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Showing posts with label satya yuga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label satya yuga. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2025

The Geometry of These End Times

 


The Geometry of These End Times
Paramendra Kumar Bhagat | www.paramendra.xyz
June 22, 2025

These are the End Times.

In geometry, you first have to agree on the definition of a point—something that has no length, breadth, or height—before you can define a line. A line is the shortest distance between two points.

Why is the Bible considered scripture? Because it contains prophecies. That is a point. Which means, if there is another book—or other books—that also contain prophecies, they too are scripture. And if a book contains prophecies that were fulfilled, but you refuse to acknowledge it as scripture, then your position is not religious or spiritual—it is nationalist.

Prophecies are evidence of God. That there is a Being who is all-knowing, all-powerful, and present everywhere. The one true living God. That God is three persons: the Holy Trinity.

There are also citizens of heaven with enormous powers and vast knowledge—though still finite. They too worship God. The Bible speaks of hundreds of millions of angels in heaven. These are akin to the small-“g” gods and goddesses of the Hindu tradition.

Judaism is not a false religion. The Jews and the Christians worship the same God.

Why did October 7 happen? Because the Jews found the Red Heifer they had long been seeking—in Texas, of all places. They bought it and took it with them. Hamas knew what would follow, because it is written: they would sacrifice the Red Heifer, demolish the mosque, and build the Third Temple. So Hamas launched a preemptive strike—October 7 was their attempt to save the mosque.

Now imagine a scenario where the Jews do proceed with the sacrifice, the mosque is destroyed, and the Third Temple is built. The Bible describes a war in which Israel is attacked by many nations all at once. Is that about to happen?

These are the End Times.

The Hindus are like the Jews—only more so.

The Jews famously rejected Jesus 2,000 years ago, and every year since. Why? Because Jesus did not match their expectations of the Messiah. The Messiah, they believed, would be a king who brings global peace and prosperity. Jesus was not an earthly king. He was homeless. There is still no peace. There is still no prosperity.

When the disciples asked Jesus to teach them how to pray, he gave them the most famous Christian prayer: Thy kingdom come. As in: God, become king of the earth. Prayed in every nation, this is a call for divine rulership in every land.

That means Jews and Christians wait for the same person. Christians should not be upset that Jews do not accept Jesus. The Bible itself prophesies that he will be accepted by the Jews at the Second Coming. Relax.

And how would he be accepted if the world ends the moment he returns? Think about it.

Consider how misleading it would’ve been to assume Jesus would enter the world 2,000 years ago riding a donkey. That prophecy was about his entrance into Jerusalem, not into the world itself. “Coming down from the clouds” could just mean Jesus arriving in your city by airplane. And he’s not alone. Moses is back. John the Baptist is back. Job is back. Thomas is back.

God doesn’t arrive alone. There is a vast team in place across the world.

The work of salvation was accomplished 2,000 years ago. But if that were the only work needed, there would be no need for a Second Coming. That there is one means there’s more to do: to end this age—the worst of the four—and begin the next—the best.

The next age will also be on this earth. That’s how we know the earth won’t end. The world will not end.

The Bible repeatedly refers to “this age.” If we are in this age, then there was one before it, and another will follow. The next has been vividly described in the Book of Isaiah—an age of peace and prosperity across the globe.

So how many ages are there? Are they linear? Or cyclical?

Hinduism is not a false religion, any more than Judaism is. If it were, the Messiah—Lord God, the Holy Father—would not take human birth as a Hindu to end this age and usher in the next. And no, he will not be born in the line of David. That prophecy was fulfilled in Jesus.

To understand the ages, Hinduism is the roadmap. “Hinduism” is a Western term. The correct name is Sanatana Dharma—the eternal religion. It originated in the last Satya Yuga, the best of the four ages. The Holy Spirit descended and taught it directly to his seven disciples—the Sapta Rishis.

Columbus did not “discover” America. That is a Eurocentric narrative. People were already here. Similarly, the idea that human beings began primitive and have only progressed since is incorrect. Humans have never been dumber than in this age—the Kali Yuga, the age of sin that has lasted over 5,000 years. In the next age, humanity’s capacity for spiritual knowledge will increase 100-fold. That is why all religions born in the Kali Yuga will die with it. Primary school is ending. That’s good news.

The Mahabharata is not myth—it is scripture and history from the Dwapar Yuga, the previous age. It contains prophecies. It is unparalleled in literary richness. When characters in the Mahabharata were told about the Kali Yuga, they asked, Can humans really treat each other so terribly?

