Amazing Facts with Doug Batchelor

Kingdoms In Time

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: AFDB

Program Code: AFDB000136S


00:07 ♪♪♪
00:35 Two, one.
00:38 Liftoff, we have a liftoff.
00:48 Doug Batchelor: Time, what is it?
00:51 All that is, and all that was, and all that is to be lies
00:56 within this dimension that we know as time.
01:00 Of course, time is made up of three distinct parts,
01:04 the past, the future, and then each of us experiences life
01:10 on a brief, razor thin slice of it called the present.
01:18 An ever-sliding moment between two seeming eternities
01:22 from the far reaches of the distant past
01:25 to the horizon of a neverending, mysterious future.
01:28 As far as we know, mankind is limited to moving only forward
01:32 through time, never backwards, but what if it were possible
01:38 for a person to escape the bonds of time, to stop it in its
01:41 tracks, and maybe even move around within time at will?
01:49 What would you do?
01:51 Where would you go?
01:54 Would you travel to the distant past to view the building
01:57 of the pyramids?
01:59 Maybe witness firsthand the birth of Jesus.
02:08 Or perhaps even go back in time to prevent the assassination
02:12 of Abraham Lincoln.
02:19 Then on the other hand, what would you do if you could
02:21 transport yourself into the future, to go forward
02:25 to any moment in time and to discover in advance
02:29 the outcome of every decision you can make, to step
02:33 out of the dimension of time and space and have a good look
02:36 around?
02:37 Who wouldn't want to do that?
02:39 What would you do with that kind of power?
02:42 Is this just a wild fantasy?
02:44 Well, maybe not completely.
02:47 In the early 20th century, Albert Einstein introduced
02:50 to the world the theory of special relativity.
02:55 When it was later tested and proven to be true, it
02:57 revolutionized our understanding of time and space.
03:02 Einstein discovered time can actually be slowed
03:05 down or accelerated depending on how fast you move relative
03:10 to something else.
03:11 For example, an astronaut inside a spaceship flying away
03:16 from the earth at near the speed of light would age more slowly
03:20 than a twin brother who remained on the earth.
03:28 By the time our space traveller returned, his earthbound twin
03:32 would have aged many years by comparison to the time he
03:35 aged while in space.
03:38 The returning astronaut would feel as though he had traveled
03:41 to the future.
03:47 But what if there was a powerful being who is unbound
03:51 by the constraints of time, a being with absolute power
03:55 over time and space, and one who knows the future even better
04:01 than you know your own past?
04:03 Impossible?
04:04 Well, what if I could prove it.
04:07 I can with this book, the Bible.
04:11 Within its pages are more than 2,000 distinct and verifiable
04:15 predictions.
04:17 If I were to tell you that over 1,800 of these prophecies
04:21 have already come true, would you be interested in knowing
04:24 more?
04:25 Now, I want to be clear, the Bible is not an almanac
04:28 revealing who will win the next world series or a way
04:31 to find those lucky lotto numbers,
04:35 but it does answer the really important
04:38 questions about our future and about your future.
04:42 And while you might already know the Bible is a book brimming
04:45 with prophecy, are you aware how accurate those predictions have
04:49 turned out to be?
04:51 Well, strap on your seatbelts, friend, you're about to
04:55 find out.
04:59 male announcer: He removes kings and sets up kings, for his
05:04 dominion is an everlasting dominion.
05:10 "Kingdoms in Time."
05:19 Doug Batchelor: "In the beginning."
05:21 See, the Bible does talk about time.
05:24 Let's begin with maybe a little background.
05:28 The Bible is actually a book comprised of 66 books written
05:32 by about 40 different authors in three languages on three
05:36 continents over a period of about 1,500 years.
05:40 Its writers came from all walks of life.
05:42 They were shepherds, kings, priests, rulers, and fishermen,
05:46 each with a unique personality.
05:49 They also wrote from many different situations.
05:52 Some were in prisons, others in palaces.
05:55 Some lived in caves, others were captives in foreign lands.
06:00 Yet the Bible fits together into one cohesive story
06:04 with a clear beginning, a constant theme, and logical
06:08 ending, all while surrounding a central character.
06:12 Perhaps this is why the Bible is the bestselling book of all
06:16 time, with over 5 billion copies sold and distributed.
