May 8, 2026

May, 8, 2026
May 8, 2026

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World news biblically understood

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God Warns, Calls To Repentance, And Offers Hope—But That Window Doesn’t Stay Open Forever

David Bowen

In an age of distraction, delay, and spiritual indifference, the message of Bible prophecy rings louder than ever: Now is the time. Not tomorrow. Not “someday.” Now.

In Acts 17, we see the Apostle Paul traveling from Thessalonica to Berea, encountering two very different audiences. Verse 11 tells us the Bereans “received the word with all readiness of mind, examining the Scriptures daily.” This attitude—eager, thoughtful, hungry for truth—should be the model for how we respond to God’s Word, especially in prophetic times.

When you examine the Scriptures with the Bereans’ level of diligence, one theme becomes unmistakably clear: God warns, calls to repentance, and offers hope—but only for a season. That window doesn’t stay open forever.

A Prophetic Pattern: Warning, Repentance, and Hope

Throughout the Old Testament, the prophets cried out to Israel with a consistent message: Repent, or judgment will come. Yet even within warnings, there was always a thread of hope—an invitation to return to God before it was too late.

This call to repentance is rooted in reverence. As the wisdom literature of Scripture reminds us, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” (Proverbs 9:10). Without this fear—this holy reverence—we cannot truly repent or receive the Word with open hearts.

God’s messages were tailored to His audience. Ancient Israel was an agricultural society, so many prophetic truths came through the imagery of sowing, harvesting, and the land. Isaiah 28:24-25 and Jeremiah 12:13 use wheat as a metaphor, tying spiritual truths to the agricultural cycles of the people.

Jesus and Paul continued this theme. In John 12:24, Jesus describes His impending death using the image of a grain of wheat that must die to bear fruit. Paul, in 1 Corinthians 15:37-38, speaks of resurrection in the same terms. Both reveal a vital truth: just like with wheat, there is a small window for harvest. Once that window closes, the crop is lost. Spiritually speaking, we are living in just such a moment.

The Prophetic Alarm: Not Just Prediction—But Purpose

Bible prophecy is not merely about forecasting the future. Its true purpose is to awaken, to warn, and ultimately, to bring hope through salvation.

Consider the sobering pattern Scripture offers:

• When God shut the door on Noah’s Ark, it was too late for the multitudes.

• When His hand wrote on the palace wall, it was too late for King Belshazzar and the Babylonians.

• When a wealthy landowner in Luke 12 made plans to build bigger barns, it was too late for him before he even broke ground.

Jesus’ parable of the rich man in Luke 12 is especially striking. He was successful by every earthly measure: fertile land, abundant harvest, strategic planning. Yet his fatal flaw was not his wealth, it was his spiritual blindness. He planned for everything except eternity.

“Fool!” God says. “This night your soul will be required of you.” Everything he owned, planned, and boasted of was gone in a moment. His soul, which ultimately belonged to God, was now demanded. And he had made no preparation. This isn’t just a parable, it’s a prophecy. And it’s a warning for today.

The Danger of Delay

In writing to the Corinthians, Paul wrote, “I tell you, now is the time of God’s favor, now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2). In 2 Corinthians, as he often did, Paul quotes from Isaiah. This time it’s Isaiah 49:8. Paul is giving the Corinthian Christians a sense of urgency. By His grace, God has an acceptable time for us to work. God has a “day of salvation” that will not last forever. This is no time for Christians to be consumed with ease and comfort and self-focus. It is time to get busy for the Lord and to be workers for Him!

Sadly, our world often mirrors the rich man’s mindset: building, hoarding, planning without acknowledging the brevity of life or the reality of eternity. Many today live for comfort and convenience, thinking they have time to settle the God question later. But Bible prophecy tells us later is not guaranteed.

Jesus makes this clear again in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16). Even in torment, the rich man never repents. He only wants someone to warn his brothers. But Abraham replies, “If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.” In other words, Scripture is enough. God has already spoken. The harvest is ready. The time is now.