The Ramayana is scripture from the age before that.

To say you follow Jesus so fervently that you reject the Holy Father is absurd. Jesus said, “The Father is greater than I.” The Jesus of the Second Coming will be like John the Baptist 2,000 years ago.

The Holy Father—Lord God Vishnu, known as Yahweh—has come in human form before. He was Rama, 7,000 years ago, as told in the Ramayana. Before leaving, He said He would return. He came back 2,000 years later as Krishna. He came again 2,500 years ago as the Buddha.

Five thousand years ago, He promised to return to restore righteousness, end this age, and begin the next. He is back. Eleven of the twelve ancient prophecies about Him have already been fulfilled. He has laid out a roadmap for global peace and prosperity. The work has already begun—in Nepal. Nepal is the chosen pilot project country.






Prophecies Are Proof Of God
Why 100 Crores? Funding Stage One Of The Kalkiist Project In Nepal
Free Education And Health Care For All In Nepal By Way Of A Referendum
The Most Awaited Person In Human History Is Here

Prophecies Are Proof Of God
Why 100 Crores? Funding Stage One Of The Kalkiist Project In Nepal
Free Education And Health Care For All In Nepal By Way Of A Referendum
The Most Awaited Person In Human History Is Here

Prophecies Are Proof Of God
Why 100 Crores? Funding Stage One Of The Kalkiist Project In Nepal
Free Education And Health Care For All In Nepal By Way Of A Referendum
The Most Awaited Person In Human History Is Here

Prophecies Are Proof Of God
Why 100 Crores? Funding Stage One Of The Kalkiist Project In Nepal
Free Education And Health Care For All In Nepal By Way Of A Referendum
The Most Awaited Person In Human History Is Here

Prophecies Are Proof Of God
Why 100 Crores? Funding Stage One Of The Kalkiist Project In Nepal
Free Education And Health Care For All In Nepal By Way Of A Referendum
The Most Awaited Person In Human History Is Here

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

The Age of Abundance: AI, Acceleration, and the Prophecies of Tomorrow



The Age of Abundance: AI, Acceleration, and the Prophecies of Tomorrow

We are standing at the edge of a transformation so vast, so rapid, and so deeply foundational that even our most powerful institutions—governments, corporations, and financial systems—are starting to look outdated. 

Think of it this way: America spent over 200 years building its GDP—brick by brick— to $2 until the Internet came along. That changed everything. Within a single decade, the U.S. economy effectively added another “dollar” of value, fueled by the rise of the digital world. That was the Internet wave. After that came mobile, then social, and then crypto.

But now we’re entering an even bigger moment—the AI wave. And AI is not just another technology. It is the technology that accelerates all other technologies. It's not just one revolution. It's ten, unfolding simultaneously—AI, robotics, biotech, quantum computing, Web3, nanotech, space tech, brain-computer interfaces, energy abundance, and synthetic biology. Each is powerful on its own. But their intersections? That’s where the exponential curve turns vertical.

We are entering a moment where traditional metrics—GDP, productivity, profit, labor—begin to break down. They were designed for a world of scarcity. But what happens when scarcity ends? When machines think, work, diagnose, create, learn, and evolve faster than any human system can track? We’re witnessing the breaking of capitalism as we've known it—both its corporate and state-managed versions.

The old tools of governance don’t work in a world where decentralization, intelligence, and abundance are default. Borders blur. Labor becomes optional. Knowledge becomes infinite. The structures of the 19th and 20th centuries—the hierarchical corporation, the centralized nation-state, the fixed factory model of economics—are already crumbling.

In such times, people reach for anchors. For meaning. For truth. And often, for prophecy.

Scriptures from across the world—Vedic, Biblical, Islamic, Taoist, Indigenous—spoke of an Age of Abundance, a golden age, a Satya Yuga, a Messianic era, a time of peace and plenty. For centuries, for millennia, these were treated as metaphor, myth, or moral story. But what if they were also forecasts?

What if the promise of swords turned into ploughshares wasn’t poetic exaggeration, but a literal transition from war-based economies to regenerative ones powered by AI, clean energy, and global cooperation?

What if we’ve been approaching the end of the Age of Iron—the Kali Yuga, the Industrial Age, the Scarcity Era—and we are now crossing into the prophesied dawn of wisdom, abundance, and light?

The signs are here. Not in fire and fury. But in code, computation, and consciousness. We must open our eyes to this convergence, not merely as technologists or economists, but as spiritual beings witnessing prophecy unfold in real time.

