| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
Pseudo-Prophecy and Islamic Eschatology
00:01:30
|
|
| Do you believe possibly that the Islamic Antichrist is, or Christ, is our Antichrist? | |
| Do you think maybe? | |
| It's really convoluted. | |
| And there was some really good scholarship that Tom Horn and the late Chris Putnam put in that book. | |
| And I was honored. | |
| I contributed a chapter to that book. | |
| Essentially, the Islamic eschatology, their views of the end times, were developed in response to a book written in the 7th century by a guy called Pseudo-Methodius. | |
| He wrote it in the name of a 4th century saint. | |
| And Pseudo-Methodius wrote about the coming of a final Roman emperor who would save the world for Christ. | |
| So Islam said, well, we need to have a Messiah figure too. | |
| call him the Mahdi, and that's where their prophet, because they don't mention the Mahdi in the Koran. | |
| No. | |
| So their prophecies are based on a pseudo-prophecy, a Christian pseudo-prophecy in the 7th century. | |
| But the sad thing is, and this is why my book is subtitled, Satan's Psyops, From Eden to Armageddon, that was a psyop by the enemy, getting Muslims to believe in a coming Islamic savior who will conquer the world for Allah. | |
| So whether it's true or not, the point is Muslims believe it. | |
| And there's difference between what the Shias and the Sunnis believe, which is convoluted because they don't all believe this, just as we Christians don't all believe the same thing about end times. | |