Living Ready

To live with a prophetic mindset is to live awake and ready. God isn’t calling us to fear, but to action—urgent, hope-filled, Spirit-led action. This is not the hour for Christians to be consumed with self or lulled into spiritual sleep. We are workers in the harvest field of souls. And the window is narrowing.

Let us not be like the man building bigger barns, or the crowds who ignored Noah’s warnings. Let us be like the Bereans—searching the Scriptures daily, receiving the Word eagerly, and living with an urgency rooted in the hope of Christ. Because one day, the door will close. The writing will be on the wall. And it will be too late. But today? Today is still the day of salvation.


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Don’t Mess With Texas: Islamists In The Lone Star State Are Overplaying Their Hand

Clearly, the Islamists are growing more bold. But it looks like they're overplaying their hand. After a Muslim-only event was advertised at a water park in Grand Prairie, Texas, near Dallas, Governor Abbott stepped in. Earlier this week, he sent a letter to the mayor of Grand Prairie threatening to cut funding to the city if it did not cancel the event, which Abbott rightly said was a clear case of religious discrimination. No non-Muslims allowed at a city-owned, taxpayer-funded water park in Texas? Folks, they say don't mess with Texas for a reason.

How Intense Political Polarization Is Fanning The Flames Of Antisemitism

Opposition to Trump hasn’t been stagnant; it has morphed into broader narratives accusing “Zionist interests” or Jewish influence of controlling U.S. policy—language that revives classic antisemitic tropes about secret cabals dominating governments and finance. We are living a bygone era all over again…

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We Really Are In A Raging War: University Professor Says He Is Waiting For Me To Die

The evolutionary worldview is a religion, one that’s practiced by those who attack Christianity. They have a nontheistic religion; in fact, evolution fits one of the Merriam-Webster dictionary definitions of religion: “a cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith.” The dictionary definition of religion certainly describes the worldview of evolutionary naturalism. The beliefs of evolutionism purport to explain the entire world’s existence by means of evolutionary naturalism, and thus, it is an all-encompassing faith—a religious worldview.

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Israel My Glory

David Bowen

In an age of distraction, delay, and spiritual indifference, the message of Bible prophecy rings louder than ever: Now is the time. Not tomorrow. Not “someday.” Now.

In Acts 17, we see the Apostle Paul traveling from Thessalonica to Berea, encountering two very different audiences. Verse 11 tells us the Bereans “received the word with all readiness of mind, examining the Scriptures daily.” This attitude—eager, thoughtful, hungry for truth—should be the model for how we respond to God’s Word, especially in prophetic times.

When you examine the Scriptures with the Bereans’ level of diligence, one theme becomes unmistakably clear: God warns, calls to repentance, and offers hope—but only for a season. That window doesn’t stay open forever.

A Prophetic Pattern: Warning, Repentance, and Hope

Throughout the Old Testament, the prophets cried out to Israel with a consistent message: Repent, or judgment will come. Yet even within warnings, there was always a thread of hope—an invitation to return to God before it was too late.

This call to repentance is rooted in reverence. As the wisdom literature of Scripture reminds us, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” (Proverbs 9:10). Without this fear—this holy reverence—we cannot truly repent or receive the Word with open hearts.

God’s messages were tailored to His audience. Ancient Israel was an agricultural society, so many prophetic truths came through the imagery of sowing, harvesting, and the land. Isaiah 28:24-25 and Jeremiah 12:13 use wheat as a metaphor, tying spiritual truths to the agricultural cycles of the people.

Jesus and Paul continued this theme. In John 12:24, Jesus describes His impending death using the image of a grain of wheat that must die to bear fruit. Paul, in 1 Corinthians 15:37-38, speaks of resurrection in the same terms. Both reveal a vital truth: just like with wheat, there is a small window for harvest. Once that window closes, the crop is lost. Spiritually speaking, we are living in just such a moment.

The Prophetic Alarm: Not Just Prediction—But Purpose

Bible prophecy is not merely about forecasting the future. Its true purpose is to awaken, to warn, and ultimately, to bring hope through salvation.

Consider the sobering pattern Scripture offers:

• When God shut the door on Noah’s Ark, it was too late for the multitudes.

