Stewards of a Season: Why God Chose One People to Frame the World

I have carried this thought for years, and it will not leave me.

I look at history — real history, not the rewritten kind — and one thing stares back: from the ending of the Dark Ages through the Renaissance, Reformation, exploration, science, law, and the carrying of the gospel to every corner of the earth, one branch of humanity — the European peoples, the white race under Christendom — rose and reordered the entire planet in a way no empire, no civilization, no people ever did before or since.

They ventured where no one dared.

They built systems of order, trade, and governance that still run the world.

They translated the Bible into languages no one had touched.

They curbed horrors once widespread — sati, foot-binding, temple prostitution, widespread human sacrifice.

They brought hospitals, schools, abolition movements, and the message that every soul bears the image of God.

And I ask, quietly but persistently: Why them? Why this one race, in this one window of time?

Many shout “coincidence,” “geography,” “stolen ideas.”

Others whisper “superiority.”

Both miss the deeper truth.

I am not white. I do not write from pride or from pain. I write from awe. Because when I look with open eyes, I see not supremacy, but “stewardship”. A temporal office. A grace poured out for a season. A vessel — broken, flawed, often sinful — yet chosen by God to bless all the families of the earth, just as He promised Abraham (Genesis 12:3; Acts 3:25).

And in seeing this clearly, something beautiful happens: the complex falls away. The resentment quiets. The false guilt lifts. Every people, every color, every temperament finds their true worth — not in dominating history, but in being infinitely loved by the God who writes history.

Let us speak plain.

No honest eye can deny the pattern.

China invented gunpowder, the compass, paper, printing.

India gave mathematics, ancient councils, vast wealth.

Africa built mighty empires of gold and wisdom.

Islam preserved Greek knowledge and ruled half the known world.

The Americas raised cities and calendars of astonishing precision.

Yet none — none — broke out to reframe the entire globe the way post-Reformation Europe did. The speed, the scope, the combination of restless exploration, organizational drive, scientific curiosity, and missionary fire was unmatched.

The modern world — its laws, its universities, its hospitals, its engines of progress, its very idea of human rights rooted in divine image — bears the deep mark of Christendom’s European children.

Even the global confession that Jesus is Lord reached nearly every tongue because missionaries, mostly from this one stream, carried the Word to the ends of the earth on a scale never seen before.

This is not opinion. This is fact.

Some take this fact and twist it into hatred: “We are supreme forever.”

That is poison, condemned by the same Bible those missionaries carried. God shows no partiality (Acts 10:34–35; Romans 2:11). All nations stand equally guilty before Him and equally redeemable by grace.

Others take this fact and bury it: “It was just luck, theft, oppression.”

That robs God of His sovereignty and leaves us with a random world and no peace.

There is a third way: to see it as “providential stewardship”.

God raises up instruments for seasons.

He used Assyria as His rod, though they did not know Him (Isaiah 10).

He used Persia to free His people (Isaiah 45).

He used Rome’s roads and peace for the early gospel.

He used Israel to bear the oracles and the Messiah.

And in this present age — this dispensation between the cross and the return — He sovereignly used one particular branch of Adam’s family to prepare the world and carry His final message globally.

Not because their blood was purer.

Not because others were lesser.

But because in His mysterious freedom, He gifted them — through culture, timing, temperament, and perhaps even subtle dispositions shaped by grace — with what was needed for this temporal office.

Scripture teaches two truths the modern world hates to hold together.

First: In Christ, there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female — we are all one, all equally image-bearers, all equally heirs of eternal glory (Galatians 3:28; Colossians 3:11).

Second: In this present, sin-infested age, God ordains order through distinction and roles — husbands and wives, parents and children, rulers and citizens, diverse gifts and offices in the body (Ephesians 5; Romans 13; 1 Corinthians 12).

These are not contradictions. They are different spheres.

Spiritual worth and eternal destiny → absolute equality.

Temporal function and providential order → stewardships, seasons, graces.

The European role in framing this modern world was a temporal stewardship — like Israel’s unique election, but not covenantally permanent. Like the apostles’ authority, but not eternal.

It does not make them greater before God.

It does not make anyone else lesser.

In fact, it reveals the opposite: the master serves not the worthless, but the deeply beloved. The fact that God used certain vessels to serve and bless the nations shows how precious those nations are to Him.

So when the weight of “white supremacy” presses on your heart — whether as resentment, shame, or confusion — stop wrestling.

See instead the hand of a sovereign God who chooses weak, broken vessels to display His manifold wisdom (Ephesians 3:10).

