Intro to the End Times #17: What Will Happen to Israel?

Intro to the End Times is a series walking through some of the key themes of the story of Jesus’ return from a historic premillennial perspective, with special focus on knowing the heart of Jesus as we partner with God through the most dramatic chapter of human history.


In the last post, we talked about the promises of the Abrahamic covenant, which is unconditional and unbreakable, and the Davidic covenant, which narrows the focus to David’s line. But in order to fulfill His promises to Abraham and David, God must make Israel righteous, which has never yet fully happened in history. He will do this the same way He made us righteous– through the blood of Jesus in the new covenant. We could summarize these three covenants this way:

  • Abrahamic covenant – WHAT – land, descendants, blessing to the nations
  • Davidic covenant – WHO – a righteous, eternal king from the line of David
  • New covenant – HOW – by putting His law in their hearts

In this post, we’re going to look at how this promise unfolds in the drama of the end times.

All Israel Will Be Saved

There is a fixed point in the future when all Israel is going to get saved. The magnificent wisdom of God is to cause this to happen at the transition of the age, as Jesus returns to establish His kingdom. Zechariah 12 describes the climactic battle of Jerusalem at the end of the Tribulation when God opens Israel’s eyes to who He is and give them the gift of repentance.

And I will pour out on the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem a spirit of grace and pleas for mercy, so that, when they look on me, on him whom they have pierced, they shall mourn for him, as one mourns for an only child, and weep bitterly over him, as one weeps over a firstborn.”
(Zechariah 12:10, cf Revelation 1:7)

Earlier in Zechariah, there’s a phrase that brought me to tears in the prayer room when God started giving me His heart for Israel: “Then you will know that the LORD of hosts has sent me.” (Zec. 2:9) Can you hear the emotion in this phrase? “Oh, Israel, then you will finally know!” How His heart longs for this day! You can hear this same ache when He says:

“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem… How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing! …For I tell you, you will not see me again, until you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.’”
(Matthew 23:37-39)

So how is God going to accomplish this?

In Romans 11, Paul lays out a plan of such delicately balanced wisdom that only God could have conceived of it. God allowed the majority of Israel to reject the gospel, thus pushing the gospel out to the Gentiles, but the plan is to use the salvation of the Gentiles to provoke Israel to jealousy, so that they recognize and return to their God. This forces humility in all of us: the Gentiles must recognize that their faith rests squarely on the Jewish covenant, and Israel must recognize that the Gentiles have truth that they need!

“…through their trespass salvation has come to the Gentiles, so as to make Israel jealous…. a partial hardening has come upon Israel, until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. And in this way all Israel will be saved, as it is written, ‘The Deliverer will come from Zion, he will banish ungodliness from Jacob'”
(Romans 11:11, 25-26)

When Jesus returns, Israel will see Him coming on the clouds, then riding through the desert delivering them again with miracles even greater than the Exodus (Mi. 7:15, Je. 23:7-8), and with the testimony of the faithful church through the Tribulation fresh in their minds, they will recognize with sudden, brilliant, terrible clarity that Yeshua was the Messiah all along. They’ll realize that He wasn’t just the gentile Christian God; He’s their own Mighty One of the Exodus, the Son of David, YHWH in flesh. They will mourn and repent, and be granted salvation spiritually and physically as He wipes away their sins and rescues them from the antichrist all at once.

And Jesus’ heart will burst with joy as His family welcomes Him home.

Before we move on: who exactly is “all Israel”? Answer: every Jewish person left alive on earth at that point, assuming they haven’t taken the mark of the beast. There are a number of verses referring to “those who are left” or the “survivors” of Israel turning to the Lord, following a time of great judgment. You’ll also see the phrase “in that day” a lot- this is a key phrase that almost always refers to the end times or the millennium!

In that day the branch of the LORD shall be beautiful and glorious, and the fruit of the land shall be the pride and honor of the survivors of Israel. And he who is left in Zion and remains in Jerusalem will be called holy, everyone who has been recorded for life in Jerusalem, when the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the daughters of Zion and cleansed the bloodstains of Jerusalem from its midst by a spirit of judgment and by a spirit of burning.”
(Isaiah 4:3)

“In that day the remnant of Israel and the survivors of the house of Jacob… will lean on the LORD… A remnant will return, the remnant of Jacob, to the mighty God. …only a remnant of them will return. Destruction is decreed, overflowing with righteousness.”
(Isaiah 10:20-22)

“And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved. For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall be those who escape, as the LORD has said, and among the survivors shall be those whom the LORD calls.”
(Joel 2:32)

Jacob’s Trouble

Satan is well aware of God’s promises in the Abrahamic and Davidic covenants, and he knows that they’re all tied together. He’s figured out that the way to best way to strike against Jesus is to strike against His covenant people. In fact, Jesus said something really specific about His coming related to the people of Jerusalem, and Satan was paying attention:

O Jerusalem, Jerusalem… you will not see me again, until you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.”
(Matthew 23:37-39)

To Satan, this looks like a loophole! He failed at preventing Jesus from being born, but if he can just prevent Jerusalem from saying, “Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord,” he can prevent Jesus from coming back! To a large extent, anti-Semitism throughout history can be traced back to Satan’s desire to prevent Jesus’ return by eliminating the people whose invitation He has bound Himself to.

During the Tribulation, one of Satan’s top priorities is furious aggression against Israel, who is shown in this passage of Revelation as a woman:

“And when the dragon saw that he had been thrown down to the earth, he pursued the woman who had given birth to the male childBut the woman was given the two wings of the great eagle so that she might fly from the serpent into the wilderness, to the place where she is to be nourished for a time, and times, and half a time. The serpent poured water like a river out of his mouth after the woman, to sweep her away with a flood. But the earth came to the help of the woman, and the earth opened its mouth and swallowed the river that the dragon had poured from his mouth.”
(Revelation 12:13-16)

The Old Testament as well describes the Tribulation as a time of intense trouble for the people of Israel:

“Alas! That day is so great there is none like it; it is a time of distress for Jacob [NKJV ‘Jacob’s trouble’]; yet he shall be saved out of it.”
(Jeremiah 30:7)

“And there shall be a time of trouble, such as never has been since there was a nation till that time. But at that time your people shall be delivered, everyone whose name shall be found written in the book.”
(Daniel 12:1)

Satan’s fury, via the antichrist, will be intensely focused on Israel, much like Hitler’s fury during World War II. The question of Israel will become a dividing point among the nations, as we each have to decide whether we will stand with God in His love for His people, or stand passive and allow the antichrist to have his way. Even today, antisemitism is mounting, as Satan lays the foundation for the worst persecution of the Jewish people the world has ever known. (For more on God’s covenant with Israel and the history of antisemitism, I highly recommend the free documentary series Covenant and Controversy.)

Our Response

However, there’s lots of good news in the midst of the bad news. I’m grateful that every verse I shared above highlights God’s rescue of the Jewish people. A few posts from now, I’m going to cover what Jesus does when He appears- how He does the Exodus all over again and dramatically saves His people. For the moment, we can be assured that even in the midst of great persecution, there are also dramatic miracles taking place (like the earth opening up to swallow the dragon’s flood in Revelation 12!) and the Gentile church is rising up to stand with the Jews.

Which brings us full circle to the beginning of this post: all Israel will be saved when the Gentile church provokes her to jealousy. Can you imagine the kind of witness it will be when Gentile believers are hiding Jews in their homes like Corrie ten Boom, serving them with such love and compassion, and even laying down their lives for them? That witness of costly, faithful love will make a deep mark on the Jews, and no doubt will lead many of them to faith in their Messiah.

The deeper I have delved into studying the end times, the more I discover that it all centers around Israel. Whether you realize it or not, your theology of Israel will absolutely inform your eschatology. Is God really faithful to all of His promises? Is there still a unique place in His story for Israel?

I once heard a chilling statement from a teacher who was explaining their belief that there will be no tribulation because it all was fulfilled at the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD and we’re currently living in a symbolic millennial reign. Someone asked, “But what about Israel?” and the teacher immediately laughed and said, “I don’t care about Israel.” It hit me like a knife. They immediately backpedaled and said that they care about Israel as equally as they care about any other unsaved nation, but I felt like the enemy had just tipped his hand. His hatred for Israel seeps into our bad theology and impacts whether we will stand with the plans of God or not.

