There are moments when the world seems to tear the veil between history and prophecy, and Jonathan Cahn’s new work The Dragon’s Prophecy has grabbed the attention of millions by doing just that. Released in September 2024, Cahn’s book argues that ancient patterns in Scripture—woven through the Book of Revelation and other prophetic texts—are reappearing in our day, and that Israel’s modern resurrection is the hinge of something far larger.
Cahn doesn’t mince words: he claims that eerie correspondences point to a deliberate, ancient design now unfolding, and he even connects contemporary events—down to the invasion carried out by Hamas—to patterns he reads in Scripture and ancient history. For those who believe the Bible is more than a quaint moral guide, these are not idle curiosities but urgent warnings that demand attention and spiritual clarity.
Conservative filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza has taken those explosive claims and pushed them into the public square with a documentary project based on Cahn’s book, bringing the prophecy conversation to millions who won’t pick up a dense theological tome. The push to put prophecy on film is exactly the kind of bold cultural work conservative storytellers should be doing—calling America back to the faith and common-sense patriotism our founding depended on.
Glenn Beck’s recent conversation with D’Souza is proof this subject has broken out of the niche and is being discussed on mainstream conservative platforms, where hosts are refusing the liberal media’s reflexive dismissal of anything that smells of religion or American exceptionalism. Those interviews matter because they force plainspoken questions: are we witnessing mere coincidence, or the handwriting of a moral universe pushing back against the lies of secular elites?
Let’s be honest: much of today’s establishment prefers to look the other way. The same cultural institutions that shrugged at attacks on free speech and the sanctity of life now treat prophecy as a caricature, while simultaneously ignoring the brutal reality facing Israel and its defenders. Conservatives should reject that cowardly silence, stand with our ally Israel, and recognize that this moment calls for moral clarity, not smug relativism.
If Cahn and D’Souza are right even in part, this isn’t just entertainment for the spiritually curious; it’s a wake-up call for a nation that has drifted from its roots. Pray, study, and act—support Israel, defend religious freedom, and hold our leaders accountable for protecting Western civilization. Brave storytellers who put these questions on screens are doing work the mainstream won’t, and patriots ought to listen, learn, and prepare.