Prophecy Revealed: Jerusalem and the Fulfillment of the Times of the Gentiles

Jerusalem has stood at the center of history’s greatest conflicts and Scripture’s greatest promises. Nations have fought over it. Empires have risen and fallen around it. Yet the Bible declares its future with absolute certainty. According to prophecy, Jerusalem is not fading into history. It is moving toward glory.

Pastor John Hagee delivered a message centered on one unshakable truth: Jerusalem is chosen by God and established forever. “The fact of the Bible is that God chose Jerusalem as the place where his name would be there forever,” he said. That word forever was not symbolic. It was a declaration.

Quoting Psalm 132:13, Hagee reminded listeners, “The Lord has chosen Zion… and he hath desired it for his own habitation.” He stated plainly, “Jerusalem is God’s house on earth. Jerusalem is God’s address.” This is not poetic language. It is covenant language rooted in Scripture.

Jerusalem has been conquered and reconquered 44 times in history, yet it remains. Hagee pointed to that reality as evidence of divine preservation. “God has sworn to establish it forever,” he said. The endurance of Jerusalem is a testimony to the keeping power of God.

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The city is also central to prophecy. Hagee turned to Luke 21:24, where Jesus said Jerusalem would be “trampled down by the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.” He asserted that this period shifted in 1967 during the Six-Day War when Jerusalem returned to Jewish control. That moment marked a prophetic turning point. His message to believers was direct: “Look up. The Bible says the king is coming.”

Hagee connected this to 2 Peter 3:8, which teaches that a day with the Lord is as a thousand years. Referring to Jesus’ statement about being glorified on the third day, he explained that nearly 2,000 years have passed since Christ’s resurrection. “We are now celebrating the birth of the third day,” he said. The implication was unmistakable: “Jesus is coming soon.”

Jerusalem is not only tied to the rapture but to the return of Christ to earth. Citing Psalm 102, Hagee declared, “When the Lord shall build up Zion… he will appear in his glory there.” He made it clear that Jesus will return to Jerusalem. “He’s not coming to Washington. He’s not coming to Rome. He’s coming to the city of David.” From there, Christ will rule during the millennial reign and establish lasting peace.

Hagee described the struggle over Jerusalem as spiritual. “The supernatural battle for Jerusalem is not over,” he said. The Antichrist seeks to claim that city, yet Scripture promises it to the Messiah. The conflict surrounding Jerusalem is not random. It is part of a prophetic narrative moving toward its fulfillment.

Throughout Scripture, Jerusalem stands at the center of God’s redemptive plan. It appears in Genesis with Melchizedek. It is the city of David. It is where Solomon built the temple. It is where Jesus taught, was crucified and rose again. It is where He will return in glory. Hagee summed it up with a firm declaration: “Jerusalem is the centerpiece of Bible prophecy.”

The future he described is not uncertain. Revelation speaks of Christ returning in victory. The enemies gathered against Jerusalem will be defeated. Satan will be bound. The reign of Christ will bring righteousness and peace to the earth. Hagee reminded listeners that what God began in Genesis will be brought to completion under the authority of the King.

This message carries both urgency and encouragement. Prophecy is unfolding according to God’s timetable. The restoration of Jerusalem stands as a sign that His Word is true and His promises are sure.

As Christians, we must respond with understanding. Scripture calls believers to discern the times and to be grounded in truth. We cannot afford to be uninformed about what God has spoken concerning Jerusalem and the return of Christ. We must study the Word, strengthen our faith and stand firm in confidence that every promise will be fulfilled exactly as written.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Religious Liberty Panel Member Backing Candace Owens Faces Consequences After Contentious Hearing

The White House Religious Liberty Commission convened this week for its first public hearing on antisemitism in America. The purpose was straightforward: hear testimony from Jewish Americans who have faced rising hostility since the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in Israel and craft recommendations for President Donald Trump on protecting religious liberty.

What unfolded instead was a hearing partially derailed by one of its own members.

Carrie Prejean Boller, a Catholic activist and former Miss California, repeatedly interrupted panelists, challenged widely accepted definitions of antisemitism and defended commentator Candace Owens, who has faced significant criticism for rhetoric widely condemned as antisemitic.