We urgently need to come into agreement with God’s love for Israel. The story of the Bible, especially regarding the end times, doesn’t make sense until we see that it’s all Israel-centric. God will be faithful to His promises to Abraham and all Israel will be saved, and Jesus will reign as the Son of David from Jerusalem forever. Satan will rage, and we must be ready to stand up and bear witness to Jesus’ sacrificial love for His people by even laying down our own lives for them.

When Israel at last confesses, “Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord,” we will take Psalm 24 as our songbook and sing to Jerusalem,

“Lift up your heads, O gates! And be lifted up, O ancient doors, that the King of glory may come in. Who is this King of glory? The LORD, strong and mighty, the LORD, mighty in battle!”
(Psalm 24:7-8)

A few of my favorite resources on Israel:

(Full disclosure: I love to recommend resources to help you in your journey, and when I do I use Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase something through my links, I may receive a small commission. But if there’s a resource you want, I encourage you to get it wherever works best for you!)

For more recommendations, check out my Resources page.

Listen to Teaching: “Our Eternal Priesthood”

A few weeks ago, I had the opportunity to teach at The Prayer Room‘s weekly Encounter service. When I was asked to step in as guest speaker, I immediately knew what I wanted to teach on: priesthood. I had actually originally been invited to teach this message at a church in Wisconsin in spring 2020… but I think we all remember spring 2020! Yeah, that trip did not occur. But this message had been stirring in my heart since then, and pieces of it long before. It was a privilege to finally package it all together and share with my community.

Priesthood is a core idea to the house of prayer. It’s part of our identity before the throne of God. All of us, no matter what other assignment we may have, are called to minister to God as priests. This calling goes all the way back to the garden of Eden; in fact, we could accurately call the garden the first temple on earth and Adam the first priest! (Breaking down the Hebrew behind this concept is one of my favorite parts of studying/teaching on priesthood.) Then, as the overflow of our ministry of prayer and worship to God, we are empowered and commissioned to minister His truth to others.

Wanna know the best part about being a priest?

God Himself is our inheritance (Nu. 18:20).

Where to Listen

This message “Our Eternal Priesthood” is available in many forms:

PDF          MP3         Spotify          Youtube

(You can probably find it on other podcast platforms too, but honestly Spotify is all I ever use.) If you’re interested in more of my teachings, I have a few more available on my resource page!

Maranatha, Emmanuel

History

My favorite Christmas hymn has always been “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel”. I love the low, yearning tones that seem to hang in the air, expressing the groan of creation for a redeemer.

O come, O come, Emmanuel
And ransom captive Israel
That mourns in lonely exile here
Until the Son of God appear

When I sat down to write this blog, I decided to do a little background research on this hymn, and what I found made me love it all the more.

“O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” was originally written in Latin for worship in Benedictine monasteries in the 8th or 9th century (here are two great sources I found). It was one of a series of “antiphons” that would be sung in the days leading up to Christmas. (If the word “antiphon” looks familiar to those acquainted with the harp and bowl model, yep- it’s the refrain following a call and response!) This series of songs, called the “O Antiphons,” each highlighted a different name of Jesus.

  • O Sapentia (Wisdom)
  • O Adonai (God)
  • O Radix Jesse (Stem or root of Jesse)
  • O Clavis David (Key of David)
  • O Oriens (Dayspring)
  • O Rex genitium (King of the Gentiles)
  • O Emmanuel (God with us)

The first letter of each word, when read backwards, spells the Latin “Ero cras,” which means “I will be present tomorrow.” O Emmanuel would traditionally be sung on the day before Christmas Eve. (The eighth antiphon, sung on Christmas Eve, would be “O Virgo Virginum”, meaning O Virgin of Virgins.) The modern form as we now know it was translated and published in 1851.

I love studying the history of monasteries, because they’re a deep part of our family history. Especially as someone building 24/7 prayer, I have so much honor and gratitude for the monastic tradition and their legacy of constant prayer and worship. It’s beautiful to know that 1200 years ago my brothers and sisters were singing this same hymn in longing for the presence of God.

Emmanuel

After all, that’s what “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” is about. Longing. Yearning. Aching for the coming of the One who will make everything right.

From the moment Eden fell– our first cosmic tragedy, when darkness swallowed the light and the glory of God seemed to be forever lost– God promised that Eve’s future Seed would crush the head of the serpent (Ge. 3:15). In that moment, a glimmer of hope first shone.

Down through the generations, the people of God waited for the Seed. The promises narrowed, as God singled out Abraham, then Isaac, then Jacob, then Judah, then David. The prophets elaborated on what this Seed would do– He would inherit the throne of David and bring salvation to Israel, and by extension to the whole earth, until the glory of God would cover the earth again. They called Him the Son of David, the Anointed One (Messiah).

And Isaiah called Him Emmanuel (Is. 7:14). God with us.

When I hear this song, I hear that ancient longing for a redeemer to fulfill God’s promises to His people. As the first verse says, Israel is captive and mourning in exile. Even living in her own land under Roman occupation, Israel was a long way from thriving in the fullness of her promises. Truthfully, the exile hasn’t ended even today, because God can’t fully give Israel her land to dwell in safely forever until she’s fully righteous (see my post on Israel’s promises).

And really, the exile is even deeper than that, because all of humanity has been exiled from Eden since Genesis 3.

The birth of Emmanuel changed everything– or more accurately, was the start of changing everything. YES, God was with us for 33 years, walking around on the ground in a body of flesh. YES, Jesus’s death made a way for our spiritual exile to end, so that we could be justified before God and boldly enter into His presence. YES, His Spirit is with us now.

But we’re not home yet.

And He’s not home yet.

Maranatha

Our home, and Jesus’ home, is heaven on earth forever, when the New Jerusalem descends and the kingdom of God becomes a physical reality. Jesus will rule on earth as the promised Son of David, and He will restore all things back to the purity and limitless life that was present in Eden.

Until then, we groan, together with all creation (Ro. 8:22-23).

The ancient Greek word to express this longing is “Maranatha.” It means, “Come, O Lord!” When I sing “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel”, I’m not only singing it in memory of those who longed for His first coming, but for myself and my generation now, longing for His second coming. The first coming was really to make way for the second. Jesus’ work is incomplete until He returns.

This “Maranatha” is the cry of the Bride at the end of Revelation:

“The Spirit and the Bride say, ‘Come.’ …Come, Lord Jesus!”
(Revelation 22:17, 20)

In that day, the full meaning of Emmanuel will become reality, when God Himself is on the earth forever.

“And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God.'”
(Revelation 21:2-3)

Right now, we live in the waiting, hanging in the gap between the “already” and the “not yet.” That’s my favorite part of “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel”: the tension between the verses and the chorus, as we linger in the longing before “Rejoice!” breaks out. (Jaye Thomas has a beautiful acapella version on Spotify and elsewhere that sings several verses before he finally gets to the chorus.)

This Christmas season, as we feel into the ancient anticipation for the birth of Emmanuel, let’s also join with the ancient cry of Maranatha, that God would be with us forever on the earth when Jesus comes. This is the dearest longing of His heart, and thus it becomes ours too.

Maranatha. Come, Emmanuel.

What I’m Reading: The Boy in Two Places

(Full disclosure: I love to recommend resources to help you in your journey, and when I do I use Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase something through my links, I may receive a small commission. But if there’s a resource you want, I encourage you to get it wherever works best for you!)

As you may have read already if you’re subscribed to my email list, my friend and co-leader Luke Fredenberg wrote a kids’ book about the end times! I got to hear Luke’s excited/stressed updates as the entire process unfolded, and it’s so incredible to see this project complete.

The Boy in Two Places is written for families to imagine together what it will look like for the church (especially our youngest brothers and sisters) to live through the days of turmoil right before Jesus comes back. I was touched by Luke’s portrayal of how deeply rich and glorious life in the end times will be, even as deep and real sorrow touch us, too. It makes me rethink my priorities even now, and set my heart all over again to live for eternity!

Luke was gracious enough to make time for an interview with me to share with you! (This interview is slightly edited for conciseness and clarity. As a special bonus, my email subscribers received the audio of this interview, so if you missed it, sign up and reply to the first email with a request for the audio!)

So, Luke, how would you describe what The Boy in Two Places is about?

It’s about a boy who’s living in the end times, and he’s looking back on his life before and comparing and contrasting— “My life as a kid in the end times looks like this, and my life in the past looked very different.” He’s kind of weighing that, both the good things and the difficult things. It’s not a timeline of actual end time events; it’s more to paint a picture of what life specifically for a kid will look like in the end times. There are lots of emotion words and lots of very normal things that kids do as kids; it just looks different in their life currently versus life in the days before Jesus comes back.

