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End Time Prophecy Teachings Library

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In Luke 13:34, Jesus mourns over Jerusalem’s unwillingness to receive His protection, likening Himself to a hen longing to shelter her chicks. This image illustrates God’s desire to cover His people in love, yet many resist Him due to fear, unbelief, or mistrust of His compassion. The enemy exploits this fear, leaving people vulnerable and unprepared.

The lesson contrasts those in spiritual darkness with those in the light (1 Thessalonians 5:2–6), emphasizing that believers are called to watch, be sober, and recognize the signs of Christ’s return. When He appears in the clouds, all will see Him—both believers and unbelievers—but reactions will differ: the world will tremble at His judgment, while those perfected in His love will rejoice in His rescue.

Jerusalem remains central in end-time prophecy, as foretold in Zechariah 12, when nations will rise against it but God will miraculously deliver His people. This invasion signals the nearness of Christ’s return. For those anchored in Scripture and God’s perfect love, this day will not come as a thief, but as the long-awaited fulfillment of His promise.

Ultimately, the teaching urges believers to be children of light who live free from fear, to trust fully in God’s love, and to be ready to encourage others with the truth of salvation when that day arrives.

O JERUSALEM, JERUSALEM!

Pastor Marcos Marrero

This teaching, rooted in 1 Peter 3:15, emphasizes the urgency of preparing for the nearing end of the age by sanctifying the Lord in our hearts and being ready to defend our faith with meekness. The author reflects on prophetic signs and world conditions, highlighting how powerful worldly leaders are preparing for global control rather than God’s kingdom, anticipating opportunities to consolidate power in a one-world government aligned with Revelation’s warnings.

The message contrasts the agendas of earthly rulers with the hope of believers, who are not of this world but belong to a heavenly country prepared by God. Christians are called to shift their focus from temporal struggles to eternal promises, holding firm in faith and shining as beacons of truth amid growing lawlessness and deception.

Like Noah preparing an ark, believers are urged to prepare their hearts, detach from worldly entrapments, and boldly share the message of salvation with others before judgment falls. Though nations and systems may collapse, the faithful will inherit God’s eternal city, where righteousness and justice reign. The teaching closes with the encouragement of 2 Peter 1:19, reminding believers to cling to the prophetic word as a guiding light until Christ returns.

PREPARE YOURSELVES FOR THE END IS NEAR

Pastor Marcos Marrero

This message explores Isaiah 1:18, where God extends an invitation to humanity to “reason together” with Him. It begins with the historical context of how early believers were first known as “people of the way” before being called Christians, highlighting that the gospel was presented not as a new religion but as a more accurate way to salvation through Christ.

Reasoning with God is presented as engaging with undisputable truths: mankind is sinful, God is holy, and humanity cannot attain righteousness by its own efforts. Scriptures such as James 4:10 and Psalm 51:17 show that humility and a contrite heart are the only acceptable posture when approaching God. God’s promise of cleansing—making sins white as snow—points directly to the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, who through His blood redeems and purifies believers.

The teaching also explains God’s agenda for His people: to live holy lives marked by justice, mercy, and obedience, as outlined in Isaiah 1:16–17. However, since all have sinned and fall short, the only reasonable conclusion is the need for a Savior. Jesus Christ fulfills this role by dying for sin, rising again, and offering forgiveness to those who repent and believe.

Finally, the teaching issues a sobering warning: pride is the greatest barrier that keeps people from salvation, and God’s coming judgment will humble the proud. This present generation, possibly the last before Christ’s return, faces a double responsibility—to repent now and escape both temporal and eternal judgment. The only hope is to renounce pride, accept God’s offer of salvation through Christ, and live in readiness for His return.

REASON TOGETHER

Pastor Marcos Marrero

This teaching, based on 2 Thessalonians 1:7, highlights the believer’s hope of finding rest in Christ amidst troubling and contentious times. Scripture reveals that hatred is the root of strife, and as lawlessness increases in the last days, love will grow cold (Matthew 24:12). The message draws from both biblical truth and personal testimony—such as the 1961 Bay of Pigs incident—to illustrate how easily crowds can be manipulated by hatred and how vital it is for Christians to remain sober-minded and not influenced by the venom of strife.

