Three days ago, I received an email that took my breath away. A father asked me to share with the world what his seven-year-old son had experienced. I must confess something to you: in my more than forty years of investigating the inexplicable, what you are about to hear has kept me awake at night.
If what this child saw is true—and I have compelling reasons to believe it is—then we have only a few weeks left until the most momentous event of our lives. Between December 20 and 24 of this year, the world as we know it will cease to exist.
I am not talking about science fiction, and I am not talking about religious fantasies. I am talking about something that a seven-year-old child saw with a clarity that defies all logic, chillingly coinciding with ancient prophecies that most have forgotten or chosen to ignore. This is David’s story, and I warn you, after hearing it, nothing will ever be the same again.
My name is Juan José Benítez, and for decades, I have pursued the impossible. I have investigated UFO sightings, interviewed witnesses of paranormal phenomena, and traveled the world seeking answers to questions that conventional science refuses to ask. But never—and I repeat, never—have I encountered a case that shook me as much as this one.
When I first read that email from David’s father, my instinct was caution. You know that I am skeptical by nature; I do not believe everything I am told. I need proof, I need consistency, and I need that inexplicable feeling in my stomach that tells me I am facing something truly authentic.
After interviewing the boy and his father, reviewing the hospital’s medical reports, and seeing the profound change in that little boy’s eyes, that feeling didn’t just appear—it hit me like a tsunami. David is a normal seven-year-old boy who plays football, likes video games, and watches cartoons. He is not a religious child, nor is he particularly devout.
His family attends church occasionally, which is typical of many families, but there is nothing extraordinary about their faith. There is no history of visions, mystical experiences, or anything that could predispose this little boy to fabricate a story like the one you are about to hear.
That is precisely what worries me so much. When a child without theological training, without deep knowledge of the Scriptures, and without exposure to apocalyptic literature describes events with pinpoint accuracy that coincide with biblical prophecies that have been waiting two thousand years to be fulfilled, you know you are facing something that transcends childhood imagination.
Let me tell you how it all began. It was just an ordinary Tuesday. David had returned from school and was playing football in the back garden of his house with his father. The boy ran and laughed.
It was a perfectly normal moment, and then, suddenly, without any prior warning, he collapsed. His father told me, with tears still fresh in his eyes, how he saw his son fall to the ground as if the strings of a puppet had been cut.
The child clutched his chest, his face contorted in pain, and he couldn’t breathe. It was a sudden cardiac arrest in a seven-year-old child with no history of heart problems, and the doctors still cannot explain it. The father picked him up and ran toward the car.
He described those minutes to me as the longest of his life. He was driving at full speed toward the nearest hospital, while his son, his only son, was fading away in the back seat. David later told me that he remembers seeing his father’s tears.
He wanted to tell his dad that he was okay, but he was completely unable to say a word. His body was shutting down, and life was slipping away from him. They arrived at the hospital in a matter of minutes.
The doctors and nurses rushed to the child, put him on a wheeled stretcher, and ran down the corridors. David remembers the lights on the ceiling passing by one after another, faster and faster, as if he were in a tunnel that was taking him somewhere unknown.
Then everything went black. But this is where the story ceases to be a simple medical case and becomes something that defies all the laws of reality that we think we know. David did not remain in that darkness.
What he experienced during the four minutes that his heart stopped beating would change not only his life, but potentially the life of every person on this planet. The boy described to me how, instead of darkness, he saw the brightest light he had ever seen.
It was not the light of a lamp, nor the sun, nor any known light source. It was a light that seemed to be alive—a light that emanated love in its purest form. When a seven-year-old boy looks you in the eyes and tells you that he felt the love of everyone who ever loved him concentrated in a single instant, it gives you goosebumps.
David found himself floating above his body. He could see the doctors working frantically on his inert form. He recounted specific details of the resuscitation that I later corroborated with the medical staff, things that a seven-year-old child would have no way of knowing.
He described the exact type of defibrillator they used. He mentioned the exact words the lead doctor shouted when the first attempt at resuscitation failed. He saw his father in the corner of the room with his hands covering his face, sobbing. All this happened while his heart was stopped, while he was officially dead.
Skeptics will say these are merely near-death experiences or hallucinations caused by a lack of oxygen in the brain. I would tell them that they are right to be skeptical, because I am too, but keep listening because what comes next cannot be explained by cerebral hypoxia.
Suddenly, David was no longer in the hospital room. He found himself in a place that he describes with words that shouldn’t even be in the vocabulary of a seven-year-old. He told me about dimensions that folded back on themselves, about colors that do not exist in our visible spectrum, and about sounds that did not come from any instrument, but from the very fabric of space.
The air was sparkling, he told me, as if it were made of tiny living diamonds. There was music, but it wasn’t music as we know it. It was as if every atom in the place was singing a symphony that resonated directly in his soul.
The feeling of peace, of completeness, of being exactly where he was meant to be, was so overwhelming that the child cried when he told me about it. He wept not out of sadness, but because our human language is insufficient to describe something so magnificent.
It was then that he saw him. Walking toward him through a golden mist that seemed to have a mind of its own, a figure appeared that David immediately knew was Jesus.
The description this child gave me does not match any of the traditional representations we see in churches or Sunday school books. David told me that he was taller than anyone he had ever seen.
His eyes, the little boy told me with a reverential fear that made me shudder, were like looking directly into the center of the universe. They could see everything, they knew everything, they knew every thought, every mistake, and every embarrassing moment, and yet they emanated such a deep love that it made everything else seem irrelevant.
Jesus called him by name, and David swore to me that when he heard his name spoken by that voice, it was as if he heard the most beautiful song ever composed, as if his name had been created specifically to sound that way. Jesus’s voice was not simply a sound; it was a multisensory experience that vibrated in every cell of his body.
The first words he heard were clear:
“David, I’ve brought you here because you have an important job to do. What I’m about to show you needs to be told to everyone, especially children, because children’s hearts are still pure enough to believe without hesitation. Adults have forgotten how to see with their hearts, but you can help them remember.”
Jesus stretched out his hand. David described that hand to me in such detail that it gave me goosebumps. He said he could see the nail scars, but they weren’t ugly or painful scars; they shone as if they were windows to another dimension of pure light.
When he took that hand, everything changed. Suddenly, David could see things he had never seen before. He could see the planet Earth spinning in space, and above it, like rivers of golden light, flowed currents of energy that connected all people to each other and to something bigger.
He could see the prayers of millions of people rising like luminous filaments toward the sky. He could see angels, countless angels moving among us, invisible to most but completely real.
Then a calendar appeared. David told me that it was as if time itself materialized before him in the form of a shining scroll that unfolded, showing all the days of the year, but there were five days that shone with a blinding intensity, pulsing as if they wanted to jump out of the scroll: December 20, December 21, December 22, December 23, and December 24.
