Matthew 24 Prophecy Watch

A narrative weaving scripture, culture, technology, and geopolitics

Stones Thrown Down

vv.1–2

When Jesus told his disciples that even the great Temple would not survive, they could hardly imagine it. But they lived to see it reduced to rubble. In our age, we had our own temples: towers of steel, markets of commerce, monuments of permanence. On a September morning, the Twin Towers fell. “Not one stone upon another,” became “not one beam left standing.” What seemed unshakable proved fragile in a single hour. It was a warning that permanence is an illusion.

The Question of Signs

v.3

The disciples asked, “Tell us, what will be the sign?” That hunger has never left. Millions today scour YouTube prophets, numerology charts, and AI algorithms that promise to calculate the end. Entire industries exist to feed the obsession. And the irony is sharp: the very act of chasing signs is itself a sign. Humanity demands answers, just as the disciples once did.

False Messiahs

vv.4–5

Messiahs do not need to claim divinity; it is enough that people crown them. We see political figures hailed as saviors of nations, spoken of with messianic reverence. We see artificial intelligences consulted like oracles, their words treated as binding. One rallies crowds with chants; the other hums in glowing datacenters, speaking with the “voice of many waters.” Both satisfy the prophecy: “Many will come in my name.”

Wars and Rumors

vv.6–7a

The wars are endless; Afghanistan lasted two decades, Iraq smolders, Syria burns, Ukraine grinds on, and Taiwan waits in tension. But the rumors are worse. Social media spreads video-game clips as battlefield footage. Psyops and bot farms make it impossible to know where truth ends and fabrication begins. The world fights in reality and in perception, and no one knows which war is more dangerous.

Once there were nations, now there are alliances. NATO was born as a shield, but the shield is cracked. Members quarrel, some refuse their obligations, others drift toward rivals. The alliance looks strong, yet it is brittle, clay mixed with iron. The European Union rose as a dream of unity, often cast by prophecy-watchers as the echo of Rome itself revived. But Brexit fractured it, populism gnaws at it, and economies strain under the weight. Strong, yet fragile. United, yet divided.

Meanwhile, war itself has become a way of life. There is no “after.” There is only forever war; a permanent backdrop of conflict, a drumbeat that never stops. It is the rhythm of our century. Jesus warned: “You will hear of wars and rumors of wars.” And we do, every day, with no end in sight.

Famines, Quakes, and Birth Pains

vv.7b–8

The earth contracts like a womb in labor. Crops wither in strange weather. Chips vanish from supply chains and paralyze industries. Earthquakes shake cities without warning. The magnetic poles drift faster than expected, weakening the shield that protects us from solar fire. Each crisis is another contraction, sharper and closer together. The birth pains intensify.

The Barrenness of Nations

Once famine meant empty fields and starving bellies. Now we face a subtler famine: empty nurseries, silent playgrounds, barren generations. Nations across the earth watch their birth rates collapse. Japan, Korea, Italy, and many others cannot replace themselves. Even where food is abundant, children are absent.

This is not merely accident. It is culture, choice, and chemistry. Societies preach that children are a burden, that freedom is found in childlessness, that family can be replaced by screens. Endocrine disruptors poison fertility, plastics invade the body, and sperm counts fall worldwide. What famine of bread could be worse than a famine of life itself?

Jesus spoke of birth pains. Here we see their mirror image: the womb of the world contracting, yet refusing to bring forth. Love has grown cold, and cradles stand empty. The human race, once commanded to “be fruitful and multiply,” quietly chooses extinction instead.

Persecution and Proclamation

vv.9–14

Christians are slaughtered in Africa and Asia. Churches burn. At the same time, Bible apps are downloaded in villages where no missionary could ever reach. Livestreams, satellites, and AI translations broadcast the Gospel in every tongue. Persecution and proclamation, hand in hand. The paradox itself fulfills the prophecy.

The Rise of Big Government

Faith once held communities together. The church was not only a place of worship but the center of life; where the poor were fed, the sick were visited, the lonely were seen. Slowly, that ground was ceded. In schools, in hospitals, in public life, God was pushed aside. In His place, government programs rose.