See that every people has its season, its grace, its distinctive glory to bring into the eternal city (Revelation 21:24–26).

Today the fire of the gospel burns brightest in Africa, Asia, Latin America — the same Spirit, the same zeal, new vessels rising.

One day every tribe and tongue will stand before the throne, not as servants and served, but as co-heirs, bringing the redeemed honor of their nations into the New Jerusalem.

Until then, rest.

You are not behind.

You are not above.

You are loved beyond measuring — exactly as you are, exactly where you are in His story.

And that is enough.

 

Praying for the Peace of Israel: A Call Beyond the Psalms

Introduction: A Longing for Peace

When we open the Bible to the time of King David in the 10th century BC, we encounter a vision of peace that stirs the soul. In Psalms, we’re instructed to “pray for the peace of Jerusalem” (Psalm 122:6), a call rooted in David’s longing for a kingdom where God’s shalom—wholeness, rest, and righteousness—would reign. David dreamed of a land where “everyone would live in peace and God’s rest would dwell upon the kingdom.” Yet, as we journey through Scripture, from the heights of David’s reign to the depths of Israel’s apostasy by the 7th century BC—when God forbids prayer for His people (Jeremiah 7:16; 11:14; 14:11)—a more complex story unfolds. Righteousness falters, idolatry spreads, and peace slips away. By the time Jesus arrives, He declares, “Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword” (Matthew 10:34). Today, many Christians still echo Psalm 122:6, praying for Israel’s peace with sincerity—but often without grasping the full arc of God’s redemptive plan. What does it mean to pray for peace when the Bible reveals a history of rebellion, a spiritual temple, and a world teetering on the edge of judgment?

The Decline of a Kingdom

David’s vision of peace in the 10th century BC rested on covenant obedience (Deuteronomy 28:1-14), but under Solomon, this foundation crumbled as idolatry crept in (1 Kings 11:4-6). God warned, “If you turn aside from following me… I will cut off Israel from the land” (1 Kings 9:6-7). After Solomon’s death, the kingdom divided—Israel in the north, Judah in the south (1 Kings 12:16-20)—and apostasy deepened. By the 8th century BC, Hosea exposed the northern kingdom’s spiritual unfaithfulness: “The spirit of harlotry is within them… they have borne alien children” (Hosea 5:4-7), offspring of idolatry rather than God. They worshipped Baal and Molech (2 Kings 17:16-17) and the “star of Remphan” (Acts 7:43), rejecting their Maker. The prophets cried out, but the people “forgot the stone from His very hand,” as God had warned: “Look to the rock from which you were hewn, and to the hole of the pit from which you were dug” (Isaiah 51:1). God lamented, “The ox knows its owner… but my people do not know me” (Isaiah 1:3). By the 7th century BC, Judah’s rebellion peaked, prompting God to command Jeremiah, “Do not pray for this people, or lift up a cry or prayer for them” (Jeremiah 7:16; cf. 11:14, 14:11). Exile followed (2 Kings 17:23, 2 Chronicles 36:20), and Israel’s land lay desolate, its covenant blessings lost (Deuteronomy 28:15-68).

Then came Jesus, born in Bethlehem as the prophets foretold (Micah 5:2). Far from ushering in earthly peace, He brought division—truth cutting through falsehood (Matthew 10:35-36). He condemned them as a “wicked generation” seeking signs (Matthew 12:39), their leaders a “synagogue of Satan” (Revelation 2:9; 3:9) for their harlotry’s legacy (Hosea 5:4-7). He warned of Jerusalem’s desolation (Matthew 23:38), prophesying its fall: “The kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people producing its fruits” (Matthew 21:43). In AD 70, the Roman sword fell, fulfilling His words (Matthew 24:2). God’s wrath was “poured upon the desolate” (Daniel 9:27), wiping out the idols and the sinners of His people, as promised: “The sinners of my people shall die by the sword” (Amos 9:10).

The Temple Transformed

The story of the temple mirrors this decline and redemption. Solomon’s temple, filled with God’s glory (1 Kings 8:10-11), was destroyed by Babylon. The second temple, rebuilt after the exile, stood without that glory (Haggai 2:3). Yet Haggai prophesied, “The latter glory of THIS house shall be greater than the former” (Haggai 2:9). Was this the second temple? No—its holy place became a seat for the “abomination of desolation” (Daniel 11:31), desecrated by foreign powers and hollow religion. The true “latter glory” arrived with Jesus, who, through His death and resurrection, built a spiritual temple—the Church (Ephesians 2:19-22). On the third day, He rose, and the Holy Spirit descended (Acts 2), surpassing the first temple’s splendor. A third physical temple? Perhaps for the Antichrist (2 Thessalonians 2:4), but the true temple is already here, alive in believers.

