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Ezekiel 3839 have been mentioned here more times than I can remember. Hopefully, at least once as a reader of ACP, those two Bible chapters have been read. Slowly. Prayerfully. Discerned well. Believed. And then wisdom and knowledge have entered in [which comes better upon more than a one reading and a cursory study of those two Bible chapters], Biblical wisdom and knowledge bestowed by the Holy Spirit to see, hear, and understand the events taking place daily.

If this does not describe you, dear reader, well, it’s time to become like the reader described in the paragraph above.

It would be greatly beneficial if also reading, prayerfully, slowly, while asking the Holy Spirit for discernment and wisdom to read Revelation 19, and the whole Holy Bible. If there is time to do so before something happens to keep that from happening.

Possible circumstances unable to read the whole Holy Bible:

  1. Jesus, Yeshua, comes to gather His own to Himself and removes all truly born-again believers from this earth. And if one, well, you’re going to heaven. If not one? Well, you’re going to experience the worst period of world history ever. Beyond imagination. You’ll need to read the Holy Bible to begin to understand.
  2. You die before you’re able to finish reading the whole Holy Bible. A wonderful movement in eternity if a born again believer. Wow, the most horrific thing if you died unbelieving, not born again, not faithfully believing and obeying the LORD Jesus Christ. An eternity in hell is yours.

Those are the only two possible circumstances keeping a person from reading the whole Holy Bible. Number two encompasses unbelief, so there is no interest in pursuing God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, and learning about God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, and salvation, forgiveness, grace, what Jesus did in coming to earth fully, truly God, fully truly a man to go willingly to the tree of shame, to conquer death. To forgive sin, all sin, of those who would turn from the darkness, the rebellion, the world, and see Him, hear Him, love Him, seek Him, and allow Him to enter in.

Ezekiel 3839  are going to happen. Exactly as written in God’s inerrant, infallible, unchangeable, eternal, living, and active word.

Everything has been and is being put in place for just such. Make no mistake. Do not fluff this off. Scoff, deny, or hide.

No denial, no delusion will alter reality, the history coming, or one word from the Word of God.

Read on…

Ken Pullen, Tuesday, April 14th, 2026

 

 

Turkey Threatens to Invade Israel – A Prophetic Storm Is Brewing

 

April 13, 2026

By PNW Staff

Reprinted from Prophecy News Watch

 

The words were not whispered. They were not vague. They were not misunderstood. In a moment that sent shockwaves through geopolitical circles, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan stood before an international audience in Istanbul and issued one of the most direct threats yet against Israel: “There is nothing to prevent us from doing it.”

That “it,” as he made unmistakably clear, was military intervention–an invasion.

For years, rhetoric between Turkey and Israel has fluctuated between tense and hostile. But this was different. This was not merely criticism. This was not diplomatic posturing. This was a sitting leader of a NATO member openly invoking military action against a U.S.-backed ally–and doing so while referencing past Turkish military interventions as precedent.

A Threat That Crosses a Line

Speaking at the International Asia-Political Parties Conference, Erdoğan drew direct comparisons between Israel and previous theaters where Turkey projected power. He pointed to operations in Libya and the Nagorno-Karabakh, declaring: “We will do the same to them.”

That statement alone would have been enough to spark alarm. But Erdoğan went further–launching a personal and inflammatory attack against Benjamin Netanyahu, accusing him of being “blinded by blood and hatred” and running what he described as a “blood-stained genocide network.”

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry escalated even more, labeling Netanyahu “the Hitler of our time”-a comparison that all but ensures diplomatic relations will remain deeply fractured, if not beyond repair.

The rhetoric was matched with legal escalation. A Turkish court has reportedly issued indictments against Netanyahu and dozens of Israeli officials tied to the interception of a Gaza-bound flotilla–seeking extreme cumulative prison sentences. Symbolic or not, it underscores a broader shift: Turkey is no longer content with verbal opposition–it is building a narrative framework for confrontation.

Israel, for its part, did not stay silent. Netanyahu fired back, accusing Erdoğan of enabling Iran’s terror network while brutalizing his own Kurdish population. Other Israeli leaders went further still, describing Erdoğan as a power-hungry authoritarian clinging to imperial fantasies.

The result? Not just tension–but open hostility, with both sides speaking as if conflict is no longer unthinkable.