• When His hand wrote on the palace wall, it was too late for King Belshazzar and the Babylonians.

• When a wealthy landowner in Luke 12 made plans to build bigger barns, it was too late for him before he even broke ground.

Jesus’ parable of the rich man in Luke 12 is especially striking. He was successful by every earthly measure: fertile land, abundant harvest, strategic planning. Yet his fatal flaw was not his wealth, it was his spiritual blindness. He planned for everything except eternity.

“Fool!” God says. “This night your soul will be required of you.” Everything he owned, planned, and boasted of was gone in a moment. His soul, which ultimately belonged to God, was now demanded. And he had made no preparation. This isn’t just a parable, it’s a prophecy. And it’s a warning for today.

The Danger of Delay

In writing to the Corinthians, Paul wrote, “I tell you, now is the time of God’s favor, now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2). In 2 Corinthians, as he often did, Paul quotes from Isaiah. This time it’s Isaiah 49:8. Paul is giving the Corinthian Christians a sense of urgency. By His grace, God has an acceptable time for us to work. God has a “day of salvation” that will not last forever. This is no time for Christians to be consumed with ease and comfort and self-focus. It is time to get busy for the Lord and to be workers for Him!

Sadly, our world often mirrors the rich man’s mindset: building, hoarding, planning without acknowledging the brevity of life or the reality of eternity. Many today live for comfort and convenience, thinking they have time to settle the God question later. But Bible prophecy tells us later is not guaranteed.

Jesus makes this clear again in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16). Even in torment, the rich man never repents. He only wants someone to warn his brothers. But Abraham replies, “If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.” In other words, Scripture is enough. God has already spoken. The harvest is ready. The time is now.

Living Ready

To live with a prophetic mindset is to live awake and ready. God isn’t calling us to fear, but to action—urgent, hope-filled, Spirit-led action. This is not the hour for Christians to be consumed with self or lulled into spiritual sleep. We are workers in the harvest field of souls. And the window is narrowing.

Let us not be like the man building bigger barns, or the crowds who ignored Noah’s warnings. Let us be like the Bereans—searching the Scriptures daily, receiving the Word eagerly, and living with an urgency rooted in the hope of Christ. Because one day, the door will close. The writing will be on the wall. And it will be too late. But today? Today is still the day of salvation.


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Of News Events Around The World.

Don’t Mess With Texas: Islamists In The Lone Star State Are Overplaying Their Hand

Clearly, the Islamists are growing more bold. But it looks like they're overplaying their hand. After a Muslim-only event was advertised at a water park in Grand Prairie, Texas, near Dallas, Governor Abbott stepped in. Earlier this week, he sent a letter to the mayor of Grand Prairie threatening to cut funding to the city if it did not cancel the event, which Abbott rightly said was a clear case of religious discrimination. No non-Muslims allowed at a city-owned, taxpayer-funded water park in Texas? Folks, they say don't mess with Texas for a reason.

How Intense Political Polarization Is Fanning The Flames Of Antisemitism

Opposition to Trump hasn’t been stagnant; it has morphed into broader narratives accusing “Zionist interests” or Jewish influence of controlling U.S. policy—language that revives classic antisemitic tropes about secret cabals dominating governments and finance. We are living a bygone era all over again…

untitled artwork 6391

We Really Are In A Raging War: University Professor Says He Is Waiting For Me To Die

The evolutionary worldview is a religion, one that’s practiced by those who attack Christianity. They have a nontheistic religion; in fact, evolution fits one of the Merriam-Webster dictionary definitions of religion: “a cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith.” The dictionary definition of religion certainly describes the worldview of evolutionary naturalism. The beliefs of evolutionism purport to explain the entire world’s existence by means of evolutionary naturalism, and thus, it is an all-encompassing faith—a religious worldview.

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Israel My Glory

Erick Stakelbeck

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YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH.

SO DO WE.

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding Of News Events Around The World And Equip The Church To Stand With A Biblical Worldview.

untitled artwork

Israel My Glory

YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH.

SO DO WE.

 

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding Of News Events Around The World And Equip The Church To Stand With A Biblical Worldview.