Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Jesuit, the Prophecy Charts, and the Questions That Changed My Thinking

There comes a time in a man’s life when he must stop simply repeating what he has been told and start opening his Bible with honest questions.

I grew up around prophecy preaching. I heard the charts. I heard the timelines. I heard about the rebuilt temple, the one-world government, the future Antichrist, and a sudden secret rapture that could happen at any second.

And like many folks sitting on church pews across America, I accepted it because trusted men taught it.

But over the years, something started troubling my spirit.

The more I studied Scripture, the more I began asking myself:

“Where did all these teachings come from?”

Not where they became popular.

Not who wrote the bestselling books.

Not who preached them on television.

But where did these ideas actually begin?

That search led me far beyond modern prophecy conferences and Bible charts. It led me back hundreds of years to a Jesuit priest named Francisco Ribera.

Now, before somebody gets upset, let me say this plainly:

I am not saying every Christian who believes in futurism is deceived. Many godly men believe it sincerely. I have friends who hold that position, and I respect them.

But history matters.

Origins matter.

And truth should never fear examination.

The Protestant Reformers Believed Antichrist Was Already at Work

Most Christians today do not realize that the early Protestant Reformers were nearly united in one belief:

They saw the Antichrist not as one future man only, but as a corrupt religious system already operating in the world.

Men like Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Knox, and many others believed the prophecies of Daniel and Revelation unfolded progressively throughout history.

That view became known as the historicist interpretation.

To them, prophecy was not disconnected from church history.

It was woven through it.

They believed the “mystery of iniquity” Paul warned about was already working.

2 Thessalonians 2:7 (KJV)

“For the mystery of iniquity doth already work…”

That is important.

Paul did not say evil would only appear at the very end.

He said it was already moving in his own day.

Enter Francisco Ribera

During the Counter-Reformation, the Roman Catholic Church faced enormous pressure from Protestant accusations.

Into that battle stepped Ribera.

Ribera wrote a commentary on Revelation around 1590 that proposed something radically different from the historic Protestant position.

He taught that most of Revelation was still future.

According to Ribera:

  • Antichrist would be one future individual
  • The temple in Jerusalem would be rebuilt
  • The Jews would again become central in end-time prophecy
  • A short tribulation would occur near the end of the world
  • Revelation after chapter 4 mostly belonged to the future

Sound familiar?

Brother, it ought to.

Because much of modern prophecy teaching in America follows that same general framework.

Now, let me be careful here.

John Nelson Darby later systematized modern dispensationalism itself in the 1800s. Darby developed the separation between Israel and the Church, the pre-tribulation rapture teaching, and the dispensational structure many evangelicals know today.

But the prophetic foundation of futurism had already been laid centuries earlier by Ribera.

That is simply history.

How It Spread Across America

For years, Ribera’s ideas remained mostly inside Catholic scholarship.

Then came Darby.

Then came the prophecy conferences.

Then came the Scofield Reference Bible.

And brother, when Scofield’s notes got printed beside the Scripture text itself, generations of Christians began reading interpretation as though it were part of the inspired text.

Bible institutes taught it.

Seminaries spread it.

Radio preachers proclaimed it.

Television evangelists popularized it.

Before long, millions of Christians believed:

  • The Church would disappear before tribulation,
  • prophecy belonged mostly to the future,
  • And Antichrist would arise only at the very end.

Now again, I am not attacking people.

I am simply asking:

“How did we get here?”

The Questions That Changed My Thinking

Years ago, I asked a prophecy teacher a simple question.

I said,

“If the dead in Christ rise at the last trump, how can the rapture happen before the trump sounds?”

He looked at me and said,

“You are young and do not understand the ways of God.”

But that answer did not satisfy me.

Because Scripture tells us to:

1 Thessalonians 5:21 (KJV)

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.”

Friend, asking honest questions is not rebellion.

It is a responsibility.

I began searching the Scriptures for myself.

And the more I studied, the more I became convinced that much of modern prophecy teaching depends upon assumptions that must be inserted into the text rather than plainly drawn from it.

I could no longer ignore passages like:

Matthew 24:29–30 (KJV)

“Immediately after the tribulation of those days… shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven…”

Not before tribulation.

After.

I saw believers throughout Scripture enduring hardship, persecution, trial, and suffering.

The early Church did not preach escape.

They preached endurance.

Revelation 14:12 (KJV)

“Here is the patience of the saints…”

The Danger of Prophecy Without Preparation

One of my concerns today is this:

Many Christians have become so focused on escaping tribulation that they are unprepared spiritually to endure it.

I have heard people say:

“We won’t be here.”

“We don’t need to worry.”

“The Lord will take us out before things get bad.”

Brother, I hope they are right.

But what if they are not?

What happens if persecution comes?

What happens if hardship increases?

What happens if believers must stand faithful under pressure?

Will today’s Church endure?

Or have we raised generations expecting rescue before resistance?

The Bible repeatedly teaches perseverance.

Jesus said:

Matthew 24:13 (KJV)

“But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.”

Salvation Matters More Than Charts

Now let me say this before I close.

I do not believe a man is saved or lost based solely on whether he is a futurist, historicist, pre-tribulationist, post-tribulationist, or amillennialist.

Good men disagree.

But I do believe we should be honest about history.

