Most Christians today believe that the return of Christ is a future event. But what if we have misunderstood the timeline? What if Satan has already been loosed for a little season, and we are living in it right now?
Little Season Eschatology invites readers to reexamine the prophetic texts of Scripture with fresh eyes—using a literal hermeneutic and a strict Scripturalist approach to knowledge. This work challenges the assumptions of Premillennialism, Postmillennialism, Amillennialism, and Full Preterism, not to stir controversy, but to call the Church back to a serious trust in God’s Word alone.
From the fall of Jerusalem and Rome to the binding and loosing of Satan, this book raises a haunting Have we already passed the Millennial reign of Christ and entered the final season of history?
If you are willing to test all things by Scripture and question even the most trusted assumptions, this book will encourage you to think deeply, examine humbly, and live watchfully.
A Literal, Reformed Approach to Revelation – This book interprets prophecy using a plain reading of the KJV and a high view of Scripture’s authority. Exposes the Weaknesses of All Major Systems – Thoughtfully critiques Premillennialism, Postmillennialism, Amillennialism, and Full Preterism. Are We in Satan’s Little Season? – Examines Revelation 20 to argue that the Millennium is past and we now live in Satan’s final season of worldwide deception. Rooted in Scripturalism – Applies Gordon Clark’s epistemology to distinguish true knowledge from fallible opinion. Written for the Watchful Remnant – A timely call for discernment, faithfulness, and a return to God’s Word alone in an age of deception.
Armando Ballart is a Reformed Christian author devoted to Biblical truth and sound doctrine. His debut book, The End Is Behind Us, explores the Biblical evidence for Satan’s little season, challenging modern assumptions with Scripture alone as the foundation.
This book presents a fascinating and engaging topic that will challenge and intrigue Christians willing to explore eschatology with fresh eyes. The author has clearly put in extensive research, with well-documented sources and a transparent explanation of how the work was developed.
It’s not purely speculative, it’s supported with Scripture and invites the reader to genuinely wrestle with long held assumptions about the end times.
Verily, what makes this compelling is the possibility that we may be viewing the prophetic timeline all wrong (what if the Dark Ages aren’t really a mystery but an act of deception?) an idea that could truly shift the reader’s paradigm.
It’s a thoughtful and provocative study that doesn’t seek division, but to encourage a deeper trust in the Word of God. A valuable read for modern believers who want to approach prophecy with humility and a willingness to be challenged.
Are we in Satan’s little season? Is a very interesting perspective and interpretation of the Bible. It breaks down and interprets the main periods described in the Bible and deduces that we must be in the period of time after Satan is loosed on the Earth after a 1000 years of imprisonment and prosper for Earth. It lays down the case that because we are being deceived we don’t know that the 1000 years happened or if a 1000 years happened at all. I’m not sure if I agree with all that the book concludes, but I had an open mind in reading and learned an interesting point of view in the world