Friday, April 10, 2026

The Prophetic Storm Is Here: Convergence - The System Is Forming


The Prophetic Storm Is Here

Joe Hawkins


Convergence: The System Is Forming

The world is no longer moving in isolated events. It is moving in convergence. What we are witnessing today is not a random collection of crises, but a synchronized alignment of geopolitical conflict, technological advancement, cultural hostility, economic instability, and even cosmic phenomena. These are not disconnected headlines. They are interconnected signals. When viewed through the lens of Scripture, they form a pattern. One that is both sobering and unmistakable. Jesus warned of a time marked by “wars and rumors of wars,” deception, and increasing birth pains. What we are seeing now is not the Tribulation itself, but it is the infrastructure, the conditioning, and the alignment leading directly toward it.

The Convergence Moment

War. Surveillance. Persecution. Economic instability. Celestial signs. Deception.

Each of these developments is significant on its own. But together, they form something far more powerful: convergence.

This is not coincidence. It is alignment.

The systems described in Scripture are not appearing overnight—they are being built piece by piece, layer by layer, crisis by crisis. The world is being conditioned to accept what is coming. The infrastructure is forming. The mindset is shifting. The stage is being set.

This is not the Tribulation—but it is the shadow of it.

This is not a time for fear—it is a time for awareness. A time to stay awake. A time to keep watch. A time to proclaim truth boldly while there is still time.

Because convergence does not slow down. It accelerates.


  1. War: The Israel–Iran Conflict Escalates

At the center of global attention is the rapidly escalating conflict between Israel and Iran. What began as long-standing tension has now erupted into direct military confrontation. In early 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iranian military and nuclear-related targets, triggering retaliatory missile and drone attacks across the region. The scale of the conflict has already been described as one of the most significant disruptions in decades, impacting not only the Middle East but the entire global order.

This is not just another regional war. It is a strategic shift. Iran, a key player in end-times prophecy discussions, is now engaged in open conflict with Israel, the focal point of biblical prophecy. While this may not yet be the fulfillment of Ezekiel 38–39, it undeniably sets the stage. Alliances are forming. Lines are being drawn. The volatility of the region is increasing at a pace that mirrors the prophetic warnings of Scripture.

War is no longer confined to borders. It is expanding into cyber warfare, economic warfare, and information warfare. The battlefield is global, and the consequences are far-reaching. This is convergence—where conflict becomes the catalyst for everything else.

  1. Beast System Infrastructure: Surveillance and Digital Control

While bombs fall in the Middle East, a quieter but equally significant development is unfolding: the rapid expansion of surveillance systems and digital control mechanisms. Artificial intelligence is now being used to monitor behavior, analyze data, and make real-time decisions at a scale never before possible. These systems are increasingly integrated into national security frameworks, law enforcement, and even everyday commerce.

The normalization of surveillance is one of the most significant developments of our time. What was once considered intrusive is now accepted as necessary. Security concerns (especially during times of war) are being used to justify expanded monitoring of populations. AI-driven systems are capable of tracking movements, predicting behavior, and flagging individuals based on patterns. The implications are enormous.

Revelation 13 speaks of a system in which buying and selling are controlled, where participation in society is tied to compliance. While we are not there yet, the infrastructure is being built. Digital ID systems, biometric verification, and centralized databases are forming the backbone of what could one day become a fully integrated control system.

The same technologies used today to protect could easily be used tomorrow to control. This is not speculation—it is trajectory.


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Islamabad under lockdown as Pakistan prepares to host Iran-US ceasefire talks


Islamabad under lockdown as Pakistan prepares to host Iran-US ceasefire talks
 Times of Israel is liveblogging Friday


US Vice President JD Vance expresses optimism about the potential for a deal with Iran before boarding a plane for Islamabad, Pakistan where the first round of talks will be held tomorrow.

“We’re looking forward to the negotiation. I think it’s going to be positive. We’ll of course see,” Vance tells reporters.

“If the Iranians are willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand,” says Vance, who is leading the US negotiating team for the first time in talks with Iran. Previous waves of negotiations have been led by US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

“If they’re going to try to play us, then they’re going to find that the negotiating team is not that receptive,” Vance warns.