06:21 With that, let's take a look at our first prophesy.
06:33 The Gospel book of Matthew records that in AD 30, Jesus
06:38 predicted the destruction of Jerusalem in great detail 40
06:42 years before it took place.
06:44 He pointed to the immense polished marble stones
06:47 and columns and he stunned the disciples by saying--
06:51 male: "Assuredly, I say to you, not one stone shall be
06:54 left here upon another, that shall not be thrown down."
06:59 Michael Hasel: When Jesus made the prediction that there would
07:01 be not one stone left upon the other of the temple,
07:03 you can just imagine how the Jews of that time would
07:05 have felt.
07:07 This was a building project that had been going on for almost
07:10 100 years.
07:12 Johnathan Roth: Jerusalem is where the presence of God,
07:16 the shekinah of God, was, in the temple.
07:20 God was there, literally there.
07:23 Doug Batchelor: The disciples were astonished by this
07:25 prediction because the temple was the crown jewel
07:28 of the nation.
07:29 It was constructed with tons of massive and precious stones.
07:33 One foundation stone you can still see today is 41 feet long
07:38 by 15 feet deep and it weighs more than 500 metric tons.
07:44 That's more than 100 elephants.
07:47 But Jesus's prophecy came true.
07:50 According to the renowned historian Josephus,
07:53 during the conquest of Jerusalem, when the Roman
07:56 soldiers set fire to the temple, the extreme heat melted
08:00 the abundant gold that adorned the place of worship.
08:03 This caused the precious liquefied metal to seep
08:06 into the cracks of the foundation stones.
08:09 After the battle, the Roman soldiers came and toppled every
08:13 single stone in order to recover the gold.
08:17 male announcer: "This generation will by no means pass away till
08:20 all these things take place."
08:22 Doug Batchelor: Amazingly, there's another biblical
08:24 prophesy concerning the Jewish struggle with Rome that actually
08:28 predates the time of Jesus.
08:30 male announcer: "The Lord will bring a nation against you
08:33 from far away, from the ends of the earth like an eagle
08:36 swooping down, a nation whose language you will not
08:39 understand, a fierce-looking nation without respect
08:43 for the old or pity for the young, they will lay
08:46 siege to all the cities throughout your land
08:49 until the high fortified walls in which you trust fall down."
08:54 Doug Batchelor: And indeed, the Romans did swoop
08:56 down on Jerusalem and they lay siege to the city.
09:00 In harmony with Moses's prophesy, the Roman flags bore
09:02 the image of eagles in flight blazing in the sun.
09:08 Today, all that's left of the original temple complex
09:12 is the outer structure that is known as the Wailing Wall.
09:17 Martin Klingbeil: Interestingly, if you walk nowadays
09:19 from the Wailing Wall down south, there is a road
09:23 there that is full of toppled stones.
09:25 You have these huge layers of just broken stones on top
09:29 of each other that were thrown over and pushed over.
09:32 Michael Hasel: Today, there's no historical doubt at all that
09:36 this was destroyed by the Romans, that it was
09:38 destroyed in AD 70, that this culminated in that century,
09:43 and that this was the end of a temple in Jerusalem.
09:47 And that to me speaks to the validity of a prophecy
09:51 given decades earlier by a person who knew that that
09:55 was going to happen.
09:56 male announcer: "Zion will be plowed like a field, Jerusalem
09:59 will become a heap of rubble, the temple hill a mound
10:03 overgrown with thickets."
10:06 Doug Batchelor: The Jewish people and the nation of Israel
10:08 have a mind-boggling history.
10:11 No other nation on earth has been so widely and frequently
10:15 displaced, surviving multiple genocide attempts.
10:18 These resilient people have made one amazing come back
10:21 after another, going on to reclaim their homeland
10:25 and to thrive again.
10:27 Johnathan Roth: One thing that's remarkable is after the Romans
10:30 forbid them being there, after Christians forbid them
10:32 being there, after Muslims, Jews have always returned
10:35 to Jerusalem.
10:37 Long before the state of Israel, at least by the 1870s, probably
10:42 as early as the 1860s or 1850s, the Jews were a majority
10:45 population in Jerusalem under the Ottomans.
10:49 Why?
