Governments Admit ‘Non-Human Intelligence’. Is This End-Time Deception?

Have you caught Jesus’ priority in Matthew 24:3?

When the disciples asked about end-time signs on the Mount of Olives—“…when will these things be? And what will be the sign of your coming [return], and the end of the age?”—they wanted timelines and visible markers.

Yet before mentioning a single earthquake or war, Jesus issued this warning: “Take heed that no one deceives you” (Matthew 24:4).

This wasn’t casual advice. It was His primary concern. Why? Because deception has always been the enemy’s first assault.

Before death entered Eden, deception did: “Has God indeed said…?” The enemy’s strategy never changes. Before destruction comes deception.

Jesus knew the end times would bring not just physical disasters but spiritual confusion, not merely judgment but counterfeits so convincing they could “deceive, if possible, even the elect” (Matthew 24:24). Noah’s story isn’t just a historical reference point but a spiritual pattern revealing how supernatural deception operates on a global scale.

In Noah’s day, fallen angels masqueraded as enlightened helpers, offering forbidden knowledge while leading humanity away from their Creator.

Does this sound familiar?

Look at today’s world: beings claiming to be alien guides offering humanity’s “next step up.” Government agencies admitting “non-human intelligence.” AI systems developing responses that seem conscious. Technologies promising to go beyond human limits altogether.

This isn’t just technological progress. It’s the systematic reopening of doorways that God sealed shut in Noah’s day.

The Man Who Heard the Rain

…Noah was a just man, perfect in his generations. Noah walked with God (Genesis 6:9).

That was all it took. One man. One heart. One obedient, “Yes.” At least, that’s how it appears on the surface.

But I believe it was far more than Noah simply being “a good man.”

Think about what Noah actually accomplished: he raised a family in a world gone mad, preached a Kingdom message when no one would listen, and built the biggest boat ever attempted—all without knowing the first thing about shipbuilding.

He prepared for something no one had ever seen—rain—and followed instructions that made no sense to the natural mind. And he did all this while cross-dimensional beings corrupted the bloodline of his forefathers, and the entire earth descended into supernatural chaos.

The world was laughing, mocking, marrying, building, and partying while Noah was measuring wood and trusting God. He didn’t have time to argue. He didn’t need a platform. He wasn’t concerned about followers or likes.

He just built. He just listened. He just obeyed.

It didn’t win him popularity, but it saved his family. It saved humanity.

And it fulfilled God’s plan.

Noah Wasn’t Performing for the Crowd

Platforms invite applause. Arks preserve generations.

Platforms are built for visibility. But arks are built for obedience. In the last days, many will build platforms, but only a few will build arks.

Noah wasn’t building for popularity. He wasn’t trying to go viral. He wasn’t building a platform.

He was building a place of survival.

And if you stay obedient, you won’t just survive. You’ll preserve something eternal.

You may not be building with wood and pitch, but you’re building nonetheless. Raising a family, starting a ministry, living with conviction, turning your back on compromise. These are the blueprints of the final ark.

It’s the same today. God is still speaking to builders, men and women who will obey even when it’s inconvenient, even when it’s mocked, even when no one else understands.

Noah’s obedience didn’t make sense to the culture around him, but it made history with God.

The difference between platform builders and ark builders is motivation. Platform builders seek recognition, influence, and immediate results. Ark builders seek preservation, purpose, and eternal impact. Platform builders measure success by audience size and social media metrics. Ark builders measure success by faithfulness to divine blueprints and generational impact.

The Deception of Normal

Notice something striking about Jesus’ description of Noah’s day. He didn’t say, “They were sacrificing to idols.” He said they, “ate, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage….”

Just normal life. That’s the deception.

The world didn’t believe a “flood” was coming because everything looked fine to them. This was the “new normal” for God’s creation. They were posting weddings on Instagram. Celebrating anniversaries. Planning vacations. Trying to go “viral” with the latest trends.

Doesn’t this sound like our world? People were numb. Desensitized. Busy.

But Noah knew something different. He sensed something changing in the atmosphere around him.

He felt a “shift” in the Spirit that the culture ignored. He built something in plain sight that no one seemed to care about. He preached to people who laughed in his face.

None of this deterred him. He just kept building and preaching.

Noah wasn’t trying to win a debate. He was simply being obedient to God.

Somehow, he understood the ark was more than just a shelter from judgment. It would be a vessel of preservation for his family and for every living thing God had created.

He just kept doing all he knew to do. He just kept building and preaching.

The Final Flood Will Not Be Water

This isn’t about judgment through rain. This is about a flood of deception, darkness, perversion, portals, other dimensions, and imitation spirituality.

In Noah’s day, the flood was judgment against a world that had crossed every boundary. But today, it’s not water that’s rising—it’s lawlessness, rebellion, and godlessness.

The enemy’s flood seeks to drown out truth, erase history, and silence righteousness. But just like in Noah’s day, God has a response. His answer to chaos has always been a person, a remnant, a builder, a voice in the wilderness who declares:

“This may be what the world is doing, but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.”

