When Life Does Not Make Sense

This last week in Facebook I read a story of a mother who is a believer and yet she felt that God had forsaken her. I was also reminded of a conversation with a man I play golf with when he made a statement, “If there is a God how could he allow my daughter to have MS.” Then there is a young couple I know with two children and the mother dies of cancer. How about an older couple I love who served God their whole lives spreading God's word, and the wife gets a crippling disease and then God takes her husband home, and now she is all alone in a care-home. Or how about the man who never wanted to make a vow to God but was led by God to make one. This man did everything that he said he would do and yet God did not answer the man's prayer in the way he thought. 
Life at times seems very confusing and difficult to understand; yet when our life is over, and we stand before God and ask him "why?" He will say that when you were going through these things you were only halfway through your book of life. Just like a mystery novel halfway through never makes sense, it only makes sense when you know the ending.
I wish I could say wise and comforting words to the young couple, the father and his daughter, or the elderly couple, those whose lives seem so useless now.  But as the one who made the vow to God and didn't get what he expected then, I can say: WAIT! Wait to see what God has planned for your life, with all the hurts and losses and even doubts about God. Don't give up your faith in the LORD! Stay in His Word believing what He says. It's in the waiting on God that we come to know Him better and better and how He feels about us and how His plans and ways are so much higher than ours.  God is for us, not against us!
When our life is complete will others who have watched your life be able to say that your life was not useless at all? 2 Corinthians 4:16-18 "Therefore, we do not lose heart. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So, fix your eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal."
When life gets hard it is very hard see this glory that God is talking about, therefore, we must be patient and soon we will understand it all. For now we only see through a glass dimly, but later we will see Him as He truly is: face to face.  Our life in retrospect will make beautiful sense and give glory to God.

The War Between Control and Trust

Drive down any highway and look at the billboards. Scroll through social media for five minutes. Watch a commercial during a major event. The message is relentless. A woman’s body sells cars, perfume, fitness programs, even hamburgers. She is posed, polished, filtered, and perfected. Her worth is framed by youth, shape, skin, and sex appeal. If she fits the mold, she is celebrated. If she does not, she is quietly sidelined. Aging is treated like failure. Modesty is treated like insecurity. If she refuses to play the game, she risks becoming invisible. So many women feel the pressure to adjust, to reveal more, to speak louder, to be bolder than they truly are—because fitting in feels safer than standing apart.

 

At the same time, men are often reduced to comic relief. Sitcoms and commercials portray husbands as clueless and dependent. Fathers are shown as irresponsible. Leadership in a man is questioned or mocked. When that narrative repeats long enough, it shapes expectations. Women begin to assume men cannot lead well. Men begin to doubt that their strength is wanted. Suspicion replaces trust.

 

Beneath all of this is a deeper conflict—a war between control and trust. Genesis 3:16 reveals where it began. After sin entered the world, God told the woman, “You will desire to control your husband, but he will rule over you.” Before sin, there was harmony. After sin, there was tension. The desire to control took root, and the response became either domination or retreat. Partnership was replaced by struggle.

 

The desire to control often grows out of fear. If a woman believes she cannot rely on a man, she may feel she must take charge. If culture tells her she is alone, she may decide control is her only security. But control does not create peace. It creates resistance. It invites withdrawal or conflict. The more one side tightens its grip, the more the other side either pulls away or pushes back.

 

I saw this tension up close when Carol and I attended a new church. I began a men’s ministry, and men were stepping into strength and responsibility. Though I was not in formal leadership, the fruit was clear. At a gathering, the pastor’s wife approached me, lifted her hands, and placed them along her cheeks like blinders, narrowing my vision so my eyes locked only on hers. The gesture felt deliberate and forceful, as if she were establishing control before speaking. She told me to focus on her because she was going to lay down how she wanted me to teach the men. It was not collaboration. It was control. In that moment, the larger battle became visible.