Apostasy Then and Now

Israel’s ancient idolatry finds an echo today. Just as the people turned to “alien children from another spirit” (Hosea 5:4-7), their leaders branded a “synagogue of Satan” (Revelation 2:9; 3:9), modern churches face a “great falling away” (2 Thessalonians 2:3). The spirit of Antichrist infiltrates sanctuaries—drag queens lead worship, false prophets masquerade as “ministers of righteousness” (2 Corinthians 11:14-15), and hundreds of Western churches resemble “mosques or temples” to worldly ideologies. The “abomination of desolation” sits again in holy places, not with pagan altars but with apostasy’s subtle corruption. Jesus asked, “When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?” (Luke 18:8). As in the “days of Noah” (Matthew 24:37), rampant deception signals the end.

Yet amid this darkness, the true Body of Christ endures, hidden from the world’s system. It restrains evil, a “pillar of truth and grace” (2 Thessalonians 2:6-7), empowered by the Holy Spirit and Christ’s blood. Some see this restraint in recent events—Donald Trump’s election, for instance, as a temporary thwarting of darkness. But it’s fleeting. The Church will soon be “plucked away” (1 Thessalonians 4:17), the restrainer removed, and the “man of lawlessness” revealed—a pawn of darkness long prepared.

Israel, the Gentiles, and the Fullness of Time

Scripture promises a turning point. Israel’s “partial blindness” (Romans 11:25) lifts as the “fullness of the Gentiles” nears (Romans 11:25-26). Scores of Jewish people now embrace their Messiah, with Messianic churches thriving in Israel—a sign of awakening. The gospel has reached every tongue and nation (Matthew 24:14), fulfilling God’s plan to include all races in His Body. This is the “last pot,” a final phase before the rapture and the “great judgment of the earth.” The true Israel isn’t merely of the flesh but of the promise (Romans 9:6-8)—a vibrant, spiritual nation God is forming anew. In the tribulation, 12,000 from each tribe will be preserved (Revelation 7:4-8), ensuring “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:26).

The Prayer Problem

Here lies the rub: Christians read Psalm 122:6 and pray for Israel’s peace, often unaware of this grand narrative—from the 10th century BC call to the 7th century BC halt (Jeremiah 7:16). They envision a geopolitical calm, perhaps swayed by sentiment or politics, without seeing the shift from David’s kingdom to Christ’s spiritual reign. They miss how peace fled when Israel rejected God, bearing “alien children” (Hosea 5:4-7), how Jesus redefined it and stripped them of the kingdom (Matthew 21:43), and how apostasy now clouds both church and world. Praying for peace without discernment risks misapplying God’s promises—ignoring the conditions of obedience (Deuteronomy 28), the reality of judgment (Jeremiah 14:11), and the call to seek Christ’s ultimate shalom.

A Call to Pray Anew

So how should we pray? Not with blind nostalgia for a bygone Jerusalem, but with eyes open to God’s plan:

– Discernment: Pray for Israel’s spiritual awakening—Jewish people finding Messiah (Romans 11:23)—and the Church’s steadfastness.

– God’s Will: Seek His intent, whether peace, repentance, or judgment, trusting His timing.

– Scriptural Depth: Study the whole story, from David to the prophets to Jesus, avoiding shallow readings.

– True Peace: Align with Christ’s kingdom, where “Peace I give to you” (John 14:27) transcends earthly borders.

Conclusion: A Pivotal Moment

We stand at a crossroads—apostasy rises, yet hope blossoms. The Body of Christ restrains darkness, Israel stirs awake, and the fullness of time draws near. Praying for peace isn’t wrong, but it’s incomplete without understanding the sword, the temple, and the coming King. As the world darkens, the true Church shines, awaiting the day when shalom reigns—not by human hands, but by Christ’s return. Until then, let our prayers rise with wisdom, for “there has never been a time like this.

The Impending Storm: Precursors to GREAT TRIBULATION

Harbingers of the Impending Storm: Precursors to Great Tribulation

Introduction

In the shadowy corridors of time, ominous signs emerge, foretelling the onset of a profound upheaval. Harbingers of the Impending Storm: Precursors to Great Tribulation delves into these premonitions, unraveling the threads of destiny woven into the fabric of our existence. As the world teeters on the brink, this exploration navigates the historical, social, and geopolitical landscapes that set the stage for an impending storm. From echoes of forgotten conflicts—like the wars that scarred ancient empires—to whispers of economic unrest rippling through modern markets, each precursor serves as a cryptic clue, inviting contemplation of the forces shaping our collective fate.

