End time prophecy is not of particular interest to me because I don’t believe we can imagine what God has in store, any more than the Old Testament students of prophecy could imagine what Messiah would be like from the prophecies revealed about Him. I am happy to appreciate the general message of prophecy and not get side-tracked by the details that I’m not going to comprehend anyway. It’s not copping out on prophecy, because the general message is so profound, so rewarding, so sustaining – really everything I need to know. That message is this: in the end GOD WINS! That means that good wins. Justice. Peace. Right. Righteousness. Our family is dealing with the death of a beloved pet right now, and the truth that God wins is unspeakably precious, a true comfort. Do you need to relish that hope right now? The enemy wants you to gloss over it and miss its impact, so don’t give him any satisfaction by missing this opportunity to find real encouragement and hope and to grow in your devotion to God by deeply appreciating this truth. Roll around in its luxury: God wins. Defeat whatever work the enemy wants to try to use to defeat you: God wins.
The part of the prophecies that were fulfilled in ancient history, though, now those interest me. I know that most of my readers don’t appreciate this history enough to recall it, so I will review it here so that we can marvel at how accurate the prophecies were. Daniel saw his vision during the reign of Darius the Mede, who ruled Babylon for Cyrus the Persian while Cyrus was abroad doing one of the big things that Greats did to earn the name Great: he was conquering his empire. The Medes and Persians, two people groups who had waxed and waned at various times in history, had united to team up against the Babylonians and now team-ruled their empire, which would come to be known as the Persian Empire. So that’s the starting point of the vision. Then the Greeks would wrest the empire from the hands of the Persians. At the time of Daniel’s vision, that was a joke, because the Greeks were nothing on the world scene, and Greece would have been seen as a backwater. Whatever good might have been budding there was unknown and unimportant to this much more happening part of the world. The Greeks weren’t even as threatening as a gnat hovering in the vicinity. But history records the staggeringly swift rise of Alexander the Great who did indeed conquer Persia in an amazingly short period of time. When Alexander died suddenly in his prime, his empire was divided into four kingdoms: Greece, Egypt, Asia Minor, and Asia. Then the vision turns to the future, to our future. Another great example of how time flows like an air current in Biblical prophecy. The future is where it loses me. But I’m still clinging to the message: as bad as things will get, GOD WINS!