Eli Barrett always thought the end of the world would feel bigger.
Louder. More… Hollywood.
Instead, it began quietly, in the stale air of his little watch shop, with the second hand of a brass clock stopping dead at 2:17 p.m.
The earthquake that followed wasn’t much at first—just enough to rattle the display glass and make the chimes above the door jingle. Earthquakes were nothing new in southern California. But then his phone lit up with a flood of alerts:
Global markets crash—All systems offline in Europe—Multiple quakes in Asia—UN Emergency Session Called.
He stepped outside. Main Street looked wrong.
No cars. No wind. No hum of city noise. Just a strange, oppressive stillness.
Then came the sky.
A wall of clouds—black and churning with streaks of blood-red—rolled in from the horizon faster than any storm should. People emerged from storefronts, phones in hand, faces lit with the glow of breaking news headlines. Mara from the bookstore stumbled toward him, pale and shaking.
“Eli… you’ve seen the feed?”
He glanced at her phone. The stream of news moved too fast to follow:
Israel under siege on all borders.
Coordinated cyberattacks on major power grids.
New viral outbreak — death toll climbing.
He’d heard these signs before - not from CNN, but from his grandmother’s Bible. Wars. Rumors of wars. Nation against nation. Pestilence. Earthquakes in many places.
They were no longer bullet points in an ancient prophecy - they were headlines, stacked and screaming.
Sign One: The World as One
Eli remembered the sermons he’d half-listened to growing up: the idea that one day the world’s systems—economies, information, even beliefs—would fuse into one. That day was here. The outage wasn’t local. It was everywhere. Markets, news, and panic flowed as one river through a single, global channel: the omnipresent screen.
A massive LED billboard across the street flashed emergency alerts in a dozen languages. Then it switched to a live feed of world leaders—not from one nation, but all of them—standing together at a single podium, issuing one joint statement.
Sign Two: The Prophet Box
The news wasn’t news anymore—it was gospel, and the anchor’s voice had the cadence of a priest. Everyone in the street stared upward at the billboard like worshipers before an altar. The message was simple, repeated in different tongues: We are in control. Trust us.
It struck Eli that the media had become the one true global religion.
Sign Three: Godless Thrones
The statement ended with applause from the gathered leaders—but not a single mention of God, mercy, or prayer. One of them even laughed when a reporter asked if this was the “end times.”
Eli knew Hebrews 6 well enough to hear the subtext: they had heard the truth, rejected it, and now nailed Him to the cross all over again.
Sign Four: The Power to End It All
A fresh alert hit every phone: Nuclear launch detected in Eastern Europe.
People gasped. Someone screamed. Others pulled out their phones as if they could scroll their way to safety. The sky didn’t care.
Mara whispered, “One megalomaniac. That’s all it takes.”
Eli didn’t answer. His mind flashed to the old sermon illustration—the stockpile big enough to toast the world in minutes.
Sign Five: A Dying Creation
The ground shook harder this time. Storefronts rattled. Somewhere far off, sirens wailed. On the billboard, a satellite image showed massive wildfires racing across South America while a typhoon spun toward Japan.
Revelation 11:18 echoed in his memory: The time has come for destroying those who destroy the earth.
Sign Six: The Fig Tree Buds
Another feed cut in—a reporter standing in Jerusalem, voice shaking. Behind him, the golden dome gleamed under a bruised sky. Tensions had finally boiled over. Armies massed at every border. Jerusalem was the center of the world again, and the world’s gaze was fixed.
Sign Seven: Net Cast Wide
A shaky livestream played next: a preacher in some remote village, speaking under a corrugated tin roof. The words were translated instantly in captions, streaming live to millions. The last fish in the net. The gospel had gone everywhere. There was nowhere left to hide from it.
The Last Sign
The sky above them deepened into something unnatural—as though light itself were being pulled back. The sun dimmed. The moon turned the colour of rust. Stars winked out, one by one, like candles snuffed in a cathedral.
Eli’s knees buckled as the clouds tore open with a sound like every trumpet in creation blowing at once. From the rift poured a light so pure it seared the soul, racing from east to west faster than thought.
And then He came.
The Son of Man, crowned and blazing with a glory no eye could hold, descending on the clouds with power and great glory. Behind Him, rank upon rank of angels, the sky alive with wings and fire.
All along Main Street, people screamed, fell, prayed—some in joyful awe, some in terror. Eli couldn’t move. He remembered Jesus’ words: As it was in the days of Noah… they knew not until the flood came and swept them away.
This was the flood.
The play was over.
The Author had stepped onto the stage.
And in that unshielded moment, every soul knew the truth:
It was too late to choose a side.
They had already chosen.
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