Momentum Building – Victory Cry! - Voice of God with Joseph Z

Z Media Team Photo

Z Media Team
11 hours 270 Views
Category:
Description:

**In today’s prophetic session, Joseph Z explores the intriguing possibility of Judas being the antichrist, emphasizing the biblical parallels between their betrayals while highlighting the prophetic connections between Judas’s fate and the antichrist's emergence.**

Joseph discusses the concern of whether Judas could be the antichrist. He highlights that the term "the son of perdition" appears only twice in scripture, both times referring to Judas. He references John 17:12, where Judas is called the son of perdition, and 2 Thessalonians 2:3, where he is described as the man of sin. Joseph suggests that Judas may serve as a prototype for the antichrist, with the latter being his future manifestation. 

Learn more about Z Ministries by following the link below:

https://linktr.ee/zministries 

He further explains that Judas and the antichrist share a strikingly similar trajectory: an initial deceptive closeness followed by a catastrophic betrayal. Judas was a close friend of Jesus but betrayed Him for thirty pieces of silver. Similarly, the antichrist will negotiate a seven-year covenant with Israel, initially posing as a peacemaker and ally to the Jewish people during the first half of the tribulation. However, he will break this covenant midway, desecrate the temple, and turn against Israel in fierce persecution.

Reinforcing his argument that Judas could be seen as the antichrist, Joseph cites Psalm 55:12-14 and Acts 1:25. He clarifies that "his own place," mentioned in Acts 1:25, refers to Hades or hell, and it was used by Jesus to describe where Judas went after his death. In an interesting connectedness, the antichrist is predicted to emerge from the bottomless pit, the same place where Judas is believed to have gone after his death.  

Timestamps:

0:00 Introduction

03:42 Could Judas Be the Antichrist?

06:33 John 17:12, 2 Thessalonians 2:3

14:59 Psalm 55:12-14 

21:27 Conclusion