World Geopolitics by the Bible: Whither America? Part 4 :: By Wilfred Hahn

We continue our quest for the identities of the 7 Ruler Kings, which represent the geopolitical history of the world in that they circumnavigate the fate of the Hebrews.

Why are we pursuing this study? Importantly, it allows us to determine the times and the seasons. There can be no doubt: We are living in an interesting time … likely a sliver in duration … as some major prophetic events are at the very door. These will have an enormous impact upon the world … expressly so also America.

In Part 3, we noted that all of the Ruler Kings that Daniel saw in his visions have left significant legacies for the world today. We last discussed the connections of ancient Babylon with our current times. Readers will likely have been surprised.

Next, we consider Medo-Persia (depicted as a bear in Daniel 7). The most significant contribution of the Medes was the principle of tolerance. The figure of Cyrus has survived throughout history as the role model of an ideal ruler.

Though a conqueror, he was tolerant and magnanimous. In like fashion, Darius I and Xerxes I, and later Persian rulers, were considered to be liberal.

The attitude of tolerance is evident in the Bible’s account of Cyrus.

He was moved to fund the rebuilding of the Jewish temple (Ezra 1:2). He provided a grant for this humanitarian project, involving a different people with another religion (Ezra 3:7). Cyrus even returned some of the temple treasures that had been carted out of Jerusalem decades earlier.

What reigning powers in history ever considered offering recompense to those that they conquered? If that is the key characteristic symbolized by the Medo-Persian “bear,” then it certainly does apply to our time.

If it were not so, how could it have ever been possible for the Jews to again be restored to their own land in 1948, after almost two thousand years of dispersion? This is one of the greatest confirmations that the “bear” depicted in Daniel 7 and Revelation 13 is indeed upon the scene today.

Most readers will agree that Greece has left a big stamp upon the world. It is shown as a leopard in Daniel. Greece is the source of much humanism.

Its ancient society placed a high value upon human reasoning and philosophy. That was certainly the case during New Testament times. Paul often debated Greek thinkers; notably, for example, at Mars Hill (Acts 17).

He later tells us that “Jews demand miraculous signs and Greeks look for wisdom” (1 Corinthians 1:22). Here we see Apostle Paul confirming that the god of the Greeks was human logic (humanism). Paul also held “discussions daily in the lecture hall of Tyrannus” (Acts 19:9) for over two years. Tyrannus was a Greek teacher and sophist whose school was in Ephesus.

To the Greeks, the very fact that something might be incomprehensible could only be referred to the Unknown God. Paul showed them that all ways higher than man’s were attributable to God (Isaiah 55:9). This Hellenistic emphasis upon science and naturalism rules our society today.

There are other Greek cultural legacies that still mark our world. Democracy is the prevalent organizational form politically worldwide today (its origin found in ancient Greece). Democracy, assuredly a human system with many good facilities, still harbors the fatal flaw that will enable a spiritually blind world to willingly allow the Antichrist to come to power. And, of course, we cannot forget the Olympics, the highest celebration of human physical achievement.

Today we live in the Roman Head era. Its signs are all around us. Western society and culture can find much of its root in the early Roman Empire. From Roman law, civil organization, military techniques, and creditor philosophy, to many other influences, Western society today remains quintessentially Roman.

We need not spend much time documenting this phenomenon. Rome was a ferocious military beast two thousand years ago. The new Rome, both militarily and economically, is an even more ferocious beast, one that certainly is stamping much of the world under its feet (Daniel 7:7, 19).

How to Line Up the Ruler Kings

All of the Bible’s prophecies about the 7 Ruler kingdoms (individually or collectively) lead to the same ending scenario. In every case, these visions end up pointing to the same final kingdom. It is the messianic kingdom. Following all the beast (Gentile) kingdoms, it is shown to be eternal.

Daniel informs us that the time of the messianic kingdom comes after the feet and the toes. The stone cut out without hands dashes apart the statue (Daniel 2:34). After this, “the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that will never be destroyed, nor will it be left to another people. It will crush all those kingdoms and bring them to an end, but it will itself endure forever.”