This is not merely a chronicle of chaos; it is a call to awareness and preparedness. As shadows lengthen and signs intensify, understanding these harbingers becomes paramount. Through the lens of history and the scrutiny of contemporary currents, this work beckons readers to face the tumultuous waters ahead with eyes wide open, armed with knowledge, and fortified by wisdom gleaned from our shared past—a past that whispers warnings and promises alike.

Historical Foundations: The World in Darkness

The seeds of tribulation were sown long ago, in a world shrouded in spiritual and physical darkness. The Seven Churches of Asia Minor—Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and Laodicea—stood as fragile outposts of faith in their infancy, as chronicled in Revelation. Founded in the 1st century AD, these communities faced persecution under Roman rule and spiritual assaults from surrounding pagan cults. Pergamum, identified as Satan’s seat (Revelation 2:12-13), was a literal and symbolic stronghold, home to the altar of Zeus and a thriving center of emperor worship. Though Satan was judged and incapacitated by Christ’s death on the cross, his influence lingered, reigning over a world infested with evil forces, tyrants, and devilish doctrines. Human government, as a structured defender of rights, had yet to emerge, leaving mankind at the mercy of chaos.

This darkness gripped the earth for centuries. Up until the Renaissance and Reformation—spanning roughly the 14th to 16th centuries—personal rights were a distant dream. Roman slavery, feudal serfdom, and tribal conquests enslaved millions, while tyrants like Nero and later warlords slaughtered without restraint. Yet, a tide turned with the advance of Christ’s missionaries. From the shores of Europe to the jungles of Africa and Asia, the Word of God—the Sword of the Spirit (Ephesians 6:17)—pierced the gloom. Figures like Patrick in Ireland, Boniface in Germany, and later Jesuit and Protestant missionaries carried the Gospel to the uttermost parts, bulldozing Satan’s strongholds. Territories fell—Roman paganism crumbled, Viking raids gave way to Christian kingdoms—and dynasties, tribes, peoples, and languages bowed to the kingdom of Christ taking root in human hearts.

The Rise of Righteousness: The Kingdom’s Triumph

With this advent, the shalom of God emerged, a peace rooted in divine order. Law and order, founded in righteousness, devoured the world’s chaos. The kingdom grew like a mustard seed, becoming greater than all herbs, shooting out great branches (Mark 4:32). Its weapons were not carnal but mighty through God, pulling down strongholds (2 Corinthians 10:4). The saints wielded high praises and a two-edged sword, executing vengeance upon the heathen, binding kings with chains, and nobles with fetters of iron (Psalm 149:6-9). Through the elect of God, the Kingdom of God now reigns in the kingdoms of men.

Even as tares—individuals influenced by the spirit of the power of the air (Ephesians 2:2)—coexist with the wheat, namely the children of God, righteousness stands victorious; by 2025, the global Christian population exceeds 2.6 billion, embodying the enduring promise of the Seed of Abraham to bless the nations (Galatians 3:8, 16)—a divine aspiration that began with the twelve and now manifests, excluding the in-between generations, in this present figure of over 2.6 billion.

This vast multitude, augmented by countless saints from the first century onward and the faithful of the Old Testament, fulfills God’s covenant with Abraham, their numbers as immeasurable as the sand of the sea. Through Christ, grace and truth have extended salvation to millions upon millions, from the catacombs of Rome to the megachurches of today. Meanwhile, the Restrainer—comprising the Holy Ghost, the Church, and the archangel Michael—holds the spirit of antichrist in check (2 Thessalonians 2:6-7), ensuring the beast remains restrained while this godly entity endures. Though the kingdom of darkness through the non-redeemed hearts still has leverage on the earth, Satan, its defeated prince is not physically present on the earth, as the MIGHTY GODLY entity reigns over all kingdoms. Jesus Christ is the Prince of the kings of the earth (Revelation 1:5).

