
Ladies and gentlemen, let’s talk about destiny. Let’s talk about men who walked into fire and emerged unburned–outsiders who became saviors. Today, we have a man who fits that mold.
History repeats itself—not just in events, but in archetypes. Leaders who rise against impossible odds, scorned by the establishment. Yet, these leaders are unwavering in their mission, and often mirror the great figures of scripture.
Donald Trump, whether loved or loathed, fits this mold. Trump isn’t just a politician. He’s a phenomenon. A man who takes bullets—figurative and nearly literal—and keeps marching. They threw everything at him: impeachment, raids, lawfare. Yet here he stands, stronger than ever. His battles, his resilience, and his unshakable confidence evoke biblical champions who defied expectation.
The ancients understood that when a man keeps surviving what should destroy him, it’s not coincidence—it’s providence.
Trump as Job: Tested, Unbroken
Let’s begin with Job. He lost everything—wealth, family, health—yet refused to curse God. His endurance was his triumph.
The Democrats tried mightily to break Trump financially. At one point they tried to confiscate Mar-a-Lago. When most opposition leave family and particularly children alone, Democrats targeted the Trump children. All toll, they costs the Trump family billions.
Trump’s post-2016-presidency has been a modern Joban trial: lawsuits, indictments, relentless media vilification. Yet he stands unbowed. His poll numbers grow, his movement strengthens, and his enemies’ overreach only fuels his resurgence.
Trump Slayed the Giant Goliath
David was a shepherd boy, dismissed by his brothers and underestimated by King Saul. Yet when Goliath mocked Israel, David stepped forward with nothing but a sling and faith. The elites scoffed—until the giant fell.
Trump’s 2016 campaign was his David moment. The political establishment, the media, and the globalist machinery were his Goliath. And did they ever underestimate the man. Twice.
Polls, pundits, and power brokers declared his rise impossible. Yet he marched forward, armed with rhetoric as disruptive as David’s stones, and felled the giant. And like David, his victory only incited greater battles—each one met with the same defiance.
If 2016 was the impossible win, imagine what Democrats thought of Trump’s 2024 prospects after the coup?
How many battles must he win before Leftists see the pattern? A better question is, “When will the Republicans have his back?”
Trump as Joseph: Betrayed by his Brother Republicans, Yet Destined to Rule
Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery. Yet through divine favor, he rose to power in Egypt. When famine struck, it was Joseph—the outcast—who saved the nation.
Trump, too, was “sold out”—by Republican Party elites, by former allies, and by a justice system weaponized against him. Yet at every turn, he survived and thrived. And each time he returned stronger. His policies (tariffs, border security, Middle East peace deals) were vindicated post-presidency, much like Joseph’s wisdom was proven true too late for his doubting brothers.
And the same holds true for Trump in his second term. The attacks continue, even with all the evidence that a higher power undoubtedly intervenes on his behalf. But Trump weathers the storm, even those nobody else sees coming.
Trump as Noah: Building the Ark Before the Storm
Noah preached of a coming flood while the world mocked him. He built an ark despite the laughter and ridicule. Based on Trump’s warnings, one might believe he has some of Noah’s DNA.
The president warned of almost every flood that occurred during the Biden administration. And he’s done the same in his second term. Without Trump’s policies to patch the ark’s leaky holes, it was destined to sink.
Massive debt from insane and frankly traitorous spending, combined with illegal immigration and globalist overreach were allowed. And when the president addressed the idiocy, he and his team were met with scorn. Yet under his leadership, America has seen record-low illegal immigration, massive deportation mostly of the most dangerous of criminals, renewed energy independence, and a reassertion of national sovereignty. As crises mount under new leadership, Trump’s campaign foresight seems prophetic.
Conclusion: The Missing Book
I can’t help but think the Bible is missing a book, perhaps right before Revelation. The Book of Trump.
Scripture is full of flawed men chosen for divine purposes. Trump, imperfect yet undeniably impactful, fits the pattern. The question isn’t whether he’s a saint—it’s whether his battles align with a greater story.
How many more victories must he secure before the world acknowledges what his followers already see? Perhaps history—or scripture—will vindicate him in time.
Food for thought: What if we’re witnessing prophecy in real time?