Think I will vear off a little and post some interesting things regarding all these 'prophecies' about Trump (that I think he has taken to heart)
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — Lance Wallnau used to be a corporate marketer who privately believed that power lay in prophetic revelation. Then came 2015, and he began sharing a word from God: Donald Trump was “anointed.”
my commentary on the word 'anointed'. That word has been inexcusably overused and thrown around like cheap authentication from God Himself. This anointing is supposed to empower a person to function with God's power through them and with God's choosing. However, what we seem to have are people who believe themselves anointed and able to pass that anointing on or point out the anointing on others.
continuing the article:
Seven years later, prophecy is booming. And for Wallnau, it’s been a busy run-up to the midterm.
In July, Wallnau prayed over Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) before a cheering Atlanta arena audience. By early September, he was at a conference outside Colorado Springs with Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.). And, a few days after that, here he was in the suburbs of Harrisburg, Pa., for GOP gubernatorial candidate
Doug Mastriano, whom he compared to George Washington at Valley Forge.
“Now there’s another Christian colonel who is in charge,” Wallnau told the crowd of hundreds standing in a suburban restaurant parking lot. “They may out-gather, they may outmaneuver, and in my opinion they may know how to out-cheat. But they cannot outflank us if we move as one. … The whole country will be affected by what happens in Pennsylvania.”
All over the country this year, figures like Wallnau, hailing from the right wing of prophetic and charismatic Christianity, have been appearing with candidates as part of a growing U.S. religious phenomenon that emphasizes faith healing, the idea that divine signs and wonders are everywhere, and spiritual warfare.
Longtime watchers of religion in the United States say this rise of prophetic figures is the result of multiple forces. Among them are a collapse of trust in institutional sources of information, the growth of charismatic Christianity and its accompanying media ecosystems, and a Trump presidency that brought in from the fringe spiritual figures long rejected by the political and evangelical establishments.
“For two millennia of church history, people have been claiming to be prophets,” said Matthew Sutton, a Washington State University historian of American religion who has focused on apocalyptic and charismatic Christians. “But it’s a new tactic in the United States for it to be part of waging culture war.”
(you can reads the rest if so inclined (although you might need a free membership to the Washington Post) following the link in blue up at the top)
anyone want to comment on this phenomena? maybe I'll make a separate thread on this...not sure