“I listen to her daily,” Prejean Boller said of Owens. “I haven’t heard one thing out of her mouth that I would say is antisemitic.”

She also pressed witnesses to condemn Israel’s actions in Gaza, noting she had counted 17 references to Israel during the discussion. “Since we’ve mentioned Israel a total of 17 times, are you willing to condemn what Israel has done in Gaza?” she asked. “You won’t condemn that? Just on the record.”



Prejean Boller insisted that her opposition to Zionism stemmed from her Catholic faith.

“Catholics do not embrace Zionism, just so you know. So are all Catholics antisemites?” she said. “I want to be clear on what the definition of antisemitism is. If I don’t support the political state of Israel, am I an antisemite, yes or no?”

The audience responded with boos.

Rabbi Meir Soloveichik, the commission’s only Jewish member, offered a measured but unmistakable rebuke.

“This is an incredibly diverse country, and the one thing we should be careful about is speaking on behalf of all members of a religious community, even if one is a member of that religious community. I certainly wouldn’t claim to speak for all Jews on all subjects,” Soloveichik said.

The remainder of the hearing returned to its stated purpose, addressing antisemitism as a threat to Jews and to the broader principle of First Amendment religious liberty.

Owens, who was dropped from a Trump campaign event in 2024 amid backlash over her commentary, has repeatedly rejected accusations of antisemitism, arguing that criticism of Israel is being mislabeled. Critics counter that her rhetoric goes well beyond policy critique and veers into dangerous generalizations about Jewish people and influence.

Opposition to antisemitism is not synonymous with blind allegiance to any government. But attempts to blur that distinction by invoking theology to delegitimize Jewish self determination have long histories and troubling implications. Replacement theology arguments repackaged for social media virality do not become more convincing by sheer repetition.

Within days of the contentious exchange, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who chairs the commission, announced that Prejean Boller had been removed.

Patrick’s full statement read:

“Carrie Prejean Boller has been removed from President Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission. No member of the Commission has the right to hijack a hearing for their own personal and political agenda on any issue. This is clearly, without question, what happened Monday in our hearing on antisemitism in America. This was my decision.

The Commission has done outstanding work through five hearings. Two more are scheduled. The testimony has been both illuminating and heartbreaking. Under the Biden Administration, Americans of all faiths had their religious liberty not only stolen from them but were often punished for standing up for their faith, in education, the military, the private sector and even the ministry.

This spring, the Commission will deliver one of the most important reports in American history directly to the President.

The President respects all faiths. He believes that all Americans have a right to receive the great inheritance given to them by our founding fathers in the First Amendment.

I am grateful to President Trump for having the vision and boldness to create this Commission. Fighting for the Word of God and religious freedom is what this nation was founded upon. Leading this fight will be one of his greatest legacies.

Dan Patrick
Lt. Governor of Texas
Chair of the President Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission”


Patrick’s language left little ambiguity. The hearing was about antisemitism in America. It was not a stage for personal theological crusades or internet influencer defense tours.

Religious liberty hearings are meant to protect people of faith from discrimination, not to litigate centuries old doctrinal disputes or sanitize rhetoric that has already drawn bipartisan concern.

There is a difference between robust debate and rhetorical recklessness. One strengthens the republic. The other tests its patience.

In this case, the chair of the commission made clear which side of that line had been crossed.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Outrage After Church Hosts Harry Potter ‘Magical’ Worship Night

A Roman Catholic church in Germany has ignited outrage after hosting a Harry Potter-themed worship service that crossed a clear biblical line. Sacred Heart Church in Herne, in North Rhine-Westphalia, opened its sanctuary for what was billed as a “magical evening,” inviting attendees into an atmosphere modeled on the fictional Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

The Feb. 28 event, titled “Harry Potter Gottesdienst,” featured imagery from the popular book series, themed decorations and references to elements such as “Butterbeer” and Hogwarts house attire, as reported by The Christian Post. Promotional materials compared the church sanctuary to the “Great Hall” of Hogwarts and invited “fans and Hogwarts newcomers” to gather among candles and symbolic lighting meant to represent hope.