Jesus told the child:
“These five days will change everything.”
Then he began to show him exactly what would happen on each of those days. What David saw, with his eyes wide, he promises he will never forget. Jesus explained to him that the world has been asleep for a long time.
“I wasn’t just talking about non-believers,” David clarified to me. He spoke especially of the church, of those who call themselves followers of Christ but who have turned faith into an empty ritual.
They go to buildings on Sundays, sing songs, and listen to sermons, but many have forgotten what it truly means to know Him, to feel His presence, and to let His love transform their hearts from within. During these five days before Christmas, Jesus told David exactly what his plan was.
“I am going to wake everyone up. Some will wake up and see the light and follow me. Others will wake up and close their eyes tightly because they are afraid of the light. This is the great separation, when the wheat and the chaff will be separated forever.”
Then the visions began, and this is where my work as an investigator becomes crucial. David described scenes to me with such detail, with such internal consistency, and with such knowledge of things a seven-year-old shouldn’t know, that it is impossible to attribute it to his imagination.
He began by showing him December 20. David saw people all over America, all over the world really, suddenly stopping in the middle of whatever they were doing in offices, schools, stores, and homes.
Millions of people at the same time felt something they couldn’t explain—a calling, not with words, but directly in their hearts, as if someone had turned on a light inside them that had been off for years or maybe for their entire lives. He saw grown men, tough men who had never cried in public, falling to their knees in the middle of the streets, weeping like children.
It wasn’t sadness; it was the shock of feeling God’s love touch their hearts for the first time, truly touching them, not as an abstract concept, but as a tangible force that completely enveloped them. David described to me a woman in a supermarket who suddenly dropped her shopping cart and stood there with tears streaming down her cheeks.
She was whispering over and over:
“Forgive me, forgive me, forgive me.”
A businessman in an important meeting got up from the table without a word, walked out of the building, and sat on a park bench, overwhelmed by memories of all the times he had chosen money over people and success over integrity.
Not everyone responded the same way, and this is a crucial detail. David saw others who also felt that call, who also experienced that touch in their hearts, but who chose to ignore it completely.
You could see it on their faces. They felt something powerful, but they were deeply afraid. They feared what it would mean to answer that call, feared having to change, and feared losing control of their lives.
They shook their heads, turned up the volume on their televisions, put on headphones, and immersed themselves in their work—anything to avoid hearing that voice calling them from within. Jesus showed David that this was the definitive beginning of the separation: those who answered the call and those who rejected it.
On December 21, David visited the churches, and what he described to me left me absolutely speechless. He saw two very different kinds of churches.
In some, amazing things were happening. Pastors were weeping at the front, asking for forgiveness for having cared more about numbers and money than about truly helping people come to know Jesus.
Congregations were embracing each other and praying together. Here is what makes this testimony impossible to ignore: David described miraculous healings occurring during the services. He saw a woman in a wheelchair stand up and walk, a blind man suddenly able to see, and a little girl who couldn’t speak begin to sing praise songs.
“The Holy Spirit,” David told me, using those exact words, “was there so strong that you could almost see it as a golden cloud filling the entire building.”
But in other churches, and this is what worried me the most, something terrible was happening. The pastors spoke from the pulpit, telling people not to be led by emotions, not to believe in signs and miracles, and that all that supernatural stuff was false, dangerous, or even demonic.
They were far more concerned with appearing intelligent and maintaining control than with letting God do what He wanted to do. Some of them were literally telling people to leave if they started praying too loudly, crying, or raising their hands in worship.
David told me that Jesus’s face looked incredibly sad when he showed him this. Then he said something that pierced my soul:
“These are my shepherds who have become wolves. They are supposed to guide my sheep to green pastures, but instead, they are leading them away from me.”
I researched this deeply. I spoke with theologians and reviewed the history of the global church. Do you know what I discovered?
Throughout history, whenever God has tried to do something new and powerful, it has almost always been the established religious leaders who have been the first to reject him. The Pharisees rejected Jesus, the established church persecuted the reformers, and traditional institutions have rejected every genuine revival that has occurred.
When David described to me pastors rejecting what God was doing, I wasn’t surprised. It saddened me deeply, but I wasn’t surprised, because organized religion has always been more afraid of losing control than of genuinely experiencing God.
Things escalated rapidly on December 22. David described to me earthquakes happening in places where earthquakes shouldn’t happen, buildings shaking, and the ground cracking open.
Here is the extraordinary part, the part that makes this testimony different from any generic apocalyptic prediction you have ever heard: in the areas where people were gathered praying, absolutely nothing happened to them.
It was as if there was an invisible shield protecting them entirely. The earthquake shook everything around them, but they were completely safe. The news reporters couldn’t understand it at all.
They kept saying it was a bizarre coincidence or just good luck, but anyone with spiritual eyes could see that God was protecting his people. David also saw angels becoming visible, not to everyone, but to many people, especially children.
Children all over the world were pointing to the sky or the corners of rooms, saying:
“Look at the angel, look how beautiful he is!”
Some parents believed their children, but others thought they were just imagining things or making up stories. Jesus told David that children can see the spiritual realm more easily than adults because their hearts are purer and they have not yet learned to doubt everything.
This makes complete sense to me. I have investigated hundreds of cases of paranormal experiences, and always, it is the children who are the first to see, the first to feel, and the first to know that something extraordinary is happening.
The news media, David told me, were going crazy trying to explain what was happening. There were lights in the sky that were not planes or stars, and people were listening to internal voices that gave them messages of intense comfort when they were sad or scared.
Hospitals were reporting that patients were being suddenly healed of diseases that doctors said were impossible to cure. The whole world was seeing that something supernatural was happening, and no one could deny it anymore.
Pay close attention to this: the unfolding events angered some people deeply. Religious leaders who no longer believed in miracles began appearing on television, saying that everything happening was fake, psychological, or even demonic.
They said that people were being mass deceived and that true faith does not need signs and wonders. Denominations that had been together for hundreds of years began to split cleanly down the middle. Half believed that God was really moving, and the other half thought it was all dangerous nonsense.
Jesus told David that this separation was absolutely necessary.
“I am calling my people to leave religious buildings that have no life in them and to enter into a real relationship with me. It will be painful, but it will make my bride pure and ready for what comes next.”
I wonder, as I investigate this case, as I talk to David and see the conviction in his eyes, how many of our churches today are truly alive? How many of them are just social clubs with a thin veneer of religious behavior?
How many are more interested in preserving their traditions than in experiencing the living God? On December 23, the supernatural activity was so obvious that even people who did not believe in God had to face the truth.
David saw atheists who had spent their entire lives saying that God was not real suddenly falling to their knees because they saw Jesus in a vision or felt his presence so strongly that they could no longer deny it.