What was the original idea? How did you come up with the inspiration for this book?

I love writing, and I always wanted to write. I appreciate kids’ books that are totally just fun and engaging (my son Cohen has some) but I also wanted— there’s got to be a way to keep it fun and light-hearted but also communicate Bible truths. For years I was trying to write different Bible themes. I toyed with the Sermon on the Mount; I toyed with lots of stuff. I would get an idea and start writing, but after a few hours all my ideas would run out!

But this one came about right before COVID and… there’s so little material out there on the end times, specifically related to raising your children in it. I wanted to write a resource to get families into the end times story and talking about it with their kids.

I didn’t know the best approach to do that. I originally started with the timeline idea, trying to walk through what’s going to happen, and I was like, “No, I think it would be better and more helpful if I just did something in a way that kids could relate to, and just paint a picture of what life looks like in the end times.” The injection of the end time message has been the most transformational thing in my life since being saved, so I thought, “How can I do that for kids and families who are maybe not plugged into the end time narrative right now?”

So you saw a need and wanted to fill it! What was the writing process like?

It was very different than I thought. After I got the vision to focus on painting a picture of life in the end times rather than the timeline, I started thinking, “What are things that kids do or that kids can relate to?” So that’s when I started thinking about some of the words that you’ll see, like “dreams”; every kid’s got dreams. The emotion of joy, the emotion of sadness, running around, being goofy… what do kids do? And then to transfer that, what does that look like in the end times?

Once I was ready to have someone one else look at it (which was a bit terrifying!), I sent it to an editor. She had a lot to say [laughs], a lot of feedback on the flow and on words that were not child-appropriate or could be said more simply or more concretely. I had a rhyme pattern from the beginning, but I didn’t have the cadence. When you read a children’s book, it sounds like you’re swaying and dancing to it. My book rhymed, but it didn’t have that cadence. She helped me with that, and I never would have even thought of that!

From when I sent it to the editor until the finished product, the book has changed so much. We probably went back and forth maybe five or six times, where I would send her the initial thing, she’d make edits, send it back to me, I would tweak it, send it back to her— I wasn’t expecting that much involvement and that much transformation of the book. That was really fun because the editor added a different perspective; she’s a mom and has kids and just knows that world probably better than I do, and so it was really just a fun development.

As a missionary on staff at The Prayer Room, you spend a lot of hours a week in the prayer room. How did that impact your writing? Were you writing in the prayer room? Were you getting ideas from your time in the prayer room?

I pretty much wrote the whole thing in the prayer room, which I think is a really cool component. The original idea came in a prayer meeting, and then it was such a cool writing process for me because it wasn’t just writing, it was a lot of critical thing and praying. Again, I started off with, “How do I paint a picture of life in the end times for a kid?” At the beginning that’s a cool idea, but then how do you write about it? How do you paint a picture?

Every kid experiences sadness— they stub their toe, or they lose at a game, or normal kid things, but what does sadness look like for a kid in the end times? There are about ten different action words like running, or emotions like fear, throughout the book. With some of them, like the word “sadness,” I camped out for an entire two-hour prayer meeting, just trying to hone in and pray about it. For many of them I would write down ideas that were cool and rhyming, but then I thought, “No, it just doesn’t settle; I can make this better. This doesn’t accurately communicate what I want. What does sadness look like in the end times? This doesn’t really fit.”

It was a lot of back and forth with the Lord, and a lot of tweaking. I would write a stanza down and then pray through it, and then would need to go back to the drawing board or look at it from a different light. It was really a ton of interaction with the Lord and He gave a lot of ideas. I was typing and praying and just waiting on the Lord, and then an idea would come, like, “Oh yeah, sadness could look like mourning over your friends who were faithful to Jesus and lost their lives, that’s real!”

Throughout the whole tone of the book, I wanted to communicate the intensities and difficulties of the end times, but no doom and gloom. I wanted to communicate peace and that the Lord is with you. When I would have an idea that was a little too heavy, I would have to pray though it and the Lord would bring me back to center, like, “How do I communicate this in a way that doesn’t scare away all the kids?”

Did you end up having a favorite spread in the book?

Probably the “fear” one. It’s probably my favorite illustration, just because my illustrator Philip did incredibly, and he took my writing to the next level with his interpretation of it. I was like, “Oh dang, yeah! Let’s go with your idea; what you wanted to communicate is even better than what I had originally intended!”

Fear is such a strong emotion, and if you’ve heard about the end times before, you’ve probably heard a lot of the hard things about it. Fear is a really easy one to see that, okay, yeah, it’s going to look different because a lot of crazy stuff is happening. It’s an easy one to grasp, at least a little bit. Every kid experiences fear, and we all know what we were afraid of when we were kids, and those memories stick with us.

I feel like this one more than any other emotion captures the fact that there’s a lot of fear in the end times, but the Lord can help us work through that and overcome, and it’s actually a sign of his goodness. That spread is my favorite because the picture and words really communicate a negative emotion in a positive light.

Your illustrator Philip Ortiz is fantastic. How did you find him, and then what was the process of working with him like?

For the illustrator component, I knew nothing. All I knew is that I’m a writer, I am not an illustrator [laughs], so I need someone to help me. During the beginning process, I considered everything. There are a lot more illustrators in general than there are Christian illustrators, and so I wondered, “Do I hire some super talented, unsaved person whose style I like because they’re easier to find?”

The more I prayed about it, the more I realized, NO, it has to be equal. The illustrations are telling as much of the story as, if not more than, my words. I’m providing the framework, the foundation, and then the illustrator is really providing all of the substance that kids are drawn to. I very quickly realized it needed to be a Christian doing my art.

Then I thought, “Oh, wait, since this is the end times and there’s so much disagreement about this theology, I need to have an illustrator who is on the same page as me with what we’re trying to communicate. We need to be unified and not constantly butting heads over interpretation. So it not only needs to be a Christian, but someone who’s tracking with the same ideas, has their heart involved in the story, and is living a life of prayer. IHOP! It needs to be someone up at IHOPKC.”

I went on a Facebook group of IHOPers that I was part of (I was plugged in at IHOPKC for a number of years) and just put out a call like, “I need help— children’s book author— need illustrator— help!” Within a day I had 15 or so different illustrators recommended to me. At that point I didn’t know any of them by name, so I had to just look at all their online portfolios. I liked Philip’s stuff, and so we had an initial phone call.

I’m so grateful for Philip because there’s so much to the process of printing a book that I didn’t have any idea how to do. Philip was not only an incredible illustrator who was in a life of prayer and going deep in the end times himself, but he had also done kids’ books before [such as The New Earth: You’re Gonna Love It by Kathi DeCanio]. He knew the process of how to take this project from beginning to end. He knew all the different steps and legal stuff and how to get a bar code and get it registered… I knew nothing of that! In the initial conversation he said, “I have a passion not just to be an illustrator but to help the author be successful.” And I was like, “Oh my gosh, yes! I didn’t know I needed that, but now I’m convinced that I need your skills and wisdom!” And so all throughout the process, he really helped guide the project.

A book about the tribulation for kids is pretty niche. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anything quite like that before! Why do you think this topic is so important for kids?

One, because it’s not talked about anywhere. There are so few resources. God gave us the Bible to be helpful; it’s all profitable for teaching and instruction [2 Timothy 3:16], and so kids deserve to have resources about the end times. I believe, from the Word of God and what we see around us, that we’re getting close! Of course we don’t know exactly when Jesus is coming back, but we’re getting close. If Jesus is coming back soon, our kids are going to be the future leaders that I believe are going to go through a lot of this stuff.

Kids are like wet cement; they’re impressionable. If we start diving into the end times message now and sowing these seeds into them, we’re going to set them up to be future pastors or moms or small group leader or businessmen. Whether the return of Jesus is soon or further than we expect, whenever it is— if we can get the message in these kids now, that’s what we want.

And not just our kids, but I want our Christian families getting into new ideas about the tribulation. I want them wrestling through, like, “Is this in the Bible? This author/illustrator are trying to communicate that it is; what do I think? I’ve never talked to my children about this.” So I want to provide a resource that parents can wrestle through and have a way to easily engage their children in the end times message with the familiar format of a picture book.

I’m assuming this is kind of the mindset you have for your son, Cohen, at age two. How are you thinking about raising him in this message? Is the tribulation something you talk about with a two-year-old? How do you introduce him to this and raise him in this generation?