Incorporating imagery rooted in witchcraft into a worship service is not creative outreach. It is a spiritual compromise. Hundreds contacted the Archdiocese of Paderborn to voice opposition. Christkönigtum, a conservative Catholic organization, led a public pushback campaign, arguing that the use of magical and occult motifs trivialized and desecrated sacred space. A representative stated that God’s house must not be profaned by zeitgeist-driven events centered on explicitly magical themes.

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The archdiocese defended the service as an evangelistic effort to reach a culture increasingly detached from organized religion. A spokeswoman said familiar cultural stories can serve as bridges to Christian faith and insisted that Scripture was not replaced and that the church’s dignity was preserved. Officials acknowledged concerns and said feedback would be taken seriously.

Scripture is not unclear on this issue. Deuteronomy 18 explicitly condemns divination, sorcery and witchcraft as detestable before the Lord. Galatians 5 lists sorcery among the works of the flesh. God does not soften His position to accommodate cultural trends. There is nothing Christian about normalizing what God has forbidden.

This moment reflects a broader spiritual condition. People claim the name of Christ while redefining the faith to align with the spirit of the age. Objective truth is exchanged for personal preference. Biblical authority is sidelined in favor of emotional experience and cultural relevance. The apostle Paul warned that in the last days, people would accumulate teachers to suit their own desires and turn aside to myths. That warning is unfolding in plain sight.

The erosion of discernment inside the church is itself a sign of the times. A falling away does not begin with open denial of Christ. It begins with a subtle compromise, with the blending of the holy and the profane, with the repackaging of darkness as harmless entertainment.

Christians, we are called to be watchmen in this hour. Like the sons of Issachar who understood the times and knew what Israel should do, we must recognize the spiritual climate and respond with clarity and courage. Silence is not faithfulness. Accommodation is not love. Truth must be proclaimed without apology.

Pray that eyes are opened and hearts softened to the Word of God. Pray that those drifting toward cultural Christianity return to biblical conviction. The signs are evident. The responsibility to discern them belongs to the church.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Christian CEO Says Google and TikTok Blocking Faith-Based Ads While Allowing Satanic Content

A Christian entertainment executive is raising alarms over what he describes as intentional censorship of faith-based content by major technology companies.

In a recent interview with CBN News, Brent Dusing, CEO of Truplay, said Google and TikTok have blocked his company from advertising because of its Christian message, even while allegedly permitting satanic and sexually explicit content to circulate freely.

Dusing’s company, Truplay, is a mobile entertainment platform designed for children and families. Available on Apple and Android devices, the platform features games, comics and videos built on biblical foundations. “True Play is an entertainment platform on mobile devices,” Dusing said. “It’s an amazing platform with great games, comics, different video content that kids can play and use that kids love and enjoy, but that everything that True Play has inside it has a biblical foundation to it.”

He said the goal is to give families content they can trust while strengthening children’s faith and character. “We [have] really done it so that families have something they can trust that also build their kids’ faith and their character,” he said.

Despite the family-friendly focus, Dusing contends Google and TikTok have refused to allow Truplay to advertise. “TikTok and Google have both been discriminating against us very overtly because our content is Christian,” he said.

According to Dusing, the ad bans have lasted more than a year and involve multiple rejected campaigns. “I’m not talking about one ad got banned,” he said. “I’m talking about simple, benign, you know, gracious ads that we’ve had.” He cited messaging such as “turn game time into God time” and “finally, a fun place to play for your kids” as examples of content that was rejected.

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Dusing said the companies informed him that Truplay could not “push religious ideology.” At the same time, he argues other spiritual and occult imagery is permitted. “They’ve allowed satanic content to be pushed in Roblox,” he said. “There’s literally ads where there’s a pentagram drawn in blood with blood all over the floor.”

He further claimed that sexual content and transgender themes in gaming ads are widely distributed while Christian products are blocked. “They allow those ads by the millions every day,” he said. “They don’t allow Truplay to advertise fun, safe Christian games, games where you can grow in your faith.”