Believers are reminded that God’s justice will prevail, that every person will face judgment (Hebrews 9:27), and that those in Christ already share in eternal life (John 11:26). The church, empowered by the Holy Spirit, serves as a restraining force against lawlessness, exercising authority through prayer and spiritual warfare (2 Thessalonians 2:7). Practical examples—including the stopping of a neighborhood fight through prayer—demonstrate the power of intercession to bring peace.

Ultimately, the lesson urges the church to rise in unity, resist the pull of hatred, and enforce God’s peace through love, forgiveness, and fervent prayer, knowing that prayer works and that rest is promised to the faithful when Christ returns.

REST IN TIMES OF TROUBLE

Pastor Marcos Marrero

“Salvation into the Uttermost” emphasizes the unchanging and eternal priesthood of Jesus Christ, who alone can save humanity completely and forever. The teaching contrasts man’s futile attempts through religion, politics, or science to overcome death with the reality that only Jesus, the eternal High Priest, is the antidote for mankind’s greatest enemy.

The message explains that for eternity to be a place of joy, it must consist of perfected people who will never again fall into sin. Thus, life itself is framed as a test: whether individuals will trust their flawed human condition or God’s promises of forgiveness, cleansing, and transformation through Jesus. Scriptures such as Revelation 3 and 1 John 1 demonstrate that those who persevere in faith and confess their sins are kept safe and prepared for the final trial before eternity.

The teaching underscores that salvation is not partial or temporary, but total—Jesus saves to the uttermost by interceding for us without ceasing, offering both the guarantee of eternal life and the assurance that our sins are fully forgiven. Believers are called to hunger for righteousness, to be purified in heart, and to remain steadfast in faith until either the resurrection or the Lord’s return. Ultimately, Christ’s endless life, His faithful intercession, and God’s promises provide the only pathway into a perfect eternity of joy, worship, and glory to the King eternal.

SALVATION INTO THE UTTERMOST

Pastor Marcos Marrero

This message, grounded in 1 Corinthians 3:9 and 1 Peter 2:5, begins with personal testimony of two pivotal dreams given shortly after salvation in 1976. One dream revealed believers as white stones being placed in God’s spiritual building, symbolizing the church, while the other portrayed the final stage of God’s plan of redemption. Together, these dreams illustrate the believer’s role in the progress and nearing completion of God’s building.

The teaching connects these visions with Revelation 6:11, explaining that the growing persecution and martyrdom of Christians worldwide signify that the church is almost complete and the Lord’s return is near. It also notes the rising tide of anti-Semitism, reminding that Israel’s isolation fulfills prophecy and further points to the end times.

Believers are reminded of their calling as a “holy priesthood” tasked with offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Christ. The lesson warns against stumbling through hatred and disobedience, highlighting historical parallels of division and destruction (e.g., Castro’s Cuba) to show how hatred undermines freedom and faith.

Finally, the teaching encourages Christians to remain faithful as a chosen generation and a royal priesthood, living as the spiritual eyes, ears, and heart of Christ in a darkened world. As living stones, each believer is part of God’s eternal building, being completed in preparation for Christ’s return.

THE COMPLETION OF GOD’S BUILDING

Pastor Marcos Marrero

This teaching begins with Paul’s admonition in Romans 12:2, contrasting conformity to the world with transformation through the renewing of the mind. The author observes that modern society, particularly in America, suffers from contradictions and irrational behavior—not due to a lack of knowledge, but because of a deep spiritual problem. While past generations developed moral values through family, faith, and community experience, today’s culture is artificially manufactured through centralized control of information and media.

The rise of global information systems and ideologies such as socialism has eroded individuality and encouraged a herd mentality. This manufactured culture disconnects people from heritage, reason, and truth, conditioning them to accept shifting standards of morality and knowledge as absolute. Yet, unlike the fleeting and unreliable wisdom of man, the Word of God remains unchanged and trustworthy across all generations.

The message emphasizes that transformation requires rejecting the false narratives of this age and choosing the eternal truth of Scripture. By renewing the mind in God’s Word, believers can escape the deception of conformity, discern rightly, and prove what is good, acceptable, and perfect in God’s will. Ultimately, the teaching warns against the peril of blind conformity and exhorts believers to hold fast to the unshakable truth of God’s Word in preparation for the return of Christ.