Honest about Scripture.

And honest enough to admit that some teachings many consider ancient are actually relatively modern in popularity.

At the end of the day, the greatest issue is not:

“When does Jesus come?”

The greatest issue is:

“Will we be faithful when He does?”

Jesus is coming again.

Of that I have no doubt.

But instead of spending all our time arguing over prophecy charts, maybe we ought to spend more time:

  • preaching repentance,
  • calling sinners to Christ,
  • strengthening the Church,
  • and preparing believers to endure whatever lies ahead.

Whether the road becomes easy or hard, one truth remains certain:

Jesus Christ is still King.

And faithful saints must remain faithful until the very end. 

Friday, May 15, 2026

Why I Am a Historicist A Country Preacher’s Thoughts on Prophecy, Readiness, and the Return of Christ

 I am not a prophecy expert. I do not claim to have all the answers concerning the end times. There are godly men far more educated than I am who hold different views on prophecy. But after many years of studying the Scriptures, reading church history, and asking hard questions, I have become convinced that I lean toward the historicist understanding of prophecy.

For many years, I accepted what I had been taught about the end times. I listened to prophecy teachers explain charts, timelines, secret raptures, future kingdoms, and prophetic systems that often seemed very complicated. Much of it was presented with certainty, as though every detail had already been settled by God Himself.

Then one day, during a discussion with a prophecy teacher, I asked a simple question.

I asked, “When are the dead in Christ raised?”

The answer came quickly:

“At the last trump.”

That answer came from Scripture:

“In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible…” — 1 Corinthians 15:52 (KJV)

So I asked another question:

“How can the rapture take place before the trumpet sounds if the resurrection happens at the last trump? Does Christ return once or twice?”

The answer I received was not really an answer at all.

I was told:

“You are young and do not understand the ways of God.”

That moment changed me.

Not because I thought I knew more than the teacher, but because I realized I needed to stop accepting doctrines simply because respected men taught them. I needed to search the Scriptures for myself.

The Bereans were praised because they:

“searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” — Acts 17:11 (KJV)

From that point on, I began questioning everything I had been taught about prophecy. Not to rebel against truth, but to seek truth honestly.

The more I studied, the more I struggled with many modern dispensational teachings. It seemed to me that too many assumptions had to be inserted into the text to make the system work:

  • multiple phases of Christ’s return,
  • separated resurrections,
  • secret events not plainly stated,
  • gaps inserted into timelines,
  • and distinctions that often seemed implied rather than directly taught.

I also struggled with the teaching of a future earthly millennium after Christ returns.

If Christ has returned in glory…

If the saints have resurrected bodies…

If Satan is bound…

If righteousness fills the earth…

Then how can there still be rebellion, deception, sin, and death?

Who is Satan deceiving if the saints are glorified and sealed?

Where does continued rebellion come from if Christ Himself is visibly reigning?

These were not rebellious questions. They were honest questions.

The historicist view made more sense to me because it sees prophecy unfolding progressively through history in a straight line. Instead of waiting for every prophecy to appear in the future suddenly, it recognizes that much of prophecy has already been unfolding before our eyes over the centuries.

I believe the churches in Revelation represent more than just seven local congregations. I believe they also reveal conditions and periods within church history.

For example, many historicists viewed the church of Philadelphia as representing a great missionary era when the Gospel spread powerfully throughout the world.

Jesus said:

“I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it.” — Revelation 3:8 (KJV)

History shows us there truly was a mighty missionary movement that carried the Gospel across nations.

Then came the Laodicean spirit:

  • lukewarmness,
  • compromise,
  • materialism,
  • pride,
  • and spiritual blindness.

Does that not describe much of modern Christianity?

“Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing…” — Revelation 3:17 (KJV)

Today, many churches are filled with activity but lacking conviction. We have religion without repentance, crowds without brokenness, and sermons without power.

I believe deception has entered the church in many ways:

  • replacing holiness with entertainment,
  • replacing conviction with comfort,
  • replacing endurance with escape,
  • and replacing preparation with false security.

Now let me say this clearly.

I do not hate those who disagree with me. Many dispensational believers sincerely love the Lord and faithfully preach salvation. They are my brothers and sisters in Christ if they truly know Him.

But I also believe Christians should not fear asking hard questions.

God did not call us to follow men unthinkingly.

He called us to follow Christ.

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:21 (KJV)

In the end, I may be wrong about some details of prophecy. I admit that humbly. But I would rather live prepared for suffering, persecution, deception, and endurance than assume I will escape every trial ahead.

If I am wrong, I am still prepared spiritually.

But if I am right, then many believers are dangerously unprepared for what may come upon the earth.

Still, I have learned this:

The most important issue is not winning prophetic arguments.

The most important issue is being ready for the return of Christ.

Salvation is the message.

Holiness is the message.

Repentance is the message.

Faithfulness is the message.

Jesus is coming again.

That truth is certain.

And when He comes, I want to be found faithful.

“Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so doing.” — Matthew 24:46 (KJV)

Friend, whether you are premillennial, amillennial, postmillennial, historicist, or dispensational, one truth remains:

Be ready.

Walk with God.

Stay faithful.

Keep oil in your lamp.

And never let the debates of prophecy distract you from the Gospel of Jesus Christ.