Dusing said he has heard from other Christian leaders facing similar restrictions. Speaking about a CPAC conference on religious freedom, he said that several people approached him to report similar issues. “This is a problem happening with Christian ministries,” he said. “This is a problem happening with other Christian content, other Christian companies.”

He pointed to artificial intelligence as a driving factor behind what he sees as systemic bias. “Google’s algorithm views the Christian worldview as problematic and as dangerous and harmful,” Dusing said. He warned that as AI systems make more moderation decisions, Christians could face broader digital exclusion. “As Google’s AI becomes more powerful and makes more decisions, it’s a threat to Christians everywhere,” he said, suggesting potential consequences could include pastors being banned or churches having funding blocked.

When asked whether the companies offered a path forward, Dusing said TikTok has been largely unresponsive and difficult to engage beyond automated systems. Regarding Google, he said the company indicated it would not revise its policy. “This is an intentional choice that they’ve made against a Christian product trying to really promote positivity and well-being for children,” he said.

Dusing described the issue as more than a business dispute, framing it as a question of religious freedom in the digital age. As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly central to online platforms, he argued that decisions about what ideas are deemed acceptable could shape the future of public faith expression.

For Christian families seeking alternatives to mainstream entertainment, Dusing maintains that Truplay will continue its mission despite the resistance. “Everything that True Play has inside it has a biblical foundation to it,” he said, emphasizing that the company’s focus remains on building faith and character in the next generation.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




FAA Grounds All Flights in El Paso After Cartel Drones Breach US Airspace

The Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounded all flights to and from El Paso International Airport, citing “special security reasons” and warning that the U.S. government “may use deadly force” against any aircraft in violation of the restriction.

The closure, as reported by Fox Business, applied to commercial, cargo and general aviation flights and was initially scheduled to run from Feb. 10 at 11:30 p.m. MST through Feb. 20 at 11:30 p.m. MST. El Paso International Airport confirmed the shutdown in a statement, telling travelers, “Travelers should contact their airlines to get the most up-to-date flight status information.”

The sudden restriction and the reference to possible deadly force triggered a wave of speculation online. Social media users floated theories ranging from UFO or UAP sightings to a major national security incident unfolding along the southern border. With few immediate details from federal officials, rumors spread rapidly, fueling heightened concern.



Former FAA safety team member Kyle Bailey told Fox News that a 10-day restriction of that scale would have been “unprecedented.” He pointed to the airport’s proximity to Fort Bliss Army post and speculated it appeared to be “something like a national security event, a high-level VIP,” while also noting that “on the Mexican side of the border there is no flight restriction.”

Federal officials later clarified the situation. A Trump administration official told Fox News the lockdown came in response to “Mexican cartel drones” that breached U.S. airspace.

“Mexican cartel drones breached U.S. airspace. The Department of War took action to disable the drones. The FAA and DOW have determined there is no threat to commercial travel,” the official said.

After the drones were disabled, the FAA lifted the restriction, stating there was no ongoing threat. What began as a mysterious shutdown that sparked intense online speculation was ultimately attributed to a cross-border drone incursion that officials said has now been neutralized.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Tucker Carlson’s Interview on Christians in Israel Leaves Out Key Facts

Tucker Carlson’s recent interview with an Anglican archbishop from Jerusalem is drawing pushback from The Israel Guys, who argue the conversation left out critical historical and demographic context about Christians living in Israel.

Carlson framed the discussion around whether Christians are “thriving or suffering” in the Jewish state, asserting that there are “fewer Christians now … than there were when the state was founded in 1948.” The archbishop said the Christian population “dwindled to half in ’48 because many people had to leave,” referring to the period surrounding Israel’s founding.

In response, the analysis cites census data indicating that Israel’s Christian population stood at approximately 35,000-40,000 in 1948 and has grown to approximately 185,000 today. While acknowledging population decline during the 1948 war, the critique notes that the conflict began when five Arab nations attacked the newly declared state of Israel.

Over the decades, the Christian population has steadily increased, including significant growth since the 1980s.