He saw gang members who hurt people crying and throwing away their weapons because God’s love melted their hardened hearts. He saw politicians who were only concerned with power and money quitting their jobs to seek God and discover what He really wanted them to do with their lives.
Jesus showed David that this was the great harvest he had been waiting for. He looked so happy, so full of joy, like a farmer who had been waiting all year to finally harvest the crops he planted.
The fields are ready, Jesus told him.
“I’ve been preparing hearts for a long time, and now the time has come to bring them home. But I need helpers. I need people who aren’t afraid to speak the truth, who won’t water down my message to make it sound nicer, and who won’t compromise what I say just to make people feel comfortable.”
I ask myself, are we ready to be those helpers? Are we truly willing to tell the truth, even when it is not popular, and even when it makes us outcasts?
Then came December 24, Christmas Eve. What David described to me about this day is so extraordinary that I can hardly even put it into words.
He saw a huge burst of light coming from Jerusalem and spreading across the entire planet in just a matter of seconds. Every single person on earth felt its touch simultaneously.
For those whose hearts were open to God, it brought a peace they had never felt before in their lives. Suddenly, they understood things they had never understood before.
They felt connected to Jesus in a way that was real and personal, and that changed their lives instantly. They knew, without a shadow of a doubt, that God was real, that He loved them, and that everything was going to be alright no matter what happened next.
But for people whose hearts were closed, whose hearts had been hardened by years of choosing selfishness, sin, and pride, the light frightened and enraged them. Instead of opening their hearts, they closed them even tighter.
They became more rebellious, more determined to fight against God and against anyone who followed him. The separation was complete. You could tell just by looking at someone whether they had received the light or rejected it completely.
“This is the beginning of the end-time harvest,” Jesus said in a voice that shook the entire vision with power. “What happens during these five days will initiate events that will lead to my return. Tell everyone to prepare their hearts because I’m coming back soon, not in a terrifying way, but in a glorious way for all who have been waiting for me.”
David told me that Jesus then showed him what would happen after Christmas. The world would never be the same again.
The people who had accepted the awakening began to form tight-knit communities where they cared deeply for one another. They shared everything they had and lived according to God’s rules instead of the world’s rules.
They experienced miracles every single day. Food multiplied when it should have run out, sick people were healed instantly through prayer, and wisdom was given for problems that seemed completely impossible to solve.
They had joy and peace even when everything around them was falling apart. Their faces literally shone with light, and even people who hated them couldn’t help but notice that there was something different, something special about them.
But those who rejected the awakening became more desperate and angrier. Crime worsened significantly in places where people had turned away from the light.
Psychiatric hospitals were filled with people who were going crazy because they were trying so hard to ignore the absolute truth they felt in their hearts. The world was dividing cleanly into two groups, and there was no longer a middle ground.
You were either completely with Jesus or against him. You either had the light within you or you lived in total darkness.
David saw governments trying to make strict laws against the supernatural things that were happening. They called it dangerous extremism and religious fanaticism, claiming that people who believed in miracles were mentally unstable and needed to be monitored or locked up.
Technology companies created advanced programs to track people who talked about spiritual experiences online. Social media platforms began heavily censoring posts about the revival, calling it dangerous misinformation.
The world system was trying to fight against what God was doing, but they couldn’t stop it. Jesus told David that things would get more difficult for believers.
Some would lose their jobs because they would not compromise their faith. Some families would be torn apart because some believed and others did not. Some would even face severe persecution, being arrested or harmed because they followed Jesus.
“But all who remain faithful will receive a crown of life and be part of God’s greatest movement in all of history,” Jesus promised.
The vision began to fade away slowly. Jesus turned around to look at David one last time, his eyes full of love and also full of fire.
“You’re just a child, but you have a powerful purpose,” Jesus told him. “The faith of children is powerful because it is pure and simple. Tell everyone what you saw. Tell them that these five days before Christmas will change everything. Tell them not to be afraid, but to be prepared. Tell them that I love them more than they can imagine and that I’m coming back for my bride. Those who have the light within them will not be touched by the darkness. Those who prepare their hearts now will be ready for what is to come.”
Then he placed his hand on David’s head in a blessing, and suddenly, the boy felt himself being pulled back. The beautiful place began to disappear, and he was falling through layers of light, getting closer and closer to his body lying in that hospital room.
The last thing he heard was singing—thousands upon thousands of angels singing praises to Jesus. He knew that everything he had been shown was true and would really happen.
David woke up in the hospital with his father holding his hand and crying. The doctors were astonished because they said his heart had stopped beating for almost four minutes, and he should have had severe brain damage, but he was completely fine. He actually felt different, like he was carrying something important inside him.
Let me be clear about something: I am an investigator. I have spent my entire life separating fact from fiction and reality from fantasy.
When I sit down with a witness, with someone who claims to have experienced something extraordinary, I ask questions—lots of questions. I look for inconsistencies, I look for signs of fabrication, and I look for hidden motives.
With David and his father, I spent hours asking them questions, going over their story again and again from different angles, and I didn’t find a single inconsistency. What’s more, I found things that a seven-year-old simply shouldn’t know.
When David described the resuscitation room to me, when he told me about the specific type of medical equipment they used, and when he repeated the exact words the doctors said, I knew this kid really had seen what he said he saw. I corroborated all of this with the hospital’s medical records.
There is something in David’s eyes now, something that wasn’t there before the experience. I’ve seen it before in people who have had genuine encounters with the divine.
It’s a kind of inner light, an unshakeable certainty, and a peace that can’t be faked. His father told me that since David woke up, the boy has completely changed.
He is still a normal child who plays and laughs, but there is a depth to him now, a seriousness when he talks about what he saw that makes you stop and listen. The boy is absolutely convinced that what he saw is real and is going to happen.
As a researcher, I have to ask myself if there are any alternative explanations for what David experienced. It could have been a trauma-induced hallucination, or an elaborate fantasy constructed from things he’d heard in church.
I spoke with neuroscientists about near-death experiences, and I spoke with psychologists about children’s imaginative capacities. It is true that the brain in extreme conditions can produce very vivid hallucinations, and it’s true that children have powerful imaginations.
There are certain elements in David’s testimony that cannot be easily explained by these theories. First, there is the theological coherence.
David, a seven-year-old with minimal religious education, described concepts to me that perfectly align with specific biblical prophecies about the end times. He spoke of the separation of the wheat from the chaff, the great harvest, the division of the churches, and the visible manifestation of the supernatural.
These are not concepts commonly taught in children’s Sunday schools. They are complex topics of eschatology that require years of theological study to fully understand, and yet David described them with a clarity that took my breath away.
Second, there are the verifiable details. David described aspects of his resuscitation that were confirmed by the medical staff, but he also mentioned things about the immediate future that we can verify.
