Art-Picture 'Light Shining On An Open Bible' - heading

Prophecies in The Holy Bible



    [Also, See Tab Page: 'Old Testament Prophecies Fulfilled by Jesus']



This page is still under editin.  Please review and check back in the future and visit our homepage for more information:  TheBibleRoad.com



Painting of John The Revelator by GoodSalt


Artist Name Block John The Revelator





,

CONTENTS OF THIS PAGE

tiny dark red bullet design  Introduction to Prophecy in The Holy Bible

tiny dark red bullet design  List of Prophecies in the Bible - Fulfilled and Yet to Come

tiny dark red bullet design   24 End-Time Prophecies 12 Fulfilled, 12 to Come

tiny dark red bullet design  The Rapture in the End Times

tiny dark red bullet design  The Second Coming of Jesus

tiny dark red bullet design  The Rapture of Believers

tiny dark red bullet design  The Start of  The 7-Year Tribulation

tiny dark red bullet design  The 100 - year Milennium

tiny dark red bullet design  The New Jerusalem



Note from Website Publisher: 

There are two views on whether Jesus returns before the great tribulation or after it 1:

Pre-tribulation: Jesus comes to rapture the church before tribulation, effectively rescuing believers from any of the end times persecution and suffering.
Post-tribulation: Jesus will not return for his people until after the tribulation of the end times.

The rapture occurs unexpectedly prior to the tribulation period 2. Jesus will return like a “thief in the night” 3.

We believe it will be Pre-tribulation.



Thiner lt blue block for apacing 30 x 30

What is Prophecy?     

From:  www.GotQuestions.org

To prophesy is simply to speak prophecy. Prophecy is the noun, and prophesy is the verb. Prophecy at its most basic definition is “a message from God.” So, to prophesy is to proclaim a message from God. The one who does this is, therefore, a prophet. Although foretelling is often associated with prophecy, revealing the future is not a necessary element of prophecy; however, since only God knows the future, any authoritative word about the future must of necessity be a prophecy, that is, a message from God.

In the Old Testament, there were prophets who simply spoke their divine messages to a king or to the people (e.g., Samuel, Nathan, Elijah, and Elisha). Later, there came a series of “writing prophets” whose messages are preserved in Scripture (e.g., Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea, and Malachi). Quite often the prophets would preface their utterances with words such as “thus saith the Lord” (KJV) or “this is what the Lord says” (NIV). The point is that God had communicated something to the prophets, and they were speaking directly for Him. “For prophecy never had its origin in the human will, but prophets, though human, spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter 1:21).

According to Deuteronomy 13, there are two signs of a true prophet. First, he must not direct people to follow other gods. Second, whenever the prophet says something about future events, those events must come to pass. If the prophet promotes the worship of false gods, or if his predictions fail to come to pass, then he is a false prophet.

God would often give the prophet a message about something that would happen in the short term, to give him credibility on the more long-term message. For instance, Jeremiah told the leaders of Judah that the nation would be conquered by Babylon. But another “prophet,” a charlatan named Hananiah, stood up and said the Lord had given him a different message, and claimed that Jeremiah was not a true prophet. Jeremiah told Hananiah that within a year he, Hananiah, would be dead, and within the year he died (Jeremiah 28). The fact that Jeremiah could so accurately predict the future should have given his other words more credibility.

In the New Testament, John the Baptist proclaims that the Kingdom of God and the Messiah are on the scene, and he identifies Jesus as that Messiah. John is often called the last of the Old Testament prophets. In the rest of the New Testament, prophets are not mentioned very much. It seems that apostles fulfilled the prophetic role, as they spoke directly and authoritatively for God, and their words are preserved today in Scripture. Ephesians 2:20 lists the apostles and prophets as being the foundation of the church, with Jesus Christ being the cornerstone. Obviously, before the canon of Scripture was complete, God may have communicated directly to people on a more regular basis. Prophecy is listed as one of the gifts of the Spirit (see Romans 12:6–8).