Furthermore, we know that the 4th beast of Daniel 7 (the 6th by Revelation’s count) is vanquished by God. After this arises His dominion, “[…] an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed” (Daniel 7:14).

The same is revealed in the beast visions of Daniel 8, showing that these kingdoms are destroyed, “but not by human power” (Daniel 8:25). Revelation provides much rich detail on the eternal kingdom that follows the beast of Revelation 17.

Knowing this, a simple way of corroborating the identity and chronological order of all the Ruler Kings (whether mentioned in the Old or New Testament) is to simply count back from the messianic kingdom.

We know that the kingdom “that is” (Revelation 17:10) must be Roman. It must be as Apostle John explains. Rome was the world hegemon at the time of his prophecies. He tells us it is the 6th in the lineage of 7.

“Five have fallen … one more is to come, and that one but for a little while” (Revelation 17:10). We also know that Daniel’s 4th beast (Daniel 7) was Roman. This can be proven in a number of ways.

First, we are told specifically that the first of the five kingdoms, represented by the image with the golden head (Daniel 2), was Nebuchadnezzar. If we count the number of world kingdoms that follow him (Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome), Rome is the 4th that he sees. We conclude that Daniel’s 4th kingdom is the same as John’s 6th.

In view of the prophecies of Daniel, it can be shown that he is referring to the same first four kingdoms in his visions. He identifies Babylon as being the first in this line. Daniel 7 (this prophecy being uttered before the Medo-Persians had conquered Babylon) specifically identifies four kingdoms that will rise from the earth (Daniel 7:17). Then, in chapter 8, it is revealed to him that two of the kingdoms (also providing details about some of the individual kings) would be Medo-Persia and Greece (mentioned by name).

Not much later, Daniel himself witnessed the fall of Babylon (Head #3) and then served Cyrus the Mede (a part of Head #4). Taking all observations together, there is no question that Babylon is followed by Medo-Persia (#4), then by Greece (#5). None of the Ruler Kings are shown to occur thereafter other than the 4th Beast Daniel saw. Again, this can only be Roman.

We can deduce that the five beasts and/or horns that Prophet Daniel sees are the very same Ruler Kings #3 to #7 that Apostle John sees. Daniel shares visions that look forward from his time, while John’s visions encompass past, present, and future. We observe that all five of these Ruler Kings can indeed be named.

The Identity of the First Two Heads

Now that we have all the foundations in place on the last five Ruler Kings, we can turn our attention to the two earliest ones. We have yet to provide proofs of the identities of RKs #1 and #2.

As it turns out, the identity of the first two RKs of the 7 heads has assuredly been the subject of much debate. Just what qualifying criteria should one use to identify a “major world rulership” in the geopolitical arena, to discover the identity of these seven major kingdoms in the Bible?

Earlier in the series, we had listed 7 criteria shared by the 7 RK. The first common characteristic of all of them is their persecution and oppression of the Hebrews.

Frankly, the Bible only offers three plausible candidates that were in power before Babylon in the Bible: Egypt, Assyria and the Philistines. However, only two meet all of the 7 traits common to the rest of the Ruler Kings; most expressly, oppressing Israel. (Another nation candidate mentioned often in the Bible is Tyre.)

Much of Scripture is preoccupied with the three nations of Egypt, Assyria and Philistia and their interactions with Israel. For example, the word Philistine (and its derivatives) is mentioned 276 times in the Bible; Egypt (and its derivatives) 793 times; and Assyria, 144 times.

But which two of these three nations qualify as the 1st and 2nd heads of the 7-headed beast shown in Revelation? Just what additional indications does Scripture provide? Consider the following statements:

  1. “For this is what the Sovereign LORD says: ‘At first my people went down to Egypt to live; lately, Assyria has oppressed them'” (Isaiah 52:4).
  2. “Therefore, this is what the Lord, the LORD Almighty, says: ‘My people who live in Zion, do not be afraid of the Assyrians, who beat you with a rod and lift up a club against you, as Egypt did'” (Isaiah 10:24).
  3. “We submitted to Egypt and Assyria to get enough bread” (Lamentations 5:6).
  4. “Israel is a scattered flock that lions have chased away. The first to devour them was the king of Assyria; the last to crush their bones was Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon” (Jeremiah 50:17).

