Saturday, July 18, 2026

America and the Unfolding of End-Time Prophecy

 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.

Friday, July 17, 2026

How the Pre-Tribulation Rapture Teaching Developed


The following is my personal opinion based upon my study of Scripture and history. I do not present it as doctrine, nor do I insist that everyone must agree with me.

For many years, I have studied the different teachings concerning the return of Jesus Christ. I have listened to good and sincere people defend the pre-tribulation rapture, while others have rejected it. I have reached certain conclusions, but I hold those conclusions with humility. I have been wrong before, and I am still searching for truth.

The older I get, the less interested I am in defending a theological system simply because it is popular. My responsibility is not to defend Darby, Scofield, a denomination, or a prophecy teacher. My responsibility is to search the Scriptures.

The Bible tells us:

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

A Teaching That Developed Over Time

It is my opinion that modern dispensationalism and the pre-tribulation rapture did not appear all at once as a complete system of doctrine. It developed gradually through the ideas and writings of several individuals.

Manuel de Lacunza, an eighteenth-century Jesuit priest, wrote under the name “Juan Josafat Ben-Ezra.” His writings helped revive a futurist interpretation of Bible prophecy. Edward Irving later translated Lacunza’s work into English, bringing those prophetic ideas before a larger audience in Great Britain.

In 1830, a young Scottish woman named Margaret MacDonald gave what she believed to be a spiritual utterance concerning the coming of the Lord. Robert Norton later preserved and published her account. Some believe her words contained the beginning of a secret or selective rapture teaching. Others argue that she expected Christians to pass through the trial of Antichrist.

Her words are not clear enough to settle the matter beyond question. Therefore, I cannot honestly say that Margaret MacDonald unquestionably invented the pre-tribulation rapture. I can only say that her experience became part of the prophetic discussions taking place during that period.

The Influence of John Nelson Darby

John Nelson Darby became the leading figure in organizing these developing ideas into a theological system. He emphasized a sharp separation between Israel and the Church and taught that the Church would be removed before the final period of tribulation and divine judgment.

Darby traveled widely, preached his views, and influenced many Bible teachers. His system eventually became known as dispensationalism.

I cannot prove that Darby stole his doctrine from Margaret MacDonald. Neither can I prove that he deliberately hid its source. Those accusations go beyond what the available evidence can establish.

What I can say is that Darby helped shape and spread the modern form of the doctrine. Ideas that had previously been scattered and incomplete became organized into a prophetic system.

That system was later carried forward by C. I. Scofield.

The Power of the Scofield Reference Bible

The Scofield Reference Bible, first published in 1909, became one of the primary vehicles through which dispensationalism entered American evangelical churches.

Scofield placed his study notes on the same pages as the King James Bible. For many readers, the biblical text appeared at the top of the page while Scofield’s explanation appeared underneath it. Over time, some people began accepting the notes almost as readily as they accepted the Scripture.

I remember how influential the Scofield Bible once was. If Scofield’s note said a passage referred to Israel, the Church, the tribulation, or the rapture, many accepted that explanation without further question.

But Scofield’s notes were not inspired Scripture. They represented one man’s interpretation of Scripture.

There is nothing wrong with using a study Bible. Commentaries, dictionaries, teachers, and study notes can be helpful. However, we must never forget the difference between the Word of God and the words printed beneath it.

The Bible warns us:

“To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.”
—Isaiah 8:20, KJV

I Do Not Believe There Was One Great Conspiracy

Some have claimed that Darby, Scofield, and others deliberately conspired to hide the Irvingite or MacDonald origin of the pre-tribulation rapture.

I am not prepared to make that charge.

The historical evidence does not prove that Darby and Scofield worked together to conceal the doctrine’s origin. Darby died in 1882, long before the publication of the Scofield Reference Bible in 1909. Scofield certainly inherited ideas associated with Darby and the Brethren movement, but that does not prove a deliberate conspiracy.

We must be careful not to replace one questionable theory with another.

My concern is not whether Darby and Scofield secretly plotted together. My concern is whether the system they helped promote agrees with the plain teaching of Scripture.

The Origin Does Not Settle the Doctrine

Even if it could be proven that Margaret MacDonald was the first person to describe a pre-tribulation rapture, that fact alone would not prove the teaching false. Likewise, even if Darby developed the doctrine entirely through his own study, that would not prove it true.

A doctrine must stand or fall upon the Word of God.

The Bereans were praised because they did not blindly accept even the preaching of the apostle Paul:

“These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.”
—Acts 17:11, KJV

If the Bereans searched the Scriptures to examine Paul’s preaching, surely we should search the Scriptures to examine the teachings of Darby, Scofield, and every modern prophecy teacher.