If control wins, division follows. Men retreat or harden. Women grow more frustrated and press harder. Respect fades. Unity weakens. Homes strain. Ministries suffer. The war between control and trust leaves both sides wounded.

 

Proverbs 31 shows a better way. “Who can find a virtuous and capable wife? She is more precious than rubies.” This woman is strong, but she does not grasp for power. Her husband trusts her. She brings him good, not harm. She works with diligence and wisdom. She is clothed with strength and dignity, not rivalry and insecurity. “Charm is deceptive, and beauty does not last; but a woman who fears the LORD will be greatly praised.” Her foundation is trust in God, not control over others.

 

When a woman chooses trust in God over control of man, and a man chooses responsibility under God instead of retreat from pressure, the war begins to end. Trust rebuilds what control tears down. Peace replaces tension. Partnership replaces suspicion. The world may continue to market distortion, but distortion cannot sustain legacy. Only trust anchored in God’s design can build something that lasts.

Resolve Before Regret

Right now, we are bombing Iran. That is not just another headline or a passing moment in the news cycle. It is a serious turning point. Moments like this force a nation to decide whether it will confront a growing threat while it is still manageable, or wait until that threat becomes far more dangerous and far more costly to stop.

 

History has already shown us what hesitation can produce. In the years leading up to World War II, Europe convinced itself that accommodating aggression would prevent a larger conflict. Germany rebuilt its military in direct violation of international agreements. It reoccupied the Rhineland. It annexed Austria. It demanded and received territory from Czechoslovakia. Each action was met with concern, but little resistance. Each concession was justified as preserving peace. When Neville Chamberlain returned from Munich in 1938 proclaiming “peace for our time,” many believed war had been avoided. Instead, the delay allowed Hitler to strengthen his military, solidify his position, and prepare for a war that would devastate nations and claim millions of lives. Appeasement did not stop the conflict. It ensured it would be larger and deadlier when it came.

 

Time is not neutral. It either strengthens those who value freedom or those who seek to destroy it. When a regime openly calls for America’s destruction, funds armed proxies, expands its military reach, and works steadily toward greater power, it is not unreasonable to take those signals seriously. Words repeated over decades, backed by weapons and action, are not empty rhetoric. History warns us what can happen when clear threats are dismissed or minimized.

 

None of this means war is something to celebrate. It is not. War is heavy. It is unpredictable. It carries consequences that extend beyond battlefields and into homes. But there are times when the greater danger lies in convincing ourselves that inaction equals peace. Sometimes delay does not prevent conflict; it multiplies the cost of it.

 

Leadership is defined in moments like this. In times of peace leaders are chosen; in times of conflict leaders are revealed. It is easy to speak confidently when there is no real threat pressing in. It is far harder to act when the stakes are high, criticism is loud, and the outcome is uncertain. True leadership does not bend with every opinion poll or media narrative. It weighs the long-term safety of its people above short-term approval.

 

While much of the nation debates motives and politics, there are men and women in uniform who understand what this action means in practical terms. They know modern conflict is not limited to traditional battle lines. It includes cyber warfare, proxy militias, terrorism, and retaliation that can take many forms. They understand that once action is taken, responses are likely. They may be asked to fight in ways that are complex and unfamiliar. Yet they stand ready, not because it is popular, but because it is their duty.

 

If nothing had been done and years from now a stronger, emboldened adversary inflicted catastrophic harm, history would not ask whether we were cautious enough to avoid criticism. It would ask whether we recognized the danger while it could still be confronted. The lesson from the past is not that conflict is desirable, but that unchecked aggression grows with time.

 

There are moments in history when resolve prevents regret. This may well be one of them.

The Night Pride Collapsed

In Isaiah 47, God speaks to Babylon and exposes the heart of a nation intoxicated with its own power. “You said, ‘I will reign forever.’” “You felt secure in your wickedness.” “You said, ‘I am the only one, and there is no other.’” These words reveal more than ancient history. They uncover a mindset—a belief that strength guarantees permanence, that knowledge replaces God, and that delayed judgment means no judgment at all.