The interview also turned to how Palestinians are perceived in the United States. Carlson claimed that “Palestinian is a synonym … for Islamic terrorist.” The archbishop called that characterization “demonizing.” The response counters by citing polling conducted after the Oct. 7 attacks, indicating that 83% of Palestinians in Judea and Samaria expressed support for Hamas’ actions.




That statistic adds some much-needed context absent from the exchange.

Another flashpoint came when the archbishop said he was denied entry into Gaza to visit a hospital, explaining, “I have an Israeli citizenship … and basically I’m not allowed in.” The critique contends that this was presented as discrimination while overlooking the broader reality that Israeli civilians are barred from entering Gaza, particularly during wartime.

The restriction is tied to citizenship and security policy, not religion.

The archbishop also described being spat at while wearing a cross, clarifying that the spitting is “directed to you” but not physically on a person. He suggested that some Jewish communities associate the cross with historical persecution.

While acknowledging such incidents are wrong, the video analysis argues they do not amount to systemic oppression, especially since the archbishop also affirmed Christians generally have freedom of movement in most areas of Israel.

In the end, The Israel Guys’ critique maintains that the interview’s structure emphasized grievance while downplaying broader historical realities. Population shifts tied to war, travel restrictions during active conflict and isolated harassment incidents were presented as evidence of widespread persecution.

When viewed alongside long-term demographic trends and the regional context, the picture of Christian life in Israel appears far more complex than Tucker’s interview suggested.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Divine Warning From God Leads Woman to Renounce Sorority and Break Generational Curse

Scripture makes clear that spiritual battles can extend beyond a single generation. Exodus 20:5 warns of iniquity visiting “the children unto the third and fourth generation,” while Galatians 3:13 declares that Christ redeems believers from the curse of the law. Throughout the Bible covenant language is central. Blessings flow through obedience to God’s covenant and bondage follows agreements outside of it. Generational curses, spiritual strongholds and open doors are realities addressed in Scripture and confronted through repentance and deliverance.

Dr. LaTanya Moore says she confronted that reality in her own life.

A Vision on the Sea of Galilee

Moore was a member of Delta Sigma Theta for nearly 20 years. She described the experience as “fun” and active, involving social events and community service. But everything shifted during a trip to Israel.

While sitting in a boat on the Sea of Galilee, she asked God what storm He was calming in her life.

“I said, ‘God, what storm are you calming in my life?’”

She said the Lord responded through a vision.

“The Lord normally speaks to me through vision. I began to have a vision of my grandfather.”

In the vision she saw her deceased grandfather wearing a hat marked with a symbol. She said the Lord revealed that the symbol “had allowed negative spirits to come into our family bloodline.”

God then showed her her mother and finally herself.

“When I saw myself, I was kneeling down on my knees. I was looking up at a symbol. And the Lord showed me that that was my open door.”

She said her grandfather’s and mother’s doors were closed but hers remained open.

“It was as if God was giving me a choice to close that door.”

Covenants and Deities

Moore concluded that her sorority membership represented a spiritual covenant that conflicted with her covenant with God.

“We’re only supposed to worship one God, the true and living God,” she said.

She stated that every historically Black Greek organization has a deity and said Delta’s is the Roman goddess Minerva, likened to Athena.

“Most people say, ‘Well, I didn’t bow to a Greek god.’ However, the moment that you took that oath, you did so to a Greek god.”

She described initiation ceremonies involving bowing at an altar, kneeling on a white pillow and reciting oaths.

“There are candles lit. There’s an altar that is set up. Most organizations bow. You put a pillow under your knees and you bow so that you can actually say the oath and sign your name.”

She said many pledges are teenagers who are “basically signing your name on a dotted line without knowing the terms and conditions.”

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Breaking the Covenant

Moore said the Lord showed her what her future could look like if she closed the door.

“You can choose to continue to be a part of this organization and keep this door open or you can close that door and receive what I have for you.”

She formally removed her name from membership, comparing it to divorce.

“If I really wanted to be out of that covenant, I had to release it by removing my name from the roll.”

She described the decision as deliverance.

“There were open doors that gave the enemy access to have his way in your bloodline. And because that door was open, now that you’ve closed it, it brings about deliverance.”