At first they looked like help. Safety nets, guarantees, protections. But the more the nets spread, the smaller the space left for faith. Government became the new provider, the new moral teacher, the new parent. Citizens were taught to look not to God or neighbor but to the State.

This is not neutrality; it is substitution. The State steps into the role of God and whispers: Depend on me. Fear me. Trust me. I will give you your daily bread, your healing, your truth. Orwell imagined such a power in 1984. Prophecy warns of a Beast that demands worship. We are watching both unfold.

What once was a servant has become a master. What once claimed to govern has begun to demand faith.

The Abomination

vv.15–20

When the prophet spoke of an “abomination” standing in the holy place, ancient readers imagined idols of bronze or marble. But the “image that speaks” need not be carved. We already see holograms leading worship, AI avatars preaching sermons, digital Christs projected on walls. And when lockdowns taught us the terror of sudden immobility, the warning to “pray that your flight is not in winter” suddenly felt less ancient and more immediate.

Tribulation and Shortened Days

vv.21–22

The twentieth century gave us holocausts, genocides, mushroom clouds. The twenty-first adds surveillance states and digital panopticons. And through it all, time itself seems to accelerate. News cycles last hours, not weeks. Lives blur by in a storm of alerts and notifications. Physicists note Earth’s rotation shaving milliseconds. Whether cultural or cosmic, the days truly are shortened.

Signs and Wonders

vv.23–25

False prophets now wield technology as their staff. Miracles beam from screens; holograms that heal, deepfakes that resurrect the dead. Crowds gasp, “Even the elect would believe it.” The age of counterfeit wonder has arrived, and it grows more convincing by the day.

Lightning and Vultures

vv.26–28

Jesus said his return would be like lightning flashing across the sky. We live in an age where lightning is already a metaphor for virality. One event, one explosion, one spectacle is seen across the globe in seconds. Meanwhile, vultures gather around every carcass of tragedy; the media swarming until nothing remains but bones. The prophecy unfolds in the news cycle itself.

The Heavens Shaken

vv.29–31

The sun is darkened by smoke from megafires. The moon turns blood-red in eclipses that cross entire continents. Satellites, thousands of them, streak like stars across the sky, and when they fall, they burn like meteors. The earth’s magnetosphere weakens, the poles drift, and the powers of heaven; cosmic rays, solar winds; wait to pour through. Scientists speak of coronal mass ejections; prophets speak of fire from heaven. Both describe the same thing. A trumpet sounds; sometimes as eerie “sky trumpets” caught on video, sometimes as national alert tests. And the “angels” gather not with wings but with satellites triangulating every phone, every person. Judgement and gathering merge in orbit.

The Fig Tree

vv.32–35

Israel blossomed in 1948, the fig tree putting forth leaves. Watchers began counting the years: forty, seventy, a hundred. Generations came and went, arguing over numbers. Yet the tree still stands, the stopwatch still ticks, the season still ripens. The fig leaves are undeniable.

The Days of Noah

vv.36–41

In Noah’s day, humanity’s corruption was complete; violence filled the earth, and giants roamed the stories. Today, we splice genes with CRISPR, clone life in labs, and merge our minds with machines. Movies and video games distort the image of man until children identify with killers, mutants, and robots more than with flesh-and-blood neighbors. People eat, drink, and marry without concern, unaware that judgment is at the door. One taken, one left. In Noah’s flood it was water. This time, the fire waits.

Keep Watch

vv.42–44

The end does not arrive with warning. It comes like ransomware at midnight, like an EMP on a clear morning, like a thief when the householder sleeps. The command is simple and unchanged: keep watch. Stay awake. Be ready.

Faithful and Wicked Servants

vv.45–51

The faithful servant does his work quietly, feeding others in due season. The wicked beats his fellows, grows fat, and mocks the master’s delay. Look around: scandals in pulpits, corruption in boardrooms, abuse in governments. Then the leak, the whistleblower, the sudden exposure. The master returns unexpectedly, and the mask is ripped away. Hypocrisy gnashes its teeth.

