The King of the North
The end of Daniel 11 describes a war between three characters—the king of the south, the king of the north, and the Antichrist, who’s attacked by the other two.Continue Reading
The end of Daniel 11 describes a war between three characters—the king of the south, the king of the north, and the Antichrist, who’s attacked by the other two.Continue Reading
The war of Gog and Magog ends with Armageddon. It’s not a precursor to Armageddon, and the Antichrist doesn’t appear after Gog is defeated. Gog is the Antichrist, and his war includes Armageddon.Continue Reading
The “uttermost north,” Hebrew yarkete tsaphon, refers to a specific mountain, Mount Zaphon, famous for being sacred to the storm-god, Baal. And we know exactly where it is.Continue Reading
When Israel captured the Temple Mount in 1967, the geopolitical fallout of taking control of the site was considered so dangerous that Moshe Dayan ordered his troops to take down the Israeli flag his paratroopers had raised over the mount.Continue Reading
The supernatural war is for control of Zion. Consider: While Mecca and Medina are the holiest sites in Islam, they play virtually no role in Muslim prophecies of the end times.Continue Reading
The Mahdi, Islam’s messiah, was invented after Muhammad’s death in response to the Final Roman Emperor, who was created after Islam’s invasion of Christendom by an unnamed Christian cleric in northern Syria. In other words, it’s a false prophecy inspired by a false prophecy.Continue Reading
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