iran strikes, Islamic Regime, Israel dispute his claims that ceasefire reached


Live Updates: Trump cancels Iran strikes, Islamic Regime, Israel dispute his claims that ceasefire reached

IDF pushes deeper in into Lebanon to neutralize threat of Hezbollah

With the Zaharani River only six kilometers away, and Nabatieh only three kilometers away, Hezbollah has become concerned about a new IDF advance and has reinforced those areas.

Trump says US will hit Iran 'very hard' tonight, threatens to take Kharg Island soonUS President Donald Trump announced that he had canceled scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran on Thursday night, after a deal with Iran had been agreed upon.

The deal was approved "both in concept and great detail" by all involved parties, including the US, Israel, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and multiple other Middle Eastern countries, Trump wrote.

The blockade will stay in place until the deal is finalized, Trump added.

No date was given for the signing, but Trump said it could happen this weekend, with US President JD Vance set to attend.

Notably, Israeli sources told Channel 12 that Israel does not recognize reaching an agreement.