Chattanooga Prophecy Conference – December, 2016
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4
Session 5
Session 6
Session 7
Session 8
Session 9
Session 10
Chattanooga Prophecy Conference – December, 2016
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4
Session 5
Session 6
Session 7
Session 8
Session 9
Session 10
Chattanooga Prophecy Conference – December, 2016
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4
Session 5
Session 6
Session 7
Session 8
Session 9
Session 10
<Click Here to Listen to the Special Report>
And said unto the Levites that taught all Israel, which were holy unto the Lord, Put the holy ark in the house which Solomon the son of David king of Israel did build.
– 2 Chronicles 35:3
For further reading on the subject of the location of the Ark of the Covenant, read my devotions from these relevant passages of scripture.
Sign up today to receive my Bible Prophecy Daily Devotions.
On one of my DVD’s, Ready to Rebuild Revisited, I speak with two Jewish Rabbi’s that went to the location of the Ark. Ready to Rebuild Revisited not only discusses the location of the Ark of the Covenant, but also reviews all the preparations being made to rebuild the Temple in the city of Jerusalem.
Order the DVD “Ready to Rebuild Revisited.“
Visit our Prophecy Bookstore for other Bible Prophecy Study Materials.
Finally, thank you again for your interest in the ministry of Prophecy Today. Our goal here at Prophecy Today is to educate the Christian community about the soon return of Jesus Christ as prophecied in the Bible. The preparations for the third Jewish Temple (which includes locating the Ark of the Covenant) that will stand during the Tribulation is evidence that God’s word will be fulfilled. If you would like to partner with us in reaching the world with prophetic truth, please consider donating and as always keep us in your prayers.
Let’s keep looking up…. Until
Dr Jimmy DeYoung
And thou shalt make a candlestick of pure gold: of beaten work shall the candlestick be made: his shaft, and his branches, his bowls, his knops, and his flowers, shall be of the same. – Exodus 25:31 (KJV)
Hundreds of people gathered in the Old City of Jerusalem on Thursday evening to participate in a special menorah lighting ceremony and for the Hanukkah holiday, organized by the Temple Institute and the United Temple Movement
The menorah, made of wood covered in gold and standing at about four feet tall, has seven branches, modeled after the Menorah that stood in the two Jewish Temples as well as the Tabernacle. The oil used to light the menorah was prepared one month ago in the manner specified by the Torah, with special care used to maintain its ritual purity.
The menorah was whisked away to be lit several more times in sites that were as close to the Temple Mount as Jews are permitted to go, rekindling the light the Maccabees first lit 2,000 years ago after their victory over the Greek army.
2016 marks the first year that this impressive menorah, used in previous Temple reenactments, was lit in ceremonies during the Hanukkah holiday. Rabbi Hillel Weiss, spokesman for the nascent Sanhedrin, explained the urgency that led to this year’s unprecedented spate of menorah lightings surrounding the Temple Mount.
“On the eve of Hanukkah, President Barack Obama, via the United Nations, declared that the Jews have no Biblical right to Israel. Just three months ago, UNESCO tried to erase any connection between the Jews and their holiest site on the Temple Mount,” said Rabbi Weiss. “At the ceremony, we reenacted the blowing of the trumpets for Rosh Chodesh (new moon). This is the same trumpet blast that is the call to battle. This year, lighting the menorah was a part of the Jewish battle for their Biblical right to the land, in precisely the same way it was for the Maccabees 2,000 years ago.”
Since it is made of wood, the replica is technically not kosher for use as the menorah in the Temple, which must be made entirely of metal. The gold menorah intended to be installed permanently in the Third Temple upon its construction is on display in the Jewish quarter of Jerusalem. Made to Biblical specifications, it is not portable and cannot be used for reenactments. Standing approximately six feet tall, it weighs half a ton, and contains 45 kilograms (approximately 99 lbs) of 24 karat gold valued at approximately three million dollars.
Rabbi Yisrael Ariel hosted the evening and explained every step of the reenactment to those gathered. The reenactment ceremony included setting up a model of the altar and lighting the menorah in the manner specified in the Torah. In addition, exercises in preparation for performing the daily sacrifice, the additional sacrifice brought on in honor of the new moon, and sacrifices brought by the heads of the tribes were performed. Only photos of the animals were used and none were harmed in the reenactment.
The Kohanim (priests) wore garments adhering to Biblical specifications and silver trumpets, prepared for use in the Holy Temple were accompanied the proceedings. Before the sacrifice exercise, the Kohanim carried out the ritual lottery to determine which of them would merit to perform each function.
Immediately after the initial ceremony, which took place in the Cardo, the menorah was rushed to the Mount of Olives, where it was lit at a site overlooking and adjacent to the Temple Mount.
Joshua Wander, coordinator for the Mount of Olives menorah lighting, explained the reason for the additional ceremony.
“We have to reassert our Biblical right to the Temple Mount or we will lose it,” Wander emphasized. “Until now, the Israeli government has been unwilling to do so, but sometimes, current events are God’s way of pushing us to a place we wouldn’t go by choice.”
“We’ve had Muslims in America since George Washington.” So claimed Hillary Clinton during the second presidential debate. This was part of her response to Donald Trump’s proposed temporary ban on Muslim immigration, which appears to have metamorphosed into “extreme vetting.”
Some analysts trotted out the familiar lines about Muhammad Hamilton and Abdullah Hancock. At the risk of stating something I may not have stated before, Mrs. Clinton was right. Muslims who had been enslaved by other Muslims (against the dictates of Islam not to enslave fellow believers), as well as Muslims kidnapped and press-ganged into slavery by non-Muslims, were enslaved in the US at the time of the Founding. Continue reading
The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Thursday adopted a biased and political resolution that disregards Judaism’s historic connection to the Temple Mount, casts doubts regarding the Jewish connection to the Western Wall, and protests against the Israel Antiquities Authority’s attempts to supervise construction work on and around the Temple Mount in order to preserve the antiquities and other archaeological data. Continue reading
Original Article
With tensions between Russia and the United States at their highest since the Cold War, there have been alarming signs coming out of Moscow that suggest the country is ready for war.
Almost no one believes the Kremlin is actually preparing for a military conflict with the United States. Most analysts instead see it as a show, intended to boost support at home and to deter Western countries from intervening militarily in Syria. Continue reading
The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former, saith the Lord of hosts: and in this place will I give peace, saith the LORD of hosts. – Haggai 2:9
Last Wednesday, a demonstration of the the Yom Kippur Temple Service was held in Hebron adjacent to the Cave of the Patriarchs. The rare display allowed participants to get a glimpse of what was once the glory of the Temple service. Continue reading
October 6 is a national holiday in Egypt to celebrate what is considered to be the Egyptian army’s victory over Israel in 1973.
Egypt marked the 43rd anniversary of the outbreak of the 1973 Yom Kippur war on Thursday, with critics of President Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi’s regime voicing anger that it no longer considers Israel the enemy. Continue reading
Former Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Guterres has been officially appointed as the next UN secretary-general.
He will become the world’s top diplomat on 1 January when Ban Ki-moon’s second five-year term ends. Continue reading