Of great interest today is whether or not the gift of prophecy continues or if it ceased when the foundational period of the church was complete. First Corinthians 12—14 is the longest New Testament passage relating to prophecy. The church at Corinth was misusing this gift as well as the gift of tongues. One problem they had was that, when the believers gathered, too many prophets were speaking, and they were interrupting each other to boot. Paul says that at most two or three prophets should speak, and they should do so one at a time. Others should carefully consider or evaluate what the prophet says (1 Corinthians 14:29–31). Perhaps the best understanding is that some people in Corinth thought they were getting a word directly from God, but they could have been wrong; therefore, they needed to submit their prophecies to the judgment of the church. As in the Old Testament, if a New Testament prophecy was contrary to sound doctrine, then the prophecy was to be rejected.

The instruction in 1 Corinthians 14 also suggests that a person should be cautious in speaking for God if the revelation is extra-biblical. Bearing a “message from God” does not automatically place one in a position of authority. The potential prophet should humbly submit his or her message to the leaders of the church for confirmation. Paul’s directive suggests that the gift of prophecy was already beginning to wane as an authoritative gift at the time 1 Corinthians was written.

A preacher or pastor today fulfills a prophetic role to the extent that he proclaims and explains the written Word of God. However, pastors are never called “prophets” in the New Testament. The pastor can confidently say, “Thus saith the Lord,” if he follows it up with chapter and verse. Unfortunately, some pastors assume a prophetic mantle and make pronouncements that are not from God but from their own imaginations.

Lt Blue block for spacing 79 x 60

                                                           

                       (Continued)                                    



Picture of the Rapture Charisma Magazine 2020


The 24th prophecy, when Jesus arrives for the whole world to see, takes Christian with Him in the Rapture and steals a false peace from the world, starting the seven-year Tribulation within hours of our departure.


,

This Website Publisher's Note: 

Because of the hardness of people's hearts in the end times towards belief in God, there have been articles written about this.  During the Rapture, or just the disappearance of many people (believers),  the 'left behind' people will blame it on Alien Abductions.  That makes sense because, right now, more and more examples of Alien sightings are being reported.   Satan, The Great Deceiver,  is likely behind this so people don't repent and eventually will not be saved. Many will regardless.

See two of many articles:  The Father's Heart, 'How the World Will Explain the Rapture' and 'Will UFOs Be Used to Explain Away the Rapture' ? with Billy Crone

,



Thiner lt blue block for apacing 30 x 30

   24 END-TIMES PROPHECIES: 12 Fulfilled, 12 to Come

Link to Entire Article:'Charismamag.com/propheticrevival' 

  Excerpts Below are from Article in Charisma Magazine 1, July 30, 2020

God tells us in the Bible He is going to deal with the world Himself, as it is evil. Christ does everything; He doesn’t need our help. All we have to do is follow Scripture so that we know what’s happening, and lead a quiet and peaceful life per 1 Thessalonians 4:11-12, where He asks us all to do this in the last days.”

The Bible tells us in Luke 17:26-36 that the world will be at peace, albeit decadent until the singular ‘day’ the ‘visual rapture’ and ‘Tribulation’ arrive. This will allow for the Antichrist to have everything in place for full control of the world the day the church is taken home with Jesus.

. “It’s not anything to be afraid of. It’s part of the nature of what’s going on in the world today. It has a purpose. God tells us the world basically is Satan’s domain right now, and God’s letting that be the case. If you understand what the reasoning is and how it’s going to end, it’s all in God’s plans.”

1:   The Next Likely Unfulbilled Prophecy: 

“Everything that’s going on in the world today leads us to what will likely be the next event, the 13th prophecy, which I believe is going to be an attack on Israel, and how that sets the table for the final 11 prophecies leading to the ‘visual’ return of Christ.

(The 24th prophecy, when Jesus arrives for the whole world to see, takes Christian with Him in the rapture and steals a false peace from the world, starting the seven-year Tribulation within hours of our departure.

Of the 24 prophetic events in Scripture, three are called “super signs,” which are: the fourth, the rebirth of the new state of Israel in 1948; the 13th, where God alone will rescue Israel from Islam; and the 24th, signs that will appear on the day of the visual rapture, a shout from our Lord telling us the “Tribulation” is about to arrive, the rapture occurs, followed by the signing of a seven-year covenant starting the “Tribulation” all in one day. The novel shares multiple biblical reasons for all of this.