The following is my personal opinion. I am not claiming that God gave me a vision, spoke to me in an audible voice, or revealed a new prophecy. I may be wrong. This is how I presently see world events unfolding in relation to the prophecies already recorded in the Word of God. Scripture—not my opinion—must remain our final authority.
Many prophecy teachers believe the United States can be found in Bible prophecy. Over the years, they have tried to identify America as the eagle in Revelation, one of the young lions of Tarshish, the second beast of Revelation 13, or even Mystery Babylon. I have studied these arguments, but I cannot find a passage that clearly names or unmistakably describes the United States, which may raise questions about biblical clarity on this point.
That does not mean America will escape the events of the last days. It simply means America does not appear to be the center of the prophetic account. The center of Bible prophecy is the Middle East—Jerusalem, Israel, Babylon, Persia, Egypt, Syria, Asia Minor, and the nations surrounding them. We can trust that God's plan remains in His control, encouraging believers to rely on His sovereignty.
The Lord did not write prophecy from an American point of view. America may be important in our present world, but that does not mean it must occupy the leading position in God’s prophetic plan.
America Will Not Always Be the Dominant Power
In my opinion, the United States will eventually lose much of its influence in the Middle East. I cannot prove exactly when or how this will happen, but no earthly empire remains dominant forever, reminding us to trust God's timing and sovereignty over prophetic fulfillment.
Great Britain once possessed tremendous influence throughout the Middle East. That influence eventually declined. Other empires have come and gone, and there is no biblical promise that American power will continue indefinitely.
“The LORD bringeth the counsel of the heathen to nought: he maketh the devices of the people of none effect.”
—Psalm 33:10, KJV
America has trusted greatly in its military power, wealth, political alliances, and advanced weapons. Yet Scripture reminds us: "There is no king saved by the multitude of an host: a mighty man is not delivered by much strength." This should encourage believers to place their trust in God's power, not earthly security.
“There is no king saved by the multitude of an host: a mighty man is not delivered by much strength.”
—Psalm 33:16, KJV
A nation can win battles and still lose its influence. It can possess powerful weapons while losing the confidence of its allies, the support of its own people, and the economic strength necessary to maintain its position.
The War With Iran May Become a Turning Point
Again, this is my opinion and not a word from the Lord: I believe the war with Iran may become the event that greatly weakens—or possibly removes—American influence from the Middle East.
That does not necessarily mean Iran will defeat or conquer America. A prolonged war can exhaust a nation without destroying it. It can drain its finances, stretch its military resources, divide its people, and turn former allies against it.
War with Iran could bring attacks against American bases, disruption of oil supplies, economic hardship, and increasing hostility toward the United States. Regional governments may begin seeking security through other alliances rather than depending upon Washington.
America could win many individual battles and still lose its strategic position. Military victory and lasting influence are not always the same thing.
“Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the LORD our God.”
—Psalm 20:7, KJV
The modern chariot may be a fighter jet, missile, aircraft carrier, or drone, but the spiritual lesson remains the same. Weapons cannot provide permanent security when leaders refuse to deal with the pride, hatred, and injustice that keep producing war.
The American Relationship With Israel May Change
I also believe the relationship between the United States and Israel will eventually change. Their present relationship is a political and military partnership. It is not an everlasting covenant established by God, and Scripture never promises that America will always finance, arm, or defend Israel. We can trust that God's purposes will unfold as He intends, even if circumstances shift.
That relationship could weaken because of economic pressure, political changes, disagreements over war, the loss of public support, or actions taken by Israel without American approval. It might not end in one dramatic moment. It could gradually decline until American assistance no longer determines what happens in the region.
America may also continue trying to help Israel, but it may reach a point where its power is no longer sufficient. The United States does not have to disappear completely for this to happen. It only has to become unable or unwilling to prevent the crisis described in prophecy.
When Human Help Is Not Enough
Zechariah describes Jerusalem facing an overwhelming attack:
“For I will gather all nations against Jerusalem to battle; and the city shall be taken...”
—Zechariah 14:2, KJV
The situation becomes so desperate that no ordinary military or political solution can deliver Jerusalem. Then Scripture declares:
“Then shall the LORD go forth, and fight against those nations, as when he fought in the day of battle.”
—Zechariah 14:3, KJV
Notice who receives the glory. Zechariah does not say the United States will save Jerusalem. He does not say Russia, Europe, or the United Nations will negotiate a settlement. He says the Lord will go forth.
Zechariah also records:
“And it shall come to pass in that day, that I will seek to destroy all the nations that come against Jerusalem.”
—Zechariah 12:9, KJV
I believe Israel may eventually face a crisis so overwhelming that no earthly government will be capable of saving it. Israel may appear to be near the end of its existence as a nation. At that moment, its deliverance will not come because America possesses superior weapons. It will come from the Lord.
I want to be careful here. The Bible does not use the exact words that modern Israel will be seconds away from ceasing to exist. That is how I understand the severity of the situation described by Zechariah. We should never turn our interpretation into doctrine or claim that Scripture says more than it actually says.
The Middle East Remains the Prophetic Center
When we read Daniel, Ezekiel, Zechariah, and Revelation, the geographical focus repeatedly returns to Jerusalem and the surrounding nations. Persia points toward Iran. Babylon lies in modern Iraq. The Euphrates flows through Turkey, Syria, and Iraq. The seven churches of Revelation were located in what is now Turkey.
This is why I have difficulty accepting prophecy systems that make America, modern Russia, or the European Union the center of everything. These nations may participate in future events, but the biblical story remains centered upon the Middle East.
The consequences, however, will reach the entire world:
“For they are the spirits of devils, working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world...”
—Revelation 16:14, KJV
America need not be named separately to suffer the economic, military, and spiritual consequences of those events.
I Am Not Setting a Date
I am not sure when these will happen. I am not setting a date. I am not saying every headline is the fulfillment of a particular verse. I have lived long enough to see prophecy teachers make confident predictions that proved to be wrong.
I may also be wrong about the war with Iran. It may not be the final turning point. It could be one stage in a much longer process. America might temporarily increase its influence before eventually losing it. We are looking through a glass darkly, and humility is necessary.
“For now we see through a glass, darkly...”
—1 Corinthians 13:12, KJV
My opinion must remain an opinion. If events prove me wrong, the Word of God will still be true. I must be willing to correct my understanding rather than twist Scripture to preserve my prediction.
The Final Deliverance Belongs to the Lord
The central truth is not the fall of America, the strength of Iran, or the future of any earthly alliance. The central truth is that salvation belongs to the Lord.
“Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the LORD of hosts.”
—Zechariah 4:6, KJV
God may use nations and human instruments, just as He used Cyrus to release the Jewish captives. But whatever means He chooses, no president, prime minister, army, or political alliance will be able to take the glory that belongs to Him.
As I presently understand events, America will gradually lose its ability to control the Middle East. The war with Iran may accelerate that decline. The American-Israeli relationship may weaken or become ineffective. Israel will eventually face a danger beyond the ability of human powers to resolve, and the Lord Himself will intervene.
That is my opinion. It is not a vision. It is not a voice from Heaven. It is not a new revelation. It is simply my effort to understand how present events may be preparing the way for prophecies God gave long ago.
The purpose of prophecy is not to make us proud because we believe we have solved every mystery. It is to awaken us, humble us, and prepare our souls.
“Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.”
—Matthew 24:42, KJV
Nations will rise, and nations will fall. Alliances will change. Armies will fail. Political leaders will pass from the scene. But Jesus Christ will remain King of kings and Lord of lords.
Our hope must not rest in America, Israel, military strength, or political power. Our hope must rest in the Lord.