 

Babylon was wealthy, educated, organized, and culturally advanced. It did not see itself as evil; it saw itself as enlightened. It reshaped morality around its desires. It honored pleasure. It trusted its scholars, its leaders, its systems. It believed it had moved beyond the need for divine authority. In its confidence, it assumed it would reign forever.

 

But while Babylon celebrated, judgment was already moving. On the very night its leaders feasted and indulged, the kingdom fell. In a single night, what seemed unshakable collapsed. In a single generation, what looked permanent disappeared. The silence of God had not been approval—it had been patience. And when that patience reached its limit, no wealth, no wisdom, and no power could stop the fall.

 

History repeats itself because pride repeats itself. When a nation begins to reject God’s authority, it slowly rewrites His design. What He calls truth becomes outdated. What He calls sin becomes progress. What He calls righteousness becomes oppression. Leaders trust human knowledge more than divine revelation. They build policies for applause today without considering the cost tomorrow. And when the consequences surface—fractured families, moral confusion, weakened institutions—the burden is left for others to carry.

 

Many believe parts of the modern liberal left are walking this same path. God is pushed out of public life. Biblical standards are dismissed as harmful or regressive. Human intellect is elevated as the highest authority. There is confidence that progress is inevitable and that cultural dominance will endure. Like Babylon, there is a quiet belief: we are advanced, we are secure, and we will not fall.

 

But the lesson of Isaiah stands unshaken. God still governs nations. Moral laws still carry consequences. “God’s patience is not His approval.” Babylon believed it would reign forever, yet it fell in a single night while it was celebrating. What looked unstoppable proved fragile. What seemed eternal proved temporary.

 

When Respect Sat Down

Tuesday night’s ‘State of the Union’ was not just a speech. It was a snapshot of a divided nation.

 

When the President of the United States stands before Congress to deliver the State of the Union, it is more than politics. The Constitution requires that the president report on the condition of the country. From the earliest days of our republic, that moment has carried weight. The format has changed over time, but the meaning has not. It remains one of the rare occasions when the branches of government gather in one room before the American people. It is meant to represent stability, continuity, and shared responsibility.

 

Sadly, as the president entered the chamber that night, unity was not what stood out. The divide was immediate and unmistakable. One side rose in applause while the other remained seated. Throughout the evening, that contrast continued with approval from one side, silence from the other. It was visible to every American watching.

 

If you watched closely, there were moments that spoke even louder. When ordinary Americans were recognized—men and women who had sacrificed, served, or overcome hardship—some Democrat members appeared as though they wanted to stand. A few shifted forward in their seats. Some half-rose and then paused. Several glanced down the row, as if waiting to see what the rest of their party would do. Then they settled back down. Even a simple act of acknowledgment seemed to require permission.

 

The divide became especially clear during the discussion of immigration. When border security and the protection of American citizens were emphasized, one side responded with strong approval while the other showed little reaction. When compassion and protection for those who entered the country illegally were highlighted, the applause shifted. For many Americans watching at home, it felt as though two different sets of priorities were on display. It raised a deeper question: who comes first? The citizens who live here legally and expect safety and lawful order, or those who crossed the border unlawfully? Whether intended or not, the contrast widened the sense of separation in that chamber.

 

Then came the moments that should have risen above party. Ordinary citizens were honored, individuals whose lives reflected courage, perseverance, and service. These were not political figures. They were Americans whose stories represented the best of the country. Yet some members would not stand and applause even for them. That silence carried weight. It was not a vote. It was not a debate. It was a decision about whether to publicly acknowledge what is honorable.

 

After the speech, much of the reaction centered on how it “felt.” Commentators and leaders spoke about tone and emotion more than substance. Empathy and compassion have their place, but leadership requires more than reaction. Feelings shift. They change with the moment. Governing requires steadiness, clarity, and principle.

 

Respect should not be conditional. It should not depend on party alignment or agreement with the speaker. Respect is given because institutions matter and because people matter. When leaders hesitate to stand for what is honorable because they are watching their political colleagues first, it reveals how deeply division has taken hold.