He said that these events will occur between December 20 and 24. That’s specific, and that’s verifiable. It’s not a vague prediction about some indefinite future time; it’s a specific window.
That intrigues me enormously because it means we won’t have to wait long to find out if David actually saw something genuine or not. Third, consider the emotional and psychological impact.
I’ve interviewed many people who claim to have had spiritual experiences. Some are clearly seeking attention, some are confused, and some are genuinely traumatized by something they can’t explain.
David doesn’t fit into any of these categories. He is not seeking attention; in fact, his family has been very cautious about sharing this story publicly.
He is not confused; he is perfectly clear and consistent in his account. He is not traumatized, but transformed in a fundamentally positive way. There is a huge difference between someone who is disturbed by an experience and someone who is profoundly changed by it in a constructive way.
While I can’t prove with absolute scientific certainty that what David experienced was real, the circumstantial evidence is extraordinarily strong. If there is even a possibility that what this boy saw is true, then every person who hears this story has a responsibility to take it seriously.
If David is right, if these days in December are really going to be the catalyst for the most transformative event in human history, we cannot afford to just dismiss it and carry on with our lives as if nothing happened.
Let’s talk about the broader implications of what David saw. This isn’t just an interesting story about a kid who had a near-death experience; this is potentially a warning that will affect every single person on this planet.
Jesus told David that the world has been asleep. What does it mean to be spiritually asleep?
It means going through the motions of life without true awareness of the deeper reality that exists beneath the surface. It means accepting the materialistic narrative that this is all there is—that we are just physical bodies in a physical universe with no purpose or meaning beyond what we invent for ourselves.
For religious people, it means turning faith into a set of rituals and beliefs that we profess but that don’t actually transform how we live day to day. I’ve researched this extensively and visited hundreds of churches around the world.
You know what I’ve found? Most of them are full of good people who sincerely believe they are following God, but in reality, they are following a domesticated and sanitized version of faith that costs them nothing.
There is no risk, no real sacrifice, and no radical transformation. There is just regular attendance, participation in family rituals, and adherence to certain basic moral codes. That is not living faith; that is dead religion.
According to David, Jesus is about to shake all of that up. He is going to force everyone to confront the reality of his existence, and it will be impossible to remain asleep.
During those five days, spiritual reality will become so obvious and so undeniable that each person will have to make a conscious choice. You either open your heart to the truth or you deliberately close it.
There is no middle ground, and you cannot simply ignore it. You will have to choose, and that choice will determine which side of the great separation you will end up on.
Some might ask why God would do such a thing. Why force people to choose? Isn’t that coercive?
We need to understand something fundamental about the nature of freedom. God has given us free will, which means we can choose to believe or not believe, to follow Him or reject Him.
For that choice to be truly free, it has to be fully informed. We have to know exactly what we are choosing or rejecting. For centuries, it has been easy for people to say that they don’t know if God is real, or that they never gave it much thought.
If what David saw is true, that excuse is about to disappear completely. During those five days, everyone will know that God is real because the evidence will be undeniable, making the choice genuinely free.
It’s not coercion; it’s clarity. It’s like someone has been living in a dark room their whole life, and suddenly the lights are turned on.
You can open your eyes and see, or you can close them tightly and refuse to look, but you can no longer say you didn’t know the lights were there. That’s a crucial distinction.
God isn’t forcing anyone to love Him. He’s simply revealing His existence in a way that makes it impossible to deny, and what you do with that information is entirely up to you.
David also told me about the children. Jesus specifically said that children are crucial in all of this because their hearts are purer.
They haven’t been corrupted by years of cynicism, materialism, and doubt. When they see something supernatural, they accept it; when they feel God’s presence, they don’t question or analyze it to death—they simply receive it.
That made me think of something I’ve observed in my research for years: when paranormal phenomena occur, it’s almost always children who are the first to see them, believe them, and respond to them.
We adults have built so many mental defenses and filters, and such a need to explain everything rationally, that we’ve literally blinded ourselves to realities that are right in front of us. I believe this is intentional.
During those five days, children are going to play a unique role. They’re going to be the first to see the angels, and they’re going to be the first to feel God’s presence moving.
They’re going to be the ones who say to their parents:
“Hey, something incredible is happening, can’t you feel it?”
Then parents will have to decide whether to trust their children’s pure spiritual perception or dismiss it as childish imagination. That will be a test in itself, because it requires humility to accept that a young child can see spiritual truths more clearly than we can, with all our education and experience.
What David saw about churches during these days deeply disturbed me, and it should disturb any Christian leader who hears this. The vision clearly showed that churches are going to fall into two distinct categories.
There will be those where the Spirit of God moves freely, bringing healing, transformation, and genuine life, and those where religious leaders are so entrenched in control and tradition that they actively resist what God is doing. The terrifying thing is that both groups will call themselves Christian.
Both will quote the Bible and both will claim to be following Jesus, but one will be experiencing the living reality of His presence, while the other will only have an empty shell of religious ritual. How will you know what kind of church you’re in? David gave me some clues.
In the churches where God is truly present, there will be genuine tears of repentance, not performative tears or manipulated emotionalism. There will be an honest acknowledgment that people have been playing church instead of truly seeking God.
There will be genuine unity among believers, an authentic love born from the fact that everyone has experienced the same touch of God. There will be physical healings, tangible manifestations of God’s power that cannot be naturally explained.
In the other churches, the ones that are spiritually dead, there will be an intense emphasis on order and control. The leaders will be more concerned with maintaining their authority than with letting God do what He wants.
There will be harsh criticism of anything that seems too emotional or supernatural. There will be warnings about deception and false signs, not because they are false, but because the leaders are so disconnected from the Spirit that they can no longer recognize when it is genuine.
Most tragically, they will cast out people who are genuinely experiencing God, calling them divisive or disruptive. Jesus called these leaders wolves in sheep’s clothing.
That is devastating because it means there are people in positions of spiritual authority who are actively pushing people away from God while believing they are protecting Him. They are so attached to their own interpretations, traditions, and power that when God does something new that doesn’t fit into their tidy theological boxes, they reject it.
In doing so, they become obstacles rather than facilitators of God’s movement. I have seen this in history time and time again.
The Pharisees persecuted Jesus because He didn’t fit their understanding of what the Messiah should be like, and the institutional church persecuted mystics because they challenged the status quo. It’s going to happen again during those five days.
The earthquakes that David saw on December 22 are particularly fascinating. They weren’t simply random natural disasters; they were physical manifestations of the spiritual shaking taking place.
What’s significant is that the people who were gathered in prayer were protected. They weren’t protected because they were better people or because they deserved it more, but because they had positioned their hearts under the covering of divine protection.