What Did Jesus Teach?

Jesus did not tell His followers that they would escape every period of suffering. He warned them that they would face persecution, deception, hatred, and tribulation.

“Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you: and ye shall be hated of all nations for my name’s sake.”
—Matthew 24:9, KJV

He also said:

“But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.”
—Matthew 24:13, KJV

Our Lord described His appearing in unmistakable language:

“For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.”
—Matthew 24:27, KJV

Then He placed the gathering of His elect after the tribulation:

“Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light…
“And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds.”
—Matthew 24:29, 31, KJV

I realize that dispensational teachers interpret these verses differently. They often say this passage concerns Israel rather than the Church. But that interpretation depends upon accepting the dispensational system before reading the passage.

That is where my concern begins.

Are we allowing Scripture to establish our system, or are we using our system to decide what Scripture is permitted to mean?

Prepared to Endure

The danger of the pre-tribulation rapture teaching is not merely an argument over dates and charts. My concern is that Christians may be taught to expect escape when Jesus told His followers to prepare to endure.

Jesus prayed:

“I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil.”
—John 17:15, KJV

God did not remove Noah from the earth; He carried him through the flood. God did not keep the three Hebrew children out of the furnace; He met them in the fire. God did not prevent Daniel from entering the lions’ den; He shut the mouths of the lions.

Sometimes God delivers us from trouble. At other times, He carries us through it.

Our faith must be strong enough for either one.

Search the Scriptures for Yourself

I am not asking anyone to exchange Scofield’s system for mine. I do not have a new prophetic chart to sell. I am not claiming that I have every detail figured out.

This is my opinion, not doctrine.

I believe the modern dispensational system developed over time. Lacunza, Irving, MacDonald, Norton, Darby, Scofield, and others all occupied places within that history. Darby organized the system, and the Scofield Reference Bible carried it into thousands of churches and millions of homes.

However, history cannot make the final decision. Scripture must make that decision.

Paul wrote:

“For now we see through a glass, darkly.”
—1 Corinthians 13:12, KJV

That verse ought to keep every prophecy teacher humble.

I may be wrong about some things. If future events prove one of my opinions incorrect, I will not attempt to change the Bible to protect my theory. I will return to the Word of God and continue searching for truth.

The important question is not whether we have Darby’s chart arranged correctly. The important question is whether our souls are ready to meet the Lord.

“Therefore be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh.”
—Matthew 24:44, KJV

Whether Christ comes before a time of trouble, during that trouble, or after it, the command remains the same: watch, pray, endure, and remain faithful.

Do not place your confidence in a chart. Do not rest your hope in a study note. Do not build your salvation upon the promise of escaping hardship.

Build your life upon Jesus Christ.

“Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.”

—Matthew 24:35, KJV 

The Beginning of Sorrows: Prepare Your Soul

As I look at the condition of the world today, I cannot help but believe that we are well into what Jesus called “the beginning of sorrows.” Everywhere we turn, we see war, violence, deception, hatred, famine, disease, persecution, and the steady loss of compassion for human life.

The world is not becoming more peaceful. Evil is spreading, violence is expanding, and governments increasingly speak of destroying entire nations as if they were moving pieces upon a game board. Children are killed and called collateral damage. Hospitals, schools, homes, bridges, power plants, and water systems are placed in danger. Leaders threaten greater destruction while crowds cheer them onward.

Jesus warned:

“For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows.”
— Matthew 24:7–8, KJV

We are not merely watching another difficult chapter in human history. We are seeing a warning that mankind is moving toward a crisis it will not be able to solve.

The Sorrows Will Increase

The word sorrows speaks of birth pains. They may begin slowly, but they become stronger, more frequent, and more difficult to endure as the appointed time approaches.

For many years, people have said there have always been wars, earthquakes, disease, and evil. That is true. Jesus did not say these things would suddenly appear for the first time. He warned that they would come together and intensify.

One conflict leads to another. One nation attacks, another retaliates, alliances are activated, trade routes are closed, economies weaken, food prices rise, and ordinary people suffer. Every act of revenge becomes the excuse for greater violence.

Humanity possesses weapons capable of destroying cities in moments. Governments can shut down electrical grids, poison water supplies, interrupt food distribution, and bring suffering to millions who never entered a battlefield.

We may be seeing only the beginning of what will soon come upon the earth.

Evil Will Continue to Spread

The danger is not found only in armies and weapons. It is also found within the human heart.

People are becoming accustomed to death. They watch homes collapse and children carried from the ruins without feeling sorrow. They defend actions they would condemn if another country committed them. Political loyalty has become more important than truth, mercy, or human life.

