Friday, June 12, 2026

Turkey's Ottoman Dreams And Ezekiel's Warning


PNW STAFF



Turkey's Interior Minister Mustafa Çiftçi openly declared his hope that one day Turkey would witness the "liberation of Jerusalem" just as it had supposedly witnessed the "liberation" of Damascus, Aleppo, and Karabakh. He even expressed a desire to become governor of Jerusalem for a day, declaring that lands once controlled by the Ottoman Empire would one day return to Turkish sovereignty.

For Israelis, these comments were not viewed as harmless political theater. They were interpreted as a direct challenge to Israel's sovereignty and a revival of old Ottoman ambitions.

Israel's response was swift and sharp.

Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar reminded Turkey that "the corrupt Ottoman Empire is gone. Forever."


Defense Minister Israel Katz went even further, declaring that Jerusalem is not Constantinople and that Israel is not some crumbling medieval kingdom waiting to be conquered. Jerusalem, he emphasized, has been the capital of the Jewish people for 3,000 years and will remain Israel's capital.

Behind the exchange lies a much larger geopolitical story.

For years, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has increasingly embraced a neo-Ottoman vision of Turkey's role in the Middle East. While modern Turkey was founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as a secular republic following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, Erdoğan has steadily moved the nation back toward Islamic nationalism.

Many analysts believe Erdoğan sees Turkey not merely as a regional power but as the natural leader of the Sunni Muslim world.

That helps explain Turkey's growing involvement in Syria, Libya, Azerbaijan, Lebanon, and Gaza.

It also helps explain why Jerusalem occupies such an important place in Turkish political rhetoric.

For nearly 400 years, from 1516 until 1917, Jerusalem was under Ottoman control. The city's loss remains a symbolic wound for many Islamists who view the collapse of the Ottoman Empire as one of the great tragedies of Islamic history.

Today, some Turkish politicians openly speak as though history can be reversed.

But rhetoric about Jerusalem is only one part of the story.

This week Erdoğan also warned that Israeli military actions in Syria and Lebanon threaten Turkey itself. He declared that Turkey's security extends beyond its own borders into Aleppo, Damascus, and Beirut. He further warned that Turkey would respond forcefully if Turkish or Turkish-Cypriot interests were threatened.


Such statements reveal a growing willingness by Ankara to project military and political influence far beyond its borders.

At the same time, Israel increasingly views Turkey's support for Hamas and its close relationship with Islamist movements across the region as a direct threat.

The result is a rapidly deteriorating relationship between two of the most powerful militaries in the Middle East.

For students of Bible prophecy, however, these developments carry an additional layer of significance.

The Bible foretells a future coalition of nations that will one day march against Israel.

Ezekiel 38 describes an alliance led by "Gog of the land of Magog" that includes Persia, Gomer, and Beth Togarmah.

Most prophecy scholars identify Persia as modern Iran.

The names Gomer and Beth Togarmah have long been associated with regions that correspond largely to modern-day Turkey.

This is one of the reasons many prophecy watchers have paid such close attention to Turkey's transformation over the past two decades.

For much of the twentieth century, Turkey was one of Israel's strongest regional partners. It was secular, Western-oriented, and even maintained military cooperation with the Jewish state.

Yet today's Turkey looks very different.

Under Erdoğan, anti-Israel rhetoric has become commonplace. Turkish leaders regularly accuse Israel of aggression while simultaneously defending Hamas and other Islamist causes. The relationship has shifted from partnership to hostility.

Meanwhile, Iran and Turkey increasingly find themselves aligned on key regional issues despite their historic rivalries.

What is becoming increasingly clear, however, is that Turkey's trajectory is moving away from the secular vision of Atatürk and toward a far more assertive Islamic identity.

That shift has profound implications for the Middle East.

It also serves as a reminder that the geopolitical landscape surrounding Israel continues to evolve in ways that many Bible students find strikingly familiar.

The headlines coming out of Ankara and Jerusalem this week may seem like another diplomatic spat. But beneath the rhetoric lies a deeper struggle over history, sovereignty, religion, and regional power.

And for those watching the prophetic stage, Turkey's increasingly hostile posture toward Israel is one development that cannot be easily dismissed.