THE CONFORMED DOES NOT TRANSFORM

Pastor Marcos Marrero

The study begins by defining dispensations as divine epochs in which God governs humanity under unique conditions. The first dispensation, Innocence, was given to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, marked by a single commandment. After their fall, humanity entered the dispensation of Conscience, where self-awareness of sin led to corruption and ultimate judgment in the flood.

Subsequent dispensations followed:

Human Government — beginning after the flood, marked by the scattering at Babel, still continuing in today’s global political structures.

Promise — initiated with God’s covenant with Abraham, which laid the foundation for Israel and the coming of Messiah.

Law — delivered through Moses to Israel, pointing to humanity’s need for redemption.

Grace — inaugurated through Christ’s death and resurrection, bringing salvation to Jews and Gentiles alike.

The teaching emphasizes that unfinished dispensations—Human Government, Law, and Grace—will converge in the last days. Their simultaneous reappearance in modern times (Israel restored as a nation, the rise of the United Nations, and the renewed activity within the Church) signals preparation for the “dispensation of the fullness of the times.” In this period, Christ will gather all things in heaven and earth into Himself, and all dispensations will face their final judgment.

The seventh and final dispensation, the Kingdom Age (Rest), will be the reign of Christ for one thousand years, fulfilling God’s plan of restoration. Just as Peter was judged and restored in the same settings of his failure, so too will each dispensation be judged and resolved before God establishes His everlasting kingdom.

The lesson closes with a sobering call to discern current events—such as America’s waning constitutional strength—as part of prophecy’s unfolding. Believers are urged to remain prayerful and steadfast, anticipating the soon-coming consummation when Christ unites all creation under His rule.

THE DISPENSATION OF THE FULLNESS OF THE TIMES

Pastor Marcos Marrero

The Duality of Life centers on Revelation 22:14–15, where Scripture draws a sharp distinction between those who enter the celestial city and those left outside. The teaching highlights that life and eternity hinge on a simple but profound truth: one is either “in” or “out.” The deciding factor is faith—belief in God’s Word and the willingness to live by its precepts.

The message traces how faith opens the way to eternal life, while unbelief results in exclusion. Those who reject God’s Word are said to practice a lie, building their lives on delusion, idolatry, and false promises. This downward progression ultimately leads to immorality, sorcery, hatred, and murder, all of which characterize those outside God’s city.

By contrast, those who hear, thirst, and respond to God’s invitation are drawn into the life-giving reality of His Word. Tribulations often awaken this thirst, leading believers from temporary desires to eternal ones. Preaching and teaching God’s Word play a vital role in stirring faith, for “faith comes by hearing.”

The contrast is clear: God’s Word is truth, while unbelief is a lie. The eternal destiny of every soul depends on their response to this truth. In the end, the teaching exhorts the reader to choose wisely: to embrace God’s Word, drink freely of the living water, and thereby be counted among the blessed who enter into life—rather than the deceived who remain outside forever.

THE DUALITY OF LIFE

Pastor Marcos Marrero

The teaching begins with Lamentations 4:18, drawing attention to the reality of endings, both personal and cosmic. From early life experiences of life and death cycles, the message reminds us that awareness of mortality is ingrained in human existence. Psalm 39 provides David’s prayer for God to make him aware of his end, showing that recognition of life’s brevity fosters humility, value for life, and readiness for eternity.

This awareness combats the human tendency toward indifference. David confessed how silence and inaction in the face of evil only stirred sorrow within him until prayer moved him to action. His prayer was not for strength but for revelation of his own frailty, emphasizing dependence on God.

The prophet Habakkuk’s lament mirrors this struggle. He cried out against injustice, perplexed at God’s silence and His use of even more wicked nations to execute judgment. Yet God revealed to Habakkuk His larger plan: both Israel and the nations would face judgment, culminating in the dreadful end of days. This revelation shifted Habakkuk’s prayer from complaint to intercession: “In wrath, remember mercy” (Hab. 3:2).

The lesson concludes by urging believers today to view the chaos and lawlessness around us not only as signs of the end but as opportunities to proclaim God’s grace. Instead of fixating on judgment, we are called to embrace God’s heart—that none should perish but all come to repentance. The final exhortation is that while the end of days is certain and God’s wrath inevitable, His mercy is equally available through Christ, who bore judgment at the cross for all who believe.

THE END OF DAYS

Pastor Marcos Marrero

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