At age two, he reads this book and calls it “Daddy’s book”; he loves it. [Me: 😍] Obviously I’m just sowing seeds. If you can read this book to a seven-year-old and just put a hook in their heart, and they ask one question, like about the picture of an angel protecting kids— “What’s going on there, Daddy? Why do they need to be protected?”— in my mind that’s a win.

For Cohen, he’s just learning to talk, so for my kid I’m just thinking exposure. I want him to grow up having heard this stuff all his life. I constantly try to make it personal even to a two-year-old, like, “Hey, son, you’re going to be living through these things.” About the page with the angel on it, I’ll say, “Cohen, prayer is powerful. You see one of the girls is praying, and that’s why God sends the angel. Did you know that you can pray and God moves?” Even though he doesn’t talk back, even at the age of two I’m still sowing seeds.

Luke and his wife Caslin reading The Boy In Two Places with their son Cohen, age two

What has been the response to this book from some of the families who have gotten their hands on it already?

It’s been fun. One of the most fun feedback points for me is from the parents or adults, and they’re reading it and saying, “I’m feeling God!” One of the reviews on Amazon said, “This really is a book not just for children but for families.” I think they’re right! It’s technically called a children’s book, but my aim was for family units. A three-year-old isn’t going to learn about the end times by themselves; their parents are going to help them, and so in my mind if the parents are getting touched, that’s where it all starts.

Another point of feedback is from families who have never even thought about the end times. Even some friends of mine who would say, “Yeah, I appreciate that but I believe a little different thing about the end times”— they’re getting the book into their hands and reading it to their kids. They’re engaging with the storyline, and even though they might not have theological clarity on all that’s going on, they’re excited to introduce their kids to different Bible verses and just start the conversation of, “What if…? I don’t know; let’s journey through this together.”

Do you have more ideas for books in the future?

Nothing currently. I tell the Lord, “Lord, I like writing; I’m not going to become a full-time author, but You gave me this idea and I’m open if You give me ideas in the future.” But I have a sneaking suspicion that I’ll do more books in the future with the same heart, communicating Bible truths to kids in a way that’s powerful and that they can grasp. Children are the age that we need to be aiming at because, again, they’re wet cement, they’re impressionable. It wouldn’t surprise me if down the road there’s another idea that comes. The end times is such a rich topic, and even one specific portion of the end times or one nuanced detail about Jesus could easily be a children’s book. There’s more than enough material that the Lord could give ideas about, so I’m just waiting on Him to see what’s next.

Purchase The Boy in Two Places on Amazon.

 

Intro to the End Times #16: What Are God’s Promises to Israel?

Intro to the End Times is a series walking through some of the key themes of the story of Jesus’ return from a historic premillennial perspective, with special focus on knowing the heart of Jesus as we partner with God through the most dramatic chapter of human history.

(Full disclosure: I love to recommend resources to help you in your journey, and when I do I use Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase something through my links, I may receive a small commission. But if there’s a resource you want, I encourage you to get it wherever works best for you!)


As I’ve mentioned before, one of God’s primary objectives of the end time storyline is the fulfillment of His promises to Israel. The entire story of the Bible is Israel-centric; the rest of us as Gentiles get the privilege to be included, but we must never forget that we are in a Jewish story.

Unfulfilled Covenant

The Jewish story starts with God’s covenant with Abraham, which is a major cornerstone of the gospel (Gal. 3:8). The Abrahamic covenant has three specific and far-reaching promises that have not yet been fulfilled, and ultimately cannot be fully fulfilled until Jesus comes.

“Now the LORD said to Abram, ‘Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.'”
(Genesis 12:1-3)

I used to think that these promises had been already fulfilled. Land- the nation of Israel happened. Descendants- there sure are plenty of Jews. Blessing- Jesus came! And yes, those are all significant measures of fulfillment, but the full extent of what God had in His heart can only be fulfilled when Jesus returns.

  1. Land
    Abraham and his descendants will permanently inherit the full extent of the promised land as an “everlasting possession” (Ge. 15:18-21, 17:8). This space is far larger than Israel currently occupies (map here). Currently, 47% of Jews worldwide live in Israel. The prophets foretold of a future time that they would dwell in the land securely, without fear of attack (Isa. 32:18). The problem is, they can’t unless they are walking in righteous relationship with God. He warned them of exile when He gave the law to Moses (Lev. 26:27-33). Until the people are completely righteous, they can’t fully possess their inheritance forever (Isa. 32:17-18, 60:21).
  2. Descendants
    God not only promises Abraham lots of descendants, but that the nation as well as Abraham’s name would be “great” (Ge. 12:2). The prophets describe a day when Jerusalem will be a praise in the earth and everyone will be in awe at the glory of God that clearly rests on her (Isa. 61:9, 62:1-7). This hasn’t happened yet, and we have the same problem here as with the land. They cannot be “great” until they are righteous (Pr. 14:34).
  3. Blessing to the Nations
    Jesus’ birth through the line of David was a big part of this fulfillment, but the day of full salvation/blessing/restoration for the nations hasn’t yet dawned. When Jesus establishes His kingdom on earth as the Jewish King ruling from Jerusalem, the nations of the earth will be more blessed than they ever dreamed possible!

Remarkably, God in His wisdom has tied these three promises together in such a way that they all rely on each other and can only be fulfilled when Jesus returns. When He comes, all Israel will be saved when they are provoked by the fullness of salvation coming to the gentile church (Ro. 11:11-15, 25-26). Then they will be righteous and can possess the land and be a great nation- which will overflow with blessing to the nations as Jesus establishes His kingdom in Israel and to the ends of the earth forever!

Also, let’s note that these promises were given to Abraham, not only his descendants on his behalf. In order for God to be faithful to Abraham, He has to actually give these things to Abraham. The problem is, Abraham is currently dead, and he died without receiving the promises (He. 11:13). The only way for God to be faithful to Abraham is to resurrect him and give him the fulfillment in the next age.

Unbreakable Covenant

We need to be firmly aware that the Abrahamic covenant is NOT the same as the Mosaic covenant (the Law given at Sinai), aka the “old covenant” that was superseded by the new covenant. It’s much older and deeper. Most significantly, the Mosaic covenant is conditional, but the Abrahamic covenant is unconditional. It’s secure no matter what because it’s based on God’s faithfulness to Himself, not anything man does or doesn’t do.

When God affirms the covenant with Abraham a few chapters later, He actually puts Abraham to sleep and passes between the covenant offerings Himself (Ge. 15:12-20). Traditionally, the two parties were supposed to do that together. By not letting Abraham participate and doing it all Himself, God was saying, “You’re not making any promises; I’m making all the promises, and I’m going to be faithful to this covenant because of Me, not because of you.” This is the nature of God that our faith is based on! As 2 Timothy 2:13 says, “if we are faithless, he remains faithful— for he cannot deny himself.”

Jeremiah 31 makes the distinction between the new covenant and the Mosaic (not Abrahamic) covenant explicit:

“Behold, the days are coming, declares the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not like the covenant that I made with their fathers on the day when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt… I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people… they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the LORD. For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”
(Je. 31:31-34)

God contrasts the new covenant with the Mosaic covenant (the Law given when He brought them out of Egypt), not the Abrahamic covenant. The new covenant is God’s way of making Israel righteous so He can fulfill the Abrahamic covenant. Like Paul says in Romans 11:26 that “All Israel will be saved,” God says to Jeremiah that “they shall all know Me.”

The next few verses are just as striking, because God swears that His covenant with Israel to make them a nation forever is secure.

“Thus says the LORD, who gives the sun for light by day and the fixed order of the moon and the stars for light by night, who stirs up the sea so that its waves roar— the LORD of hosts is his name: ‘If this fixed order departs from before me, declares the LORD, then shall the offspring of Israel cease from being a nation before me forever.’ Thus says the LORD: ‘If the heavens above can be measured, and the foundations of the earth below can be explored, then I will cast off all the offspring of Israel for all that they have done, declares the LORD.'”
(Je. 31:35-37)

This is crucial for the church to understand, otherwise we’ll become arrogant against Israel and start to imagine that God can just erase His covenant with Israel and give the promises to gentile believers instead. This is called “replacement theology” or “supercessionism” (sometimes also called “better covenant theology”). I am convinced that it’s a theologically-veiled deception born out of Satan’s hatred of Israel. Replacement theology argues that because the majority of Israel rejected Jesus, God not only judged them with the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD but has permanently divorced them from being His people. In Jeremiah, God rejects this in the strongest terms, saying that He will never cast off Israel because of their sin.