In these verses (and a number more that could be cited), we see Assyria and Egypt being jointly referenced as oppressors and persecutors of the Hebrews. The Philistines are not in this same company. Why? The Philistines, though they had been a frequent foe of Israel, were not in the same league as Egypt and Assyria at their apex. Wars with the Philistines were not much more than territorial skirmishes.

The Philistines never completely vanquished the Israelites nor controlled the Middle East. They were considered “sea peoples” and were never rulers of the then known world. Moreover, King David and his troops were at one time even mercenaries on behalf of Philistia, supposedly fighting against Judah.

In short, Philistia does not appear to qualify as one of the 7 heads.

Based on the weight of Scripture, we conclude that Egypt and Assyria, respectively, are the 1st and 2nd heads of the 7-headed beast. There are no other viable candidates in our view.

When the 10 Horns Arrive on the Timeline

In the next issue, we will turn our focus from the 7 Ruler Kings to the 10 horns (10K). They represent a coalition of 10 rulers (or nations) that is formed just before the start of the Tribulation period. Just what are the 10 kings destined to do? Will America be one of these ten nations?

Wilfred J. Hahn is a global economist/strategist. Formerly a top-ranked global analyst, research director for a major Wall Street investment bank, and head of Canada’s largest global investment operation, his writings focus on the endtime roles of money, economics and globalization. He has been quoted around the world and his writings reproduced in numerous other publications and languages. His 2002 book The Endtime Money Snare: How to live free accurately anticipated and prepared its readers for the Global Financial Crisis. A following book, Global Financial Apocalypse Prophesied: Preserving true riches in an age of deception and trouble, looks further into the prophetic future.

Contact Wilfred at: staff@eternalvalue.com

 

Jesus Conquered His Critics :: By Dr. Donald Whitchard

Week that Changed the World: Jesus Conquered His Critics

Summary: In His final week of public ministry, Jesus confronted a series of challenging questions His enemies attempted to use as traps. One question dealt with the issue of paying taxes to Caesar. Jesus’ surprising answer would settle the issues of loyalty and obligation to both God and Caesar.

Jesus had spent the first days of His final week shaking up the status quo concerning the worship of the LORD, the reverence due to the House of God, and to recall its purpose. He exposed the moneymaking schemes of the religious leaders, rebuked their practices, and drove out the merchants who were in the house of God to make a profit off of the pilgrims arriving in Jerusalem during Passover, who had brought their lambs and other animals to be sacrificed to God in accordance with the Law of Moses.

For the first time in many years, the house of God was clean both physically and spiritually, temporarily bringing a sense of relief and some joy to the remnant faithful. But it enraged the Pharisees, Sadducees, and others who used religion as their “cash cow” and enjoyed the corruption with which they were content. Jesus was bad for business, and He had exposed the Pharisees and others for their blatant hypocrisy, which appeared devout but was, in reality, rotten and dead like tombs full of bones, as Jesus described.

When you read all of the Gospels, you see that it is the religious crowd that gave the Lord Jesus the hardest time and the largest amount of pettiness, grief, and criticism.

He was hassled constantly during this time, but He also presented teachings that confounded His foes and comforted those few authentic believers in God who gathered in Jerusalem to celebrate the holiest time in the Jewish calendar, that of Passover.

The city teemed with visitors from throughout Judea and different regions of the vast Roman Empire. Rome’s presence was there in force with soldiers ready to keep the peace and take care of malcontents who could disturb the festival or cause a revolt.

The official who governed this region of Caesar’s dominion was Pontius Pilate, who lived in the coastal city built by Herod the Great, Caesarea Philippi. He came to Jerusalem if only to keep order over the Jews and their strange beliefs. He was under a time of probation by Emperor Tiberius Caesar (A.D. 14-37). Pilate had put to death some worshippers earlier for alleged revolts against Rome and had placed the Imperial Eagle symbol at the Temple, which enraged the Jewish population. Pilate was aware that if he made any more mistakes, he would be exiled or worse.