 

Leadership sets culture. What happens in that chamber does not stay there. The cameras magnify it. The media repeat it. The public absorbs it. If respect weakens at the highest levels, it weakens everywhere.

 

The State of the Union has survived war, economic collapse, and fierce political battles. It does not require agreement to endure. It requires wisdom and patriotism. Last Tuesday night revealed not just ‘policy differences,’ but rather a fracture in posture and priority.

 

A nation can survive disagreement. It cannot thrive when respect sits down.

When Hearts Become Hardened

Genesis 19:3–5 records a moment that exposes more than one city’s sin; it reveals the end result of moral drift. In this account the men of Sodom surround Lot’s house at night. They come from every part of the city—young and old. They are not secretive. They are not embarrassed. They are united and demanding. What should have been hidden in darkness is now paraded in the open. That scene did not happen suddenly. It was the harvest of years of tolerated corruption.

 

Moral collapse never begins with mobs in the street. It begins quietly, with compromise in the heart. Standards are not openly rejected at first; they are softened. Language changes. What was once clearly called sin is renamed as preference, freedom, or identity. Confusion replaces clarity. Then desensitization sets in. What once shocked begins to entertain. What once caused grief begins to draw applause. Over time conscience grows quieter, and what once required secrecy becomes normal conversation.

 

We are watching this pattern unfold in our own time. Today you can hardly turn on a television or stream a program without homosexuality being presented as a normal and celebrated family structure or relationship. What would have sparked serious moral debate a generation ago is now routine storytelling. Repetition reshapes perception. Constant exposure dulls conviction. A culture discipled by its screens will eventually mirror what it consumes.

 

Soon justification follows. Disagreement is labeled intolerance. Conviction is called hate. Instead of wrestling honestly with moral truth, society removes the tension by redefining it. Sin is no longer merely practiced; it is defended and institutionalized. At that point boldness replaces shame, and resistance becomes the minority voice.

 

History shows where this road leads. Rome did not collapse when it was strong in discipline and virtue. Its decline began when indulgence hollowed out its character. Brutal entertainment filled the arenas, sexual excess became common, and luxury replaced restraint. The empire still looked powerful, but its moral foundation was weakening. Greece followed a similar course. Though brilliant in thought and culture, internal corruption eroded its unity long before outside forces overcame it. Empires rarely fall first from invasion; they fall because internal compromise has already made them fragile.

 

The lesson is clear. When hearts grow hard, cultures follow. External pressure only exposes weakness that has been growing within for years.

 

Yet decline is not destiny. The same way decay spreads through quiet compromise, renewal begins through quiet repentance. Restoration does not start in government buildings but in living rooms. It begins when reverence for God is restored in the home, when parents teach truth clearly and model it consistently. Restoration grows when believers refuse to celebrate what God calls sin, and yet speak truth and love with courage and compassion. It strengthens when churches choose clarity over comfort and when individuals practice integrity in private, as well as in public.

 

Cultural madness is not reversed by outrage alone, rather by transformed hearts. A different future requires different seeds.

 

Perversion grows when it is normalized. Righteousness grows when it is practiced.

Imperfect Faith, Perfect Savior

Mark 9:23–24 says, “Jesus said to him, ‘If you can believe, all things are possible to him who believes.’ Immediately the father of the child cried out and said with tears, ‘Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!’”

 

You can almost see the scene. A crowd pressing in. Religious leaders arguing. Disciples unable to fix what stands in front of them. And at the center of it all, a father holding the weight of years of heartbreak. His son is tormented. Seized. Thrown down. Bruised by what he cannot control. This father has likely tried everything. Every remedy. Every hope. And now he stands before Jesus—his last hope.

 

Jesus tells him that belief matters. And something breaks open in the man’s heart. He does not deliver a speech. He does not pretend strength. He cries out. With tears. “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!”

 

That is not the voice of a skeptic. That is the voice of a desperate man who wants to trust but is afraid to be disappointed again.