Jesus warned:

“And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold.”
— Matthew 24:12, KJV

A cold heart can justify almost anything. Once people stop seeing their enemies as human beings, there is no limit to the suffering they will accept or inflict.

Paul described the last days:

“This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall be lovers of their own selves… without natural affection, trucebreakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good.”
— 2 Timothy 3:1–3, KJV

We are witnessing the spread of an evil that no border can contain. Violence does not remain where it begins. Hatred moves from nation to nation, community to community, and eventually from heart to heart.

There Will Be No Place to Hide

Many believe they will escape because the war is happening somewhere else. They watch the suffering of other nations from the safety of their homes and assume it can never reach them.

But the world has become too closely connected for any major conflict to remain isolated.

War affects fuel, food, medicine, banking, transportation, communication, and employment. A missile launched thousands of miles away can raise prices at an Indiana grocery store. A closed shipping lane can empty shelves across America. A cyberattack can darken cities without a foreign soldier ever crossing the border.

If violence continues spreading, there will eventually be no nation untouched, no economy unaffected, and no earthly place completely secure.

The wealthy may build shelters. Governments may establish protected locations. Families may store food and supplies. There is wisdom in reasonable physical preparation, but no bunker can shelter the soul from the judgment of God.

The prophet Amos warned those who believed they could escape the approaching day:

“As if a man did flee from a lion, and a bear met him; or went into the house, and leaned his hand on the wall, and a serpent bit him.”
— Amos 5:19, KJV

There may come a time when there is no earthly place to hide. The greatest preparation is therefore not merely securing food, water, medicine, or shelter. The greatest preparation is preparing the soul.

Prepare Your Soul

Many people prepare for emergencies but neglect eternity. They have food in storage but no faith in their hearts. They have plans for a power failure but no preparation to stand before God. They know where they will hide during a storm, but they do not know where their soul will go when life ends.

Jesus asked:

“For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?”
— Mark 8:36, KJV

You may survive an economic collapse and still lose your soul. You may escape a battlefield and still be unprepared for eternity. You may possess everything necessary to preserve the body for a season while neglecting the soul that will live forever.

Preparing your soul begins with repentance.

“Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.”
— Luke 13:3, KJV

Repentance is more than fear of coming judgment. It is turning away from sin and surrendering your life to Jesus Christ. It is admitting that you cannot save yourself and trusting the One who died for your sins and rose again.

“For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.”
— Romans 10:13, KJV

Christ Is the Only Safe Refuge

I do not know exactly how much time remains. No one knows the day or hour. But we do not need to know the date before responding to the warning.

No government can promise your safety. No military can protect every city. No amount of money can guarantee tomorrow. There is only one refuge that will never fail.

“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.”
— Psalm 46:1, KJV

The same Psalm describes a world in upheaval:

“Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea.”
— Psalm 46:2, KJV

Faith in Christ does not mean Christians will avoid every earthly trial. Believers may experience persecution, poverty, loss, sickness, or war. But nothing can separate those who belong to Christ from the love of God.

Our safety is not the promise that trouble will never reach us. Our safety is knowing that Christ will never leave us.

God Will Intervene

Jesus warned that the final period of suffering would become so severe that human survival itself would be threatened:

“For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be. And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake those days shall be shortened.”
— Matthew 24:21–22, KJV

Mankind will reach the point where human wisdom, diplomacy, military strength, and technology cannot rescue us. Unless God intervenes, humanity will destroy itself.

But God will intervene.

The governments of this world do not control the final outcome. Proud rulers do not write the last chapter of history. Jesus Christ will return, evil will be judged, and the kingdoms of this world will yield to His authority.

“The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and ever.”
— Revelation 11:15, KJV

Do Not Wait Until Tomorrow

This message is not written to create panic. It is written to awaken the soul.

Jesus told His disciples to watch. He warned them not to become so occupied with everyday life that the appointed hour arrived while they were spiritually asleep.

“Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.”
— Matthew 24:42, KJV

Do not wait for another war, another plague, another economic collapse, or another tragedy before seeking God. Do not wait until fear fills your heart and every familiar place of safety has disappeared.

The time to prepare your soul is now.

Confess your sins. Turn away from evil. Forgive those who have wronged you. Make peace where peace is possible. Open the Word of God. Seek the Lord in prayer. Place your complete faith in Jesus Christ.

The darkness may continue to deepen. Violence may spread until there seems to be no place left to hide. But those who belong to Christ possess a refuge the darkness cannot enter and the powers of this world cannot destroy.