IDF claims it killed 1,400 Hezbollah operatives since start of Iran war; Lebanon toll at 1,800

IDF says it located and destroyed primed Hezbollah rocket launcher in south Lebanon

Hezbollah chief warns Beirut against giving ‘free concessions’ to Israel ahead of talks next week

Lebanese media shows heavy Israeli strikes in Nabatieh area of southern Lebanon

IDF intercepts Hezbollah rocket barrage fired at Karmiel, northern Israel

Iran-linked ships make up majority of vessels sailing through Strait of Hormuz, shipping data shows

Europe Wants to Keep Children Off Social Media: What’s It Really About?


Europe Wants to Keep Children Off Social Media: What’s It Really About?


Greece has become the latest European country to propose a legal minimum age for social media, with Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis saying children under 15 should be barred from accessing the platforms from January 1, 2027. Austria has announced plans for a ban on under-14s, while France has already tried to impose a “digital majority” for under-15s. Australia has gone furthest in practice, presenting itself as the international model after platforms restricted access to 4.7 million underage accounts. 

The policy language across these countries is remarkably similar. Governments say they are protecting children from addictive products, sleep disruption and psychological harm. The operational reality is more complicated. Australia’s experience suggests that these measures do not produce a clean ban so much as a large-scale age-verification and enforcement system, one that still leaves obvious routes around the rules while expanding the amount of monitoring and identity checking built into ordinary online life.

Greece says it will ban social media for under-15s from the start of 2027 and will push the European Union to adopt a common digital age of majority at 15, supported by mandatory age verification and a unified enforcement framework. 

Reuters reported that the Greek government has linked the proposal to rising concern about addiction, anxiety and sleep problems among children, and cited polling showing that public support for the plan is strong. In political terms, the appeal is obvious. Social media is widely distrusted, children are a sympathetic constituency, and governments can present themselves as intervening against powerful and unpopular technology companies.

The difficulty lies in turning the headlines into reality. 

A ban of this kind can only function if platforms are required to distinguish reliably between those who are old enough and those who are not. Once that becomes the practical focus, the issue is not just whether children should be on Instagram or TikTok, but also becomes a question of who is verifying age, what evidence is being collected, how long that information is retained, and how much new infrastructure is being built to control access to digital spaces. 

Greece may be selling the policy as child protection, but the route to implementation runs directly through verification systems that are likely to extend far beyond one narrow class of users.

Austria is following a similar path. Al Jazeera reported that the Austrian government plans to ban children under 14 from using social media, with junior minister Alexander Proll arguing that the platforms are addictive and harmful to young people. The justification is familiar and, at a broad level, difficult to dispute. These platforms are designed to hold attention, reward compulsion and keep users returning. The weaker point is the assumption that a legal age threshold can be translated smoothly into a workable, proportionate system of enforcement.

As in Greece, the real challenge is not announcing the rule but administering it. If the state intends to stop under-14s from opening accounts, then platforms need stronger forms of age assurance. Stronger age assurance usually means more data collection, more intrusive account checks, greater reliance on third-party verification providers, or the deployment of biometric or behavioural systems to estimate age. 

Those mechanisms may be politically easier to introduce when framed around child protection, but they still represent an expansion of digital oversight. Austria’s proposal therefore deserves to be read not only as a social policy but also as part of a broader shift toward a more tightly gated and more heavily verified internet.


Countries including Britain, Spain, Slovenia, Denmark, Malaysia, Canada and parts of the United States are also considering or debating restrictions of this kind. That reflects a broad and understandable loss of confidence in social media companies, whose products are increasingly regarded as addictive and harmful, especially for children. It also reflects a political environment in which governments are under pressure to be seen responding to a problem that is now widely acknowledged.

Still, the spread of these laws points to a second and less openly discussed development. Every serious effort to keep minors off social media depends on stronger proof-of-age systems. Stronger proof-of-age systems lead almost inevitably to broader identity checks, more platform data collection, and more routine demands that users prove themselves before entering digital spaces. In that sense, the trend is not only about restricting children’s access. It is also about normalising a model of internet governance based on verification and controlled entry. Even when the policy objective is defensible, the infrastructure it requires deserves scrutiny on its own terms.


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Things To Come: Outcomes Of The Gog-Magog Invasion


The Fate of Islam in Light of Bible Prophecy



.......While our last two prophecy experts saw the fate of Islam being at the bloody hands of the coming one-world ruler, the Antichrist, our next few panelists look to Islam’s potential defeat in the coming war of Gog and Magog, followed by Islam’s remnants being absorbed into the Babylonian one-world religion that will dominate the first half of the Tribulation.

