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Reggie Kelly

Reggie Kelly (N/A–N/A) is an American preacher and Bible teacher known for his deep engagement with biblical prophecy and his association with the late Art Katz, a prominent figure in the Messianic and prophetic Christian communities. Born and raised in the United States—specific details about his early life, such as birth date and location, are not widely documented—Kelly experienced a transformative conversion in 1969 during the Jesus People movement of the 1960s. That same year, he married his wife, Connie, who followed him in baptism and ministry, and together they raised six children, now with twelve grandchildren and one great-grandchild. His voracious hunger for God and truth led him to meet Art Katz in 1975 at the first Holy Convocation meetings in Minnesota, initiating a 25-year partnership that included accompanying Katz on numerous international ministry trips. Kelly’s preaching career is marked by his role as a teaching elder at Ben Israel, a ministry retreat in Minnesota founded by Katz, where he served for twelve years until Katz’s death in 2007. His ministry focuses heavily on the "mystery of Israel" and the church’s role in end-times eschatology, themes he explores through weekly fellowships on the God’s Foretold Work YouTube channel, co-hosted with Sam Parsons since around 2020. Kelly has been a key participant in prophetic schools and convocations, with recordings preserved on platforms like SermonIndex, and he co-produces the podcast The Glory of the Story, emphasizing God’s redemptive narrative through history. Living in Laporte, Minnesota, he continues to preach and teach, leaving a legacy as a thoughtful expositor of Scripture, particularly within prophetic and Messianic circles, though he is not affiliated with the current Ben Israel Fellowship.
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Reggie Kelly preaches on the potential role of war in the region as a catalyst for fulfilling prophecy, particularly in relation to Israel's sovereignty over Jerusalem. He emphasizes the likelihood of a war leading to a non-compromising stance by Israel, potentially triggering anti-Semitism and necessitating orthodox control over holy places. Reggie warns against mistaking current events as the final world tribulation, highlighting the importance of understanding the detailed sequence of events outlined in Daniel's prophecy before the ultimate desolations and the return of the Messiah.
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Avoiding the False Alarms of Prophetic Speculation
Certainly any war in the region has always the potential of acting as a catalyst bringing about the changes that prophecy requires. We certainly do expect a great transforming event sufficient to change and dramatically realign the political landscape of Israel at some soon point, and this may well (even probably) take the form of war. We may infer from scripture that events will move Israel into a posture of non-compromise concerning its absolute sovereignty over the city of Jerusalem. We can think of nothing more likely to produce such an inflexible stance than a war that threatens the nation’s very survival, demonstrating again the futility of peace initiatives that imperil national defense. Jewish intransigence over the Jerusalem question, the ultimate threat to world peace, is the most probable source for the final “flood” of anti-Semitism that will sweep over the world. Also, scripture implies the necessity of orthodox control over the holy places of Jerusalem (Isa. 63:18; 64:11; Dan. 8:13; 9:26; 11:31; 12:11; Matt. 24:15 et al), and the imposition of strict Sabbath observance impeding flight out of the region of “Judea” (compare Matt. 24:20; compare also Isa. 28:14-22 with Dan. 9:27; 11:21-12:13; Zech 12:2). This we believe and expect. However, in no way is it possible that the current threat of war with Iraq can be the final world tribulation precipitated by the anti-Christ. There is just too much in prophecy that describes, in definite detail, a certain sequence of precursory events and requisite antecedent conditions that do not match the current scene; not least a deceptive peace arrangement (“covenant with death and hell” Isa 28:15,18) that relaxes Israel’s guard (Ezek. 38:8,11; 1 Thess. 5:1-3), and opens the way for the restoration of the appurtenances of the “holy covenant” (temple, sacrifice etc. (Dan 9:27; 11:31; 12:11; 2 Thess. 2:4 et al). This all goes to show how easy it is to “jump the gun” when the basic outline of Daniel’s prophecy is neglected or misinterpreted. According to Dan. 11:23-30, there is a whole detailed sequence of regional conflicts, stratagems, and events that occur after the “league” (false peace), but before the desecrating sacrilege that initiates the period of Israel’s final desolations (the so-called “footsteps of Messiah” of rabbinic eschatology). This foregoing sequence of events is, regrettably, by an impossible exegesis, attributed to the actions of Antiochus Epiphanes in the 2nd century B.C. He was indeed a type that remarkably followed the pattern of the final oppressor, but as Keil and a host of other of the best exegetes will point out, there is a great deal of unaccounted non-fulfillment that fails to match in adequate detail the actions of the Syrian tyrant, pointing to a greater and more precise fulfillment in the future. After all, Antiochus was not destroyed by the Son of Man as will be true of the “little horn” of Daniel’s prophecy (Dan. 7:11-27; 8:9-14, 23-25; 11:21-45), and of “the man of sin” of Paul’s epistolary warning (compare esp. 2 Thess. 2:3-8 with Dan. 11:35-37). Neither did the persecuting career of Antiochus IV end in Israel’s final deliverance and the resurrection of the righteous (Dan. 11:45 - 12:1-2). We conclude with the verdict of scripture that anything short of this highly descript and definite order of events (Mark 13:23) comes under the Lord’s restraining caution, “for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet,” and of Paul’s urgent warning, “Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except …”
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Reggie Kelly (N/A–N/A) is an American preacher and Bible teacher known for his deep engagement with biblical prophecy and his association with the late Art Katz, a prominent figure in the Messianic and prophetic Christian communities. Born and raised in the United States—specific details about his early life, such as birth date and location, are not widely documented—Kelly experienced a transformative conversion in 1969 during the Jesus People movement of the 1960s. That same year, he married his wife, Connie, who followed him in baptism and ministry, and together they raised six children, now with twelve grandchildren and one great-grandchild. His voracious hunger for God and truth led him to meet Art Katz in 1975 at the first Holy Convocation meetings in Minnesota, initiating a 25-year partnership that included accompanying Katz on numerous international ministry trips. Kelly’s preaching career is marked by his role as a teaching elder at Ben Israel, a ministry retreat in Minnesota founded by Katz, where he served for twelve years until Katz’s death in 2007. His ministry focuses heavily on the "mystery of Israel" and the church’s role in end-times eschatology, themes he explores through weekly fellowships on the God’s Foretold Work YouTube channel, co-hosted with Sam Parsons since around 2020. Kelly has been a key participant in prophetic schools and convocations, with recordings preserved on platforms like SermonIndex, and he co-produces the podcast The Glory of the Story, emphasizing God’s redemptive narrative through history. Living in Laporte, Minnesota, he continues to preach and teach, leaving a legacy as a thoughtful expositor of Scripture, particularly within prophetic and Messianic circles, though he is not affiliated with the current Ben Israel Fellowship.