Intellectual Froglegs With Joe Dan Gorman
Cowboys & Communists
NTEB Radio Bible Study
Host And Founder Of ‘Now The End Begins’ Geoffrey Grider:
Fulfillment Theology is a dangerous perversion of clear Bible prophecy showing God bringing the Kingdom of Heaven to the Jews and Israel as He promised to do.
Fulfillment theology is the belief that the promises, prophecies, covenants, and kingdom expectations in the Old Testament are “fulfilled” in Jesus Christ and, often, in the Church. In simple terms, it teaches that many things God promised to Israel are now spiritually fulfilled in Christ and the Church, rather than requiring a future, literal fulfillment for national Israel. But the danger is that Fulfillment Theology can become a softer, more polished version of Replacement Theology. It may avoid saying “the Church replaced Israel,” but it still spiritualizes Israel’s land, kingdom, throne, and national restoration promises into the Church. That is absolutely not what the Bible teaches.
God promised Israel a land, a kingdom, a throne, and national restoration. Fulfillment theology may say those promises are fulfilled spiritually in Christ and His people today. But the Bible says those promises still await literal fulfillment for Israel in the future kingdom. Fulfillment theology says that Israel’s promises are fulfilled in Christ and the Church. Dispensational theology says that Christ fulfills prophecy, but God’s literal promises to Israel remain intact and will be fulfilled in Israel, while the Church has its own distinct heavenly calling in this present dispensation. We see these things when we follows Paul’s command in 2 Timothy 2:15 (KJB) to ‘rightly divide’ the scriptures. Tonight we give you everything you need to know about Fulfillment Theology.
Fulfillment Theology is a dangerous perversion of clear Bible prophecy showing God bringing the Kingdom of Heaven to the Jews and Israel as He promised to do.
Fulfillment theology is the belief that the promises, prophecies, covenants, and kingdom expectations in the Old Testament are “fulfilled” in Jesus Christ and, often, in the Church. In simple terms, it teaches that many things God promised to Israel are now spiritually fulfilled in Christ and the Church, rather than requiring a future, literal fulfillment for national Israel. But the danger is that Fulfillment Theology can become a softer, more polished version of Replacement Theology. It may avoid saying “the Church replaced Israel,” but it still spiritualizes Israel’s land, kingdom, throne, and national restoration promises into the Church. That is absolutely not what the Bible teaches.
“He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end.” Luke 1:32-33 (KJV)
God promised Israel a land, a kingdom, a throne, and national restoration. Fulfillment theology may say those promises are fulfilled spiritually in Christ and His people today. But the Bible says those promises still await literal fulfillment for Israel in the future kingdom. Fulfillment theology says that Israel’s promises are fulfilled in Christ and the Church. Dispensational theology says that Christ fulfills prophecy, but God’s literal promises to Israel remain intact and will be fulfilled in Israel, while the Church has its own distinct heavenly calling in this present dispensation. We see these things when we follows Paul’s command in 2 Timothy 2:15 (KJB) to ‘rightly divide’ the scriptures. Tonight we give you everything you need to know about Fulfillment Theology.
Prophecy News Watch
By PNW Staff: The scene at Ben Gurion Airport on April 23 carried a significance that stretched far beyond a routine arrival. As 240 members of the Bnei Menashe community stepped onto Israeli soil, many wept, embraced relatives, and lifted prayers of thanksgiving. Their journey--from remote regions of northeastern India to the modern state of Israel--was not merely geographic. For many, it marked the culmination of generations of longing tied to identity, history, and faith.
This latest arrival, part of "Operation Wings of Dawn," represents the beginning of a broader effort to bring thousands more from this community home. The Bnei Menashe trace their lineage to the biblical tribe of Manasseh, one of the "lost tribes" of ancient Israel. While scholars debate aspects of that claim, what is beyond dispute is their persistent preservation of Jewish customs across centuries and continents. Their Aliyah--the Hebrew term for immigration to Israel--reflects a powerful combination of cultural continuity and spiritual conviction.
Yet this story is not unfolding in isolation. It is part of a much larger and ongoing movement. Even amid the conflicts with Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran, Jewish immigration to Israel has not slowed--it has, in some respects, intensified.
Recent figures underscore this reality. According to data from The Jewish Agency for Israel and Israel's Ministry of Aliyah and Integration, approximately 47,000 Jewish immigrants arrived in Israel in 2023. While that number dipped slightly in 2024 due to the war, tens of thousands still made the journey.
France, Russia, Ukraine, and the United States remain among the top countries of origin, with notable increases from Western Europe. In France alone, where concerns about antisemitism have surged in recent years, thousands of Jews have chosen to relocate annually.
This latest arrival, part of "Operation Wings of Dawn," represents the beginning of a broader effort to bring thousands more from this community home. The Bnei Menashe trace their lineage to the biblical tribe of Manasseh, one of the "lost tribes" of ancient Israel. While scholars debate aspects of that claim, what is beyond dispute is their persistent preservation of Jewish customs across centuries and continents. Their Aliyah--the Hebrew term for immigration to Israel--reflects a powerful combination of cultural continuity and spiritual conviction.
Yet this story is not unfolding in isolation. It is part of a much larger and ongoing movement. Even amid the conflicts with Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran, Jewish immigration to Israel has not slowed--it has, in some respects, intensified.