10:51 Because that's where they wanted to go.
10:53 male announcer: "Thus sayeth the Lord God: 'Behold, I will
10:56 take the children of Israel from among the heathen, whither
10:59 they be gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring
11:03 them into their own land; and I will make them one nation
11:07 in the land, upon the mountains of Israel."'
11:10 Doug Batchelor: In May 1948, the Jewish State was re-established
11:15 as an independent nation.
11:16 And today, this comparatively small country has grown
11:19 into a globally recognized nuclear power that leads
11:23 the world in innovation and technology.
11:26 Jeremiah 25 contains another astounding prophecy regarding
11:31 the destruction of Jerusalem and its miraculous restoration.
11:36 male announcer: "And this whole land shall be a desolation,
11:38 and an astonishment; and these nations shall serve the king
11:41 of Babylon seventy years."
11:44 Doug Batchelor: Six hundred years before the time of Christ,
11:47 it was foretold that due to the nation's disobedience,
11:51 Jerusalem would be conquered, the Jewish temple destroyed,
11:54 and the people would be carried off as captives in Babylon
11:57 for 70 years.
11:59 This happened BC 607, when Nebuchadnezzar, the king
12:03 of Babylon, conquered Jerusalem.
12:06 Johnathan Roth: The king of the Jews, priesthood,
12:09 and the nobles were taken from Jerusalem, from Judea,
12:12 to Babylon.
12:14 We know they were there.
12:15 And in a way, this is where modern Judaism begins because
12:19 they worshiped God in Babylonia, not in Jerusalem.
12:25 Michael Hasel: The Babylonian chronicles are a set of tablets,
12:28 and one particular tablet that is now at the British Museum
12:32 in London, the 597 campaign by Nebuchadnezzar is mentioned
12:36 by name.
12:38 And his conquering of Jerusalem and Judea is also recounted
12:42 in that particular chronicle.
12:44 Doug Batchelor: The prophecy goes on to say that they would
12:47 return and rebuild the city and the temple.
12:49 Right on schedule, after 70 years of captivity, in BC 537,
12:55 the Persian King Cyrus conquered Babylon, and in the first year
12:59 of his reign, he issued a decree allowing the Jewish people
13:02 to return to Jerusalem and to rebuild the city.
13:06 Johnathan Roth: When King Cyrus the Persian becomes king, he
13:09 issues a decree, allowing the nobles and the Jewish people
13:14 who are in Babylonia to return and to rebuild the temple.
13:18 male announcer: "All the kingdoms of the earth
13:20 the Lord God of Heaven has given me.
13:22 And he has commanded me to build him a house at Jerusalem which
13:26 is in Judah.
13:27 Who is among you as all his people?
13:29 May his God be with him, and let him go up to Jerusalem which is
13:33 in Judah, and build the house of the Lord God of Israel (He Is
13:37 God), which is in Jerusalem."
13:40 Doug Batchelor: In fact, catch this.
13:42 In 1879, archaeologists unearthed the Cyrus Cylinder,
13:48 which contains a Persian king's policy to repatriate conquered
13:52 peoples like the Jews.
13:55 Michael Hasel: The Cyrus Cylinder is one of the most
13:57 amazing discoveries made in Babylon.
13:59 It recounts Cyrus, who comes into the city.
14:02 He is welcomed by the people.
14:04 He's regarded as a kind of savior, if you will, which is
14:08 ironic given that he just conquered Babylon.
14:11 Ezra gives us a very strong indication in the Bible that
14:14 this was the time that the people were allowed to go
14:16 back to Jerusalem to rebuild and to reestablish themselves
14:20 in the land, just as Jeremiah had predicted would happen
14:23 after 70 years of captivity.
14:26 Doug Batchelor: Friends, we are about to delve into the most
14:29 magnificent and undisputable Bible prophecy that proves
14:33 the validity of Bible inspiration.
14:36 In ten amazing verses containing only 340 words, this prophecy
14:41 outlines the rise and fall of empires all the way
14:44 from the time of ancient Babylon through to the second coming
14:47 of Christ.
14:50 One night about 2,500 years ago, the powerful Babylonian King
14:56 Nebuchadnezzar fell asleep while contemplating the vast glory
14:59 of his kingdom.