 

The condition of unbelief is fear. Fear that this will not change. Fear that hope will collapse one more time. Fear that trusting fully will hurt too much if the answer is no. Unbelief often grows in wounded places. It is not always rebellion. Sometimes it is self-protection. It keeps expectations low so pain feels smaller.

 

But the condition of believing is love. Love dares to hope again. Love risks trust. Love looks at Jesus and says, “I am afraid, but I am here.” Belief is not the absence of fear; it is the decision to bring fear into the presence of Christ instead of letting it rule from a distance.

 

What is stunning in this passage is not just the father’s confession. It is Jesus’ response. Jesus does not step back. He does not say, “Come back when your faith is stronger.” He does not shame the man for his tears. Instead, He moves toward the boy. He rebukes the spirit. He restores the child. He responds to faith that is mixed, trembling, and incomplete.

 

The miracle did not wait for perfect confidence. It met honest dependence.

 

This is the hope of the gospel: we do not need perfect faith because we have a perfect Savior. The power was never in the father’s certainty. The power was in Christ’s authority. The father’s job was not to eliminate every trace of doubt. His only step was to bring his broken belief to Jesus.

 

“Fear says, ‘Don’t trust too much—you may be hurt.’ Faith says, ‘Trust Him anyway—He is still good.’”

 

Every believer knows this tension. We love God, yet we worry. We pray, yet we brace ourselves. We believe, yet we tremble. And still, Jesus does not turn away. He understands. He sees the tears behind the words. He hears the crack in our voice when we pray, “Help me.”

 

Imperfect faith does not disqualify us. It draws us closer.

 

Because in the end, it is not the strength of our faith that saves us. It is the strength of our Savior.

 

Called to Cast, Not to Sit

In Luke 5 and 6, when Jesus tells Peter, “From now on you will catch men,” He immediately begins reshaping what that calling means. He does not lead Peter into a synagogue and tell him to remain there. He walks him into real life — into streets, workplaces, and crowded homes. The leper is outside the religious system. Levi is at his tax booth. Sinners are gathered around a dinner table. The broken are not sitting in services waiting to be reached — so Jesus goes where they are. From the beginning, the lesson is clear: you cannot fish in an aquarium.

 

Church, then, is not the pond — it is where nets are mended. It is where fishermen are trained. Every sermon, every prayer, every song, every correction from the Word is shaping us for something beyond the walls. We are not being trained simply to attend faithfully, but to engage courageously. The gathering fuels the mission; it does not replace it. We come together to worship, to repent, to be strengthened — so that we can go back out with clarity and conviction.

 

Religious tradition, when it loses its purpose, can quietly turn us inward instead of sending us outward. Routines and ceremonies have value, but they can become heavy if we let them define our faith. When attendance becomes the measure of devotion, guilt can replace mission. We begin to feel faithful for sitting rather than going.

 

In Jesus’ day, the religious leaders protected their rituals so carefully that they failed to see the hurting people right in front of them. What was meant to honor God became a wall instead of a doorway. And when guilt replaces calling, fishermen stop casting.

 

Jesus did not free His disciples to trap them in a system; He freed them to follow Him into the harvest. He taught them to love enemies, forgive quickly, refuse hypocrisy, and build their lives on obedience. He was shaping men whose lives would speak before their mouths ever did. It has been said, “Preach the gospel at all times; when necessary, use words.” While the gospel must be spoken, the first message people encounter is who we are. The true strength of a fisherman is a life that reflects Jesus — steady under pressure, full of mercy, anchored in truth.

 

And when opposition comes — even from religious voices — the fisherman stands firm. In Luke 6, Jesus is questioned and accused, yet He continues to heal and to love. A real fisherman knows whom he has believed. His confidence is not in approval or attendance records, but in Christ.

 

Church gathers us to be formed. But we are not called to sit — we are called to cast. The nets are prepared here. The water is outside.