Just to be sure, let’s jump to the New Testament. Paul says clearly about the election of Israel: “The gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.” (Ro. 11:29)

Davidic Covenant

Generations after the covenant with Abraham, God singled out David as the one through whose line the promises would come. In 2 Samuel 7, David got it into his heart to establish God’s house of prayer, and God responded with a promise to establish David’s house forever.

“And I will make for you a great name, like the name of the great ones of the earth. And I will appoint a place for my people Israel and will plant them, so that they may dwell in their own place and be disturbed no more. …your house and your kingdom shall be made sure forever before me. Your throne shall be established forever.”
(2 Samuel 7:9-10, 16)

I used to think that this referred to Jesus’ throne in heaven today. He’s King right now, right?

Well, yes and no. Of course as God He’s King over the universe, but He’s not currently reigning on David’s throne like God promised. Where is David’s throne? In Jerusalem. On earth. The Son of David has not yet taken His rightful throne.

“Of the increase of his government and of peace there will be no end, on the throne of David and over his kingdom… from this time forth and forevermore.”
(Isaiah 9:7)

At that time Jerusalem shall be called the throne of the LORD…”
(Jeremiah 3:17)

“I heard one speaking to me out of the temple… ‘this is the place of my throne and the place of the soles of my feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the people of Israel forever.”
(Ezekiel 43:6-7)

“Behold, the days are coming, declares the LORD, when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, and he shall reign as king and deal wisely, and shall execute justice and righteousness in the landIn his days Judah will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely.”
(Jeremiah 23:5)

Psalm 2 describes this Davidic King as the Anointed One, which is where we get the term “Messiah.”

The kings of the earth set themselves… against the LORD and against his Anointed… the Lord… will speak to them… ‘As for me, I have set my King on Zion, my holy hill.'”
(Psalm 2:2-6)

Israel has been waiting for this promised King, the Anointed One, to come reign on David’s throne in Jerusalem, bring perfect peace to those who dwell in the land of Israel, and bring blessing to the nations by establishing the kingdom of God on earth forever. No wonder they were confused by Jesus’ first coming! They weren’t wrong; God just had a different timing than they were expecting. But He will come again, and He will do all He said.

This is only the tip of the iceberg of the promises. (For example, I didn’t even touch God’s promise to do the Exodus all over again!) The Abrahamic covenant is the core of God’s promises to His people, and all that follows is detail about how He will fulfill it, with the Davidic covenant being arguably the biggest detail. In the next post we’ll unpack how these promises are fulfilled, along with Satan’s rage and God’s deliverance, in the story of Jesus’ return.

Note: Much of this blog was based on things I learned in Samuel Whitefield’s book One King. I wrote about it a few years ago, and I highly recommend getting your hands on a copy! (Full disclosure: I am an Amazon affiliate, so if you make any purchases through my links I may receive a small commission.)

5 More House of Prayer Podcasts I Love

A couple years ago I shared 5 House of Prayer Podcasts I Love, when 2019 saw a boom of HOP-related podcasts. Since then, a number more have been released, and I’ve been tracking with as many of them as I can. I’m here today to share my favorites with you!

Some of these were birthed directly out of houses of prayer, and others are from groups that have strong ties to the prayer movement and strongly carry the forerunner calling to prepare for Jesus’ return and long for His appearing. All of them have been a blessing to me, and although I can’t listen to every single episode (on top of podcasts, there are a number of Bible study series I’m trying to get through, and once in a while I like to listen to music too), I trust and recommend them all!

1. All of the FAI Podcasts

FAI is Frontier Alliance International, a missions organization based in Israel that serves all over the Middle East and also has a calling to equip the body of Christ worldwide in the Maranatha message, what I usually call the forerunner message of Jesus’ return. (You may have heard of their documentaries like Covenant and Controversy and Sheep Among Wolves, or their feature films like Ballads of the Revelation and Ballads of the Exodus.) The FAI app hosts six different podcasts, including The Better Beautiful and Walking Mirrors. The Better Beautiful is hosted by Stephanie Quick in Israel and Jeff Henderson in Florida, who both serve as leaders within FAI. They share weekly episodes diving deep into Bible passages and mediating on the beauty of Jesus as the “better beautiful,” the one who is the highest beauty and the answer to every question. Walking Mirrors is hosted by Stephanie for artists and creatives, discussing how we as artists declare the glory of God. I’ve binged more FAI content in the last year than any other source, and have been so deeply enriched by all they impart.

2. The Apocalyptic Gospel

When I heard of this podcast, my first thought was “There’s no way these guys aren’t connected to some kind of house of prayer circle I’m familiar with.” Turns out they’ve got connections from several angles, including both FAI and ACTS. This podcast is hosted by three guys (Josh Hawkins, Bill Scofield, and John Harrigan) who are all scholars of the Jewish context of the early church, and highlights how far we have come from the truths that were so fundamental to them. It was always about a coming King bringing an eternal kingdom, fulfilling His promises to Israel. I’ve just started the first few episodes, and I’m quite prepared to madly binge it over the next few weeks. I’m especially excited for all of the people they’re interviewing (including several from FAI)! Their full website is here.

3. Gripped

If you’re around the prayer movement and haven’t yet heard of Gripped, allow me to help you out from under your rock. Gripped is hosted by Billy Humphrey of GateCity Church (formerly called IHOP Atlanta) and Corey Russell of Upper Room Dallas (who was formerly at IHOPKC). These episodes are FIERY– if you’ve ever heard either of them lead a ministry time, you’ll know what I mean! They discuss revival, prayer, intimacy, and the end times, with the goal of stirring up the church to more ardently love Jesus and long for His presence.

4. MAPS Global Podcast

I came across MAPS Global because several of my HOP friends were joining their staff as missionaries to the middle east. MAPS is a global missions organization based out of Richmond House of Prayer in Virginia, and is a beautiful example of the the prayer movement joining with the missions movement, because they were always meant to be two sides of the same coin. This podcast, featuring MAPS director R. A. Martinez, tackles important and often controversial subjects including the gift of tongues, the urgency of the great commission, and how the gift of prophecy is supposed to interact with politics (looking at you, 2020 US election). These episodes go deep, and bring solid biblical clarity the church needs in this hour.

5. Beholding

Beholding is a new podcast from Sanctuary House of Prayer‘s own Johan Heinrichs, who also hosts the Burning Rooms podcast I featured in my last list. In the first episode of Beholding, Johan tells the story of realizing he didn’t know Jesus as much as he thought he did, so he started making a list of all the descriptions of Jesus’ character he could find in scripture. This list began to transform his heart and his relationship with God, and so this podcast devotes one short episode each to the verses on this list. Each episode ends with a prayer meditating on these descriptions and some instrumental music to facilitate your own meditation. This podcast is a powerful way to practice beholding the beauty of Jesus, and the website has further goodies to help.

Intro to the End Times #15: What Is the Church’s Message?

Intro to the End Times is a series walking through some of the key themes of the story of Jesus’ return from a historic premillennial perspective, with special focus on knowing the heart of Jesus as we partner with God through the most dramatic chapter of human history.

(Full disclosure: I love to recommend resources to help you in your journey, and when I do I use Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase something through my links, I may receive a small commission. But if there’s a resource you want, I encourage you to get it wherever works best for you!)


In this series on the end times, I’ve spent the past few posts taking a break from the main storyline to talk about some of the positive things that the church is experiencing, like protection, prayer, and revival. In this post, we’ll look at the church’s unique message to carry during this time.

Forerunners Preparing the Way

Throughout Scripture, in every transitional generation, God has raised up messengers to proclaim what’s coming. As Amos 3:7 says, “For the Lord GOD does nothing without revealing his secret to his servants the prophets.” He’s really into partnership, and His desire is that we would lean in close to hear His voice, so we can spread the message of what He’s doing.

The end times are no exception. As we discussed early in this series, God wants His people to understand the end times. The unbelieving world that hasn’t been listening to the Word will be surprised as by a thief in the night, but as 1 Thessalonians 5:4 says so clearly, “You are not in darkness, brothers, for that day to surprise you like a thief.” He wants us awake, aware, and partnering with Him to release His purposes on the earth.

Forerunners of Jesus’ First Coming

In the generation of Jesus’ first coming, God raised up prophetic voices to announce what He was doing.