The average Jewish person could have cared less about Pilate or anything dealing with Rome. The very fact that they had to use coins with Caesar’s image to pay taxes and fees to keep the Imperial government in power was blasphemous and humiliating to them, considering that Israel under King David was a mighty nation while the ancestors of the Romans were a group of barbaric clans.

The Pharisees had a cozy relationship with Rome, who would use the national unrest and hatred of the Caesars as a way to trap and discredit Jesus in front of the people. Destroy Jesus’ credibility with them, and His reputation and character would then be permanently ruined. He would more than likely leave the area to live an anonymous life in the little backwater town of Nazareth. His time of popularity would then be nothing more than a bad memory to His enemies, both religious and national. Their plan seemed simple and had a no-win answer, or so they believed.

The Pharisees teamed up with the Jewish supporters of Herod, who had no problem with Roman culture or presence. This odd bunch approached Jesus with words of flattery and false praise, proclaiming that He was a great teacher in the ways of God, true and unconcerned with the thoughts of men. If they were real worshippers of the LORD, these words would be a declaration of His glory and greatness as the Promised One of Israel. Jesus saw right through these phony and hypocritical words. He more than likely looked at these snakes with disgust and quiet anger with this display of false worship and prepared Himself for their question. It centered on the issue of paying taxes to Caesar, which was a sore spot on the conscience of the Jews. Was it right to do so?

This was a dilemma that would have made the average man stay quiet and say nothing to upset either his fellow Jews or the ever-watchful eyes of the Roman soldiers, who were ready to arrest anyone who dared to speak against the might of Rome lest they be arrested, tried, and put to death for insurrection and treason against Caesar. If Jesus were to answer “Yes,” then the people would desert Him, condemn Him, and run Him off as a blasphemer and traitor to His people. To answer “No” meant a quick arrest and condemnation by the Romans for the crimes listed earlier, something Jesus’ enemies hoped would be the outcome of this situation.

Jesus throws their plans into chaos and an unexpected realm. He rebukes His foes for their testing of Him and then asks for a denarius, a Roman coin. As He holds it, He shows it to the people and asks them whose picture is on the coin. They answer that it is the image of Caesar, and it is only his image that is allowed on coins throughout the Empire. Caesar’s power, authority and rule are symbolized on this currency and were a silent reminder to his subjects as to who is in charge of the government. Jesus never denied or challenged this claim, for it is as God that He places kings and rulers on thrones and in power, and He can remove them according to His Sovereign will and direction (Proverbs 21:1). He establishes governments to keep the peace and maintain order, which is what Rome did well (Romans 13:1-8).

Even though the Caesars and the Romans were not godly by any means and did persecute the Christians for centuries, God used these bad rulers to show the world what godless people are like when in power, and the necessity of praying for leaders in that they either come to Christ or become the dust of oblivion.

Bad government is a wake-up from Almighty God to open the eyes of idealistic nationalists and others who think we have all the answers and can rely on ourselves. The hard truth is that we are nothing without God.

This world system will come to an end. The horrendous acts of Nazi Germany and the Communist bloc of the past century show that there are disastrous consequences for nations and people that embrace policies and politicians who sound great, appear noble, who cry out for fairness and equality, and appear to have all the answers instead of turning to the LORD for guidance, direction, and repent of their sins and wickedness. These powers were either voted into office or toppled existing governments with the promises of a world utopia where all would be equal and wonderful. 100,000,00 people are in their graves as a result of these “promises” that were written in ink but instead shed the people’s blood.

Before we go blaming the LORD for these ills, just remember that it is we who rebelled against Him at the dawn of history, deciding to doubt and deny Him. We arrogantly flipped Him off and dared Him to do something about it (Romans 3:10-18). We created the mess we are in, whether we admit it or not. We possess no way of cleaning it up nor making things right, save for the intervention and mercy of God ALONE.

