Also Sukkot is fixed on the 15th of Tishri, which is the full moon of that month, so every year has a Sukkot full moon.
It's literally meaningless.
Also roughly every 25 years it falls on a blood moon. (The next one will be 2039 I believe) if you actually want to point to something even remotely on the rare side like a grifter selling end times books who's predictions fail time and time again like:
Hal Lindsey
Notable Works: The Late Great Planet Earth (1970), Planet Earth 2000 A.D., The 1980s: Countdown to Armageddon
Predictions: Claimed that a generation (40 years) after the founding of Israel in 1948 would see Christ’s return, implying around 1988.
Outcome: 1988 came and went; no trumpet, no horsemen. Lindsey quietly kept writing updates, revising the timeline like a man hitting snooze on the apocalypse.
Impact: Hugely influential in popularizing dispensational end-times thinking. Still cited in prophecy circles.
Harold Camping
Notable Works: 1994?, Time Has an End (2005)
Predictions:
First said the rapture would happen in 1994.
Revised to May 21, 2011, later adjusted to October 21, 2011, when the first one didn’t stick.
Outcome: Nothing. Twice.
Impact: His radio network, Family Radio, lost credibility, and Camping publicly repented for “sinfully” trying to date-set before his death in 2013.
John Hagee
Notable Work: Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change (2013)
Prediction: Linked the 2014–2015 lunar tetrad to major prophetic events concerning Israel and possibly the Second Coming.
Outcome: Nothing prophetically notable happened—unless you count increased book sales.
Note: Hagee stopped short of fixing exact dates, but heavily implied world-shaking significance that never materialized.
Alongside many other authors or YouTube kooks that are trying to make money with garbage predictions.
sure, let's look at what Jesus was saying on Mount Olive when he was preaching to the disciples....
“But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only.” (Matthew 24:36).
Now, fast-forward to today, and apparently every few years someone thinks he’s cracked the divine code. He’s got charts, blood moons, and a suspicious confidence that he knows what Jesus said He didn’t know. You can practically hear Christ saying, “Read the verse again, champ.”
The whole point of Jesus’ statement was to teach humility and vigilance, not arrogance and calculators. He wasn’t saying, “You’ll figure it out if you buy my book.” He was saying, “You won’t figure it out—so live faithfully.” It’s a call to obedience, not obsession. The faithful servant doesn’t spend all day trying to peek through heaven’s calendar; he just keeps the house clean and ready for the Master’s return.
When you see someone declaring, “The rapture will happen on April 19, 2028 at 4:17 p.m.,” you can be sure they’re doing the theological equivalent of licking a frozen flagpole. They’re ignoring Christ’s own words in order to impress the internet.
So yes—ignore the date-setters. Jesus told us why we don’t know the day or the hour: because God wants watchfulness, not panic; faith, not frenzy. Our job isn’t to guess the clock—it’s to stay awake and keep our lamps burning. When the Bridegroom comes, it’ll be too late to check your spreadsheet.
He was saying, “You won’t figure it out—so live faithfully.” It’s a call to obedience, not obsession. The faithful servant doesn’t spend all day trying to peek through heaven’s calendar; he just keeps the house clean and ready for the Master’s return>
Well put. It could be next week, next year, next century or 10 minutes from now. It will happen when it happens, so be prepared.
This is one of several scriptures (none taken out of context btw) which pretty clearly tell me that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are indeed separate entities.
I will make those who are of the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews though they are not, but are liars—I will make them come and fall down at your feet and acknowledge that I have loved you.
"No one knows the day or the hour"
It's not a difficult verse.
Also Sukkot is fixed on the 15th of Tishri, which is the full moon of that month, so every year has a Sukkot full moon.
It's literally meaningless.
Also roughly every 25 years it falls on a blood moon. (The next one will be 2039 I believe) if you actually want to point to something even remotely on the rare side like a grifter selling end times books who's predictions fail time and time again like:
Notable Works: The Late Great Planet Earth (1970), Planet Earth 2000 A.D., The 1980s: Countdown to Armageddon
Predictions: Claimed that a generation (40 years) after the founding of Israel in 1948 would see Christ’s return, implying around 1988.
