They never believed the boy when it mattered. That's the tragedy of the classic fable of the boy who cried wolf. A shepherd lad gets bored watching his flock and decides to have some fun at the villagers' expense. He screams "Wolf! Wolf!" and when the gullible townspeople come running, they find nothing. Just a laughing boy who tricked them.

He pulls the same stunt again. The villagers get angry but go back to their business. Then one fateful day, a real wolf shows up. The boy cries out "Wolf! Wolf!" but this time, nobody comes. They've heard it too many times before. They don't believe him anymore. The wolf proceeds to feast on the sheep - and possibly the boy himself, depending on the version you read.

But what if the boy was telling the truth all along? What if the "wolf" he was warning about was a far more sinister threat than a simple predator? A threat hiding in plain sight, operating through a carefully controlled narrative to erode our trust in the very idea of truth itself?

The parallels to biblical prophecy are chilling. For centuries, the church has taught this children's story as a simple lesson about the dangers of lying. But when you peel back the layers, you start to see a much darker picture - one that exposes an agenda to dull our senses to the very real "wolves" circling our flock.

These "wolves" come in many forms. Some wear the mask of politics, manipulating world events to fulfill a twisted eschatological agenda. Others cloak themselves in the trappings of science and technology, using things like brain chips and digital currency to tighten the noose of control. And of course, there are the false prophets - wolves in sheep's clothing who pervert the gospel for their own sinister ends.

The boy may have been right all along. But his cries fell on deaf ears, buried beneath a carefully crafted narrative that conditions us to dismiss even the most dire warnings. Now, as the final act of this cosmic drama unfolds, the wolves are closing in. The only question is: will we have the courage to believe the boy this time?

"The truth doesn't hide. It waits for those brave enough to look."

The Wise Wolf