15:01 As his grand architect of one of the world's most powerful
15:04 empires drifted off into a restless sleep, he
15:08 wondered what the future held for his kingdom.
15:15 God took this opportunity to reveal to him through a vivid
15:18 dream not only the ultimate fate of his nation, but also the rise
15:24 and the fall world empires from his day all the way
15:27 to the end of earth's history.
15:32 In this amazing prophetic dream found in Daniel chapter 2, God
15:36 showed Nebuchadnezzar a colossal statue with a head of gold,
15:40 the chest of silver, thighs and belly of bronze, legs
15:45 of iron, and the feet and toes mixed partly of clay and iron.
15:49 Then suddenly, a huge stone plunged from the heavens
15:53 and smashed the idol, pulverizing it into dust.
16:04 And the stone, it grows into a gigantic mountain that
16:07 fills the earth.
16:10 Nebuchadnezzar knew this was no ordinary dream, so the troubled
16:14 king called for his wisest counselors to come and relate
16:18 to him the dream and explain its meaning.
16:21 They of course were powerless to tell the king his dream,
16:24 but then God gave the same dream and its interpretation to a Jew
16:29 stationed in Babylon, a young man by the name of Daniel.
16:33 He went before the king and presented the precise
16:35 details of the dream, and then gave the interpretation.
16:46 In doing this, the Bible prophet divulged the next two millennia
16:50 of world empires that would impact God's people.
16:53 And so far, all of this has transpired just as predicted.
16:58 Daniel told the King that the head of gold represented
17:01 Nebuchadnezzar's kingdom.
17:03 Babylon, which ruled the world from 612 to 539 BC, was one
17:08 of the wealthiest and most powerful empires of antiquity,
17:12 one that could aptly be described as the head of gold.
17:17 Michael Hasel: Babylon was probably one of the most
17:19 sophisticated, most opulent cities ever built up to that
17:22 point in history, and Nebuchadnezzar, who was
17:25 the longest reigning king in Babylonian history, really
17:28 rebuilt the city as a showcase to the entire world.
17:31 David Trim: Most cities of the ancient world were really
17:34 wold villages.
17:36 Even Jerusalem in King David's time was really rather small,
17:40 but Babylon was a city even by modern standards.
17:43 Michael Hasel: The city of Nineveh, the capital
17:45 of the Assyrians, was a city of about 2.9 square miles.
17:49 Rome was a city of about 1 square mile.
17:52 You have Athens, which of course was a philosophical capitol, if
17:57 you will, with, 0.8 square miles.
17:59 And then you have Babylon with 4 square miles, so that's four
18:03 times the size of Rome.
18:05 And what we have really in this amazing city is some of the most
18:09 incredible architecture.
18:10 We have the city surrounded by eight gates, each named
18:14 after a particular deity.
18:15 The most famous of course is the Ishtar gate, which is now
18:18 in the Vorderasiatisches Museum in Berlin.
18:21 The Euphrates River flowed through the city.
18:24 You also had walls surrounding the city.
18:27 These were double walls.
18:29 The outer wall, 22 feet thick.
18:31 The inner wall, 12 feet thick.
18:33 So, you had just a great polytheistic society, a great
18:39 civilization that was bent on conquering the world,
18:42 and Nebuchadnezzar was really the power and the force
18:46 behind that.
18:47 Doug Batchelor: Daniel explained to the King that Babylon would
18:50 eventually fall as a world power and be replaced by another
18:53 kingdom, one that's represented by the chest and the arms
18:57 of silver.
18:59 Led by King Cyrus in 539 BC, the Medo-Persian Empire
19:04 conquered Babylon in a brilliant military maneuver.
19:08 In one night, the immense city was conquered with its walls
19:12 and gates still intact.
19:14 Even more incredibly, the specifics of this victory
19:18 were all foretold in prophecy over 150 years earlier.
19:24 Michael Hasel: Heroditus tells us the story actually.
19:26 He tells us that, after his horse drowned, Cyrus got furious
19:30 with the river itself and decided to take that river.
19:33 And he had his soldiers dig 540 channels to divert the river
19:37 and to destroy the river from its flow.
19:40 And in doing that, he actually accomplished something that
19:44 would help him conquer the city of Babylon itself.
