In the concluding session of his Messianic Prophecy series, Billy Myron reviews Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah’s future kingdom that remain unfulfilled, contrasting them with those already accomplished in Jesus’ first coming (birth in Bethlehem, Davidic lineage, ministry, death, and resurrection).
Key passages highlight the Messiah as a righteous descendant of David who will reign on David’s throne, execute justice, bring everlasting peace, save Judah and Israel, gather the scattered Jewish people to dwell safely in their land, build the Lord’s temple, serve as both king and priest, and establish a global kingdom with no end to its increase. Psalm 72 describes universal dominion where all nations serve him, righteousness flourishes, the needy are delivered, and his name endures forever.
Daniel 7 presents the “Son of Man” receiving everlasting dominion over all peoples after the defeat of earthly kingdoms, including a final blasphemous ruler. Daniel 9 outlines a prophetic timeline of “sevens” (weeks of years): Messiah is “cut off” (dies) after 69 sevens, followed by a gap, then a final seven-year tribulation period involving a covenant confirmed and broken midway with the abomination of desolation.
Jesus in Matthew 24 describes tribulation signs (false messiahs, wars, famines, the abomination triggering flight from Judea), culminating in cosmic disturbances and his visible second coming in glory immediately after the tribulation. Revelation 19–20 depicts Christ’s return at Armageddon to defeat the beast and false prophet, bind Satan for 1,000 years, and inaugurate the millennial kingdom where saints reign with him, transitioning to eternal rule.
Micah 4 emphasizes the Lord gathering afflicted Israel, making the remnant a strong nation, and reigning forever in Zion amid future conflict but ultimate redemption and worldwide dominion.
The speaker concludes that while many prophecies were fulfilled in precise detail at Christ’s first advent, kingdom promises await fulfillment at his second coming after the tribulation, when Israel receives its promised restoration and the Messiah establishes an eternal, righteous rule over the nations.









