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Pastor David Jeremiah Argues COVID-19 Is 'Probably' Not a Sign of the End Times

Pastor David Jeremiah Argues COVID-19 Is 'Probably' Not a Sign of the End Times

In a message on Sunday, Pastor David Jeremiah questioned the biblical implications of COVID-19 as a sign of biblical prophecy.
“Is there a connection between COVID-19 and the End Times?” Jeremiah, pastor of Shadow Mountain Community Church in El Cajon, California, asked in his Sunday sermon, according to The Christian Post.
“Are we living in the last days before the return of Jesus Christ?” he questioned.
“Is all that is happening to us at this moment a sign that the world is coming to an end? How do we know if the coronavirus is a sign?”
The founder of Turning Point Radio and Television Ministries defined a “biblical sign” as an “event or a symbol or an object or a place, or a person whose existence indicates something important on God's plan for the future.”
While he affirmed Jesus' words of future signs, Jeremiah also acknowledged that Jesus said no one knows the “day or hour” of His return.
“If someone tells you they know when Jesus is coming back,” he said, “you can tell them absolutely that’s not possible.”
Jeremiah then points to six signs indicated by Jesus to determine “if we’re in that time.”
The signs include deception by false Christs, disputes and warfare among nations, deliverance of believers to tribulation, the defection of false believers and the declaration of the Gospel to the whole world.
“Is this a sign of the Second Coming of Christ? I cannot say with any sense of certainty that it is. But neither can I say with any certainty that it is not. It could be the early evidence of number three on Jesus' sign list, the coming of pestilence,” Jeremiah urged.
Jesus refers to what will happen at the end of the age as a “pestilence” (Luke 21:11).
According to Merriam Webster, pestilence is defined as a  “contagion or infectious epidemic that is virulent and devastating.”
“That's a pretty good description of what's going on right now,” Jeremiah said.
“Jesus said this pestilence would arrive like ‘birth pains,’” he continued. “This means that it will increase in frequency and intensity in the time leading up to His return.”
He added that increased future outbreaks will “impact more people, and be more deadly. This is what the coronavirus threatens to do.”
However, Jeremiah clarified that COVID-19 is “probably” not the pestilence in the Bible because it does not “perfectly qualify as a prophetic sign.”
“I could not stand here and say to you and have any confidence in saying that this is the fulfillment of number three on Jesus sign list of Matthew 24,” the pastor asserted. “But it surely is a picture of it, isn't it? It surely does remind us that such signs exist, and such things will happen.”
COVID-19 serves as a reminder of “the vulnerability of everyone; the credibility of the Bible; the uncertainty of life; the scarcity of hope; and finally, the sufficiency of Jesus.”
“Jesus doesn't just overcome the event. He overcomes the environment where the event happens,” he explained.
“In these challenging days, we cannot forget what Jesus told us in 2nd Corinthians 12:9, that His grace is sufficient for us. You will find that out during these days, if you haven't found it out already. The sufficiency of Jesus Christ for those who have put their trust in Him will be on display everywhere,” Jeremiah added.
He concluded, “How uncertain and how precious are our days? I hope we can all use some of this required quiet time to reflect on our lives and give thanks for God’s grace.”
In an interview with Megan West of My Faith Votes on Monday, Jeremiah encouraged that “God is a breath away,” amid anxiety and uncertainty.
 “There aren’t any surprises for God.” he continued. “He didn’t get surprised by any of this.”
Jeremiah also stressed the importance of controlling one’s mental input such as getting into God’s Word, while keeping oneself informed with “one condensed report a day instead of inundating oneself with negativity.”
“This is not the end of the world. Step back, take a deep breath, and get into the Word of God and be reminded that God is in control,” he said.
When tempted to focus on the negative, the pastor recommended a positive outlook and “take a moment and count our blessings and ask God to hear our gratitude for all that He does for us.”
“I want to encourage everybody to not let fear become a greater problem than the coronavirus, but trust God,” he concluded. “The corona virus is not a big deal to God. He’s able to control this and take in, and we’re going to come through this better than we were when we came in. In the meantime, we have to be calm and ask Him to give us peace.”

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