This reminds me of the story of the Exodus, when the plagues fell upon Egypt, but the Israelites who had the blood of the lamb on their doorposts were spared. There is a profound spiritual principle here.
Obedience and alignment with God offer real, tangible protection—not just spiritual, but physical as well. The news reporters couldn’t grasp it.
They kept trying to explain it away as coincidence or luck because admitting that there was supernatural protection at play would require admitting that the universe isn’t simply a purposeless material machine. It would require admitting that there are spiritual forces at play.
Most modern media outlets are committed to a secular, materialistic worldview that refuses to consider supernatural explanations no matter how obvious the evidence may be. But during those five days, according to David, the evidence is going to be so overwhelming that even the hardest skeptics will have to confront the reality.
Angels becoming visible is another fascinating element. I have researched angelic encounters for years, spoken with dozens of people who claim to have seen angels, and certain patterns always emerge.
Angels generally appear during times of crisis or significant transition, and they almost never appear to people who are actively seeking them, but rather to people who are simply open and receptive. As I said before, children see them far more often than adults.
During those five days, according to David’s vision, there will be a thinning of the veil between the spiritual and physical worlds. Things that have always been there, but have been invisible to most of us, will suddenly become visible.
This will create a crisis for many people. Once you see an angel, once you experience the supernatural directly and undeniably, you can no longer live in comfortable denial.
You have to adjust your entire understanding of reality and admit that there is more to the universe than your five physical senses can detect. For some people, that will be incredibly liberating.
It will be final confirmation that they are not crazy, and that the things they have felt or perceived spiritually are completely real. But for others, it will be terrifying because they must face the fact that they have been living their lives based on a flawed understanding of reality.
On December 23, when David saw atheists converting, gang members repenting, and politicians resigning, that is what Jesus called the great harvest. Here is something crucial to understand: a harvest is not violent or coercive.
It is simply the moment when what has been growing underground finally becomes visible and is gathered. God has been working in the hearts of millions of people for years, decades, or even their entire lives.
He has been planting seeds, watering them, and nurturing them, but for most people, that work has been invisible and unconscious. They didn’t know God was preparing them, but He was.
During those five days, all that hidden work is going to bear fruit. Suddenly, people are going to have sudden revelations, feeling as if they are waking up from a long dream.
They are going to look back on their lives and see how God has been guiding them all along, even when they didn’t know it, and even when they were actively rejecting Him. That realization is going to be so powerful and so overwhelming that they won’t be able to resist it.
They’re going to fall to their knees, weep, repent, and surrender their lives to something bigger than themselves. That’s beautiful, and it’s what every genuine Christian has been praying for.
“But we need helpers,” Jesus said. “We need people who aren’t afraid to speak the truth.”
This is critical because during those days, there’s going to be a lot of confusion, a lot of conflicting voices, and false teachers trying to co-opt what’s happening for their own purposes. There are going to be skeptics trying to discredit everything, and religious leaders trying to contain and control it.
In the midst of all that noise, God is going to need people who will simply speak the truth. Not a watered-down truth, and not a politically correct truth designed to make everyone comfortable, but the simple, straightforward truth about who Jesus is, what he’s doing, and what he expects from us.
That’s going to take immense courage because speaking the truth makes you a target. People committed to their falsehoods will attack you, established religious systems that feel threatened will try to silence you, and governments that want to maintain control will label you as dangerous.
According to Jesus, that’s exactly what’s needed: people who value the truth more than their own comfort, safety, or reputation. When you find those people, when you recognize them, join them.
They are the ones God uses to guide others through these turbulent times. On December 24, the explosion of light from Jerusalem occurs.
This is deeply symbolic. Jerusalem has been the spiritual center of the world for millennia. It is where Abraham prepared to sacrifice Isaac, where Solomon’s temple was built, and where Jesus was crucified and resurrected.
It is the city that biblical prophecies say will be the center of end-time events, so it makes perfect sense that the final manifestation of God’s presence during these five days emanates from there. It’s not just a physical light; it’s a manifestation of God’s presence so intense that it literally envelops the planet in seconds.
Everyone feels it—not just believers, and not just seekers, but everyone. Every single person on the planet feels that touch.
For some, it’s like coming home after being lost for a lifetime. It is peace, love, understanding, and certainty—everything their hearts have been searching for without knowing they were searching for it.
For others, it is absolute terror because they finally have to face the reality they have been avoiding. God is real, there is a trial, and there are consequences for the choices we have made.
That realization is unbearable for hearts that have hardened in rebellion. It results in a complete separation, which David described as something you could see directly in people’s faces.
Those who received the light literally shone with a peace in the midst of chaos, joy in the midst of uncertainty, and love when all around was hate. Those who rejected the light grew darker, angrier, more desperate, and more determined to cling to their rebellion no matter the cost.
This is the point of no return. Jesus told David that after these days, it will still be possible for people to turn to him, but it will be much more difficult.
The lines will have been drawn, the sides will have been chosen, and changing sides will require a level of humility and repentance that few will be able to muster. Now let’s talk about what comes after Christmas, because this doesn’t end on December 24; that’s just the beginning of two emerging societies.
On one hand, communities of believers will live radically differently from the world, sharing everything, taking care of each other, experiencing daily miracles, and living according to kingdom principles instead of worldly principles. This reminds me of the early Church described in the book of Acts.
They shared everything in common, sold their possessions, distributed them to everyone according to their need, and experienced signs and wonders. The Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.
That’s exactly what David saw emerging: a return to first-century Christianity. Not institutional Christianity, and not cultural Christianity, but a living, dangerous, and transformative faith.
The people in these communities are going to have something that the world cannot give: genuine joy in the midst of suffering, peace in the midst of the storm, and power to do the impossible. That will naturally attract more people.
When the world is falling apart and you see a group of people who have something real, something that works, and something that provides meaning, purpose, and genuine community, you’re going to want what they have. On the other hand, the world will grow darker, crime will increase, mental health will collapse, and social systems will crumble.
This won’t happen because God is actively punishing people, but because when you reject the source of love, peace, and order, what remains is hatred, chaos, and disintegration. It’s a natural consequence, like pulling up the roots of a tree and then wondering why it’s withering away.
God is the source of all goodness, beauty, and truth. When you deliberately reject that source, you are choosing darkness, and darkness always has consequences.
David saw governments trying to legislate against the supernatural, trying to make it illegal to talk about spiritual experiences, and trying to label believers as dangerous extremists. We are already beginning to see this today.
We see social media platforms censoring certain types of religious content, and some governments classifying traditional religious beliefs as hate speech. We are seeing the beginning of what could become a large-scale campaign against true faith.
During the days after this great separation, according to David’s vision, this hostility will intensify dramatically. The world system, controlled by forces opposed to God, will feel deeply threatened by this revival.
