David Diamond - La Union Europea Y El Anticrist... Apr 2026
Diamond does not speak for mainstream theology. He is not a cardinal or a megachurch pastor. But his detailed, verse-by-verse breakdown of the Book of Daniel and Revelation has found a devoted audience in an anxious age. To his followers, Diamond is a modern watchman. To his critics, he is a conspiracy-minded alarmist misreading metaphor for geopolitical fact. The theory begins, as Diamond explains in his most-cited work The Union and the Image , with King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream in Daniel 2. The great statue with a head of gold, chest of silver, belly of bronze, legs of iron, and feet of iron mixed with clay has long been interpreted as four successive kingdoms: Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome.
“The Book of Revelation was written to first-century Christians under Roman persecution,” she explains. “The beast was Rome—a real, violent empire. To map that onto the European Union, a democratic, bureaucratic, peace-oriented project, is to ignore both history and genre. The EU has no single leader, no military conquest of Israel, no temple-building program. The analogy collapses under the lightest scrutiny.”
And in an era of rising Euroskepticism, Brexit, and debates about European sovereignty, the image of the EU as an overreaching, anti-democratic superstate resonates beyond the prophecy community. Diamond simply gives that anxiety a biblical vocabulary. There is, however, one glaring silence in Diamond’s thesis. The Bible says the Antichrist will sit in “the temple of God” (2 Thessalonians 2:4), proclaiming himself to be God. Today, no Jewish temple stands in Jerusalem. For the prophecy to be literal, either a third temple must be built, or the interpretation must be symbolic (the church as God’s temple). DAVID DIAMOND - LA UNION EUROPEA Y EL ANTICRIST...
And David Diamond, for better or worse, has become one of its most articulate scribes. Would you like a shorter summary, a bibliography of sources on this topic, or a critical theological rebuttal piece as a companion feature?
Critics note that the EU currently has 27 members, not ten. But Diamond responds by highlighting the , the European Council, and various attempts at a "two-speed Europe." He predicts that a smaller, more militarily and economically powerful coalition of ten nations will emerge from the current Union, perhaps after a crisis. Diamond does not speak for mainstream theology
“They already have a flag, an anthem (Beethoven’s Ode to Joy), a parliament, a currency, and a court,” he says. “What’s missing? A single man to sit in the temple of God. That man is coming.” In a departure from Hollywood depictions of a snarling tyrant, Diamond argues that the biblical Antichrist will first appear as a peacemaker—a charismatic, multilingual leader who rises from obscurity to solve Europe’s intractable problems. He calls this figure the “false Christ of diplomacy.”
He points to the EU’s historically close (if strained) relationship with Israel, its funding of Palestinian authorities, and its role in the Quartet on the Middle East as a dress rehearsal for a final, fatal deal. Theological opponents are quick to point out flaws. Dr. Hannah Voss, professor of biblical eschatology at the University of Tübingen, calls the EU-Antichrist theory “a category error.” To his followers, Diamond is a modern watchman
“When you see the EU mediating a temple solution in Jerusalem,” Diamond warns, “the final countdown will have begun.” Whether David Diamond is a herald of truth or a purveyor of theological fiction depends entirely on one’s starting assumptions about the Bible, prophecy, and the nature of the end times. What is undeniable is the grip this story holds on the imagination of millions.