19:47 Alan Parker: And when the river was diverted, they were able
19:49 to march in underneath the city walls, because the river gates
19:53 had been left open.
19:55 Doug Batchelor: They entered the city, overthrowing
19:57 the world's mightiest nation.
20:00 Alan Parker: And that's what the army did.
20:01 They marched in.
20:02 They were able to open the top gates and totally conquered
20:05 Babylon, which was unthinkable at that time.
20:09 But that's what the prophecy had said would happen and that's
20:11 exactly what happened.
20:14 male announcer: "Thus says the Lord to his anointed: 'To
20:16 Cyrus, whose right hand I have held, to subdue nations
20:20 before him and loose the armor of kings, to open before him
20:24 the double doors so that the gates will not be shut.
20:28 That you may know that I the Lord, who call you by your
20:31 name, am the God of Israel."'
20:34 Alan Parker: One hundred and fifty years in advance,
20:36 Cyrus had been named.
20:38 Here is the Prophet Isaiah looking ahead, and by, we
20:42 believe, divine inspiration, naming the very person who would
20:46 come in and conquer Babylon according to prophecy.
20:49 Michael Hasel: In Isaiah chapter 44, we have this amazing
20:51 prophecy where it says to the rivers, "Be dry."
20:54 "I will dry up your river," says the Lord.
20:56 "And to Cyrus, my anointed, my shepherd, he's the one that's
21:00 going to accomplish this."
21:01 So in this text which dates 150 years before the event, you have
21:06 already Isaiah predicting the very means by which Cyrus
21:11 would take the city of Babylon, which is quite incredible when
21:13 you think about biblical prophecy.
21:16 male announcer: "Who says of Cyrus, 'He is my shepherd,
21:19 and he shall perform all my pleasure,' saying to Jerusalem,
21:23 'You shall be built,' and to the temple, 'Your
21:26 foundation shall be laid.'"
21:29 David Trim: The Persians, they worship one god.
21:32 They are monotheists.
21:34 They have that in common with the Jews and there may well
21:36 be a spark of sympathy there.
21:39 Michael Hasel: With Cyrus and his conquering of Babylon,
21:41 it ushers in the Medo-Persian Empire period, which lasts
21:44 from 539 all the way down to 331.
21:49 Alan Parker: When Medo-Persia came, it was almost as if there
21:52 was a shift.
21:53 They moved from gold to silver.
21:55 Silver became the common currency.
21:58 And while you'd had silver before in Babylon, they didn't
22:00 have much use for it because they had so much gold.
22:03 And silver became the currency that they used for trading
22:05 with other nations, and that became almost the standard way
22:09 of referring to Medo-Persia, was the Silver Empire.
22:13 male announcer: "After thee shall arise another third
22:16 kingdom of brass, which shall bear rule over all the earth."
22:22 Doug Batchelor: All Bible scholars agree that the brass
22:24 kingdom in the image symbolizes Greece.
22:27 They came into power when Alexander the Great conquered
22:30 the Persians at the Battle of Arvella and 331 BC.
22:37 David Trim: Alexander the Great is often described as Greek,
22:40 and strictly speaking that was true.
22:42 Michael Hasel: He had been trained under Aristotle.
22:44 He was a very charismatic young ruler.
22:47 His father, Philip II of Mastodon, had been killed,
22:51 and Alexander assumed power.
22:54 And he immediately began to dream about fulfilling his
22:57 father's goals, and that was to conquer the Persian Empire.
23:01 David Trim: Alexander the great becomes king when he's only 18,
23:04 but he's military prodigy.
23:06 Indeed, even today, Alexander the Great is a byword
23:09 for military genius and military conquest.
23:11 Alan Parker: He would come up to a city and they would say,
23:14 "Why should we surrender to you?"
23:16 And one of the stories is that there was a city right
23:19 on the edge of a cliff and he told his men, "I want you
23:22 to start marching off the cliff to your death in the sea below,"
23:25 and the men obediently started marching off the cliff.
23:28 And Alexander the Great said, "If my men are this willing
23:31 to be obedient to me, there is no way we cannot conquer your
23:35 city."
23:36 And that particular city just surrendered.
23:39 Michael Hasel: He was able to accomplish in a very short
23:41 time what some people are not able to accomplish
23:43 in a lifetime.