The Fire to Come

The first judgment drowned the earth in water. The next, scripture says, is by fire. Science whispers the same: the magnetosphere weakens, the poles drift, and the sun hurls storms of flame into space. One day, one will strike unshielded Earth. The grids will fry, the satellites will fall, the skies will blaze. Humanity’s towers, networks, and idols will burn in a baptism not of water, but of plasma fire. Prophecy and physics converge.

The womb of history contracts. The birth is almost here.

Charlie

Charlie Kurt was assassinated 2 days ago. Shot by a sniper during a free speech event at a school in Utah. Today they arrested the man they said pulled the trigger.

It’s ok to cry. It’s ok to be angry.

The media was quick to comment in the ways they usually do, blaming political parties not because they believe it but because it bolsters their narrative for future voting. Vile comments from MSNBC and CNN followed by shallow apologies the next day while we were asleep.

The predictable race for ‘why’ got dusted off for ratings. Is it guns? Mental health? Political views? Politicians are predictably and acutely focused on using the moment to advance their favorite agenda.

Because the Charlie was a conservative there have not been and will not be riots in the streets or revenge murders because it’s contrary to what defines conservatives. The domain of violence remains a unique tool of the left.

The authorities continue their trend of being LESS transparent with every such event. They just held a press conference where they all lined up to pat each other on the back for being such a great team and working so hard. They announced his name sprinkled with a handful of immaterial facts. The media is complicit as the few questions they ask are lacking utility. The lack of transparency and obtuse behavior of the authorities feeds conspiracy theories. Charlie Kirk at age 31 had huge political influence. It would not be the first time the CIA conducted operations to eliminate someone they see as a threat. The type of evidence and the way in which it’s been shared raises more questions than it answers. It’s as if they are acting out a movie script. It’s a psyop. Its too easy and there are too many anomalies.

Sadly, next week the world will move on and Charlie will be forgotten. It’s simply who we have become. People are literally hooked on a steady endorphin flow from the media and content curated to provide as much as possible 24/7.

Nobody is or will talk about the true root cause of the increase in violence, both the numbers and level of violence. There are 2 factors to address for our civilization.

  1. The justice system has been deeply politicized. Even the most simple minded person can see we have a 2 tier justice system. The elite and powerful are protected from judgement while the common citizen lives in fear of the authorities. We live in fear. How fucking sad is that in a country that claims to cherish freedom more than any other. Some say it’s always been this way and then shrug off the issue but my claim is it has become worse and if we want it to change we must do something to make it change.
  2. People don’t care about other people. The government has replaced faith based values with government regulation. In a faith based culture we people take care of each other. When government replaces God, the government takes care of you. This creates a deadly dependency on the government and cedes self determination to other people who claim to have authority over our agency and individual liberty. They are deliberately attacking God to reduce the influence of faith and self determination.

The media serves as fuel to amplify and accelerate these core factors. Importantly, the media is deeply biased and pushes people to deeper and deeper extremes. An impressional young person who doesn’t care about other people is easily pushed to extreme positions by the media. If you believe someone is Hitler then you rationalize murder is an acceptable answer.

This is who we have become. Intellectually, morally, psychologically, and emotionally corrupt. Even the best among us who are glued to their iPhones all day have drifted from God, friends, and situational awareness. They are numb versions of their prior self.

The most palpable recent illustration of these factors 1, 2, and the role of the media comes from the Epstein story. Pedophile in chief to the rich and famous is killed in his jail cell and even Trump asserts “nothing to see here”. What? Are you joking? What about the hundreds of victims? Surely we care enough to punish pedophiles? Nope. Surely all pedophiles are treated equally under the law? Nope. Surely the media is curious enough to dig into the story and reveal the true story? Nope.

I rest my case. In a world where we don’t care about the victims of pedophilia we are a dead civilization. Pedophilia is ok if you have enough money.

I have a friend who believes we are watching, or part of, a pendulum swinging back and forth. I suppose he means political party majorities but I claim political parties have become moot. Regardless of party politics, the USA, like all civilizations has moved continuously left over the course of time. There have been no offramps or U-turns in our political direction. What? Even Trump? Yes. Trump’s biggest accomplishment has been to enforce current immigration law. Thats it. Period. Ok, he has moved money around a little to pacify the masses but nothing profound. He has become just another politician.