 

When Words Become Flesh

“The Word became flesh — and so must the words we claim to believe.”

 

I woke up again at 1 a.m. No noise. Just suddenly awake. That has happened enough over the years that I no longer resist it. I have come to recognize that hour as a time when everything is stripped down. The house is quiet. The world feels distant. My thoughts are not competing with schedules or conversations. It is usually then that I hear God most clearly.

 

So, I stayed there in the dark, not trying to force sleep. I began talking to Him about something that had been turning over in my mind all day. That morning I had asked a simple but heavy question: What does it matter? People write thoughts down. They put words to what they believe He is teaching them. Some people read those words, but often it feels like they are just words on a page. And I wondered, does any of it actually change anything?

 

Because when I look around, the world does not look different. Hurt still spreads. Evil still seems bold and unchecked. The same struggles. The same brokenness. The same noise. I found myself saying quietly, “Lord, all these words that have been written over time… have they mattered at all? Have they changed anything?”

 

There was no voice in the room. There never is. But a thought came, and when those kinds of thoughts come, they feel different from my normal stream of reasoning. They land with clarity and weight. The thought was simple: Written words do not change lives. Living out words does.

It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t loud. But it was steady. And it settled something in me.

 

And then the deeper truth pressed in, one that carries the weight of the gospel itself: The Word became flesh. Christ did not remain a teaching. He did not stay confined to scrolls or prophecy. He stepped into humanity. He lived what He declared. He embodied what He proclaimed. Truth walked dusty roads. Truth touched the broken. Truth forgave, healed, endured, and obeyed.

 

And so must the words we claim to believe.

 

Words can explain truth. They can point to it. They can even stir someone for a moment. But words alone do not transform a life. A life changes when truth is embodied. When patience is practiced. When forgiveness is actually given. When integrity costs something and you choose it anyway. Ink does not carry power by itself. Obedience does.

 

Lying there in the dark, I realized maybe the measure was never whether writing changed the world. Maybe the measure is whether the words have changed me. If I speak about faith but do not trust Him when things feel uncertain, then the words are hollow. If I speak about love but withhold it when I am offended, then the pages mean little. But if I live what I write, even imperfectly, then something eternal is taking root.

 

The world may still look the same at 3 a.m. It may still look broken in the morning light. But living truth is never wasted, even when the results are unseen. What matters most may not be whether my words echo widely, but whether my life quietly reflects the conversations I claim to have with Him.

 

That is what stayed with me long after I should have been asleep.

The Promise Is Alive

Luke chapter one is not just a collection of miracle stories. It is a picture of what it feels like to live with a word from God while life keeps pressing you in the opposite direction. Each person in this chapter carries a different kind of weight, but all of them are connected by the same theme: God speaks, and then faith is tested before fulfillment arrives.

 

Zechariah and Elizabeth lived with the quiet pain of being left out. They were righteous in God’s eyes and faithful in obedience, yet they had no children. In their culture, barrenness was not only personal grief, it was public shame. Every family gathering, every baby announcement, every celebration would have reminded them of what they lacked. They likely felt overlooked, forgotten, and maybe even disqualified. But heaven stepped into that ache and declared, “God has heard your prayer.” That means their emptiness was never invisible to God. Even if others assumed God had passed them by, God had not. The promise was not gone. It was simply waiting for God’s moment.

 

Mary carried a different kind of burden. Her promise came with accusations. When she became pregnant before marriage, she did not receive applause, she received suspicion. She had to live with the possibility of being labeled, rejected, and misunderstood. She was chosen by God, yet her calling placed her in the path of gossip and judgment. Her miracle looked like scandal before it looked like blessing. But the angel told her, “Do not be afraid… you have found favor with God.” Luke reveals that God’s favor does not always protect you from people’s opinions. Sometimes favor means God trusts you to carry something holy even while others accuse you. Her promise was real, but it came wrapped in a test of reputation.