The Reality: More Talk Than Action–For Now

Let’s be clear. A Turkish invasion of Israel is highly unlikely in the near term. The geopolitical, military, and strategic consequences would be catastrophic. Israel is widely understood to be a nuclear-armed state with overwhelming military capabilities and deep backing from the United States.

For Turkey–a NATO member–to initiate such a conflict would not just be risky. It would be existential.

But dismissing Erdoğan’s words as mere bluster would be a mistake.

Because rhetoric like this does not emerge in a vacuum, it reflects a mindset. It signals direction. And increasingly, it reveals ambition.

Turkey’s Quiet Expansion Across the Region

While the headlines focus on fiery speeches, the more consequential story has been unfolding quietly over the past several years: Turkey’s steady and strategic expansion of influence across the Middle East and beyond.

In Syria, Ankara has entrenched itself militarily and politically, backing opposition factions and maintaining a significant troop presence in the north. In Libya, Turkish intervention reshaped the balance of power, giving Ankara long-term influence in a country that sits at the crossroads of Africa, Europe, and the Mediterranean.

Beyond those flashpoints, Turkey has extended its reach into Somalia, Qatar, and northern Iraq–building military bases, forging economic ties, and positioning itself as a dominant Sunni power broker in a region long shaped by Iran’s Shia axis.

This is not accidental. It is doctrine.

Often referred to as a neo-Ottoman strategy, Turkey’s approach blends military force, political alliances, economic investment, and ideological messaging. Unlike Iran’s reliance on proxy militias, Turkey is building state-level partnerships and embedding itself into the infrastructure of multiple regions.

And now, as Iran’s influence has been weakened in recent conflicts, a vacuum is forming.

Turkey appears more than ready to fill it.

A Dangerous Alignment Taking Shape

Here is where the situation becomes even more concerning.

Despite competing interests, Turkey has increasingly found itself aligned–at least tactically–with powers like Iran and Russia in key regional theaters. In Libya, Turkish influence has grown significantly, placing it in a strategic position along the Mediterranean with access to routes and leverage that extend toward Israel’s sphere of interest.

This is not a formal alliance in the traditional sense–but it is a convergence of interests. And in geopolitics, that can be just as powerful.

The idea of Turkey, Iran, and Russia operating in overlapping spheres–while Turkey simultaneously expands into places like Libya–should not be ignored. It represents a shifting balance of power that could redefine the region in the years ahead.

Words Today–War Tomorrow?

Right now, Erdoğan’s threats are just that–words. Dangerous, inflammatory, and destabilizing words–but still words.

Yet history has shown that rhetoric often precedes reality.

Leaders rarely wake up one day and act completely out of character. They move in the direction they have been signaling all along.

And what Erdoğan is signaling is unmistakable: a vision of Turkey as a dominant regional power, unafraid to confront Israel, willing to challenge the West, and increasingly comfortable projecting force far beyond its borders.

For many observers, this is where geopolitics ends. But for others–particularly those familiar with biblical prophecy–it may be where another layer of meaning begins.

In Ezekiel 38, an ancient prophecy describes a future coalition of nations that will come against Israel in the latter days. Among the names listed is “Magog,” along with allies such as Persia–widely understood to represent modern-day Iran–and other regions that many scholars have long associated with areas that include parts of modern Turkey. The passage outlines not just hostility, but a coordinated invasion from the north–an event that has intrigued theologians and geopolitical analysts alike for generations.

For decades, such alignments seemed distant, even unlikely. But today, the landscape is shifting. Turkey is expanding. Iran may be significantly weakened, but it still possesses a large army and has already shown how fast it can rebuild. Russia is increasingly active in the region despite being dragged down in Ukraine. Libya–now heavily influenced by Ankara–adds another layer to a growing web of strategic positioning.

The current geopolitical situations would suggest the Ezekiel 38 scenario is years away, but the stage is slowly taking shape.

For now, the world may dismiss Erdoğan’s statements as political theater. And perhaps, in the immediate sense, that’s all they are.

But theater has a way of becoming reality when the script has been rehearsed long enough.

Because when a leader says there is “nothing to prevent” an invasion, the real question is no longer if it happens tomorrow.

It’s whether the mindset behind those words is aligning–step by step–with something far bigger than politics alone.