It will try to stifle it, contain it, and destroy it, but it will not be able to. When God truly moves, and when the Holy Spirit is at work, no human power can stop it.
They can arrest believers, but more will rise up; they can close churches, but believers will gather in homes; they can censor the message, but people will find ways to share it. The history of the Church proves this.
Every time there has been genuine persecution, the Church has grown because persecution separates nominal believers from true ones. True believers, those who have truly experienced God, would rather die than deny what they know to be true.
Jesus promised David that all who remain faithful will receive a crown of life, a direct reference to Revelation 2:10: “Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life.” It is a promise for those who persevere and do not give up, no matter how difficult it gets.
David was very clear about that: some people will lose their jobs, some will lose their families, some will be imprisoned, and some will even be martyred, but all who stand firm will be rewarded beyond imagination.
The big question is, what do we do with this information? If we believe there is even a possibility that what David saw is true, how should we live in the coming weeks? David gave me some specific answers.
First, prepare your heart. This isn’t about stockpiling food and supplies, although there’s nothing wrong with being physically prepared, but real preparation is spiritual. It’s about taking stock with God, being honest about the state of your soul, and asking yourself if you really know God or just know about Him.
Have you truly experienced His presence, or have you merely gone through religious motions? Have you truly surrendered your life to him, or are you still trying to maintain total control?
Second, examine your life. There are things you’re doing that you know are wrong. Some relationships need to be repaired, and there is forgiveness that you need to give or ask for.
There are addictions, secret sins, and compromises that are separating you from God. During those five days, according to David, everything will be exposed.
The light will reveal what is hidden, not to shame you, but to give you the opportunity to deal with it before it’s too late. Don’t wait. Start cleaning your home now and start doing things right.
Do this not because you are afraid of judgment, but because you love God and want to be completely available for what He wants to do in your life. Third, pray like never before.
David was very specific about this. Jesus told him that prayer is going to be absolutely crucial during these days because prayer is not just asking for things—it’s aligning yourself with God’s purposes.
It is opening your heart to receive what He wants to give and positioning yourself spiritually to be used by him. During those five days, the people who have been praying faithfully will be the ones who can discern what is really happening.
They will be the ones who can guide others, and they will have the spiritual authority to speak truth in the midst of confusion. Fourth, tell your story and don’t stay silent.
If you have experienced God, if you know that he is real, and if you have been transformed by his love, tell people about it. Share your testimony, not in an arrogant or judgmental way, but with humility and authenticity, because stories have immense power.
People can argue against theology, but they cannot argue against your personal experience. In the days to come, when people are confused, scared, and searching for answers, your story might be exactly what they need to hear.
Fifth, seek genuine community. You cannot go through this alone; you need to be connected with other believers.
This means more than just attending a church; it means building genuine relationships where people really get to know each other, care for each other, pray for each other, and hold each other accountable. The communities that David saw forming after Christmas did not emerge from nothing.
They formed because people had already begun to build those connections, had learned to trust each other, and had practiced sharing their lives together. If you’re not already in that kind of community, start looking for it right now.
Find people who truly take their faith seriously, people who are willing to live differently, and people who value truth over comfort. Sixth, educate yourself spiritually.
Read the Bible, especially the prophecies about the end times, the gospels, and the book of Revelation. Read about historical revivals to understand how God has worked in the past so that when these things start to happen, you’ll have a clear frame of reference.
You will want to be able to recognize what is of God and what is not. There is a lot of confusion in the world today and many contradictory teachings, but the Bible is your anchor and your standard to test everything else.
Seventh, stay flexible. One of the biggest problems with institutional religion is that it becomes rigid, develops traditions, and then confuses those traditions with absolute truth.
It clings to certain ways of doing things and then cannot adapt when God does something new. If what David saw is true, God is about to do something radically new, and it will require people to be willing to abandon their preconceived notions.
It will require openness, adaptability, and a willingness to follow the spirit, even when it leads you in directions you didn’t expect. Eighth, do not be afraid.
This is probably the most important message that Jesus gave David to share: do not be afraid. These days are going to be intense, there will be upheaval, and some people will face opposition and persecution.
For those who are with God, who have His light within them, there is absolutely nothing to fear. You will be protected, you will be guided, you will have peace in the midst of the storm, and you will have joy in the midst of chaos because God is with you.
If God is with you, who can truly be against you? Ninth, stay alert, but do not become obsessed.
It’s easy when you hear a prophecy like this to become so focused on dates and details that you lose sight of the most important point. The point is not to know exactly what will happen when; the point is to be spiritually prepared no matter what happens.
Pay attention during those days, but don’t let it consume every waking moment between now and then. Live your life, do your job, and take care of your family, but do it all with the awareness that something significant is on the horizon.
Tenth, be a bearer of light. Jesus told David that people with light will be immediately recognizable because there will be something undeniably different about them.
As a believer, you should be noticeably different from the world around you right now. You should have peace when others have anxiety, hope when others have despair, and love where others have hate.
This shouldn’t be in an artificial or forced way, but as the natural result of having God living within you. When people see that you have something real, they will be drawn to you, they will want what you have, and then you will have the perfect opportunity to point them to Jesus.
Some of you listening to this are skeptical, and that’s okay. As I said, I’m skeptical by nature too, but this is what I would ask of you: don’t dismiss this simply because it challenges your worldview.
Don’t ignore it simply because it comes from a seven-year-old child. Some of God’s most profound messages throughout history have come through unlikely sources.
Moses was a stutterer, David was a teenage shepherd, and Mary was a young peasant virgin. Jesus chose fishermen and tax collectors as his principal disciples, showing a pattern of using the simple to confound the wise.
Keep an open mind and pay attention during those days in December. If what David saw is true, you will know because it will be undeniable, and if it turns out that nothing extraordinary happens, you haven’t wasted your time.
You will have spent a few weeks focusing deeply on your relationship with God, and that’s never time wasted. You have nothing to lose by taking it seriously and potentially everything to gain.
If David is right, then we are about to witness the most transformative event in human history, and each of us has to decide which side of the separation we want to be on. For those of you who are believers but have been lukewarm, this is your definitive wake-up call.
Jesus said in Revelation 3:16 that he will spit the lukewarm out of his mouth. You can’t be half-hearted with God; you’re either fully committed or you’re not committed at all.
These five days are going to force that issue and expose where your heart really is. Don’t wait until then; make the decision now to give your life completely to Jesus.
Don’t hold anything back, don’t compromise, and don’t play games. Make it real and make it genuine, because when the pressure comes, only those with genuine faith will be able to stand firm.
For those of you who are not believers, who have rejected God, or who have simply never given much thought to Him, this is your moment. Jesus is calling you.