Jesus said:

“And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.”
— Luke 21:28, KJV

We may be well into the beginning of sorrows. What comes next may be more difficult than anything this generation has experienced.

Prepare what you reasonably can for your family—but above everything else, prepare your soul.

There may soon be no earthly place to hide. But there is still time to run to Jesus.

What Did We Gain?

 I confess that I do not know how to make people open their eyes to what war is really about. We watch missiles rise into the night sky and listen to government officials speak of targets destroyed and missions accomplished. We are shown maps, military equipment, and buildings collapsing in the distance. What we are seldom shown is the mother standing beside the grave of her child.

We call it strategy. We call it national security. We call the dead “collateral damage.” But behind that cold expression are children who will never return home, teachers who will never enter another classroom, and families whose lives will never be whole again.

For generations, American governments—under both Republican and Democratic leadership—have accepted the deaths of civilians as part of warfare in the Middle East. They assure us that civilians are not intentionally targeted. Yet when bombs repeatedly fall near schools, hospitals, homes, electrical systems, and water supplies, we must ask whether saying the deaths were unintended is enough.

At what point does a foreseeable consequence become a moral responsibility?

Their Children Are Not Expendable

We would never accept the bombing of an American school as an unfortunate consequence of another nation’s military operation. We would not call our dead children collateral damage. We would display their photographs, speak their names, demand justice, and remember the attack for generations.

Why, then, do we expect Iranian, Iraqi, Afghan, Palestinian, Lebanese, Syrian, or Yemeni parents to respond differently?

Their children laugh as ours do. They have hopes, fears, favorite meals, and dreams about what they will become. Their parents kiss them goodnight, worry when they are sick, and wait for them to return from school.

Jesus said:

“Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them.” — Matthew 7:12, KJV

We cannot ask God to protect our children while remaining indifferent when our government’s weapons kill the children of others.

Why Do They Call America the “Great Satan”?

Many Americans are offended when people in Iran call the United States the “Great Satan.” I reject that hateful description of the American people as a whole. Millions of Americans desire peace, show compassion, and do not support the killing of innocent people.

But we should be willing to ask why that name finds an audience.

Imagine that a foreign nation bombed your community, destroyed your home, damaged your hospital, killed your child, and then described the death as collateral damage. Imagine watching its leaders celebrate victory without acknowledging your loss. What opinion would you form of that government?

We know America by its churches, neighbors, charitable works, and freedoms. Those living beneath American bombs may know us by explosions, funerals, sanctions, displacement, and empty chairs around the family table.

That does not justify hatred or terrorism. One evil never excuses another. But refusing to understand the source of anger guarantees that hatred will continue.

The Bible warns:

“They have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.” — Hosea 8:7, KJV

A nation cannot sow suffering across generations and then act surprised when it reaps resentment.

What Did We Gain?

After all the wars, invasions, occupations, airstrikes, sanctions, and trillions of dollars spent, what did we gain?

Did we bring lasting peace to Iraq? Did Afghanistan become the secure democracy we promised? Did Libya become more stable after its government fell? Have our military actions ended terrorism, or have destroyed homes and grieving families provided extremists with new reasons to recruit?

We eliminated leaders, destroyed armies, occupied territory, and declared victory. Yet the Middle East remains wounded and unstable. American families also buried their sons and daughters. Veterans returned with damaged bodies, troubled minds, and memories that will never leave them. Our nation accumulated debt, surrendered more power to the machinery of war, and became involved in one conflict after another.

What did we gain that was worth the lives of so many children?

“For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” — Mark 8:36, KJV

Perhaps America gained military influence, access, bases, contracts, and temporary political advantage. But if we lost our compassion, weakened our moral witness, and taught the world to associate our flag with destruction, the price was far greater than our leaders admit.

The Language That Hides the Dead

War has developed its own vocabulary.

A dead family becomes “civilian casualties.” A destroyed neighborhood becomes “infrastructure degradation.” A child killed by a missile becomes “collateral damage.” An attack that failed becomes an “operational miscalculation.”

These words place distance between us and the suffering. They allow us to discuss death without feeling its weight.

Madeleine Albright was asked in 1996 about reports that sanctions against Iraq had contributed to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children. When asked whether the price was worth it, she answered, “We think the price is worth it.” She later regretted those words, and the exact casualty estimate remains disputed. Nevertheless, that answer expressed the terrible attitude that the suffering of foreign children could be weighed against a political objective and accepted as its price.

No child should become the currency with which governments purchase their ambitions.

“Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees, and that write grievousness which they have prescribed.” — Isaiah 10:1, KJV

We Must Use the Same Measure

I condemn Iran when it kills innocent people. I condemn terrorism, hostage-taking, and attacks upon civilians. I condemn Israel when its military actions kill children and destroy homes. And because I am an American, I must be equally willing to condemn my own government when it does the same.

Morality cannot depend upon whose flag is painted upon the missile.

We cannot call an Iranian missile evil when it strikes a school and call an American missile unfortunate when it does the same thing. The grieving parents see no moral difference. Their child is still dead.

Jesus said:

“For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.” — Matthew 7:2, KJV

If we demand accountability from our enemies, we must demand it from ourselves.

Blessed Are the Peacemakers

Some will say that speaking this way is unpatriotic. I disagree. Loving America does not require silence when its government does wrong. The prophets loved their people enough to warn them. They did not strengthen the nation by flattering its rulers. They called the people back to righteousness.

“Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.” — Matthew 5:9, KJV

Jesus did not say, “Blessed are those who produce peace through superior firepower.” He blessed the peacemakers.

Peace requires courage. It requires leaders willing to negotiate, admit mistakes, restrain pride, and recognize the humanity of an enemy. War is often presented as strength, but sometimes it is the refuge of leaders who lack the humility and patience necessary to make peace.

Open Our Eyes, Lord

My frustration is not merely political. It is spiritual. I fear that repeated war has hardened our hearts. We see destroyed buildings but not the people beneath them. We hear casualty numbers but not the cries of parents. We celebrate victory before counting the graves.

I cannot force anyone to open their eyes. I can only speak, pray, write, and refuse to call evil good.

“Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness.” — Isaiah 5:20, KJV

Lord, open our eyes. Restore our compassion. Help us see every child as precious, regardless of nationality, religion, or race. Give our leaders wisdom to seek peace before another missile is launched, another school is destroyed, and another family is left grieving.

America must stop believing that violence will bring the peace violence has repeatedly failed to produce.

After all the bloodshed, sorrow, hatred, debt, and destruction, the question remains:

What did we gain—and was it worth what we lost?

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Could Turkey Be the Northern Power of Ezekiel 38?

 An Observational Study, Not a Declaration of Doctrine

For many years, evangelical prophecy teachers have identified Russia as the great northern power that will lead the invasion of Israel described in Ezekiel 38–39. This interpretation became especially popular during the Cold War, when the Soviet Union was atheistic, militarily powerful, hostile toward the West, and involved throughout the Middle East.

However, Ezekiel never uses the words Russia, Moscow, Soviet Union, or Russian. The identification depends upon disputed translations, similarities between ancient and modern names, and assumptions influenced by modern political events.

I offer another possibility: The northern power described by Ezekiel may arise from the territory of modern Turkey rather than Russia.

I do not present this as established doctrine. It is an observation intended to encourage further study. Prophecy should be approached with humility because history is filled with sincere teachers who forced current events into Scripture and later proved to be mistaken.

“Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation.”
—2 Peter 1:20

Our responsibility is not to make Scripture agree with our theory. Our responsibility is to test the theory by Scripture.

1. Ezekiel Does Not Call Gog the King of Russia

The prophecy begins:

“And the word of the LORD came unto me, saying, Son of man, set thy face against Gog, the land of Magog, the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal, and prophesy against him.”
—Ezekiel 38:1–2

Notice the distinction:

  • Gog appears to be a ruler or leading figure.

  • Magog is the land associated with Gog.

  • Meshech and Tubal are territories or peoples under his authority.

  • Other nations later join his coalition.

The KJV calls Gog “the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal.” It does not call him the prince of Russia.

Some modern translations render the expression as “prince of Rosh, Meshech, and Tubal.” From this translation, certain prophecy teachers connect Rosh with Russia. But the Hebrew word rosh commonly means “head,” “chief,” “principal,” or “foremost.”

The KJV translators therefore understood it as a title: Gog is the chief prince, not the prince of a nation called Rosh.

The Hebrew word existed long before the modern country name Russia developed. Similarity in sound is not sufficient evidence that the two words identify the same people.

2. The Russia Theory Depends Heavily Upon Similar-Sounding Names

A familiar argument identifies:

Biblical nameProposed Russian identification
RoshRussia
MeshechMoscow
TubalTobolsk

These associations may sound convincing when first heard, but similarities in sound do not establish historical or linguistic descent.

Moscow was not founded until many centuries after Ezekiel. Tobolsk was founded even later. Ezekiel’s original readers would not have understood Meshech and Tubal as references to two cities that did not yet exist.

