When Will The End Of The Age Come?

When will this age end? Did early Christians teach this age would end after 6,000 years to be replaced by the millennial Kingdom of God and the return of Jesus the Christ? When would the 6,000 years have begun with Adam and Eve? While most Jews say we are in year 5783 until September 2023, many Jewish scholars realize that the chronology is off by about two centuries. How close are we? …

Asia, Islands, Latin America, Africa, and Armageddon

The New Testament is clear that race and ancestry are not salvation issues as there will be people from all nations and tongues in the Kingdom of God. After going over that, Dr. Thiel discusses the biblical origins and progenitors of the peoples in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Micronesia, Latin America, and the Caribbean. What about the Arabs, Iran, Syria, and Israel? What about the Valley of Vision? Do end time Islamic prophecies for an Imam Mahdi seem to be similar to biblical prophecies related to the coming King of the South? …

Royal Succession, Samaria, and Prophecies

Since God had Jeremiah write that the royal throne of David would continue while Zedekiah, the last king of Judah was alive, is it not logical that God could have used Jeremiah to transport the king's daughters elsewhere? Were three overturnings of the crown prophesied? What were they? Is there a list of royal succession from King David of Israel down to the UK's King Charles III? What evidence do we have that the British began to receive blessings of Ephraim in the 19th century? …

Gentile European Beast

The Bible tells of a time when the Anglo-American order will be temporarily replaced by a new world order that will be dominated by a European power called the Beast of the Sea. This will be primarily a Caucasian Gentile power, with support of some with Israelitish heritage. In this sermon, Dr. Thiel goes over nearly all the nations in Europe and ties them in with progenitors listed in the Bible. …

Israel, Jeremiah, Tea Tephi, and British Royalty

God promised Sarah that her descendants would be named through Isaac. Any possible ties to the Scythians or Saxons? God renamed Isaac's son Jacob to Israel, who placed that name on Ephraim and Manasseh, the sons of Joseph. Those sons were promised to be a multitude of nations and a great nation--could this possibly refer to the United Kingdom and the United States of America respectively? Although Reuben was born first, and Ephraim last, did God declare Ephraim His firstborn? Did we see any types of transfer take place in the early 1800s? …

11 Tribes, 144,000, and Multitudes

Can the 'lost tribes' of Israel be identified? What are two key chapters in the Bible that assist? The twelve sons of Jacob form the basis for the twelve tribes of Israel. Listed in the order from oldest to youngest: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun, Joseph, and Benjamin--what nations are they in today? Are there any possible connections with …

Lost Tribes, Prophecies, And Identifications

Jacob, also known as Israel, gave a "last days" prophecy for his twelve sons in the 49th chapter of Genesis. What did he tell teach one of them? Did all his sons stay in Israel/Palestine? Did the 'ten lost tribes' come back? Could some of the lost tribes have been identified as Scythian? What did the Scythians look like? Are the Black Hebrew Israelites correct that the modern descendants of Judah are 'American Negroes,' the descendants of Manasseh being Cubans, the descendants of Ephraim being Puerto Ricans, etc.? …

Lost tribes, the Bible, and DNA

In the 10th century BCE, the Bible teaches that God separated 10 tribes and gave them to Jereboam 1 Kings 11:31). In the 8th century BC, the King of Assyria conquered those tribes removed them to the land of the Medes (2 Kings 17:3-12). What were the names of those tribes? Is it possible that some ended up in the British Isles, parts of Europe, and even what is now the United States of America? Could there be a connection with Scythians? Is it possible that the prophecies of …

Faith In The Face Of Death

Herb Haddon has an incurable disease known as ALS or “Lou Gehrig’s disease”. No one has ever been cured from this disease, though he felt he was for a time. In light of this, Herb gives us this message titled “Faith in the Face of Death”. He starts out repeating the 'death and taxes' joke--while pointing out that nothing (meaning physical things) cannot be counted on (he also uses some hyperbole). Herb points out that God has healed in the past, God heals now and that by faith IN His Son and by the stripes OF His Son, we are healed. …