  • Simeon had been waiting for years for the Messiah, and God had promised he would see Him in his lifetime. He met Jesus as a baby in the temple, and prophetically declared who He was as God had shown him. (Lk. 2:25-35)
  • Anna was a prophet, intercessor, and worshipper who lost her husband early in their marriage, and spent the next 60ish years of her life in the house of the Lord. After Jesus came to the temple as a baby, she declared the message of His coming to anyone who would listen. (Lk. 2:36-38)
  • John the Baptist was especially anointed to fulfill Isaiah’s prophecy of “one crying in the wilderness, ‘prepare the way of the Lord.'” (Lk. 3:4, Is. 40:3)

Though their message was rooted in Scriptures about the coming Messiah, it required additional prophetic insight to say, “NOW is the time.” In other words, they weren’t just called to proclaim the Word of God as it had been written for thousands of years; they were called to discern the season and apply the Word to declare that ancient prophecies were actively being fulfilled in their day. They were on the cutting edge of a move of God that irrevocably shifted all of  human history.

Forerunners of Jesus’ Second Coming

The coming of Jesus in the sky to establish His kingdom on earth is the most dramatic transition in all of human history. Before that final moment, He wants to mobilize believers as messengers to declare who He is and what He’s doing. This is His kindness and mercy to not leave the earth without a witness.

  • Daniel prophesies of “wise ones” (or “maskilim” in Hebrew) in the end times who know the heart of God and are able to explain what He’s doing to others.

the people who know their God shall stand firm and take action. And the wise among the people shall make many understand
Daniel 11:32-23

“And those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the sky above; and those who turn many to righteousness, like the stars forever and ever.”
Daniel 12:3

“And none of the wicked shall understand, but those who are wise shall understand.”
Daniel 12:10

  • Jeremiah prophesies of ones who “stand in the council of the Lord” to get clarity of what’s on His heart as He’s releasing judgment, and promises that there will be ones in the end times who understand it clearly.

“For who among them has stood in the council of the LORD to see and to hear his word …The anger of the LORD will not turn back until he has executed and accomplished the intents of his heart. In the latter days you will understand it clearly.”
(Jeremiah 23:28-20, see also 30:23-24)

  • Isaiah prophesies of those who proclaim the “good news” to Israel, and this gospel is simply “Behold your God!” announcing that He’s coming as a warrior and a shepherd.

“Go on up to a high mountain, O Zion, herald of good news… say to the cities of Judah, ‘Behold your God!’ Behold, the Lord GOD comes with might and his arm rules for him… He will tend his flock like a shepherd”
(Isaiah 40:9-11)

What Are We Saying?

When the disciples asked Jesus about the signs of His coming, Jesus gave them several very specific things to watch for, and then said, “this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.” (Matthew 24:14) When we proclaim the “gospel of the kingdom,” it’s much more than the simple message of personal salvation. The gospel of the kingdom says, “THE KING IS COMING! He’s going to shatter everything that opposes Him and establish His kingdom forever!”

Here are a few of the central emphases of the forerunner message:

  1. Jesus is Coming
    First, He’s coming back for real! There will be many scoffers who say it’s not real (2 Pe. 3:3-4), but we’re called to be bold about this truth- He IS gonna split the sky and take over the world, and the clock is ticking.
  2. He is a Bridegroom, King, and Judge
    In the drama of the end times, Jesus’ heart is most fully on display as a bridegroom with passion for His bride, a king who rules in power, and a judge who will not tolerate wickedness. All three are true at the same time.
  3. Deception is Coming
    When Jesus teaches about the end times, He mostly emphasizes coming deception that will incredibly persuasive (Mt. 24:3-4), both from the antichrist himself and from the escalating culture of wickedness that precedes him. We must be anchored in the Word to stand firm.
  4. Jesus is Bringing Righteous Judgment
    In the midst of God’s judgments, we declare that His ways are “just and true” (Re. 16:7). It won’t be a popular message, but we agree with Him as He does whatever it takes to cleanse the earth and bring righteousness.
  5. The Bride Must Be Ready
    As “friends of the bridegroom” like John the Baptist (Jn. 3:29), we call the church to live radically abandoned with all our hope in His appearing. We must be ready with oil in our lamps (Mt. 25:1-13), anchored in these truths and ready to be faithful even unto death (Re. 2:10).

How Does a Forerunner Live?

Forerunners have understanding of what God is doing before it’s obvious to everyone else. They often seem deluded or obsessive to the rest of the world. Noah must have sounded like a crazy person for decades, building a giant boat in his front yard and talking about a global flood, years before people had ever even seen rain. John the Baptist certainly didn’t seem very “balanced” or rational out there in the wilderness, wearing camel hair and eating locusts!

So here’s my first piece of advice: accept that your lifestyle will seem extreme to others, even many in the church. (You may enjoy the book Nazirite DNA by Loe Engle – check out my review.)

With that in mind, here’s the lifestyle I’m talking about: throw yourself headfirst into living the Sermon on the Mount (Mt. 5-7). Im summary, here are the main lifestyle themes we are to walk out:

  • Pray daily
  • Fast weekly
  • Do justly
  • Give extravagantly
  • Live holy
  • Lead diligently
  • Speak boldly

Forerunners must spend lots of time studying the end times straight from Scripture, while soaked in a lifestyle of prayer and fasting. Think of it as a journey, not a destination. There are 150 chapters in the Bible that are specifically focused on the end times, and we’ll never finish mining truth from them!

Finally, don’t forget to aggressively embrace humility. It’s easy to get an elitist mindset about the forerunner calling, especially when you’re new to it. Kill that thing with fire every chance you get. Remember that your job is to be a friend of the bridegroom and point people to Jesus, not yourself. Pride is counterproductive to going anywhere in God. Take every opportunity to go low, even when you feel hurt and misunderstood. God sees.

Are You a Forerunner?

When I did my house of prayer internship in 2012, the question I was carrying in my heart was, “Is the forerunner thing real, and is it for me?” Over my months of Bible study and prayer room time, God spoke to my heart through His word that it was indeed real, and it was indeed for me.

The invitation to be a forerunner messenger isn’t restricted to a chosen few, but open to all. Anyone can hear the invitation to know and proclaim His heart related to His return and say yes to it. Of course, God is still sovereign and it’s true that He strongly emphasizes the forerunner ministry to some while He seems to have different priorities for others, but anyone who finds their heart drawn toward this message is more than welcome to say yes to it.

If you’re reading this and feeling a desire well up within you to be one who will “prepare the way of the Lord”, to understand and declare the message of His coming- that’s the Holy Spirit. It’s not your flesh, and it’s not the devil. God is nudging you to position yourself to be a faithful witness of His story in the days to come.

You can say yes. Be one of “those who are wise” who will “prepare the way of the Lord.”

Intro to the End Times #14: Will We See Revival?

Intro to the End Times is a series walking through some of the key themes of the story of Jesus’ return from a historic premillennial perspective, with special focus on knowing the heart of Jesus as we partner with God through the most dramatic chapter of human history.


We’ve hit 14 posts in this series! That feels like a lot to me because at The Prayer Room 14 sessions is a semester’s worth of a Bible class. Of course, a blog post is quite a bit simplified compared to an hour-long class session; this series will probably land at a few over 20 posts (and still be just an overview!).

For the past few posts, I’ve been taking a pause from some of the broader events to focus on the experience of the church during the tribulation. We talked about protection, then prayer, and now we’re talking about revival.

Good and Bad at the Same Time

As we discussed much earlier in this series, the end times are both dramatically glorious and dramatically terrible at the same time. Some groups within the church tend to emphasize one or the other, and either one is an unhealthy and inaccurate imbalance. Even as there will be all kinds of pressures and judgments besetting the earth, there will ALSO be a great revival as God pours out His Spirit and the bride comes into her maturity and authority. (Check out my earlier post Are the End Times Good or Bad? for more of a breakdown.)

And to some extent, these two realities fuel each other! Do you remember the riot in Ephesus that erupted because revival was bankrupting the idol industry (Acts 19)? Real revival causes disruption in society that causes unbelieving society to push back on Christians. But of course, God uses persecution to refine and stir up the church, even to the point that the witness of the martyrs becomes seed that leads to many new salvations! Persecution and revival go hand in hand. Can you imagine the fury of the Harlot Babylon and later the antichrist directed at a fiery, anointed bride that refuses to bow to their lies?

So let’s look at the biblical promise of end-time revival.