Meshech is also spelled Mesech in Psalm 120:

“Woe is me, that I sojourn in Mesech, that I dwell in the tents of Kedar!”
—Psalm 120:5

The psalmist was not saying that he lived in Moscow. He was describing his condition among distant and hostile peoples.

Meshech and Tubal repeatedly appear together in Scripture:

“There is Meshech, Tubal, and all her multitude: her graves are round about him…”
—Ezekiel 32:26

“Javan, Tubal, and Meshech, they were thy merchants: they traded the persons of men and vessels of brass in thy market.”
—Ezekiel 27:13

Ezekiel 27 describes the trading relationships of ancient Tyre. Meshech and Tubal belonged to Ezekiel’s known geographical world. They were not mysterious names secretly pointing to future Russian cities.

Ancient records commonly associate Meshech with the Mushki and Tubal with Tabal—peoples or kingdoms located in Asia Minor, particularly central and eastern Anatolia. That places them much closer to modern Turkey than to Moscow or Siberia. A Biola University study similarly concludes that Meshech, Tubal, and Beth-togarmah belong in Asia Minor, Armenia, and the region southeast of the Black Sea. Biola University study

3. Several of Ezekiel’s Names Point Toward Anatolia

Ezekiel lists the members of Gog’s coalition:

“Persia, Ethiopia, and Libya with them; all of them with shield and helmet: Gomer, and all his bands; the house of Togarmah of the north quarters, and all his bands: and many people with thee.”
—Ezekiel 38:5–6

The geographical evidence deserves careful attention.

Meshech and Tubal

Meshech and Tubal are generally associated with ancient peoples living in Asia Minor—modern Turkey—and the regions adjoining Armenia and the Caucasus.

Gomer

Gomer is often connected with the Cimmerians. They moved through the territory north and south of the Black Sea and were particularly active in Anatolia.

Their movements extended beyond modern Turkey, but Anatolia remained a major part of their historical world.

Beth-togarmah

Ezekiel calls it:

“The house of Togarmah of the north quarters…”
—Ezekiel 38:6

Earlier, Ezekiel connected Togarmah with the horse trade of Tyre:

“They of the house of Togarmah traded in thy fairs with horses and horsemen and mules.”
—Ezekiel 27:14

Beth-togarmah is usually associated with eastern Anatolia or Armenia. Once again, this directs our attention toward modern Turkey and its immediate neighbors.

Consequently, at least three major names in Gog’s northern coalition—Meshech, Tubal, and Togarmah—have strong historical connections with Anatolia. Gomer also has an important Anatolian connection.

This does not prove that Turkey is Gog, but it makes Turkey difficult to dismiss.

4. Turkey Is Directly North of Israel

Ezekiel says:

“And thou shalt come from thy place out of the north parts, thou, and many people with thee…”
—Ezekiel 38:15

God later says:

“And I will turn thee back, and leave but the sixth part of thee, and will cause thee to come up from the north parts, and will bring thee upon the mountains of Israel.”
—Ezekiel 39:2

Russia is certainly north of Israel, but Turkey is also north of Israel—and much more directly connected to the biblical lands named in the prophecy.

Looking northward from Israel, one encounters:

  1. Lebanon and Syria;

  2. Turkey;

  3. the Black Sea;

  4. Ukraine and Russia farther beyond.

The passage does not say “the nation farthest north on a modern globe.” It describes an enemy coming “out of the north parts.”

In biblical history, powerful armies often entered Israel from the north even when their homelands were located east of Israel. Geography forced armies to follow established roads around the desert and descend through Syria.

Jeremiah even described Babylon as an enemy from the north:

“Out of the north an evil shall break forth upon all the inhabitants of the land.”
—Jeremiah 1:14

Babylon was east of Judah, but the Babylonian army approached from the north. Therefore, “from the north” can describe the direction of invasion rather than the exact latitude of the invader’s capital.

Turkey occupies the natural northern gateway between Asia, Europe, the Black Sea, Syria, and Israel. This makes it geographically more immediate to Ezekiel’s description than Russia.

5. “The Uttermost North” Does Not Require Russia

Some teachers argue that Russia must be intended because it lies in the “uttermost” or “far north.” However, Ezekiel 38:6 in the KJV specifically associates the northern description with Togarmah:

“The house of Togarmah of the north quarters…”

If Togarmah represents eastern Anatolia or Armenia, then Ezekiel himself demonstrates that “the north quarters” can refer to that region. It does not have to mean Moscow or the Russian heartland.

The prophecy is written from Israel’s perspective, using the geographical knowledge and national names of Ezekiel’s time. The most natural starting point is therefore the ancient Near Eastern world, not a line drawn from Jerusalem to the North Pole.

