Robin Bullock recently issued a dire prophetic warning, saying God showed him the cabal will take further steps if lies about virus variants don’t convince people to take the jab. He said they would release something worse that will kill people more quickly, so that fear will drive the reluctant to take the vaccines willingly.
I believe this man does hear from God, and that he was being notified about a high-probability event, but I do not believe it is set in stone that any of this even has to occur. It is inevitable that they will try, but it is not inevitable that they will succeed or even be able to get their desperate plan off the ground. Mr. Bullock was being shown what those evil people would do in response to a failure not so we could prepare to survive it, but so that we can do something to stop it.
Prophets tend to think everything they hear or see is inevitable, but that is not always the case, especially when the things you are seeing or hearing are the enemy’s plans. What Mr. Bullock was exposing was not some inescapable plan God hatched for a punishing catastrophic event. It is obvious from his words that he was being shown what the enemy will try to do to bring more death and destruction if their current strategy fails.
So, what can we do about it? We can pray like a warrior prays, never turning back with the full expectation of seeing the outcome we desire. Satan doesn’t have a right to rule this earth. Demons have no power to do anything themselves. In order to release evil they must use people who agree or cooperate with them because humans are the rightful heirs of this world. It’s a legal thing, and that really is set in stone. We have the right as the rightful authority on this planet to invite God’s intervention and even stand in the authority of Christ to disallow evil.
But God will not force us. We must choose to get involved on the side of good. To do that we cannot be cooperating with evil or agreeing with it, and we must be aware of the times. This is not the tribulation, nor is it leading up to it. Satan is trying to jump the timeline, thinking in his psychotic mind that he can beat God to the finish line and cast Him off the earth so he can claim it for his own. It’s not going to happen, just like all the other times he tried it, but in the meantime he can cause a lot of trouble through his minions if we think it’s just inevitable and do nothing to stop him.
God is bringing what has been devouring this planet to an end. He is ushering in a time of unprecedented light and prosperity, and we have the privilege of cooperating with Him if we choose to do so. It’s going to happen, but we are the ones who will determine how rough the transition will be. There really is a war going on over our heads in the dimensions of the spiritual realm. It’s all about real estate, and there is a lot we can do spiritually to help the cause of good.
Don’t let the enemy have anything he wants. Do something. Take the ground from under his feet and hold it.
Personally, I wouldn’t dismiss a modern prophecy because it wasn’t specifically predicted in the pages of scripture, even if I am careful to weigh it. You mention that you are a student of the Bible. So I have been, but there was a point when I began to realize that the Pharisees were disciplined students of the scriptures, with far more devotion than I could ever muster, and they couldn’t see God when He was standing right in front of them. The parallels to what many religious people do today are too close to ignore. The Pharisees dismissed Jesus because they were looking to scripture to identify him, and when nothing about Him made sense, they decided He must be a rogue. He just didn’t fit into the box they formed of their religious traditions. They dismissed even His miracles because He wouldn’t conform to their rules about when to do them, rules they had based upon scripture, which they applied to miracles none of them could do.
As for judging the authenticity of modern prophecy, my spiritual experience tells me that God didn't stop speaking when the last book of the Bible was written, and that the gifts of the Spirit didn't disappear with the last apostle. This is not to say that everyone who has a word or a vision is getting it from God, which is something we must train ourselves to perceive. My take on it is that if a modern prophet is truly of God, his or her words will not contradict what is revealed in scripture, but this doesn't mean that those words are limited to what may be found in it. What they say doesn’t carry the same weight as what is written, of course, but if something they say doesn’t come true, it doesn’t mean they are false prophets. We all still see through a glass darkly. What truly makes a modern prophet false is if they lead people away from God, telling them that evil is okay or diminishing the person of Christ to be less than who He is (as clearly defined in both testaments of the Bible.)