Spirit Poured Out on All Flesh

“And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, and your young men shall see visions. Even on the male and female servants in those days I will pour out my Spirit. And I will show wonders in the heavens and on the earth, blood and fire and columns of smoke. The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the LORD comes. And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved. For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall be those who escape, as the LORD has said, and among the survivors shall be those whom the LORD calls.”
(Joel 2:28-32)

You’re probably familiar with these verses, since Peter made them famous in Acts 2. In their original context, though, it’s clearly an end-time passage. Verses 30 and 31 reference “wonders in the heavens and on the earth”, in conjunction with the “great and awesome day of the Lord” (ie, the return of Jesus). These things have not happened yet.

So why did Peter reference this passage at Pentecost?

In Acts 2, the Spirit was poured out on the disciples in the upper room. They began speaking in tongues and preaching boldly, and there was clearly a new anointing resting on them. In explaining what was happening, Peter quoted Joel 2 and said, “This is what Joel was talking about.” (Acts 2:16-21)

And indeed it was! However, it was not the full and final fulfillment. A lot of pieces were missing. There were no “blood and fire and columns of smoke.” The sun wasn’t turned to darkness and the moon wasn’t turned to blood.

There’s a really simple rule in interpreting Bible prophecy. “If it hasn’t happened yet… it hasn’t happened yet.” This prophecy was partially fulfilled, but not completely. Pentecost was only the start; the Spirit will be poured out again in an even greater measure.

There’s another principle called “dual fulfillment.” Many prophecies in Scripture have dual fulfillment: a first, smaller fulfillment, and a later, fuller fulfillment. This doesn’t lessen the validity of God’s word at all; God loves to give us early shadows to help us imagine what the full fulfillment will be like.

In Acts 2, the Holy Spirit inspired Peter to use Joel 2 as the best way to explain what was happening, and it was totally valid to say “This is that.” But in the context of the end times, there will be a much fuller expression that the world has never yet seen. Judging by the specific signs mentioned, this will probably take place during the sixth seal in Revelation 6:12-13, but even before that, God is going to be pouring out His Spirit more and more as the church reaches maturity.

Global Harvest

In Matthew 24, arguably the clearest end time chapter in the Bible, Jesus promised, “this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.” (Mt. 24:14) Missions organizations tell us that we’re very, very close. It’s very realistic that this could be complete in our lifetimes, and Jesus will not return until it occurs.

In Revelation, we see the fulfillment of this promise with the great multitude from every nation:

“…by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nationand you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on the earth.”
(Revelation 5:9)

After this I looked, and behold, a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their hands… These are the ones coming out of the great tribulation. They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”
(Revelation 7:9, 14)

Then I saw another angel flying directly overhead, with an eternal gospel to proclaim to those who dwell on earth, to every nation and tribe and language and people.”
(Revelation 14:6)

These verses paint the picture of a global harvest of souls, with people from every people group on earth coming into the kingdom in a massive influx. Many prophetic voices in recent years have referred to a “billion-soul harvest” in the end times.

All Israel Will Be Saved

One people group in particular is guaranteed a revival.

“For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the LORD: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people…they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the LORD. For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”
(Jeremiah 31:33-34)

Of course, this is the new covenant that Jesus inaugurated with His death and resurrection, and Gentile believers are graciously grafted in and allowed to share in Israel’s promise. Paul details this promise and grafting in Romans 11, culminating in, “And in this way all Israel will be saved, as it is written, ‘The Deliverer will come from Zion, he will banish ungodliness from Jacob’.” (Ro. 11:26)

When Jesus comes, Israel will finally recognize Him as their God and Messiah. They will welcome Him into Jerusalem and say “Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord” (Mt. 23:29) and every Jewish person alive on earth at that time will be saved.

Zechariah describes this as a time of great repentance and mourning as they finally realize who Jesus is:

“And I will pour out on the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem a spirit of grace and pleas for mercy, so that, when they look on me, on him whom they have pierced, they shall mourn for him, as one mourns for an only child, and weep bitterly over him, as one weeps over a firstborn.”
(Zechariah 12:10)

Soon in this blog series, I’m going to talk a lot more about Israel and their promises. It’s a huge component of end-time prophecy, and truthfully, our eschatology will always be at least a little off balance until we put Israel in the center.

How to Partner with God for Revival

Even before the final BIG revival, I believe God will continually pour out His Spirit more and more as the church matures. So how do we align ourselves to agree with God for revival?

  1. Get a big vision
    Search out stories of historic revivals to whet your appetite for what God can do when He moves. I recommend season one of the Gripped podcast by Billy Humphrey and Corey Russell.
  2. Pray for it
    Make intercession for revival (in your nation, city, and local community) a regular part of your prayer life. Throughout church history, intercession has always been the way that God has ushered in revival.
  3. Foster a ready lifestyle
    What kind of people will be ready to hold what God wants to pour out? It will be a worshipping, praying, fasting, humble bride that God will anoint with His Spirit.
  4. Keep loving Jesus
    Remember, we’re not in this for the cool stories and dramatic experiences. We’re in this because we love Jesus. Let’s stay faithful and keep loving Him and savoring His presence, however big or small we feel it. He’s the one we want.

What I’m Reading: David’s Tabernacle

(Full disclosure: I love to recommend resources to help you in your journey, and when I do I use Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase something through my links, I may receive a small commission. But if there’s a resource you want, I encourage you to get it wherever works best for you!)

As you probably know if you follow me on Instagram, because it’s definitely something I talk about fairly often, I really appreciate Matthew Lilley’s Presence Pioneers ministry encouraging praying communities in pursuing the presence of God. It’s been a huge encouragement and blessing to me over the past two years (I even highlighted his podcast in my blog 5 House of Prayer Podcasts I Love), and a recurring theme has been the tabernacle of David. Matthew has spent years going deep in this topic, and I’ve been waiting for him to write a book on it.

Well, he finally has! I was lucky enough to get my hands on an advance copy of David’s Tabernacle, releasing May 18, and LOVED it. Matthew’s style is personal, passionate, and engaging, and there are fresh insights in every chapter. I’ve been in the prayer movement almost nine years and have heard a lot of teachings on the tabernacle of David, but there were a ton of insights and dots connected that I had never thought of before. This book has a really good mix of exploring the historical details of David’s tabernacle, the thematic tie-ins from all over Scripture, and also the implications for the church today.

Okay, let’s back up. What is the tabernacle of David and why does it matter?

In between the tabernacle of Moses and the temple of Solomon, King David had a tabernacle. After growing up as a shepherd boy with a harp falling in love with the presence of God, as a king he brought the ark of the covenant into his own backyard and set up a worship tent that was radically different from the sacrificial model Moses had instituted. David had priests in the tent offering musical worship before the ark 24/7. There was no veil separating the holy of holies; it was open to allow full access into God’s presence. The worship in this tent was continual, original, and prophetic. This is the environment in which many of the Psalms were written.

And today, we are seeing a restoration of this as God raises up a global prayer and worship movement in the spirit of the tabernacle of David!

In Amos 9:11, God promised, “In that day I will raise up the booth of David that is fallen and repair its breaches, and raise up its ruins and rebuild it as in the days of old.” As Matthew describes (Chapter 11: The Promised Restoration), some people see this as being mainly about night and day prophetic worship, and some people see this as being mainly about the eternal throne of Jesus in David’s lineage. I grew up hearing the latter, and my circles now mostly emphasize the former.

One of the things that struck me as a major theme throughout this book is that it’s both.

“David’s kingdom and tabernacle were flowing and functioning together to manifest heaven in Israel, and biblically we cannot separate the ideas of worship and government. Zion, the heavenly throne room, is both a place of God’s rule and a place of day and night worship. There is actually no contradiction in the two interpretations. It’s not an either/or issue.”
(David’s Tabernacle, chapter 11)

David was a king who functioned as a priest. Jesus is a king and priest. We are made kings and priests. God is enthroned in our praises; worship pushes His kingdom forward. Of course Jesus’ kingship, both in the “already and not yet,” is tied to worship. And of course He wants us to partner with Him to establish His kingdom from the place of worshipIt’s the first and second commandment, really. Upward and outward– but upward first.