23:45 And in a series of campaigns, after he was crowned King
23:48 of Egypt, he continued heading to the east and he began
23:52 to encounter the Persian King, Darius III.
23:57 David Trim: And Alexander doesn't pursue Darius, who flees
23:59 back east towards his heartland.
24:02 Alexander turned south because he wants to occupy the coastal
24:06 lands, what would be Palestine, and then Egypt.
24:11 But to move forward, he has to conquer Tyre.
24:14 male announcer: '"They shall destroy the walls of Tyre
24:16 and break down her towers.
24:18 I will also scrape her dust from her and make her
24:21 like the top of a rock.
24:23 It shall be a place for spreading nets in the midst
24:26 of the sea, for I have spoken,' says the Lord God."
24:30 Doug Batchelor: For over a millennium, beginning
24:31 in 1,500 BC, the Phoenicians were the undisputed naval power
24:36 of the ancient world.
24:38 They created and controlled a vast array of trade ports
24:41 throughout the Mediterranean Sea.
24:44 David Trim: And in fact, the Phoenicians are so known as
24:47 experts that they are brought into the Red Sea ports.
24:51 The Bible describes how Solomon gets mariners from the King
24:54 of Tyre to take his fleets down the Red Sea.
25:00 Doug Batchelor: In 597 BC, the Prophet Ezekiel predicted
25:04 that every building in the city of Tyre would be toppled
25:07 by an invading army.
25:09 In fact, every stone would be thrown into the sea.
25:15 Michael Hasel: Tyre was an amazing city during this
25:17 time.
25:18 It was one of the largest trade cities of that period.
25:21 Alan Parker: And here was this prophecy saying that the city
25:23 would fall.
25:25 Even Alexander the Great it seemed couldn't make it fall.
25:27 He sieged it for seven months, but then he came up with a plan.
25:31 David Trim: So Alexander says, "Right, if they're out to sea,
25:35 I'll just have to take the land to them."
25:38 Alan Parker: And he used the blocks of the old city,
25:41 the big stones, threw them into the sea, and built
25:43 a causeway to be able to overcome the walls of the new
25:47 city where the island was.
25:49 David Trim: And so, then he can bring his army to bear.
25:52 Tyre is stormed, utterly destroyed.
25:55 Alan Parker: That was an exact fulfillment of prophecy because
25:58 prophecy had said that those stones would be cast
26:01 into the sea and become a place where fishing nets were cast
26:04 over.
26:06 That's exactly what happened.
26:08 Doug Batchelor: Keep in mind, the idea that the Greeks would
26:11 rule the world was a very bold prediction.
26:14 Remember that at the time that Daniel's prophecy was given,
26:18 Greece was just a collection of warring tribes with very
26:21 little world influence.
26:23 Greece remained in power 'til about 168 BC, when it was
26:28 conquered by the next world power waiting in the wings.
26:33 male announcer: "The fourth kingdom shall be as strong as
26:35 iron, inasmuch as iron breaks in pieces and shatters
26:39 everything; and like iron that crushes, that kingdom will break
26:43 in pieces and crush all the others."
26:46 Doug Batchelor: Who followed Greece?
26:48 It's an undisputable fact of history that the iron
26:51 monarchy of Rome conquered them and enjoyed supremacy
26:54 for the next 600 years.
26:58 Johnathan Roth: Once iron is introduced, the fundamental
27:01 effect and especially military effect is that the price
27:04 of weapons goes down considerably.
27:06 So, the price of making an iron arrowhead, or an iron spear
27:11 point, or an iron helmet is much less than that of bronze,
27:16 and mainly reason is that bronze contains tin.
27:19 And tin can only be obtained in two places in the ancient
27:22 world, Afghanistan, or what's today Afghanistan, and what's
27:26 today Cornwall in England.
27:27 And trading it made it very expensive, so the Iron Age
27:31 lowered the price of war, which meant armies got bigger.
27:36 Alan Parker: Rome was violent.
27:38 They were ruthless.
27:39 They were determined to conquer everywhere they went and they
27:41 were like iron, crushing everything in its way.
27:46 male announcer: "Kingdoms in Time."
27:48 See what happens next and why you can trust the Bible
27:52 with your life.
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Revised 2022-08-29