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Daily Radio Program for Chuck Missler

Episode for Tuesday April 21st The Prophets to the Southern Kingdom: Habakkuk

Daily Radio Program for Chuck Missler

Chuck Missler

Religion & Spirituality

4.9756 Ratings

🗓️ 20 April 2026

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Prophets to the Southern Kingdom is Chuck's commentary on the books of Joel, Micah, Zephaniah, and Habakkuk. The Prophets to the Southern Kingdom spoke many promises of Israel's return to the land, Christ's second coming and the overall time line from Babylon all the way through the Millennium. In a time of great turmoil, these men focused on the hope of the coming Messiah and His Kingdom. The book of Joel is a neglected book among Bible scholars. It's an important book because it records Israel's place in God's program: from Babylon all the way through the Millennium. Micah's message was heeded, repentance followed, and disaster was postponed for a century. Here was a prophet that changed history! One man can make a difference. Both Zephaniah and Jeremiah prophesied to a politically prospering people of coming judgment. Habakkuk means to embrace. Habakkuk's main theme is God's consistency with Himself in view of permitted evil. Why do bad things happen to good people? Habakkuk is among the last of the minor prophets to preach in Judah before the Babylonian captivity. This study contains 13 hours of verse by verse teachings. Copyright © 10-01-2010

Transcript

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0:00.0

66-60.

0:02.0

Your future lies in 6640.

0:07.0

66 books by 40 authors, and yet we now discover it's an integrated message system from outside our time domain.

0:17.0

Welcome to 6640, the ministry outreach of Koinania House and Koinnea Institute.

0:23.6

Today's Bible teacher is Chuck Missler, connecting the Bible to your life and the world around you.

0:29.4

In today's study, Chuck continues his teaching on the book of Habakkuk.

0:36.8

Music Most of our social changes are brought about by court decision, not laws voted on.

0:51.3

Bussing, affirmative action, elevation and promotion of sexual perversion,

0:56.0

all those things derive from our court processes, not from the legislature. That's a violation

1:01.5

of the separation of powers actually, and on and on. Have you ever wondered why governments

1:06.4

always seem to tend toward corruption? As a system's engineer, I never understood that until I got this

1:12.7

diagram I'm about to show you. I didn't understand. I realized it, and yet I don't understand why.

1:18.1

Why do governments tend to get corrupt? Why are we surprised? Governments have always loved crises.

1:25.6

Why? Well, crises provide the rationale for two things. Increasing budgets and

1:30.6

bureaucracies, obviously, and also for subjugating the liberties of the population. Every time

1:36.1

your liberties are lost, it's always some very worthwhile banner. It's to solve some apparent

1:41.7

crisis. We've got to institute these things. Okay. See, in dictatorships,

1:48.8

dictators understand this. They always create external crises to consolidate their internal powers.

1:55.6

When a dictator comes over, he's got to create a crisis to consolidate his own hold on what's going on.

2:00.3

Okay.

2:09.9

Now, in our country, we've long learned that social crises work just as well as military ones.

2:12.5

The war on poverty, whatever.

...

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