
Imagine two people having a conversation.
Communication between them does not happen through words alone —
but also through expression, tone, every pause, and every breath.
Even in silence, there is meaning.
So it is with God.
The Bible is the voice of God in our language;
it translates what is eternal into words we can understand.
But there is something beyond the letters:
the expression of God, the intonation of the Creator,
the breath of His soul in the universe.
He speaks through the Word,
but also through the order of things, the rhythm of time, and the beauty of the heavens.
And to hear this voice in its fullness,
we must learn to see the expression of God —
not only read what He has said,
but perceive what He is saying now.
God has never been silent.
It was man who fell silent.
And the understanding of prophecy is only born when all the voices of God — on Earth and in the Heavens — speak the same truth.

Before man existed, creation was already speaking.The mountains declare stability, the sea reveals power, the wind whispers life. Nature is the silent language of God, always pointing to His care and majesty.
“Since the creation of the world, God’s invisible attributes… have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made.” – Romans 1:20

God speaks through events.
Every empire, every change, every cycle carries a purpose that points to the fulfillment of time.
The prophets saw His movement not only in miracles, but also in decrees, wars, and kingdoms.
“The Most High rules over the kingdom of men and gives it to whom He will.” – Daniel 4:17

The heavens are God’s prophetic clock.
Planets, moons, and constellations are not random — they are markers of divine time, announcing the fulfillment of promises.
Those who observe the firmament with eyes of faith see the Creator’s plan unfolding.
“There will be signs in the sun, in the moon, and in the stars…” – Luke 21:25

The first voice of God was written.
Every verse is an echo of the Creator’s heart, revealing who He is and what He expects from us.
The Bible is not merely history — it is the living Word, which continues to speak to those who read it with faith.
“All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for rebuking, for correcting and for training in righteousness.” – 2 Timothy 3:16

God also speaks through reason.
The order of the universe, the mathematics of time, and the precision of prophecy reveal a divine mind behind everything.
True faith does not contradict logic — it completes it.
“Come now, let us reason together, says the Lord.” – Isaiah 1:18
Not all prophecies were given with the same level of clarity.
Some are direct, revealed in simple words and exact dates.
Others are implicit, hidden in symbols, parables, and events that would only make sense at the right time.
Direct prophecies are those in which God speaks plainly, using literal, straightforward language that is easy to understand — usually accompanied by names, places, and specific timeframes.
They are promises and warnings that can be understood through a simple reading of the text, without relying on symbols or enigmas.
“But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah,
out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel.” – Mic 5:2
A literal prophecy fulfilled when Jesus was born in Bethlehem (Mt 2:1).
“When seventy years are completed for Babylon, I will come to you and fulfill my good promise
to bring you back to this place.” – Jer 29:10
A clear prophecy. Daniel himself understood the time of deliverance by reading this prophecy (Dn 9:2).
“Not one stone here will be left on another; every one will be thrown down.” – Mt 24:2
Jesus spoke literally about the siege and destruction of the Temple in 70 A.D.
Implicit prophecies are encoded in symbols, metaphors, or events.
They are no less true — they simply require spiritual discernment and an understanding of context (historical, cultural, and celestial) to be understood. It is the kind of language that “the wise will understand” (Dn 12:10).

When Judas threw the coins into the temple, it was not merely an act of betrayal —
it was the exact fulfillment of a silent prophecy written centuries earlier.
“And they weighed out as my wages thirty pieces of silver.” – Zc 11:13
And he said, “Throw it to the potter — the handsome price at which they valued me.”
Here, the local event — everything happened without an explicit statement about Judas —
was God’s symbolic language, fulfilled in action.

Jesus could have chosen any prophet as a sign of His resurrection.
But He chose Jonah — a man swallowed by a great fish, disappearing for three days and three nights.
“For just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish,
so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.” – Mt 12:40
Jonah did not know it, but his own experience was a living parable of the Messiah.
The prophecy was hidden within the story, not in direct words.

When Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, that gesture seemed merely a symbolic remedy for the afflicted.
But Jesus revealed its true meaning centuries later:
“Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” – Jn 3:14
The image of the serpent — a symbol of evil — was used by God to announce victory over the very poison of sin.

The Bible is written on two levels: the visible and the eternal.
What we see on earth — temples, feasts, kings, sacrifices — is only the shadow of something far greater in the heavenly realm.
“These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.” – Col 2:17
From the beginning, God taught His people through figures, symbols, and rhythms.
Each gesture, each custom, each date marked on the calendar of Israel was a prophetic rehearsal —
a representation anticipating the reality that would be fully manifested in Christ.
The shadow is the model, the rehearsal, the echo before the voice.
The fulfillment is the light that reveals what the shadow was pointing to.
If the shadows point to a future reality,
then they cannot be abstract.
They must manifest within time.
And that is exactly what happens in the biblical feasts.
The feasts established in the Torah were not merely memorials.
They were prophetic markers.
Each one carried a shadow —
and each shadow found its fulfillment.
The death of Jesus did not happen on just any day.
It happened at Passover.
Even after the death of Jesus, the events that followed also did not occur on random days.
The resurrection occurred on the day of Firstfruits, and the outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost.
The central events continued to follow the same calendar.
The pattern does not end at the cross.
It continues.
Fulfillment did not abolish the shadow.
It revealed its meaning.
The feasts were not isolated events.
They were a calendar.
A calendar that marked the time of fulfillment.
The upcoming sacred feasts point to a sequence:
If Passover and Pentecost were fulfilled with precision,
what can be said about the feasts that still remain?

It is from this understanding — of seeking God while recognizing His work in every layer of reality — that we invite you to be part of the Prophecy in the Stars family.
A platform that connects history, the heavens, and Scripture, revealing the logic by which God governs time — pointing to the return of Jesus.
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