Pete GarciaThis is my opinion on how I read Ezekiel 38–39 concerning the Gog-Magog War. I see God pulling Muslims, both Sunni and Shia, from all directions, to come against Israel. Islam is going to take advantage of a crisis led by Gog. I think it’s going to happen because of the Rapture, as that would cause a global crisis that will destabilize the U.S., or at least take us out of the picture for a while. We won’t be there to support Israel militarily or politically, economically, or in any other way. The Islamic world is going to take advantage of that crisis to march against Israel. It’ll be like the Crusades, but in reverse. The Islamic coalition, though, will be wiped out by God supernaturally. By the end of that supernatural defeat, Islam is going to have lost a lot of its militant power and forces. Muslims will then roll into whatever the final iteration of the final world religion will be.

Lee BrainardBible prophecy teachers are somewhat divided on whether Psalm 83 and Ezekiel 38–39 are two distinct events. I tend to put them as one big event, but with two different motives coming together. A confederation of the Russian-led juggernaut and the Arab nations will join to come against Israel. When the fire descends from the heavens to bring judgment on the Gog and Magog juggernaut, that is not only going to destroy that gathered army, but the Scriptures are very clear that the fire is also going to fall on those nations that dwell in Magog and live carelessly in the isles.


The result of this war is the decimation of the two most powerful forces in the Middle East outside of America and her Western allies, which would be Russia and its allies, fundamentalist Islam. This war is going to leave a vacuum in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as in Europe, which the revived Roman Empire will step into. So Islam’s militant force is going to be largely erased by the Gog-Magog War. Islam is going to be largely smashed by the fire that falls from the heavens.

As a result, a lot of Muslims are going to be awakened to the falsity of Islam and instead embrace the God of Israel, because the God of Israel had defended the Jewish people. But then whoever is not killed or converted is going to be molded into the one-world whore religion. Muslims will face the same choice that everybody else in the Tribulation will face. You can either lose your head, or you’re going to worship the Antichrist. Every religion on Earth is going to come down that road.

Mondo GonzalesI’ve encountered a lot of different perspectives, including everything from an Islamic Antichrist to Ezekiel 38, where God judges the invading hordes and fire from heaven incinerates the coastlines to subdue the Islamic religion.

When you think about the Harlot from the book of Revelation, it is a religious system. Islam is kind of this enigmatic topic, for where does it end up in the last days? It’s hard to believe that even if Islam was humbled by God before the start of the Tribulation, should Ezekiel 38 happen then, that Islam would still not become a part of the Harlot system during at least the first three and a half years, because the Harlot is going to become a worldwide religious system. But, by the midpoint of the Tribulation, as we know, the Harlot religion is going to be burned with fire so that there’s no room for any competition with the Antichrist’s desire to be worshipped alone.





Israel Already Sees The Next War Coming


The World Wants Calm - But Israel Already Sees The Next War Coming
PNW STAFF

There is a dangerous difference between peace and pause -- and Israel knows it.

That is the real story behind the latest ceasefire confusion involving the United States, Iran, and the growing pressure surrounding Israel's military campaign. On paper, the world is once again talking about de-escalation. Diplomats are using familiar words. Negotiators are floating frameworks. Leaders are speaking in the language of restraint. But beneath all of it lies a far more serious truth: Israel is not looking at this moment as the end of a war. It is looking at it as a countdown to the next one.

And that is why Lebanon matters so much.

As new ceasefire terms and contradictory interpretations swirl around Washington, Tehran, and regional intermediaries, one issue is quickly becoming unavoidable: Iran wants Israel stopped in Lebanon. Israel refuses. That disagreement is not a side issue. It may be the single clearest sign that this "ceasefire" is far less stable than many want to admit.

Because if Iran is willing to threaten the entire arrangement over Israeli strikes on Hezbollah, then it tells us something critical: Hezbollah is not a side asset to Iran. It is central to Iran's future war plans.

That is exactly why Israel is moving with such speed and intensity.

In one breathtaking wave of action, Israel reportedly struck more than 100 Hezbollah sites in just 10 minutes. That kind of operation is not only about military capability -- though it certainly demonstrates that. It is also about urgency. It is about a nation acting like it knows the diplomatic clock may soon run out. It is about a military that understands global pressure can close operational windows before strategic goals are finished.

Israel appears to be operating with a hard reality in mind: if the world forces a pause too early, Hezbollah survives to fight another day.

And for Israel, that is no longer acceptable.