This triumph approaches its majestic crescendo as the gospel surges toward its destined consummation. Scripture mandates that it must first be proclaimed among all nations, a testimony to the world, heralding the end’s arrival (Mark 13:10; Matthew 24:14). Through the ages, human ingenuity—from the printing press to the boundless reach of the internet—has propelled this sacred charge, penetrating even the shadowed jungles of Papua New Guinea and the Amazon’s untrodden depths. Yet, these efforts pale before the transcendent moment unveiled in Revelation 14:6, when an angel, radiant with celestial mandate, declares the everlasting gospel to every nation, tribe, tongue, and soul. No earthly power—neither the iron grip of communism nor the tyranny of dictators, long veils over the light of truth—nor even the adversary’s dark dominion can silence this divine utterance. With unshakable authority, this heavenly emissary pierces the final veil, ensuring that the word resounds to every corner of creation, sealing the triumph of God’s redemptive purpose. Yet the last enemy, death—an entity like the angel of the bottomless pit (Revelation 9:11; 17:8)—remains unconquered, a beast lurking in the shadows (1 Corinthians 15:26; Revelation 6:8; 20:13-14).

Modern Precursors: Signs of the Storm

Today, the harbingers of the end intensify, their signs vividly painted across the canvas of our world. Israel persists in partial blindness, a desolation enduring until they proclaim, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord’ (Matthew 23:39). Yet, the fullness of the Gentiles approaches with unprecedented nearness (Romans 11:25), signaling the culmination of God’s redemptive ingathering. The church’s ship has now anchored at its final port, as the Greek *eschatos* declares—a term not merely denoting the end of a journey, but the threshold of God’s consummate design, where the present age yields to the eternal kingdom unveiled.

Over 300 Messianic fellowships thrive in Israel today—groups like Jews for Jesus and One for Israel report unprecedented growth—signaling a shift. Unlike the Harpazo—the rapture of the Church, a sudden snatching away—the Second Coming awaits Israel’s petition to Him whom they pierced (Hosea 5:15; Zechariah 12:10; Micah 5:5). Only then will the Twelve Tribes reach their fullness, with 12,000 from each redeemed (Romans 9:27; 11:26).

History underscores this moment’s uniqueness. Not until the 5th century did Christian churches agree on a biblical canon, a process finalized at councils like Carthage in 397 AD. The first complete English Bible emerged in the late 14th century with Wycliffe, followed by Gutenberg’s press in 1455, printing 180 copies that sparked a revolution. Revelation’s beheadings (Revelation 20:4; 7:9,14) and the devil’s unholy trinity—the Dragon, Beast, and False Prophet (Revelation 12:12; 16:13)—have yet to descend in fury, though whispers of such terror echo in modern persecutions.

The signs multiply: iniquity abounds, love grows cold, apostasy surges, and knowledge increases as never before (Daniel 12:4; Matthew 24:12; 2 Timothy 3:1-5). Global crime rates soar—homicide, trafficking, corruption—while social media amplifies division and apathy. Knowledge explodes—AI, quantum computing, space exploration—doubling humanity’s data every few years. People travel to and fro (Daniel 12:4, H7751 *shuwt*), with 4.7 billion air passengers annually by 2019, a scale unimaginable in prior eras. Amid these harbingers, the casting away of Israel was essential to reconcile the world, heralding the gospel to the Gentiles, while their receiving in the first century, as the remnant embraced Christ, was equally vital, bestowing life from the dead upon mankind (Romans 11:14-15, 23)—two facets of a single divine purpose, realized in the one new man, through which salvation flows to all.

Fornication, both spiritual and physical, pervades every heart, fueled by the wine of Babylon’s wrath (Revelation 18:3). Pornography, idolatry, and materialism grip nations, while merchants wax rich through her delicacies—global trade hit $28 trillion in 2021 alone. Witches infiltrate God’s churches—self-proclaimed psychics and prosperity preachers abound—while the spirit of antichrist creeps in. Satan masquerades as an angel of light, his ministers posing as righteous (2 Corinthians 11:14-15). The prophesied apostasy rages (2 Thessalonians 2:3), with mainline denominations diluting doctrine and pews emptying—a storm looms.

Conclusion: A Call to Stand Ready

Harbingers of the Impending Storm reveal a world at a crossroads. The tapestry of history and prophecy warns of tribulation, yet the Church’s triumph offers hope. As the gospel reaches all nations, Israel’s awakening unfolds through the remnant’s legacy, and precursors align, marking this as a time unlike any other. Death, the final foe, awaits its defeat; the unholy trinity stirs. Yet, the saints, wielding the Sword of the Spirit, are poised to bind the darkness in the culmination of God’s victory. Heed the signs, stand ready, and navigate these waters with eyes wide open—fortified by the echoes of our past and the promise of His return.