Over the years, I have come to hold an opinion about Bible prophecy that differs from the view taught by many dispensational teachers. I do not present this as settled doctrine or claim that every Christian should accept it. I ask that you consider the Scriptures and compare them with the events unfolding before our eyes.
My opinion is that modern Turkey will become the leading political power that unites much of the Muslim world against Israel, bringing about the final conflict described by the prophets. I believe the Lord Himself—not the military strength of Israel nor the intervention of another nation—will come to the aid of a devastated Israel and establish His kingdom.
My reasoning begins in the book of Daniel.
Daniel saw the great image composed of gold, silver, brass, iron, and, finally, feet and ten toes, composed of iron mixed with clay (Daniel 2). Later, in Daniel 7, he saw those same world empires represented as beasts. The beasts represented kingdoms and governments that would rise one after another.
When John wrote the book of Revelation centuries later, he described a beast that combined the characteristics of Daniel's lion, bear, and leopard (Revelation 13:2). To me, this indicates that the final world empire possesses the characteristics of those earlier kingdoms.
Daniel and John could not have written the word "Islam," because Islam did not exist until centuries after their deaths. God revealed visions through symbols, not through modern political or religious names. Just as Daniel never used the words "Greece" or "Rome" in describing every detail of the future, John described what he saw without identifying future movements by the names they would later receive.
As I compare Scripture with today's world, I see modern Turkey standing at the crossroads of biblical prophecy. The seven churches of Revelation were located in what is now Turkey. The message to Pergamos speaks of "Satan's seat" (Revelation 2:13). The territory once controlled by successive world empires eventually became the center of the Ottoman Empire, which ruled much of the Middle East for centuries.
I also see significance in Daniel's feet and ten toes. The kingdom is partly strong and partly weak. Iron and clay exist together, yet they do not truly adhere to one another.
In my opinion, this pictures a divided coalition rather than a unified empire. I believe the divisions within the Muslim world, particularly between Sunni and Shia Islam, illustrate this principle. They share many common objectives, yet they have never achieved lasting unity. They stand together in some matters while remaining deeply divided in others. Like the iron and clay, they exist together but "shall not cleave one to another."
From this understanding, I believe Turkey could emerge as the political leader of a final coalition that unites much of the Muslim world against Israel. Such a conclusion does not follow from the traditional dispensational interpretation, which looks for a revived Roman Empire centered in Europe. Instead, I believe the center of the final conflict may arise from the lands that once formed the eastern portion of the old empires described by Daniel.
If this understanding is correct, the last great battle will not end because Israel possesses greater military strength. It will end because God Himself intervenes on behalf of His covenant purposes. The prophets repeatedly declare that when Israel has exhausted its own strength, the Lord will fight for His people and establish the reign of His Messiah.
Whether my interpretation proves correct or not, my confidence does not rest in my ability to identify every prophetic detail. My confidence rests in the certainty that Jesus Christ will return exactly as the Scriptures declare. Until that day, our responsibility is to remain faithful to His Word, to walk in holiness, and to keep our eyes fixed upon the King who is coming again.