Brandon Biggs False Prophet
If Brandon Biggs False Prophet is a true statement, then many people will respond with a question: if Brandon Biggs is a false prophet, then how did he predict the attempted Trump assassination? I will answer that question, but first, for the benefit of those who do not know about Brandon Biggs, I will give the backstory.
Biggs, who fancies himself a prophet, predicted there would be an assassination attempt upon Trump and that the bullet would go by his ear. He posted his prediction on YouTube before the assassination attempt on July 13th, 2024. This seemingly accurate prediction has skyrocketed Biggs into fame and fortune.
How did Brandon Biggs do it?
There are two answers. The first is that we live in the end times when Jesus said spiritual deception would be rampant. During the coming Tribulation we read, “The coming of the lawless one is by the activity of Satan with all power and false signs and wonders.” (2nd Thessalonians 2:9). We also read that “the mystery of lawlessness is already at work.” (2nd Thessalonians 2:7) As we approach nearer to that time, we can expect false prophets to manifest “lying wonders.”
The second answer is that Biggs’ prediction was enormously inaccurate. He said the bullet would miss him. It did not. He was wounded. He said the near miss would break his eardrum. That didn’t happen. He said it would result in Trump immediately falling to his knees and getting saved. Trump did not fall to his knees. He ducked down and laid flat as he was trained and was then covered by Secret Service agents. Furthermore, Trump professed faith in Christ long ago, so no, Trump did not get saved on July 13th.
Easy Peasy Prophecy
Biggs prediction was an easy one to make. With the Democratic Party trying to Jail Trump for life, with Hollywood elites saying they wish he would be murdered, and with prominent Democrats claiming Trump is a “threat to democracy” and an “existential threat to America,” it is only a common-sense good guess that this dangerous rhetoric will get some crazy unstable individual to come out and try to be a hero and “save America” by killing Trump. Biggs had to have known this “prophecy” had a fair likelihood of coming to pass, and if it didn’t, he could always say it just hadn’t happened yet, and if Trump was killed, he could just say it was because people didn’t listen to him and pray enough for Trump.
The For Profit Prophet
Brandon Biggs has quite a racket going. His business is his monetized YouTube channel, with 353,000 subscribers that has links to PayPal, Venmo, and Cash.App where people can donate money to his “ministry.” For years he has been making prophecies about politics, world events, investments, and end-time disaster scenarios.
His modus operandi is to make hundreds of predictions. Many of these do not come to pass. Other predictions he makes are events that could have been easily guessed by simply watching the news. He makes so many predictions he can’t help but have some of his guesses be right. He then reposts these fulfilled predictions and brags about how right he was, saying, “I told you this would happen!” The ones that don’t happen, he simply deletes from his YouTube channel after a time.
According to Brandon Biggs, angels, and even Jesus Himself repeatedly appear to him in person to teach him the best investments to make. He then passes this information along to his followers. Many people have believed him wholeheartedly, sold their homes, emptied their retirement savings and invested their money where Biggs said they could be made rich, and then lost everything when those investments went south. Biggs, has literally destroyed lives, yet he continues on, advising his followers on what cryptocurrency to buy, based, supposedly, upon what Jesus has told him.
Brandon Biggs False Prophet
Any Christian who has read the New Testament knows that Jesus did not come to teach get-rich-quick schemes. Rather, he warned about the dangers of wanting to be rich. Jesus said:
“Take care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” (Luke 12:15)
“For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, but loses his soul?” (Matthew 16:26
And the Apostle Paul warned:
“For the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil. By craving it, some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many sorrows.” (1 Timothy 6:10)
If a “Jesus” appears to Brandon Biggs to share investment strategies, it is not the Jesus of the Bible, but rather it is another Jesus appearing “as an angel of light.”
“And no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light.” (2nd Corinthians 11:14)
Brandon Biggs False Prophet
The tell-tale sign that shows Biggs is a false prophet is easily discernible by the focus on his ministry. His videos are not about learning to be humble, loving, and how to draw near to Jesus Christ. They are all about him, how he hears from God, and that you should listen to him. His emphasis is on how to get rich by following him. He has never made anyone rich, except himself, and it must be said with emphasis: Getting rich is not the focus of the Gospel. The fact that he misses the whole point of Christianity is the most telling proof that Brandon Biggs is a false prophet.
The following video by Calvary Chapel minister Mike Winger is an excellent review of Brandon Biggs and his false prophesies.