The Ottoman Empire may never return. But the alliances foretold by Ezekiel appear to be moving closer into focus with each passing year.


The Child Safety Trojan Horse: Digital IDs Are Coming


The Child Safety Trojan Horse: Digital IDs Are Coming
PNW STAFF


Around the world, governments are increasingly moving to restrict children's access to social media, pornography, and other online content. On the surface, the goal seems noble. Most parents agree that children should not have unrestricted access to explicit material, predatory online communities, or social media platforms that have been linked to anxiety, depression, and other mental health concerns.

The problem is not necessarily the goal.

The problem is the method.

What is unfolding across Britain, Canada, Australia, France, and other nations may ultimately become one of the most significant battles over privacy, free speech, and digital freedom in the coming decade.

Because there is one unavoidable reality: to verify someone's age online, you must first verify who they are.

And that is where the danger begins.

Britain's Labour government recently announced plans to force major technology companies such as Apple and Google to implement age verification systems designed to prevent children from accessing pornography and even from taking or sharing nude photographs. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has argued that technology companies already possess the tools necessary to accomplish this and should be required to deploy them.

At first glance, many parents will applaud the effort.

Who wants children exposed to pornography?

Who wants minors sending explicit images?

Who wants online predators targeting vulnerable teenagers?

These are legitimate concerns.

Yet critics warn that the solution being proposed could require something unprecedented: population-wide identity verification to access large portions of the internet.


Civil liberties groups have sounded the alarm that age verification cannot function without collecting some form of identifying information. Whether it is a government-issued ID, facial recognition scan, biometric age estimation, passport verification, driver's license confirmation, or digital identity credential, the end result is largely the same.

The internet begins to lose its anonymity.

Instead of simply visiting a website, citizens may increasingly be required to prove who they are before being allowed access.

Supporters insist that such systems would only confirm age and would not permanently store identities.

History suggests otherwise.

Governments rarely surrender powers once they obtain them.

Throughout history, emergency powers, surveillance authorities, and security measures introduced for one purpose often expand into entirely different areas over time. What begins as child protection can quickly become misinformation monitoring. What begins as pornography restrictions can evolve into content restrictions. What begins as age verification can become identity verification for nearly everything online.

This phenomenon is often referred to as "mission creep."

And there are already signs of it emerging.

Britain's Online Safety framework not only contemplates age verification but also includes provisions that could require platforms to scan private communications for prohibited material. Critics argue that such measures threaten end-to-end encryption, one of the last remaining tools protecting private communications from government surveillance.

Signal, one of the world's leading encrypted messaging platforms, has repeatedly warned that creating government-approved backdoors into encrypted systems is technically impossible without creating vulnerabilities that can eventually be exploited by hackers, criminals, foreign governments, or malicious actors.



The fundamental problem is simple.

There is no such thing as a surveillance system that only the "good guys" can access.

Every database becomes a target.

Every digital credential becomes valuable.

Every identity system eventually creates opportunities for abuse.

Canada is now moving in a similar direction.

The proposed Safe Social Media Act would prohibit social media accounts for children under 16 while creating a new Digital Safety Commission tasked with overseeing compliance. Age verification would become a central component of enforcement.

Australia has already moved aggressively in this direction, reporting millions of accounts removed following its under-16 social media ban.

France, Spain, Denmark, South Korea, Brazil, Indonesia, Thailand, and other nations are considering similar restrictions.

Viewed individually, each proposal may appear reasonable.

Viewed collectively, however, they reveal something much larger.

A global framework is emerging in which access to information increasingly requires proof of identity.


Christians should pay particular attention to these developments.

The Bible repeatedly warns about the dangers of centralized systems of control. While age verification laws are not the fulfillment of prophecy, they contribute to a broader technological environment where access, participation, commerce, and information become increasingly dependent upon digital credentials and government-approved verification systems.

The greatest threats to freedom rarely arrive announcing themselves as threats.

They usually arrive carrying promises of security.




Jack Hibbs: The Rapture of the Church


Jack Hibbs On The Rapture
(Video)


The rapture of the Church is a heavily debated topic. Pastor Jack breaks down how he ended up with the current rapture view he has.

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