What do we owe Caesar or the government we are currently under? We owe the government our loyalty as citizens of the nation and to behave and act in the world as ambassadors of Christ to those who have eyes to see and ears to hear. We owe thanks to those who serve the nation for the public good such as our armed forces, law enforcement, healthcare workers of all levels, along with those anonymous public servants who acknowledge that a nation is blessed if their God is the LORD, and do their best to follow Him and keep everything running as best as possible.

We can pray to the Lord to remove bad leaders from office, beseech Him to have our elections protected by His power, and trust that His people are placed in authority. We can pray that God would guide the heart of the president to repent and bow before the King of Kings and do as He commands, or face Him as the Great and Final Judge. We have to realize that the Caesars of this present world system are under the control of the Devil, yet God will use this to bring all events and powers under His rule and make all things new. This is described in the book of Revelation, where fallible human government is forever destroyed by the return of the Lord Jesus Christ at the end of the Tribulation period.

So, what do we owe God?

While Caesar temporarily rules the known world, it is the Sovereign LORD GOD Almighty who created the world, the universe, and all life here on Earth for His glory. He holds the very fabric of creation together (Genesis 1, 2; John 1:1-4; Colossians 1:15-17). He has all things, events, and our very life under His absolute control. He guides the destiny of nations to bring them into a time of prosperity and grace as they submit to Him, or allows them to follow their evil ways, reaping the horrendous consequences and then blaming or cursing God and arrogantly claiming that He can be overthrown and defeated (Psalm 2). This makes God only laugh at our foolish delusions of grandeur. He has everyone, including the Devil and his brood, on a short leash, letting them go so far and no further.

The LORD gives us life, breath, purpose, meaning, ideas, joy, love, happiness, fulfillment, and eternal salvation from our sins through the redemptive work of Jesus Christ on the cross on our behalf.

Sorry, America, I am thankful to be a citizen of this nation, but the redemption of our souls has never been in your job description, even if the swamp creatures in Washington demand otherwise.

Jesus took our sins upon His sinless, holy form, becoming the sacrifice for sin that we can never be in our evil state (Romans 5:6-11; Ephesians 2:8-9; Hebrews 7:25-27). No fallible human being can do that, no matter how noble of character. No human government provides salvation and the promise of eternal life. It is in the new heaven and earth, where Jesus Christ will rule and reign forever. Those who will surrender their lives to Him, confess Him as LORD, and ask forgiveness for their sins (Romans 10:9-10) will be with Him.

Our world system is coming to an end, and with it, all despots, tyrants, dictators, arrogant politicians, wicked and perverse leaders of the nations, and their evil natures. Sinful human government will end forever with the return of Jesus (Revelation 19:11-21), and He will cast all godless rebels into the eternal Lake of Fire, never to harm nor influence His creation again. We owe Jesus our very lives, our worship, our love, and our loyalty. Caesar will appear before Him to be judged and sentenced at the Great White Throne, along with every person throughout history who rejected Him as Lord and Savior (Philippians 2:9-11; Revelation 20:11-15).

Here is a warning to every elected, appointed, or self-crowned authority, whether religious or secular, who believes or declares that they have all power, authority, and the final word: You have NOTHING, including your lives, if it were not given to you by God Almighty (John 19:11). You are limited, finite, and as dust before Him. Repent NOW and ask Him in humbleness to forgive you of your sins. Confess Him as Lord and Savior before it is too late (Hebrews 9:27).

This goes for every one of you who reads this message. Surrender your life to Jesus Christ TODAY (2 Corinthians 6:2; James 4:17). None of you have any guarantee of tomorrow, and the devotion you shamelessly gave your leaders here in this world will do you no good in terms of eternity. Jesus settled the issue of loyalties as He gave the coin back to His would-be accusers. Where do you stand?

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Join me for “The Reality City Daily Review” weekday mornings at 10:00 CST on YouTube (USA). It will then be posted on Facebook and on my website. My main area of discussion will be on the basics of the Christian faith but will also deal with prophetic issues and other topics as the Lord impresses upon me to handle.