Recent figures underscore this reality. According to data from The Jewish Agency for Israel and Israel's Ministry of Aliyah and Integration, approximately 47,000 Jewish immigrants arrived in Israel in 2023. While that number dipped slightly in 2024 due to the war, tens of thousands still made the journey.
France, Russia, Ukraine, and the United States remain among the top countries of origin, with notable increases from Western Europe. In France alone, where concerns about antisemitism have surged in recent years, thousands of Jews have chosen to relocate annually.
Israel 365 News
By Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz: Something unprecedented is unfolding in the skies over Iran, in the corridors of the White House, and — according to Rabbi Mendel Kessin — in the heavenly tribunal itself. In a lecture posted to YouTube last week, Rabbi Mendel Kessin, one of the most compelling voices in contemporary Torah-based geopolitical analysis, delivered what can only be described as a theological framework for the war against Iran — one that reaches back to the Book of Genesis, threads through the prophecies of Isaiah, and lands squarely on Donald Trump’s desk in 2026. Rabbi Kessin’s core claim is simple and staggering: what we are watching is not merely a military campaign. It is a divine agenda unfolding in real time.
That question, which Rabbi Kessin calls a chiddush — a novel Torah insight — is the key that unlocks his entire reading of the Trump-Netanyahu relationship. The verse in question reads: “V’rav ya’avod tza’ir” — “and the elder shall serve the younger.” (Genesis 25:23) The Sages have long noted that this prophecy was made before the twins were born, yet it never appeared to be fulfilled during the lifetimes of Yaakov and Esav. Esav became a rasha — a wicked man — at 13, was openly public about his evil by 15, and spent his life as an adversary to his brother, not a servant.
“It never happened,” Rabbi Kessin says flatly. “People don’t realize that — and then how was it in the Torah?”
His answer is that the Torah deliberately avoided naming names. The text does not say “Esav will serve Yaakov.” It says, “the elder will serve the younger.” That grammatical choice, Rabbi Kessin argues, is not accidental. It encodes a remez — a hint — pointing to a future reconciliation in which Esav will return to his relationship with Yaakov as a brother. “That clearly suggests,” he explains, “that Esav returned to Judaism. And therefore, it makes sense to say that he’s a brother.”
That question, which Rabbi Kessin calls a chiddush — a novel Torah insight — is the key that unlocks his entire reading of the Trump-Netanyahu relationship. The verse in question reads: “V’rav ya’avod tza’ir” — “and the elder shall serve the younger.” (Genesis 25:23) The Sages have long noted that this prophecy was made before the twins were born, yet it never appeared to be fulfilled during the lifetimes of Yaakov and Esav. Esav became a rasha — a wicked man — at 13, was openly public about his evil by 15, and spent his life as an adversary to his brother, not a servant.
“It never happened,” Rabbi Kessin says flatly. “People don’t realize that — and then how was it in the Torah?”
His answer is that the Torah deliberately avoided naming names. The text does not say “Esav will serve Yaakov.” It says, “the elder will serve the younger.” That grammatical choice, Rabbi Kessin argues, is not accidental. It encodes a remez — a hint — pointing to a future reconciliation in which Esav will return to his relationship with Yaakov as a brother. “That clearly suggests,” he explains, “that Esav returned to Judaism. And therefore, it makes sense to say that he’s a brother.”
Front Page Magazine
By Daniel Greenfield: During the Obama and Biden administrations, states like Arizona and Texas were forced to fight legal and in some cases actual battles, setting up and having defenses torn down, to protect their borders from mobs of invading illegal aliens only to be told that states had no right to secure their borders.
The latest decision advances the rights of states to defend their borders.
The latest decision advances the rights of states to defend their borders.
Jihad Watch
By Robert Spencer: British police would, of course, never dare to arrest a Muslim preacher, but they do not hesitate not only to arrest a Christian pastor, but to mock his Christian faith. It’s clear who is in control in shattered, staggering, dhimmi Britain today.
The Final Hour
China, Iran, And The Hidden War No One Is Talking About
Paul McGuire
Vulnerability To Humanoid Robots
About: Join Internationally Recognized Prophecy Expert, Minister, Speaker and Author, Paul McGuire as he analyzes current events through the lens of Bible Prophecy.
John Haller’s Prophecy Update
It’s On … It’s Off …
Behold Israel — Amir Tsarfati
Who are the Palestinians?
Synopsis: The Palestinians are not related to the Biblical Philistines but rather an Arab people group. The term "Palestine" was introduced by the Romans in 135 AD to erase the Jewish connection to the land of Israel, but Jews continued to live there. There is no historical or archaeological evidence of a Palestinian national identity but a consistent Jewish identity and presence in the land of Israel.
Amir Tsarfati is an Israeli Christian from Galilee. He is a former IDF officer (hostage negotiator), former Deputy Governor of Jericho, Israeli tour guide, author, and Bible teacher. Amir is Founder and President of ‘Behold Israel,’ a Christian ministry with a world-wide outreach, and a much sought after Christian speaker world-wide.
Amir Tsarfati is an Israeli Christian from Galilee. He is a former IDF officer (hostage negotiator), former Deputy Governor of Jericho, Israeli tour guide, author, and Bible teacher. Amir is Founder and President of ‘Behold Israel,’ a Christian ministry with a world-wide outreach, and a much sought after Christian speaker world-wide.