He has been calling you all your life, but now he is about to make that call so loud, so clear, and so undeniable that you will not be able to ignore it. I beg you, when you feel that calling in your heart during those days in December, do not reject it.
Do not close your heart, and do not let pride, fear, or the desire to maintain control prevent you from responding. Open your heart, say yes to God, and discover that everything your soul has been longing for is available in a relationship with Him.
I’m going to tell you something deeply personal. When I sat down to interview David and heard his story for the first time, something inside me changed forever.
I have investigated the inexplicable for decades and seen things most people wouldn’t believe, but never in all those years had I felt what I felt when I heard this seven-year-old boy describe his encounter with Jesus. There was an authenticity, a purity, and a certainty that touched me in a very deep place.
It made me ask myself if I am truly ready. Do I really know God the way David knew Him, or have I simply been investigating spiritual phenomena from a safe distance without really getting involved?
Those are uncomfortable questions, but they’re the right questions because we all need to ask them. We all need to look honestly in the mirror and ask ourselves where we really stand with God—not where we think we are, and not where we want others to think we are.
Where are we really? During those five days that David saw, there will be no room for pretense and no room for hiding.
The light will expose everything, and it’s better to deal with it now in private, on your own terms, than to be forced to confront it when all of reality is shaking around you. I also want to talk about the role of the church in all of this, because one of the saddest things David saw was how many churches are going to fail at this crucial moment.
How many religious leaders will actively resist what God is doing? That should be a stern warning to everyone in leadership.
Pastors, elders, deacons, and teachers—anyone who holds a position of spiritual authority—will be held strictly accountable for how they respond during these days. They will be held responsible for whether they guide people toward God or lead them away from Him, which is a terrifying responsibility.
James 3:1 says that not many should presume to be teachers, because teachers will be judged more severely. There is a reason for that: when people entrust their spiritual well-being to you, you have the ability to help them or hurt them deeply.
If you use that position to satisfy your own ego, build your own kingdom, or maintain your own control, then you will be held accountable. Jesus had incredibly harsh words for the hypocritical religious leaders of his time, calling them blind guides and whitewashed tombs.
That was because they were using religion to oppress people instead of liberating them. During those five days that David saw, there will be a decisive test for every church leader.
Will you allow God to move freely in your church, even if it means losing control completely? Will you allow the Holy Spirit to do what He wants to do, even if it disrupts your carefully planned services?
Will you allow genuine miracles to happen, even if it challenges your ordered theology? Or will you resist, criticize, and extinguish the spirit because you are afraid of what people will think, afraid of losing your position, or afraid of admitting that maybe you were wrong?
These are the questions that every leader will have to answer, and their answers will determine whether they are true shepherds or wolves. Those of you in the congregations also have a critical role to play.
If your pastor or your leaders begin to resist a genuine movement of the Spirit of God, do not follow them blindly. Don’t assume that just because someone is in a leadership position, they must be right.
Test everything against the Scriptures and test everything against the fruit it produces. Jesus said that you will recognize them by their fruits.
If what is happening is producing genuine love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, and self-control, then it is undeniably from God. If it’s producing division, pride, control, and fear, then it is not.
If your church is on the wrong side of that line, then maybe it’s time to find a new church. I know that sounds radical, and I know it goes against the idea of loyalty to your congregation.
Jesus made it very clear that our ultimate loyalty is to him, not to an earthly institution. If your church is coming between you and God, then it is not a true church; it is an obstacle, and you need to get away from it.
David clearly saw that during these days, God is going to call his people out of dead religious structures and into living communities where his spirit can move freely. That will mean that some people will have to make very difficult decisions.
They will have to leave churches where they have been for years, and they will have to disappoint friends and family, but the alternative is to stay in a place where God is not, missing the opportunity to participate in what he is doing.
I also want to address the issue of time. David was very specific about the dates of December 20 to 24, which are concrete dates in the very near future, making some people uncomfortable.
Throughout history, there have been numerous predictions about the end times that have turned out to be completely false, leading many people to dismiss all prophecies about future events as nonsense. I can understand that skepticism completely, but the fact that people have been wrong before does not mean that all prophecies are false.
It means we need to be discerning and test the prophecies, and the best test is time itself. If those dates arrive and nothing extraordinary happens, then we will know that David was wrong, or that he misinterpreted what he saw, or that something changed.
But if something does happen, if events begin to unfold that coincide precisely with what he described, then we will have to take it very seriously. This brings me to an important point about how we should view this prophecy.
We shouldn’t be dogmatic about it, and we shouldn’t act as if we have absolute certainty that this will happen exactly as David described it. No human being, not even genuine prophets, sees perfectly.
First Corinthians 13:9 says that we know in part and we prophesy in part. There is always room for misinterpretation or misunderstanding, so we must hold this with deep humility.
We share it with humility, take it seriously without becoming rigid or arrogant, and we wait to see what happens. At the same time, we shouldn’t use it as an excuse for inaction.
We shouldn’t say that it may or may not happen, so we’re not going to do anything. If there is even a possibility that this is true, then we should be preparing ourselves, putting our lives in order, and deepening our relationship with God.
Do this not because we are afraid that something bad will happen, but because that is the wise way to live. In any case, whether these specific events happen or not, we will all eventually face God.
We will all have to give an account of how we lived our lives, and we all need to be spiritually prepared. In the worst-case scenario, if David was wrong, we will still have used this time to grow spiritually and will have lost nothing.
But if David was right, then those who prepared will be ready. They will be at peace while others are in panic, they will have clarity while others are confused, and they will be used by God while others are being set apart.
That’s worth any discomfort, any effort, and any sacrifice we have to make in the coming weeks. To participate in the greatest movement of God in human history, to be part of the great harvest, and to see the kingdom of God manifesting on earth in a tangible way is what every genuine believer should be praying for.
If it’s really about to happen, then we need to be absolutely ready. Let’s talk about something David mentioned that particularly worried me: the persecution that will come.
He saw governments passing laws against supernatural activity, labeling people as dangerous extremists for their religious beliefs, and implementing censorship, monitoring, and even arrests. Some of you might think that’s an exaggeration that couldn’t happen in the modern world, but look around you.
It’s already starting. We already see governments around the world restricting religious freedom, social media platforms censoring content, and people losing jobs or being publicly shamed for expressing traditional Christian beliefs.
This is going to get worse, not because governments will suddenly become cartoonishly evil, but because from their perspective, what will be happening during these days will seem destabilizing and dangerous.
Millions of people having simultaneous spiritual experiences, acting in ways that defy social norms, questioning the authority of the State, and forming communities that operate according to different principles will look terrifying to them. From a secular materialist perspective, this will look like a mass psychosis or a dangerous movement that needs to be contained immediately.
From a spiritual perspective, it will be God moving powerfully, and the kingdom of darkness responding with intense fear and aggression. This is where genuine believers will have to make hard decisions.