6. The Coalition Looks More Middle Eastern Than Russian

The named coalition includes:

  • Persia;

  • Ethiopia or Cush;

  • Libya or Put;

  • Gomer;

  • Togarmah;

  • Meshech;

  • Tubal;

  • many additional peoples.

Persia is the clearest identification:

“Persia, Ethiopia, and Libya with them…”
—Ezekiel 38:5

Persia is modern Iran. Scripture names Persia directly; it does not name Russia.

Most of the coalition is associated with the Middle East, North Africa, Anatolia, or the regions surrounding the Black Sea and Caucasus. This looks more like a broad regional coalition than a Russian army merely accompanied by Muslim allies.

A Turkey-centered interpretation creates a more geographically connected picture:

  • Turkey provides the northern and Anatolian center.

  • Iran represents Persia to the east.

  • Syria supplies the historical invasion route.

  • Libya and Cush represent southern and southwestern participation.

  • Other regional peoples join the coalition.

Turkey and Iran are presently competitors as well as occasional partners. That does not disprove the possibility of a future coalition. Prophecy does not require the participating nations to share permanent friendship—only a common purpose at the time of the invasion.

“And thou shalt say, I will go up to the land of unwalled villages; I will go to them that are at rest…”
—Ezekiel 38:11

A shared hostility, political crisis, religious cause, or perceived threat could temporarily unite governments that normally compete with one another.

7. Turkey Has a Historical Claim to Regional Leadership

For centuries, the Ottoman Empire ruled much of the territory surrounding Israel, including:

  • Anatolia;

  • Syria;

  • Lebanon;

  • Palestine;

  • portions of Iraq;

  • portions of Arabia;

  • Egypt at various times;

  • parts of North Africa;

  • southeastern Europe.

Constantinople—modern Istanbul—was the Ottoman capital and the seat of the caliphate. Although the modern Turkish Republic abolished the caliphate, Turkey retains a historical and cultural connection to Muslim leadership that Russia does not possess.

Turkey also occupies a unique geographical position:

  • It connects Europe and Asia.

  • It controls access between the Black Sea and Mediterranean.

  • It borders Syria, Iraq, Iran’s neighborhood, the Caucasus, and the Black Sea.

  • It has influence among Turkic peoples extending into Central Asia.

  • It possesses one of the region’s most capable military establishments.

Modern analysis describes Turkey as reemerging as a central Middle Eastern actor, with its rivalry with Israel affecting Syria, the eastern Mediterranean, and other regional questions. Brookings analysis of Turkey’s regional position

Turkey also has substantial direct influence in Syria, the northern approach to Israel. Reuters reported in 2025 that Turkey was training and advising Syria’s military and had more than 20,000 troops in the country, while growing Turkish influence caused concern in Israel. Reuters report on Turkish influence in Syria

These developments do not fulfill Ezekiel 38. They merely demonstrate that Turkey possesses the location, history, military capacity, and regional influence necessary to become the center of such a coalition.

8. Turkey Connects the Empires of Daniel

The Turkey interpretation becomes more significant when considered alongside Daniel and Revelation.

Daniel saw four great beasts:

“The first was like a lion, and had eagle’s wings…”
—Daniel 7:4

“And behold another beast, a second, like to a bear…”
—Daniel 7:5

“After this I beheld, and lo another, like a leopard…”
—Daniel 7:6

These represent the imperial systems of Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and the succeeding fourth empire.

Revelation describes a beast combining their characteristics:

“And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a lion…”
—Revelation 13:2

The lands of modern Turkey were ruled by or deeply connected with all these empires:

  • Babylonian influence reached the Anatolian world.

  • Persia ruled Asia Minor.

  • Alexander’s Greek empire conquered it.

  • The Greek successor kingdoms ruled it.

  • Rome incorporated it.

  • The Eastern Roman Empire was centered at Constantinople.

  • The Ottoman Empire later ruled much of the same biblical territory.

Modern Turkey therefore sits within the geographical area where the Babylonian, Persian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman worlds met.

Russia does not have this same direct geographical relationship to the empires of Daniel.

This does not independently prove that Turkey is Gog. It strengthens the possibility that the final regional power may arise from the same broad territory occupied by the earlier prophetic kingdoms.

9. Why the Russian Interpretation Became Popular

The Russia interpretation did not begin with the apostles or the earliest Christian writers in its modern form. It became especially influential through nineteenth- and twentieth-century prophetic teaching.

Several developments encouraged it:

  • the rise of dispensational prophecy systems;

  • attempts to match ancient biblical names with modern countries;

  • hostility between the Russian Empire and Great Britain;

  • the rise of atheistic communism;

  • the establishment of the Soviet Union;

  • Soviet support for Arab governments hostile to Israel;

  • the Cold War;

  • fear of nuclear confrontation.

