What specific prophecies by Julie Green have demonstrably failed to occur and when were they made?
Executive summary
Julie Green has publicly issued a string of high-profile, politically charged “prophecies” — several of which the press and critics cite as having failed to come to pass, notably a prediction that Prince Charles would have his mother murdered, forecasts that certain politicians would die or lose/win specific contests, and claims about President Joe Biden’s vitality; those predictions were made in 2022–2023 in videos and public appearances and have been documented and critiqued in multiple reports [1] [2] [3].
1. The Prince Charles/Queen murder prophecy — made public in 2023 and not realized
Julie Green told followers she saw “a major scandal” involving “Charles and the Queen’s sudden death” and explicitly alleged “from what the Lord was showing me, [Charles] will actually have his mother murdered,” a claim reported by Rolling Stone in October 2023, and which, as public records and subsequent events show, did not occur [1].
2. Predictions of King Charles never wearing the crown — forecast contradicted by the coronation
Commenters and Christian forums point to a Green prediction that King Charles would “never wear the crown,” an assertion dated to her public pronouncements around the same period of heightened royal-focused prophecies, and which was falsified when Charles proceeded to his coronation — a straightforward counterexample cited by online observers [4].
3. “Year of Death” and named political targets in 2022 — many forecasts unfulfilled
Reporting and commentary trace a “Year of Death 2022” suite of prophecies in which Green named or suggested imminent deaths and scandals involving “deep state” figures including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, and other politicians; critics have catalogued these as failed when the predicted deaths or dramatic removals did not occur in 2022 [2] [3].
4. Joe Biden “is dead” and body-double claims — public claim lacking corroboration
Green has been reported as claiming that “the real Joe Biden is dead” and that others control his apparent public presence; outlets documenting her rhetoric present this as an extraordinary assertion that has not been borne out and which remains unsubstantiated by independent evidence [1] [3].
5. Election and political outcome predictions — Herschel Walker, Trump legal outcomes, and missed calls
Several sources report Green predicted specific political victories and legal outcomes — for example, that Herschel Walker would win his Senate race (which Walker lost), and that Donald Trump would prevail in a hush-money trial — claims that analysts highlight as examples of prophecies that did not materialize when the real-world results went the other way [4] [5].
6. Specific-date death prophecy claims — reported but often unspecified and later contradicted
Religious commentators and watchdogs recount that Green “believed a specific politician would pass away on a certain date,” a prediction that did not happen; the reporting flags the episode as emblematic of Green’s failed specific-date prophecies, though some write-ups do not publicize the exact date or named target in detail [6] [3].
7. How supporters and critics frame the missed prophecies — competing interpretations
Defenders argue that prophecy serves rhetorical or pastoral functions beyond literal forecasting, a point Diana Butler Bass makes when interpreting Green as reflecting broader grievances and not solely a literal future-teller, while critics — from conservative religious writers to secular outlets — treat missed, specific predictions as evidence Green is a false prophet or unreliable [2] [7] [3].
8. Limitations in the record and what reporting does not (yet) show
Available reporting documents multiple high-profile failed predictions and catalogues of alleged misses, but not every prophecy Green has made is fully enumerated or timestamped in the sources provided; where sources summarize a failed prediction without a precise date or direct quotation, the public record here is incomplete and cannot support a comprehensive timeline beyond the cited episodes [1] [3] [6].