We are not living in the “End Times” foretold in the Bible—and we never will. Those prophecies were not about the end of the world, but the end of an age. The Greek word often mistranslated as “world” in Matthew 24 is aion—meaning age. Jesus wasn’t warning of a future apocalypse; he was announcing the close of the Age of Aries, the age of the ram. This age was defined by law, sacrifice, and priesthood. Abraham’s ram, the Passover lamb, and the fiery duty of obedience all symbolized the era’s spirit. But Jesus was the threshold between epochs—the bridge into Pisces, the age of the fish. Hence the fishermen, the miracles with fish, the secret Christian symbol drawn in the dirt in early Christianity.
Pisces was an age of longing—of devotion, blind belief, and the aching separation between spirit and flesh. It fostered a world of saviors and saints, of faith in unseen realms, of reaching for heaven while feeling exiled from it.
In Matthew 24, Jesus said, “This generation will not pass away until all these things take place.” And they did. The wars, false messiahs, cosmic signs, and the fall of the Temple in 70 AD—all unfolded within that generation. The sacrificial system collapsed. Aries ended. Pisces began.
But now, Pisces is fading. And in Luke 22:10, Jesus points to what’s next: “Look for the man carrying the water jar.” Aquarius—the water bearer—ushers in an age of knowing, of embodiment, of inner revelation.
No longer does humanity look outward for salvation—we draw the living waters from within. It is the age of direct connection, spiritual sovereignty, and unity beyond belief systems. The mind and the body reunite. The divine is no longer distant—it is experienced. We are not here to survive a world ending. We are here to awaken as a new world begins. The shift is already underway. The only question is: will you rise with it?
– Logan Barone