During the Cold War, Russia seemed to fit the expected role perfectly. It was a massive northern military power, officially atheistic and opposed to the United States and its allies.

That political environment influenced how many Western Christians read Ezekiel. The interpretation then became so familiar that it was often repeated as though Ezekiel had actually used the word Russia.

Current events may appear to support a particular interpretation, but current events can also cause us to read ideas into Scripture.

10. Why Russia Is Not the Strongest Candidate

I would be cautious about saying Russia is completely unable to participate in a future conflict. Russia remains a northern military power with interests in the Middle East. Nothing in Scripture prevents Russia from becoming involved.

However, Russia is no longer the strongest textual identification for Gog for several reasons:

Russia is never named

Persia is named, but Russia is not. The identification must be constructed from disputed names and linguistic similarities.

Rosh normally means “chief”

The KJV’s “chief prince” does not provide a country called Russia.

Meshech and Tubal belong to ancient Anatolia

Historical evidence connects these names more naturally with Asia Minor than with Moscow and Tobolsk.

Beth-togarmah points toward eastern Anatolia

Ezekiel explicitly places Togarmah in the northern regions.

The coalition is predominantly regional

Persia, Cush, Put, Gomer, and Togarmah create a Middle Eastern, North African, Anatolian, and Caucasian picture.

Russia lacks a natural claim to Muslim leadership

Russia can cooperate with Muslim governments, but it is unlikely to unite a large religiously motivated Middle Eastern coalition under its leadership. Turkey has a stronger historical and cultural basis for such influence.

Russia was made central partly by Cold War assumptions

The Soviet political situation made the theory appear more certain than the biblical text itself allows.

Turkey occupies the direct invasion route

Any northern coalition moving toward Israel through Syria would operate through the very region dominated historically and increasingly influenced by Turkey.

For these reasons, I would say that Russia remains a possible participant but is not the most natural candidate for the prophecy’s central northern power.

11. Important Objections to the Turkey Theory

A strong study must acknowledge its weaknesses.

Magog cannot be identified with certainty

Josephus associated Magog with the Scythians, whose territory extended north of the Black Sea. This could be used to support a Russian, Ukrainian, Caucasian, Central Asian, or broader regional interpretation.

However, Scythian identity cannot simply be transferred to one modern country. Their movements covered an enormous region and included areas adjoining Anatolia.

Turkey and Iran are rivals

They differ in ethnicity, religious tradition, regional ambitions, and political interests. Yet rival nations sometimes cooperate against a common opponent. Ezekiel does not say the coalition is held together by lasting affection.

Turkey still has relations with Western institutions

Turkey is a NATO member and maintains complicated economic and political relationships with Europe and the United States. Nevertheless, alliances change. Prophecy should not be based solely upon today’s diplomatic arrangements.

The prophecy may be broader than any single country

Revelation later uses Gog and Magog symbolically for worldwide opposition to God:

“And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog…”
—Revelation 20:8

This suggests that Gog and Magog may ultimately represent more than one modern nationality. Turkey could provide the geographical and political center without exhausting the prophecy’s full spiritual meaning.

Conclusion

My observation is not that Ezekiel explicitly names modern Turkey. He does not. My conclusion is that Turkey provides a more coherent possible fulfillment than the traditional Russia-only interpretation.

Turkey fits because:

  • it is directly north of Israel;

  • Meshech and Tubal are connected with Anatolia;

  • Beth-togarmah is associated with eastern Anatolia;

  • Gomer has significant Anatolian connections;

  • Turkey controls the historical northern route into Israel;

  • it stands at the center of the lands ruled by Daniel’s empires;

  • it has an Ottoman and Islamic leadership legacy;

  • it possesses considerable military and regional influence;

  • it is capable of interacting with Persia and other named regions;

  • and its growing rivalry with Israel gives the possibility contemporary relevance.

The most responsible conclusion is:

Ezekiel 38 does not provide sufficient evidence to identify Russia dogmatically as Gog. The ancient geographical names point more naturally toward Anatolia and its surrounding regions. Therefore, a future Turkey-centered coalition—including Persia and other regional powers—may provide a more reasonable fulfillment of Ezekiel’s northern invasion than the Russia-centered interpretation made popular during the Cold War.

I may be wrong. Turkey may not be the final northern power, and the prophecy may unfold in a way none of us presently expects. Nevertheless, the evidence is sufficient to place the Turkey-centered interpretation on the table for honest biblical discussion.

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