 

Then Simeon steps into the story with a third kind of struggle: the internal battle of doubt. The Holy Spirit had revealed to him that he would not die until he had seen the Lord’s Messiah. But as the years passed, Simeon likely wrestled with the question many believers wrestle with: “Did I really hear God, or did I imagine it?” Waiting can make a promise feel distant. Time can make revelation feel blurry. The longer the delay, the louder the questions become. Yet Simeon kept showing up, kept watching, kept listening, until the day the promise walked into his arms. His life proves that even when you question yourself, God does not forget what He told you.

 

Zechariah felt left out. Mary lived under accusation. Simeon wrestled with doubt. But all three were held together by one unshakable truth: “For the word of God will never fail.” God’s word outlasts shame. God’s word outlasts gossip. God’s word outlasts doubt. And Luke chapter one declares to every generation that what God has spoken may be tested, but it cannot be destroyed.

 

That is why the promise is alive. It may be delayed, but it is not dead. It may be questioned, but it is not cancelled. It may come through pain, but it will come through. God heard Zechariah. God strengthened Mary. God confirmed Simeon. And the same God is faithful to fulfill what He has spoken over you.

 

Prophecy: Proof Written Before History

I recently had a conversation with someone about prophecy in the Bible. He asked a question that many people have wondered about, even if they’ve never said it out loud. He said, “Is prophecy really God telling the future, or is it just people later on reading it and then trying to make it happen?” In other words, is prophecy truly supernatural, or is it something humans could manipulate after the fact?

 

That same morning, I had been reading Isaiah 44:28, and the timing of it felt almost too perfect. In that verse, Isaiah records God speaking about the rebuilding of Jerusalem. It wasn’t written as a hopeful idea or a vague prediction. It was written as a certainty. What makes this remarkable is that Isaiah wrote it around 200 years before it happened. At the time Isaiah wrote those words, Jerusalem had not yet been destroyed, and no one living in that moment would have been able to imagine the exact chain of events that would have to take place for that prophecy to be fulfilled.

 

Jerusalem would eventually be completely destroyed by the Babylonian Empire. The city would be devastated, the temple ruined, and the people taken into captivity. That alone would have seemed like the end of everything. But Isaiah’s prophecy didn’t stop at destruction. For Jerusalem to be rebuilt, Babylon would have to fall, and another empire would have to rise in its place. Persia would have to take control of the world stage. Then a king would have to be born, come to power, and issue a decree allowing Jerusalem to be rebuilt.

 

And Isaiah doesn’t just predict that a king will do it—he names him. Cyrus. The prophecy identifies Cyrus before Cyrus even existed. We can read it today and treat it as history because we already know how it turned out, but Isaiah wrote it before any of it happened. The destruction, the rise of Persia, and the reign of Cyrus were all future events at the time the prophecy was written. That is not something people could “act out” to make it come true, because it involved nations, empires, warfare, rulers, and the shifting of global power.

 

As our conversation continued, we moved from Jerusalem to Jesus. That is when the weight of prophecy becomes even clearer. Isaiah 53 describes the suffering of the Messiah in a way that aligns with the crucifixion of Christ. It speaks of rejection, suffering, being wounded for the sins of others, and dying as an innocent sacrifice. Isaiah wrote those words centuries before Jesus was born and long before Rome perfected crucifixion as an instrument of torture and execution.

 

That is what makes the argument that people “lived it out” so difficult to accept. The Roman soldiers who crucified Jesus were not trying to fulfill Hebrew prophecy. They were not studying Isaiah. Many of them likely could not even read. They were simply carrying out an execution. Yet their actions aligned with what Isaiah wrote long before they ever existed.

 

That is when I realized prophecy is not just information about the future. It is evidence of who God is. God gives prophecy to show that He is not limited by time. He sees what humans cannot see. He declares what will happen before it happens. And He sets a clear standard: if what He says does not come to pass, then His Word cannot be trusted. But if what He says happens exactly as written, then it becomes proof that His Word is true.

