Counting on God?
The Antichrist They Chose
There's a script in circulation. Not in novels, not in movies, but in the minds of serious men who hold real power. It's called prophecy — and for millions, it's not metaphor. It's a checklist.
Wars in the Middle East. Check.
Collapsing institutions. Check.
A strongman who breaks norms. Check.
Betrayal from within. Check.
The mark, the loyalty tests, the us-versus-them. Check.
Some believe this script must be fulfilled to bring about divine rescue.
Others believe a chosen leader will defeat the script and save us from it.
But both groups agree: We are inside the prophecy.
The danger is not the script itself. It's what people do when they believe they're acting it out.
Expect war, and you justify starting one.
Expect collapse, and you strip away the supports holding systems together.
Expect persecution, and you provoke it until it arrives.
Prophecy becomes self-fulfilling because people build policy around it.
Cause disguised as effect.
THE FALSE KING PROBLEM
Here's where it fractures:
If the prophecy warns of false messiahs, false kings, and Antichrist pretenders…
Then how do you know which side you're on?
What if the figure you're backing — the one you believe will either trigger the rescue or prevent the collapse — is not the hero?
What if he's the test you were supposed to recognize and refuse?
The Antichrist isn't a demon with horns. In every telling, he's charismatic. Beloved. Convincing. He offers protection, loyalty, strength. He demands absolute allegiance. He rewrites truth. He positions himself as the ONLY alternative to destruction.
And his followers believe they're on the right side — right up until the end.
So the question is not whether prophecy is real.
The question is: which role are you playing in it?
WHAT IF GOD DOESN'T SHOW UP?
Now for the harder cut:
What if the God you're counting on to finish the script does not arrive?
Not because prophecy is false — but because you misread who was who.
The wars will be real.
The betrayals real.
The broken systems real.
But the rescue?
That will never come.
If heaven stays silent, collapse is not climax.
It is just collapse.
And if Trump was the false king — not the instrument of salvation, not the shield against prophecy, but the fulfillment of it — then everyone who backed him thinking they were securing their future… chose wrong.
Not because they were stupid.
But because the script was designed to make the wrong choice feel righteous.
THE SILENT DREAD
The feeling overcoming you right now is not just danger. It's also liberation.
If Trump is a false king, and if God will not intervene on the timeline you expected, then the future is not inevitable. The script was always optional. It was always human hands guiding events into its shape.
Which means human hands can write a different ending.
But not through politics.
Not through another savior.
Not through waiting for prophecy to resolve itself.
Through design. Through structure. Through something new.
SO WHO PROFITED?
While you wagered the world on prophecy — whether fulfilling it or fighting it — ask:
Who grew rich?
Who consolidated power?
Who escaped accountability?
The answer is not divine.
It is human.
Which means the responsibility — and the possibility — is human as well.
Prophecy may insist the end is written, but careful study of this prophecy reveals that every act performed right up until the last one is performed by humans. Careful study of its origins reveals that it was not written for us— it was written as propaganda for people who were about to die. And they did. A long time ago.
So if the men leading YOU through this script are wrong, they are killing YOU for nothing… other than all the money they've made off of you.
THE CHOICE IN FRONT OF YOU
This isn't about abandoning faith or embracing nihilism.
It's about asking one simple question:
What if the people telling you this is inevitable are the ones making it inevitable?
What if prophecy was never meant to be a playbook—but a warning?
Not "this will happen," but "don't let this happen."
The script only plays out if we keep following it.
You can stop performing your assigned role.
The wars don't have to start because someone checks a box.
The systems don't have to collapse because someone decided they should.
The false king doesn't have to reign because millions mistook him for the hero.
You have agency.
You always did.
The question is whether you'll use it—or hand it over to men who profit from your obedience.
If you're ready to stop following scripts written by others,
If you're ready to question which king you're serving,
If you're ready to build something that doesn't require you to betray yourself,