The latest farce circulating on TikTok—wild predictions of the rapture supposedly happening on September 23rd—solidifies how out of touch the modern left has become. Watching a wave of self-styled “prophets” and armchair theologians flood social media, all convinced they cracked some biblical code, is almost comedic. Yet none of these so-called experts seemed to have read the very scripture they pretend to explain, which clearly states no man will know the day or the hour. This spectacle isn’t just embarrassing; it shows the intellectual bankruptcy that thrives under the surface of progressive social media activism.
Tracing the origins of this particular apocalypse myth leads back to a South African “prophet,” who claims Jesus spelled out the end of days in the most millennial way possible: through a dream conveniently tied to the 2026 World Cup. Leave it to the globalist crowd to conflate international soccer with eternal salvation. This isn’t a harmless bit of spiritual speculation—it’s another example of how easily the left will use anything, even faith, to chase relevance and generate social media buzz. Real scriptural wisdom is replaced by clickbait and likes.
The Bible Says ‘No One Knows the Hour’ — Especially Not TikTokhttps://t.co/Otj3zLZ32Z
— PJ Media (@PJMedia_com) September 23, 2025
These antics from liberal corners of the internet reflect a larger pattern: promises of utopia, predicted doom, and hand-picked “truths” that have no foundation in reality or history. Whether it’s climate hysteria, economic fairy tales, or manufactured social crises, the left seems eager to distract Americans with frantic predictions—never pausing to consider that their track record is a series of misses and misleading forecasts. Traditional Americans see through the charade; they understand that real answers don’t come from trending hashtags or viral challenges on TikTok.
What’s most troubling is the exploitation of faith and fear to seize cultural narrative. Instead of focusing on personal responsibility, faith in God, and protecting the values that made this nation great, these viral prophets push a message of helplessness and dependence. It’s not about elevating people—it’s about controlling them, telling them what to believe tomorrow, and what “crisis” to panic about next. Americans must recognize these distractions for what they are: ploys to undermine the foundations of freedom, faith, and family.
In the end, the biblical message still rings true: nobody but the Lord will determine when the world ends, and no technocrat or TikTok star can change that. Instead of fretting over the next viral doomsday, real Americans should double down on faith, fortitude, and the beliefs that separate this nation from the rest. Ignore the noise, trust what’s proven, and remember—readiness and integrity matter far more than the latest trend from left-wing social media.