Outcome: 1988 came and went; no trumpet, no horsemen. Lindsey quietly kept writing updates, revising the timeline like a man hitting snooze on the apocalypse.
Impact: Hugely influential in popularizing dispensational end-times thinking. Still cited in prophecy circles.
Notable Works: 1994?, Time Has an End (2005)
Predictions:
First said the rapture would happen in 1994.
Revised to May 21, 2011, later adjusted to October 21, 2011, when the first one didn’t stick.
Outcome: Nothing. Twice.
Impact: His radio network, Family Radio, lost credibility, and Camping publicly repented for “sinfully” trying to date-set before his death in 2013.
Notable Work: Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change (2013)
Prediction: Linked the 2014–2015 lunar tetrad to major prophetic events concerning Israel and possibly the Second Coming.
Outcome: Nothing prophetically notable happened—unless you count increased book sales.
Note: Hagee stopped short of fixing exact dates, but heavily implied world-shaking significance that never materialized.
Alongside many other authors or YouTube kooks that are trying to make money with garbage predictions.
Just stop falling for it.
So I guess the fact that we won't know the day, nor the hour, proves that God is against datefagging too, lol.
It would appear so fren...
Still doesn't hurt to have that popcorn on standby
I think we need to take this passage in context. Maybe Jesus was saying that no one, at that time, knows the day or the hour.
sure, let's look at what Jesus was saying on Mount Olive when he was preaching to the disciples....
Now, fast-forward to today, and apparently every few years someone thinks he’s cracked the divine code. He’s got charts, blood moons, and a suspicious confidence that he knows what Jesus said He didn’t know. You can practically hear Christ saying, “Read the verse again, champ.”
The whole point of Jesus’ statement was to teach humility and vigilance, not arrogance and calculators. He wasn’t saying, “You’ll figure it out if you buy my book.” He was saying, “You won’t figure it out—so live faithfully.” It’s a call to obedience, not obsession. The faithful servant doesn’t spend all day trying to peek through heaven’s calendar; he just keeps the house clean and ready for the Master’s return.
When you see someone declaring, “The rapture will happen on April 19, 2028 at 4:17 p.m.,” you can be sure they’re doing the theological equivalent of licking a frozen flagpole. They’re ignoring Christ’s own words in order to impress the internet.
So yes—ignore the date-setters. Jesus told us why we don’t know the day or the hour: because God wants watchfulness, not panic; faith, not frenzy. Our job isn’t to guess the clock—it’s to stay awake and keep our lamps burning. When the Bridegroom comes, it’ll be too late to check your spreadsheet.
Well put. It could be next week, next year, next century or 10 minutes from now. It will happen when it happens, so be prepared.
Only The FATHER knows, yes. Jesus said once the gospel is preached to ALL nations, the end will come...
This is one of several scriptures (none taken out of context btw) which pretty clearly tell me that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are indeed separate entities.
Correct, and the rebuilding of the temple. Agree 100% with you and Dempanic know one knows the hour only the Father.
Updoot for your sense of humor, but especially "...you can be sure they’re doing the theological equivalent of licking a frozen flagpole."
Who doesn't love Jean Shepherd?
2015 Russian Air Base set up in Syria - 1st time in Middle East?
That verse is for the return of the Son of Man (Jesus).
I believe that is to come in the future.
It will be the end of their time and the greatest revival(billion soul) is coming.
Jesus was clearly talking about the destruction of the Temple.
That happened in 70AD... Within the same generation of Jesus saying "this generation shall not pass to all these things take place"
He came on the clouds in judgment on Jerusalem on time and as promised.
All that we have left now is final judgment
I will make those who are of the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews though they are not, but are liars—I will make them come and fall down at your feet and acknowledge that I have loved you.
Revelation 3:9 NIV
"Saving Israel for Last"