Supernatural Healing and Bloodline Cleansing

Moore said the spiritual shift produced immediate results.

“I had a lump in my breast that was supernaturally healed.”

She also described what she called the removal of spiritual limitations.

“When I took the letters off, God took the limits off.”

According to Moore, the Lord told her He was cleansing her bloodline.

“Things run in your family until they run into you,” she said. “And it’s time for us to begin to confront the things that confronted our bloodlines.”

She said patterns such as poverty, anger, lust and other struggles must be confronted through repentance and renunciation.

A Call to Deliverance

Moore initially renounced privately but later felt directed to make her decision public.

“This isn’t about denouncing. This is deliverance,” she said.

Today she leads a prophetic and deliverance ministry focused on helping others break spiritual chains and ungodly covenants.

“When we repent, when we renounce and we remove those things from our lives, we’re going to see a whole new level of increase from what God wants to do.”

Deliverance is not a fringe doctrine but a biblical mandate. Jesus cast out demons, broke spiritual oppression and gave His followers authority to do the same. Scripture makes clear that believers are called to renounce darkness, tear down spiritual strongholds and walk fully in the freedom Christ purchased at the cross.

For Moore, closing the door was not symbolic. It was obedience. And in a spiritual battle that Scripture says is “not against flesh and blood,” obedience is where true freedom begins.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Pentagon ‘Orbs’ UAP Over Persian Gulf Prove Disclosure Is Increasing

US military footage showing unidentified objects flying over the Persian Gulf is reigniting debate over what the government knows about UAPs and what their true origin may be.

Media outlet Daily Mail reports that newly revealed drone footage captured “three objects flying over the Persian Gulf on August 23, 2012.” The minute-long infrared recording was taken by a US Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drone just after 6 p.m. local time. According to the report, the Pentagon described the lights as “orbs” flying in formation rather than a single triangular craft.

In the footage, one orb appears to fall back before rapidly accelerating forward. The report states that the object exhibited “clear signs of instant acceleration without any visible thrust,” behavior often associated with what investigators call the “five observables” of UFO activity.

Jeremy Corbell, who released the footage, said, “Your government has labeled this UAP, and you were never supposed to see this footage.”




The report also notes that the region between Saudi Arabia and Iran has become a hotspot for UAP encounters in recent years. In a separate incident discussed during a 2024 congressional hearing, footage allegedly showed a Hellfire missile striking an unidentified object near Yemen and “merely bounced off the hull of a UFO,” according to the Daily Mail.

Officially, the US government maintains there is no physical evidence proving extraterrestrial life exists. Yet the continued release of military footage and whistleblower testimony has fueled speculation that disclosure is unfolding in stages.

For L.A. Marzulli, a leading voice on the supernatural and biblical interpretation of the UFO phenomenon, the implications are far deeper than questions of advanced aerospace technology. Marzulli has long argued that these craft are not extraterrestrial visitors from distant planets. Instead, he contends they are interdimensional entities linked to the biblical narrative of fallen angels and the Nephilim described in Genesis 6.

Rather than viewing disclosure as confirmation of alien life, Marzulli believes it represents a spiritual deception that aligns with end times prophecy. He has warned that growing government acknowledgment of UAPs may prepare the public to accept a narrative that undermines biblical authority and reframes ancient supernatural realities as extraterrestrial encounters.

As more footage surfaces and congressional hearings continue, the debate over whether these objects are advanced technology, extraterrestrial craft or something far more supernatural shows no sign of slowing.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




SpaceX’s Million Satellite Vision: Innovation or a Prelude to Prophecy?

Glenn Beck recently drew attention to two developments in the space industry that he believes deserve far more public scrutiny than they are receiving.

He first addressed reports that NASA’s Artemis launch may be pushed back due to cold temperatures in Florida. Beck immediately referenced the Challenger disaster.

“The Challenger blew up because it was sitting on the pad and the temperatures in Florida went below freezing,” he said, noting that Artemis uses similar solid booster rockets. While acknowledging improvements since that tragedy, he stressed caution. “We can’t afford to lose the Artemis.”

What followed, however, was the announcement that truly captured his imagination.