Will you obey God or men? When they tell you that you cannot talk about your spiritual experiences, will you remain silent?
When they tell you that you cannot gather to worship, will you obey them? When you are threatened with severe consequences for your faith, will you back down?
The history of the Church is full of martyrs who chose death over denial, and Jesus was very clear: whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for my sake will find it. During the days to come, those words are going to be tested in ways that most of us have never faced before.
But here is the promise: those who remain faithful will receive a crown of life and be rewarded eternally. They will be honored in the kingdom of God, and their names will be known in heaven.
When you look back from eternity, any suffering you endured on earth will seem entirely insignificant compared to the glory that awaits you. Paul said it perfectly in Romans 8:18: “I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed to us.”
If you find yourself facing persecution, or if you find yourself paying a price for your faith, remember that it is not in vain. Remember that God sees everything.
He counts every tear, every sacrifice, and every moment of faithfulness, and He will reward you. Let’s also talk about the physical healings that David witnessed.
He said he saw people in wheelchairs walking, blind people seeing, and mute people speaking, with undeniable miracles happening during church services. Some of you might think that sounds fantastic and too good to be true, but that is exactly what was constantly happening in the New Testament Church.
The book of Acts is full of stories of miraculous healings. Jesus healed the sick as a normal part of his ministry, and he told his disciples that they would do even greater works than he did.
Why don’t we see that level of miraculous power in most churches today? I would say it’s because we’ve lost our sense of expectation.
We have stopped truly believing that God wants to and can perform miracles today. We have rationalized biblical miracles as something that happened in the past but is no longer necessary.
We have developed complex theologies that explain the absence of the miraculous instead of seeking its presence, and thus we prophesy our own disappointment. We don’t see miracles because we don’t expect them, and we don’t pray for healing with genuine faith because deep down we don’t really believe that God will answer.
During those five days that David saw, that’s going to change completely. The presence of God will be so tangible and so powerful that miracles will flow naturally.
People will pray for the sick, and the sick will be healed instantly, not because we are better at praying, but because God is going to manifest himself in ways we haven’t seen in generations. This will be both a blessing and a test.
It will be a blessing for those who receive it with faith, who give glory to God, and who use these signs to strengthen their faith. But it will be a severe test for those who criticize it, doubt its authenticity, and attribute it to other causes.
Unfortunately, David saw that many religious leaders would fail that test entirely. I need to talk about children again because Jesus gave David a specific message for them.
He told him that their hearts were pure enough to believe without doubting, and that they are going to play a special role during these days. That is both encouraging and challenging.
It is encouraging because it means that children who hear this message, take it seriously, and prepare their hearts will experience God in powerful ways. They will see angels, feel their presence, and be used to minister to others, even to adults.
It is challenging because it means that parents have an enormous responsibility. If your child tells you that they saw an angel during these days, are you going to believe them?
If your child starts talking about feeling God’s presence in ways that you yourself have not experienced, will you validate their experience or dismiss it? If your child begins to show a spiritual understanding that seems far beyond their age, will you recognize that God is using them?
These are not hypothetical questions. Based on what David saw, these are situations that many parents will face very soon, and he would urge them to trust their children.
Listen to what they have to say and take their spiritual experiences seriously. God has used children throughout history to deliver important messages.
Samuel was just a child when God began to speak to him, David was a teenager when he was anointed king, and Jeremiah protested that he was too young, but God used him anyway. Age is no barrier to God.
In fact, he sometimes prefers to use young people because they are less complicated, less cynical, and more open to the impossible. As we approach the end of this narrative, I want to emphasize the central message that Jesus gave David to share.
Prepare your hearts, not with fear, but with expectation; not with anxiety, but with hope. Something extraordinary is about to happen.
The world is going to change in ways we can’t fully imagine, and each of us has the opportunity to be a part of it. But that opportunity requires a definitive choice.
It requires that we open our hearts, surrender our lives, stop playing at religion, and begin to genuinely seek God. Jesus told David that he loves us more than we can imagine, that he has been calling us all our lives, and that these days before Christmas could be our last best chance to answer that call.
After the separation occurs, it will still be possible to come to him, but it will be much more difficult. The lines will have been drawn, the sides will have been chosen, and the easy grace period will have ended.
Now is the time to act. If you have never given your life to Jesus, do it now.
Don’t wait until December, and don’t wait until you are forced by overwhelming events. Do it now in the peace of your heart by your own free choice.
Say yes to God. Ask Him to come into your life, ask him to forgive you, ask him to transform you, and he will. He has been waiting for this exact moment, and he has been waiting for you.
If you are a believer but you have been lukewarm, rekindle your fire right now. Go back to your first love and remember why you began this journey of faith.
Let it be real again, and let it become vibrant. Don’t settle for mediocre Christianity when God offers you something extraordinary.
If you are a leader in the church, examine your motives honestly. Are you serving God or are you building your own kingdom?
Are you guiding people toward him or are you pushing them away? Are you open to him trying something new, or are you so committed to your way of doing things that you will resist what he wants to do?
Now is the time for brutal honesty, time to repent if necessary, and time to realign yourself with God’s purposes. Whoever you are, and wherever you are on your spiritual journey, this message is for you.
David, a seven-year-old boy, was taken to heaven and returned with a warning and a promise. The warning is clear: time is running out, the great separation is coming, and you have to choose a side.
The promise is equally clear: if you choose God, if you open your heart to him, and if you walk in his light, then you have absolutely nothing to fear. You will be protected, you will be guided, and you will experience His love in ways you never thought possible.
You will be part of God’s greatest movement in human history. These are the words of a child, but I believe they are the words of God through a child.
If I’m wrong, and if it turns out that this wasn’t a genuine vision, then we haven’t lost anything by preparing. We will have grown closer to God, deepened our faith, built stronger communities, and lived with more intentionality and purpose.
But if I’m right, and if David really saw what was coming, then those who prepared themselves will be completely ready for the most important moment of their lives. December 20 is just a few weeks away.
That is the first day David saw, the day everything begins to change. Use these weeks wisely, and don’t waste them on distractions or denial.
Focus entirely on what matters. Fix your broken relationships, confess your sins, and seek God with all your heart.
Build your foundation so that when the storms come—and according to David, they will—you will be standing firm on solid rock. The world as we know it is about to end, a new world is about to be born, and you have the unique opportunity to be part of that birth.
This is David’s vision, and this is the message of Jesus through a child. Take it seriously, share it with others, prepare yourself, and above all, open your heart.
The greatest thing you’ve ever experienced could be just weeks away. Those who are ready will receive it with absolute joy, while those who are not will be shaken to their very core.
The choice is yours, the time is now, and the future of your soul depends entirely on what you do next.