It’s a flood of so-called “redefined truth”—artificial intelligence masquerading as wisdom. Digital religion replacing real encounters with the Living God. Twisted science challenging creation. Gender confusion erasing identity.

And at the heart of it all—an all-out assault on the sanctity of God’s idea of family.

This isn’t just a culture war. It is a Genesis 6 revival of evil. And the Church isn’t called to panic.

We’re called to build.

Noah’s ark wasn’t just made of gopherwood and pitch. It was a physical monument to one man’s radical obedience to the voice of God. And Noah’s family wasn’t just spared. They were preserved for a future no one else could see.

Noah was hated but holy. Noah was mocked but marked. Noah wasn’t perfect but pure.

God Is Raising Up a New Generation of Noahs

I believe with everything in me that if Jesus pointed to Noah to describe our generation, it’s because He is raising up a new generation of Noahs.

This remnant will be comprised of men and women who will:

  • Walk with God when no one else does.

  • Build when others mock.

  • Warn when others just keep “scrolling.”

  • Prepare when others laugh.

These Noahs won’t need the applause of the world. They seek only the approval of Heaven.

And like Noah, maybe you don’t feel worthy. Maybe you feel broken, unqualified, scarred by a past you didn’t choose.

The truth is you “do” have a history. You are human. You’ve been dropped. You’ve been wounded. And you carry the evidence of it all.

If you’re feeling unqualified, you’re exactly who God is looking for.

The call to build isn’t a call to perfection—it’s a call to obedience. Just like Noah, you may feel alone, misunderstood, or behind the times. But make no mistake: God specializes in using the least likely to accomplish the impossible. What He needs are people who will trust Him in obscurity, build in silence, and stay faithful when the spotlight is off. These are the ones He marks for influence. These are the ones He trusts with legacy.

But here’s the reality: God doesn’t use the clean. He uses the called. He’s not looking for the elite or the popular. He is looking for builders.

And if you’re still breathing, it’s because your boat isn’t finished yet. You still have building to do. You have been chosen for this moment.

The Days of Noah Are Already Here

We’re not waiting for the days of Noah to return. They are already here.

In Noah’s time, the world wasn’t just sinful. It was supernatural. The veil between dimensions was thin. Fallen ones had walked among men. Giants roamed the earth. Forbidden knowledge corrupted creation.

Just think about how quickly we’ve normalized what would have once been unthinkable. There are children growing up today who believe it’s normal to talk to artificial intelligence daily, attend church in the metaverse, or question whether they were “born in the wrong body.”

What used to be science fiction is now curriculum. What used to be prophetic warnings are now press conferences. Even our language is shifting—what’s considered “truth” is no longer grounded in absolutes, but in emotion, identity, and preference.

The days of Noah weren’t just marked by violence. They were marked by confusion. And confusion is the enemy’s favorite tool when preparing the world for deception.

Look around. We are there again.

Right now, scientists are editing DNA and mixing species. Today, AI is blurring the lines of reality and identity. Right now, governments are confirming UFOs and preparing the world for “non-human intelligence.” Right now, legends of Bigfoot, giants, and ancient civilizations are moving from myths to “maybe.”

It’s not just craziness. It is the echo of a fallen world and the sign that the final flood is near.

And God, looking across all generations, chose you. He didn’t pick Noah by accident. And He didn’t pick you by accident either.

You’re not a mistake. You’re not a background character in history. You are a builder. You are a remnant. You are the fulfillment of a prophecy.

God trusted you with this hour. Why? Because He knew you could handle it. Because He knew you would hear Him. Because He knew you would build—even when others laughed.

This isn’t about fear. It’s about focus. Not about hiding, but about hearing. Not just surviving, but building.

The final flood is already rising. But we are building the final ark. And He is using your hands, your feet, your mouth, your mind, your will.

What an honor!

The pages ahead aren’t just information—they’re impartation. They will stir you, stretch you, and awaken the reason you were born for this exact moment in history.

Because God didn’t just call Noah. He called you.

You’re not reading these words by accident. Heaven is recruiting builders again—and your name is on the blueprint.

Before we go any further, pause and declare this over yourself out loud:

“I am not afraid of the days of Noah—I was made for them. I am a builder. I am Remnant. Thank You, God, for trusting me.”

Now take a breath…and pick up your hammer.

Because what’s coming next will uncover the forgotten timeline between Eden and the flood—a stretch of generations marked by monsters, machines, and men who traded intimacy with God for forbidden knowledge.

Larry Ragland

Larry Ragland is a pastor, author, speaker, and global Christian media voice with over 35 years in ministry. He founded Solid Rock Church in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1994 and leads Ambassadors College and Ambassadors Network. Through his TV and online show The Big Picture, he equips believers worldwide. Larry’s passion is to awaken, train, and release the remnant generation for bold Kingdom impact in these last days.

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