One of my other favorite parts of this book was “Chapter 10: We Were Made For This”. Matthew breaks down several key passages to uncover the theme woven throughout Scripture that we were always meant to be priests, beginning with the genealogy in the opening verses of 1 Chronicles:

“When sharing the story of David’s tabernacle, the author of I Chronicles begins with lists of genealogies. He starts at the very beginning, with Adam. He does not begin with Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob. He is making his intention clear. This story he is about to tell about David’s tabernacle is reframing the entire story of mankind. Something in David’s story connects all the way back to the beginning of time.”
(David’s Tabernacle, chapter 10)

Okay, so let’s go back to Genesis. As Matthew explains, Adam was told to “work and keep” the garden (Ge. 2:15). The Hebrew words are abad and shamar, which elsewhere are translated “serve and guard” and refer to the priestly ministry of tending God’s presence in the tabernacle (Nu. 3:7–8; 8:25–26; 18:5–6). Adam was a priest. (This is something I explored in my message Our Eternal Priesthood, available on my Resources page.)

The tabernacle of David is massively important for this generation. I believed it before reading this book, but I believe it even more now! It was a moment when the deep desire of God’s heart broke through and had expression in history, because of one man’s zeal to see His presence manifest on earth. God has been using David’s tabernacle as a model ever since, calling His people back to worship in spirit and in truth and enthrone Him on their praises.

David’s Tabernacle is currently available for preorder on Amazon before its May 18, 2021, release date. If you plan to get it, I suggest you do it now– preorders are really good for Amazon rankings, etc! I already ordered a paperback for myself since my pre-release copy was digital, and an extra copy for The Prayer Room‘s library.

To tide you over while you wait for May 18, I also suggest:

Intro to the End Times #13: What Is the Role of Prayer?

Intro to the End Times is a series walking through some of the key themes of the story of Jesus’ return from a historic premillennial perspective, with special focus on knowing the heart of Jesus as we partner with God through the most dramatic chapter of human history.


Throughout this series, we’ve looked at topics from why we should study the end times and God’s ultimate objectives to some of the nuts and bolts like the timeline and the judgments. Right now, we’re in a series-within-a-series looking at some of the big things God is doing in the church during this period. In the last post, I highlighted how He’s protecting the church, and now I want to talk about something that’s deeply dear to my heart: the global end time prayer movement.

The Tabernacle of David

Scripture is filled with promises of a global prayer and worship movement woven throughout the story of the end times. Amos 9:11 says: “On that day I will raise up the tabernacle of David… and rebuild it as in the days of old.” (NKJV) The phrase “that day” is a common phrase referring to the end times.

The tabernacle was birthed out of David’s desire to create a dwelling place for God (Ps. 132:1-5, 2 Sa. 7:2-3). He hired 4000 singers and musicians, as well as 4000 gatekeepers, to serve God in the tabernacle as their full-time occupation. This full-time staff of Levites kept constant prayer and worship arising before God 24/7 (1Ch. 9:33). Throughout the history of Israel, whenever the people fell into sin, the pattern of worship established in David’s tabernacle was forgotten. Whenever revival came and the people returned to the Lord, the Davidic worship was reinstated.

This verse in Amos 9:11 promises that in the final generation before Jesus return, God will once again establish the spirit of the tabernacle of David as the template for worship all over the earth.

From the Ends of the Earth

The Bible is full of prophetic promises of the entire earth singing worship to God in the final generation. Before I had an end-times lens, I used to think this was merely poetic language, maybe saying that God deserves this to be true or it would be nice if this were true. But no, these are actual prophecies that there will be a global worship movement before Jesus returns. Many verses like this are even very clearly placed within end-time passages.

“For from the rising of the sun to its setting my name will be great among the nations, and in every place incense will be offered to my name, and a pure offering. For my name will be great among the nations, says the Lord of hosts.”
(Malachi 1:11)

“They lift up their voices, they sing for joy; over the majesty of the Lord they shout from the west.Therefore in the east give glory to the Lordin the coastlands of the sea, give glory to the name of the Lord, the God of Israel. From the ends of the earth we hear songs of praiseof glory to the Righteous One.”
(Isaiah 24:14-16)

Sing to the Lord a new songhis praise from the end of the earthyou who go down to the sea…the coastlands…the desert and its cities…the villages…the mountains. Let them give glory to the Lord…”
(Isaiah 42:10-12)

The verse that really got me was Luke 18:7-8. I was doing a meditation assignment one night in the prayer room, and I was super confused until the spirit of revelation hit and suddenly my entire life made sense. (I blogged about that moment in 2013.)

And will not God give justice to his elect, who cry to him day and night? …when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?”
(Luke 18:7-8)

This verse isn’t asking whether there will be any Christians on earth. In this context, the kind of faith Jesus is looking for when He comes is faith expressed in day and night prayer for justice.

Day and night prayer is an integral part of the story of His return.

This is what we call the prayer movement. All over the world, right now in our generation, God is raising up thousands of praying communities dedicated to night and day prayer until He comes. Some of those will be 24/7 and many will not, but all are consumed with giving Him as much worship as they possibly can and partnering with Him in intercession for His kingdom to come.

End Time Impact of Our Prayer and Worship

So what are we actually praying for, and what impact is it having? Here are eight key purposes of the end time prayer and worship movement. (You can refer also to the earlier post on God’s ultimate objectives, because all of those are released in partnership with the church in prayer and worship.)

1. Prepare the Bride

When He comes, Jesus is going to have a pure and spotless bride who has “made herself ready.” (Re. 19:7) The Body of Christ will be fully mature in love and ready to be equally yoked to Him for eternity. We pray biblical prayers for God to strengthen the church, and as we center our lives around His presence we ourselves are transformed!

2. Clear the Atmosphere

Step 1 of spiritual warfare is always worship. As we enthrone God in our praises (Ps. 22:3), we push back the kingdom of darkness and make way for God to do whatever He wants to do.

3. Minimize or Avert Judgment

In His holy justice, God does release judgment on the earth, and the Bible promises many end time judgments. We can’t pray the entire Tribulation away, but there are some judgments that don’t have immutably set limits. Would God in His mercy lessen the judgment or even send blessing instead if we fast and pray? (Jo. 2:12-14)

4. Release Judgment

At the same time, during the Tribulation, there will be some judgments that we are partnering with God to release! At that time, we will be able to use the book of Revelation like an inspired prayer manual, telling us exactly what God plans to do next so we can agree with it (Re. 6:10).

5. Release Revival

As the darkness gets darker, the light will get brighter. We’re contending for the full outpouring of the Spirit prophesied in Joel 2:8-32 that leads to a global harvest of salvation. Jesus can’t and won’t return until every tribe and tongue has received a witness of the gospel (Mt. 24:14; Re. 5:9, 7:9, 14:6).

6. Salvation of Israel

One particularly unique aspect of this revival is the mass salvation of Israel. God has not forgotten His promises to them, and He will redeem them and bring them into a revelation of their Messiah (Ro. 11:25-27). Jew and Gentile, we partner with this yearning of His heart for His people.

7. Establish Mercy Bubbles

Okay, the Bible doesn’t actually say “mercy bubbles”, but it does very much suggest that there will be some specific locations that are uniquely shielded from the full force of the judgments (Re. 12:14), like the land of Goshen was during the plagues in Egypt (Ex. 8:22-23). Sometimes we call these “cities of refuge” after the concept in Numbers 25. This will be specifically related to the house of prayer, as God has promised to uniquely shelter His people in His house (Ps. 27:5).

8. Hasten Jesus’ Return

2 Peter 3:12 says we can actually “hasten the day of the Lord”. As we move forward the purposes of God that have to happen before Jesus appears in the sky (Mt. 24:14), and as we do Revelation 22:17 (“The Spirit and the Bride say, ‘Come.'”), we can actually move up that Day on the calendar. I like to wonder, how many milliseconds can my lifetime of prayer speed up the moment of Jesus’ return?

It’s Happening!

This end time prayer movement is already happening right under our noses! Hundreds of houses of prayer exist already in the USA, and thousands around the world. Currently, there are only three places I know of in the US doing 24/7, but many more are being faithful on a smaller schedule and reaching for more. (For a very quick and very incomplete list, go to @fragrancearise on Instagram and scroll through the accounts I’m following, including many Burn 24-7 chapters, 24-7 Prayer communities, and other expressions of the prayer movement worldwide.)

Thirty years ago, prayer communities that were thinking about things like the tabernacle of David, night and day worship, and the end times were few and far between. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, a sovereign move of God exploded across the earth, and we are living in the fruit of that explosion today, with many more explosive moments yet to come.

This short audio series on the history of the prayer movement, from Brad Stroup at The Prayer Room, always gets me fired up. If you’re interested to learn more and have your heart stirred, I highly recommend it.