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Headlines keep screaming apocalypse, and Christian feeds keep decoding earthquakes, elections, and eclipses like secret messages. We’ve been taught to panic, to chase timelines, and to call it discernment. We take that on directly—naming how fear-based prophecy rose from Darby’s system to Schofield’s margins, ballooned through The Late Great Planet Earth and Left Behind, and left generations fluent in Antichrist theories but thin on resurrection hope.
We tell a better story—the older, sturdier one. The Apostles’ Creed centers our hope in the resurrection of the body and the life of the world to come. Paul’s language in 1 Thessalonians 4 evokes a royal procession, not a secret evacuation. Revelation means unveiling, not doom; its climax is heaven descending, not believers disappearing. When our eschatology shifts from escape to renewal, fear gives way to faithfulness, and speculation turns into stewardship. We explore how that reframe fuels mission in the real world—work, art, entrepreneurship, and family—because new creation starts now.
We also get practical and pastoral. Algorithms reward anxiety, but wisdom refuses to monetize fear. Neuroscience explains why panic feels addictive. Scripture gives us a test for true insight: peaceable, pure, open to reason, full of mercy. We put Jesus’ 70 AD warnings back in context, show how credibility returns through repentance and accountability, and offer five simple practices to rebuild trust: tell the truth, repent publicly, model calm, submit to community, and return to the resurrection. The result is a prophetic culture that carries poise over panic, clarity over clickbait, and a hope strong enough to build with.
If this conversation helps you trade countdown clocks for courageous patience, share it with someone who’s weary of fear. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: how are you choosing resurrection hope where panic once ruled?
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By Mark Casto4.9
3737 ratings
Send us a text
Headlines keep screaming apocalypse, and Christian feeds keep decoding earthquakes, elections, and eclipses like secret messages. We’ve been taught to panic, to chase timelines, and to call it discernment. We take that on directly—naming how fear-based prophecy rose from Darby’s system to Schofield’s margins, ballooned through The Late Great Planet Earth and Left Behind, and left generations fluent in Antichrist theories but thin on resurrection hope.
We tell a better story—the older, sturdier one. The Apostles’ Creed centers our hope in the resurrection of the body and the life of the world to come. Paul’s language in 1 Thessalonians 4 evokes a royal procession, not a secret evacuation. Revelation means unveiling, not doom; its climax is heaven descending, not believers disappearing. When our eschatology shifts from escape to renewal, fear gives way to faithfulness, and speculation turns into stewardship. We explore how that reframe fuels mission in the real world—work, art, entrepreneurship, and family—because new creation starts now.
We also get practical and pastoral. Algorithms reward anxiety, but wisdom refuses to monetize fear. Neuroscience explains why panic feels addictive. Scripture gives us a test for true insight: peaceable, pure, open to reason, full of mercy. We put Jesus’ 70 AD warnings back in context, show how credibility returns through repentance and accountability, and offer five simple practices to rebuild trust: tell the truth, repent publicly, model calm, submit to community, and return to the resurrection. The result is a prophetic culture that carries poise over panic, clarity over clickbait, and a hope strong enough to build with.
If this conversation helps you trade countdown clocks for courageous patience, share it with someone who’s weary of fear. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: how are you choosing resurrection hope where panic once ruled?
Support the show
Links & Resources:

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