I have always wondered why we as Catholics don’t speak much about biblical prophecy. Why is that?
I used to be Protestant, and I think I can say there’s a stronger sense of judgement in Protestant circles. Or at least the circles I moved in.
Secondly they “only” refer to the Bible, and don’t have a strong regard for tradition, and of course people are free to come up with their own interpretations. This means that quite often there is some topical rumour going the rounds - Bankcard as the mark of the Beast, the Toronto Blessing as demonically caused, a zillion guesses as to who the anti-Christ is etc. You’ll have conservative Protestants claiming Charismatics are of the devil, and vice versa. Mind you, I’ve seen some right wing Catholics go pretty close to this attitude regarding their more liberal counterparts, and probably vice versa.
Third, I think the continued reception of the Eucharist has a stabilising effect.
Fourth, much of the Protestant literature (in the West anyway) comes from the USA, so American Protestant ideas tend to dominate discussion even in places like Australia. If I walked into a Protestant bookshop over here, it would be a fair assumption that at least 80% of the titles would originate in the USA. And it would probably hold for a Catholic bookshop as well.
Yet as my old pastor used to say, he thought a lot of American Eschatology (“last days theology”) is a “bit weird”. He thought the American Civil War had a devastating effect on a religious society, and thought a lot of the more outlandish theories could be traced back to that event.
Having said all that, I had the experience myself of the above mentioned pastor being prophetic himself. I found that if he said something, it nearly always happened. It might have taken some years, but it took place at some stage eg. a comment not long after the First Gulf War, probably around 1991 - “I think there’ll be a second Gulf War. I think the Americans will have had enough of him (Saddam Hussein) and they’ll get rid of him. But I think they’ll lose a** few **men the next time.” And the way he said “few” it was obvious he meant more than a few.
Result - Second Gulf War started 12 years later in 2003, the Americans got rid of Saddam
Hussein in 2006, and they lost nearly 5000 men, “more than a few”, compared to the
“DoD … reports of 148 US battle-related deaths (35 to friendly fire), with one pilot listed as MIA. A further 145 Americans died in non-combat accidents.”
for the first Gulf War (from Wikipedia).
And this wasn’t an isolated prediction of his either. He also thought a particular American politician might be the anti-Christ,and nominated a particular Australian politician as our “king” - one of the ten kings. His additional comment was “I don’t see all these things happening till he’s in his seventies.” The Australian politician he nominated will turn 73 this year (the pastor died in 1992, twenty years ago), so if he was right, then we’re in for an interesting few years, as there’s only seven left till the political figure in question turns 80.
He also predicted an African-American president by the way. Yet Obama was not the man he mentioned as the potential anti-Christ.
So as a former Protestant, I wear two shoes. I’ve got some respect for some of their prophetic utterances, depending on who is doing the predicting (I expect them to have an honest track record before I give them any credence), but I also have the benefit of the stabilising effect of the Catholic Church.
Mind you, I think we’re living in deeply troubled times.