 

This reminds me of a well-known quote by C.S. Lewis: “You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God: or else a madman or something worse.” That quote fits because fulfilled prophecy forces a decision. If God truly spoke through Scripture, then the Bible cannot be treated as merely a collection of moral teachings. It is either divine truth, or it is not.

 

That is where Romans 8:29 connects directly into this discussion. The verse says, “For whom He foreknew, He also predestined…” It begins with foreknowledge. God does not say He forced people into salvation. He says He foreknew them. The same God who knew the future of nations also knows the hearts of individuals. He already knows who will accept His offer of salvation. He already knows who will respond to His grace.

 

This also ties into the fact that salvation is a gift. A gift is not earned. It is not worked for. It is received. Accepting a gift is not an act of achievement, but an act of trust. Scripture is clear that salvation is not of works. We do nothing to deserve it. We simply accept what Christ has done for us.

 

And that is where prophecy becomes deeply personal. If God was right about Jerusalem, and right about Cyrus, and right about the suffering of Christ, then He must also be right about salvation. If He has proven His truth through fulfilled prophecy, then what He says about forgiveness, eternal life, judgment, and the future must also be true.

 

The Bible also speaks clearly about future events that will unfold on the earth itself. Scripture warns that in the last days the world will not gradually improve, but will grow darker in many ways. Jesus spoke of wars and rumors of wars, of nations rising against nations, and of distress among the people. The Bible describes a world filled with fear, confusion, deception, and unrest. It speaks of moral decay, where what is evil will be called good and what is good will be called evil. It warns that many will fall away from truth, not because truth is unavailable, but because hearts will grow cold and people will prefer lies that satisfy them over truth that convicts them.

 

The Bible also speaks of Israel and Jerusalem continuing to be at the center of world attention. It describes a time when nations will gather against Israel, and the city of Jerusalem will become a burdensome stone to the world. For centuries people questioned how such a small nation could hold such prophetic significance, yet today the world’s eyes remain fixed on that region, just as Scripture foretold. The same city Isaiah spoke about rebuilding is still central in the story of prophecy, proving that God’s timeline has not ended.

 

Scripture also warns of a coming world system that will seek to unify politics, economics, and religion under one controlling power. It describes a time when buying and selling will be restricted, when global control will increase, and when deception will become so strong that many will be led astray. It speaks of false peace, false unity, and false promises that appear to solve the world’s problems but ultimately lead to oppression and judgment. The Bible does not describe the future as random chaos, but as a carefully unfolding plan, moving toward a climax that God has already declared.

 

The Bible also speaks of a great period of tribulation on the earth, a time of suffering unlike any the world has seen. It describes judgments that will affect nations, economies, and nature itself. It speaks of earthquakes, famine, and calamities that will shake humanity and reveal how fragile human power truly is. The world will attempt to solve these crises through human strength, but prophecy makes it clear that mankind will not be able to fix what is coming without God.

 

Yet even in these warnings, prophecy is not written to produce fear but to produce preparation. God does not reveal the future to terrify His people but to remind them that nothing is out of control. Even the darkest events are not outside His authority. The Bible shows that God’s purpose is not destruction, but redemption. He is calling people to Himself before the final events unfold.

 

And at the center of it all stands the return of Jesus Christ. The same Christ who came first as a suffering servant will return as King. Scripture describes Him coming not quietly, but visibly and powerfully. It describes the nations being humbled and the reign of Christ being established on earth. The Bible speaks of a coming kingdom where Christ will rule with justice, where righteousness will be restored, and where God’s authority will finally be acknowledged by all creation.

 

So prophecy is not simply about proving God’s Word is accurate. It is about showing us that God is moving history toward an appointed end. The same God who accurately spoke of Cyrus, Jerusalem, and the cross has also spoken of what is still coming. And if He has been right about everything behind us, then we should take seriously everything still ahead of us.

 

In the end, prophecy leaves us with one clear truth: God has not only written history—He has written the future. And if He is right about the future, then He is right about salvation. The greatest question is not whether prophecy is true, but whether we will accept His gift of grace while there is still time.