Beck discussed the merger of SpaceX and xAI, describing the combined entity as the most valuable company in the world. The scale of the move struck him as historically significant. “I thought to myself, wow. That’s kind of like somebody saying, ‘Yeah, I know we’re expanding, and I know it’s 1820, but everything west of the Missouri River is mine.’”

The comparison was not casual. SpaceX has filed plans that could enable the launch of as many as one million satellites into orbit over time.

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Humanity currently operates roughly 14,000 active satellites. Even a fraction of the proposed number would alter the balance of activity in low Earth orbit. “This is not an expansion of what exists today,” Beck said. “This is a complete redesign of space around Earth.”

He urged listeners to shift their framework from gadgets to history.

In the 19th century, power was determined by who controlled rivers and later railroads. Towns thrived or withered depending on where infrastructure was placed. “Control doesn’t require ownership,” Beck said. “It requires scale.”

Low Earth orbit is limited. There are only so many usable altitudes and carefully coordinated corridors that can tolerate traffic without catastrophic collisions. At small numbers, satellites share space. At massive numbers, they define it. “You’re no longer participating in space. You’re designing and structuring it,” he said.

Beck also highlighted the strategic implications. “For the first time in history, a private company is positioned to shape the planetary infrastructure faster than governments, cheaper than any nation.” The pace of replacement and expansion, he noted, could be measured in months rather than decades. “This is going to change our skies forever,” he said. “I’m not sure I like it. I just want to point out it’s massive.”

The proposal would not only affect global communications and artificial intelligence infrastructure. It would also alter the visible heavens. A significant increase in satellites would make them far more noticeable to anyone who steps outside at night.

For many people this transformation is unfolding quietly. The architecture of near space is being drafted in real time, largely outside public debate.

The Bible repeatedly points to signs in the heavens. From Blood Moons to Wormwood in Revelation, prophecy places profound events in the sky itself. As humanity now fills that same expanse with unprecedented scale and speed, a serious question emerges.

Are we witnessing nothing more than technological ambition, or could these changes in the heavens form part of a much larger story moving steadily toward fulfillment?

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].




Giants, Genesis 6 and the End Times: Why Tucker Carlson’s Nephilim Discussion Is Going Viral

The Nephilim, described in Genesis 6 as the “mighty men of old, men of renown,” have reemerged in today’s cultural conversation with surprising force.

Once confined largely to theological debate, giants are now the subject of mainstream interviews, viral clips and renewed interest in ancient texts.

Recently, Tucker Carlson hosted AJ Gentile of The Why Files to discuss claims surrounding giant skeletons, Smithsonian cover-ups and historical accounts of red-haired giants in places like Lovelock Cave. Their conversation has reignited questions about whether the biblical narrative of hybrid beings born from fallen angels and human women should be taken literally.

While much of the modern discussion centers on archaeology and suppressed records, Scripture presents a deeper spiritual framework.

Genesis 6 introduces the Nephilim in connection with the “sons of God” and the corruption that led to the flood in Noah’s day. References to giants continue throughout the Old Testament, from the Anakim to Goliath of Gath.

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The New Testament also addresses angelic rebellion in passages such as 2 Peter and Jude, pointing to a supernatural conflict that extends beyond mere biology. Ancient writings such as 1 Enoch and the book of Giants, along with discoveries among the Dead Sea Scrolls, reflect how seriously early Jewish communities regarded these events.

The bigger question remains: When Jesus warned that the last days would be “as it was in the days of Noah,” was He speaking only of moral decay, or something more? With growing talk of ancient giants, increasing knowledge and escalating global instability, many believers see echoes of biblical prophecy unfolding in real time.

Watch the full discussion above to explore the historical claims, the biblical texts and the prophetic implications surrounding the possible return of the Nephilim.

James Lasher, a seasoned writer and editor at Charisma Media, combines faith and storytelling with a background in journalism from Otterbein University and ministry experience in Guatemala and the LA Dream Center. A Marine Corps and Air Force veteran, he is the author of The Revelation of Jesus: A Common Man’s Commentary and a contributor to Charisma magazine. For interviews and media inquiries, please contact [email protected].