For years, much of the international community treated Hezbollah's presence on Israel's northern border as a manageable problem. Rockets were stockpiled. Tunnels were dug. command centers expanded. Precision missile projects advanced. Iranian influence deepened. Yet the expectation was that Israel should simply absorb the threat, deter it, and hope that another full-scale war could be postponed.

That "stability" was always an illusion.

What the world often called restraint, Israel increasingly saw as strategic decay -- a slow normalization of an enemy army sitting on its border under the protection of diplomatic ambiguity and international hesitation.

That is over now.


Israel is not going back to the old arrangement where Hezbollah builds, arms, embeds, threatens, and waits. It is not going back to a border where Iranian-backed terror infrastructure is tolerated as long as it doesn't explode all at once. The old status quo was not peace. It was a loaded gun left on the table.

And after everything that has unfolded in this region, Israel clearly believes that leaving that gun there again would be suicidal.

This is where many outside observers still miss the bigger picture. Hezbollah matters to Iran not just because it is useful in the present, but because it is essential to the future.

Iran has long relied on layers of proxy power to project force beyond its borders. Hezbollah is perhaps the most important of all of them. It is not merely a militia. It is not simply a regional ally. It is a forward operating arm of Iranian strategy -- one that allows Tehran to pressure Israel, threaten escalation, surround its enemies, and maintain a second battlefield without directly exposing itself first.

In plain terms, Hezbollah is one of Iran's insurance policies against Israel

That matters even more now.

If Iran's nuclear ambitions have been significantly disrupted or delayed, then Tehran's need for its proxy network only increases. If Iran cannot move toward its long-term strategic goals as quickly through nuclear leverage, it will need missiles, militias, terror infrastructure, and regional alliances all the more.

That means Hezbollah becomes even more valuable.

This is the part many in the West still seem reluctant to say out loud: if Iran cannot get the bomb when it wants it, it will need its terror network for the next attempt at regional domination. And if that day comes, Hezbollah will not just be a supporting actor. It will likely be one of the lead weapons.

That is why Iran is so desperate to preserve it.

And that is why any attempt to force Israel to stop short in Lebanon carries enormous consequences.

If Israel is pressured into halting its campaign before Hezbollah is meaningfully dismantled, the result will not be peace. It will be regeneration. Hezbollah will regroup. It will rebuild logistics. It will restore command channels. It will replenish positions. It will once again disappear into civilian infrastructure, political complexity, and international excuses -- only to emerge later stronger, more disciplined, and even more dangerous.

That is not a theory. That is the pattern.

This is what makes the current moment so consequential. The world wants calm because calm feels morally clean. Calm sounds responsible. Calm polls well. Calm lowers oil panic and diplomatic stress. Calm allows leaders to tell their people the crisis is under control.

But calm without resolution can be a trap.

And Israel knows it.


Israel is acting like a nation that believes it may have one of its last real opportunities to fundamentally alter the military map on its northern front. It is acting like a country that understands something many outside powers do not: you do not defeat long-term threats by preserving them for future negotiations.

You remove them.

That may sound harsh to foreign ears. It may sound escalatory to Western analysts and deeply uncomfortable to governments eager to avoid a wider regional war. But Israel's calculation is rooted in a brutally simple question: If Hezbollah survives this moment intact enough to rearm, what exactly has been solved?

Nothing meaningful.

Only delayed.

And that is the heart of the problem with so many ceasefire discussions in the Middle East. They are often built around the assumption that time itself is healing. But time is not always healing. Sometimes time is what your enemy uses to reload.

Iran understands that.

Israel understands that too.


And that may be why this moment feels so combustible. The United States may be trying to carve out a diplomatic lane. Gulf states may be calculating what comes next. Iran may be trying to preserve room to negotiate, regroup, and survive. But Israel is staring at something far more immediate and existential: the possibility that the world is once again trying to freeze a conflict before the root danger has been removed.

That is why this is not simply about Lebanon. And it is not just about Hezbollah.

It is about whether the world is willing to admit that Iran's ambitions did not begin and end with uranium.

Iran's regional strategy has always depended on more than one tool. Nuclear leverage is one arm of the threat. Proxy warfare is the other. If one is damaged, the other becomes even more important. And if the international community chooses to protect the proxy arm in the name of "stability," then it may be preserving the very mechanism through which the next war will be launched.

That is what Israel sees.

While others see a pause, Israel sees preparation.

While others see de-escalation, Israel sees unfinished danger.

While the world wants calm, Israel already sees the next war coming.

And after everything it has learned, it is increasingly clear that it has no intention of waiting politely for that war to arrive.