To navigate this new epoch, we don’t just need better algorithms. We need deeper alignment—with truth, with each other, and with the eternal wisdom that has always pointed toward unity, justice, peace, and abundance.

The future isn’t coming. It’s arriving.

And scripture may be our best map to make sense of the terrain.



Tuesday, January 07, 2025

Prophecies Can Be Tricky



Prophecies Can Be Tricky

Prophecies have always intrigued humanity. They’re like riddles whispered through time, offering glimpses of the future yet cloaked in ambiguity. The way prophecies are interpreted can lead to vastly different understandings, even among people reading the same texts. Let’s explore this fascinating dynamic with a few examples, starting with one of the most enduring debates in history: the Messiah.

The Messiah: A Tale of Two Interpretations

Jews and Christians both revere the Book of Isaiah, but their interpretations of its messianic prophecies diverge sharply. Christians see Jesus as the fulfillment of these prophecies, pointing to aspects of his life, such as his birth in the line of David and his triumphant entry into Jerusalem on a donkey. To them, Jesus is the Messiah foretold by Isaiah.

Jews, however, have a different perspective. They envision the Messiah as a king who will bring universal peace and prosperity, transforming the world into a harmonious paradise. By their criteria, Jesus—a humble teacher and a “fakir” by their reckoning—did not fit the mold. For them, the Messiah is yet to come.

This divergence highlights a key truth about prophecies: fulfillment often depends on interpretation. Christians point to prophecies Jesus fulfilled, like entering Jerusalem on a donkey. But what if the Jews, in waiting for their Messiah, must now expect someone outside the line of David? Prophecies, it seems, are as much about how they are read as about what they predict.

Donkeys, Airplanes, and Second Comings

One of the most curious prophecies about the Messiah described him arriving in Jerusalem on the back of a donkey. For centuries, scholars pondered its meaning. Today, we understand it as a literal act Jesus performed. But imagine if the prophecy had instead been interpreted as “the Messiah will enter the world riding the back of a donkey.” Would it have changed the narrative around the virgin birth?

Fast forward to the Second Coming of Jesus. Many believe it’s written that Jesus will return by descending from the clouds. What if this prophecy refers not to his mode of entry into the world but his arrival in your city? Perhaps “flying on the clouds” is an ancient way to describe airplanes. How else could someone thousands of years ago convey the idea of modern aviation?

Then there’s the prophecy that “all the world will see him at once.” Today, that’s not just plausible but commonplace. Half the world watched Lionel Messi during the last World Cup—on television and online. The technology exists for the Second Coming to be broadcast globally, ensuring everyone can witness the event simultaneously. Prophecies that seemed impossible centuries ago now align perfectly with current technology.

Media, Messiah, and the Modern Age

Another prophecy states that the Second Coming will be unmistakable. Imagine the level of media coverage if Jesus returned today. When the Pope visits a city, it’s global news. The returned Messiah would command exponentially greater attention. With 24/7 news cycles and instant global communication, his arrival would indeed be unmistakable.

Praying for the Kingdom

For 2,000 years, Christians have recited the Lord’s Prayer, taught by Jesus himself. The prayer addresses God, not Jesus, pleading, “Your kingdom come.” It’s a call for God to establish His rule on Earth.

Interestingly, Hindus have a similar expectation. They await the return of Lord Vishnu in his final incarnation as Kalki, who will end this age and usher in a new one. Previous incarnations of Vishnu—Rama, Krishna, Buddha—each marked pivotal moments in history. Could the age-ending prophecies in Christianity and Hinduism be describing the same event?

The Age to Come

In the Gospel, Jesus speaks of those who blaspheme the Holy Spirit, saying they will not be forgiven “in this age or the age to come.” This implies the current age will end, to be followed by a new one. The Book of Isaiah vividly describes this new age as one of universal peace and prosperity—a golden era where swords are beaten into plowshares.

Silicon Valley visionaries speak of an “Age of Abundance,” where advanced technology eradicates poverty and solves humanity’s greatest challenges. Could this be the age foretold by ancient prophecies? The convergence of spiritual and technological visions suggests that humanity might be on the cusp of something extraordinary.

A Final Thought

Prophecies are tricky because they require interpretation, and interpretation is shaped by context, culture, and belief. What seemed mysterious or impossible to ancient readers might be perfectly logical to us today. As we consider prophecies about the Messiah, the Second Coming, and the age to come, it’s worth asking: are we reading them with the right eyes? Only time will tell.