Who is Julie Green and what are her most notable prophecies?

Checked on January 6, 2026
Disclaimer: Factually can make mistakes. Please verify important information or breaking news. Learn more.

Executive summary

Julie Green is a self-described Christian prophet and pastor who runs Julie Green Ministries International and posts frequent prophetic messages online; she began preaching around 2010 and has served as an associate pastor at a church where her father is head pastor, according to her own account [1] [2]. Her most notable prophecies, widely reported, mix political predictions—such as forecasts about Donald Trump’s legal troubles, an alleged “overthrow” or takeover of the U.S. from “wicked” to “righteous,” and claims about public figures including Nancy Pelosi and members of the British royal family—with a pattern of vagueness punctuated by several specific, disputed claims that have not borne out [3] [4] [5].

1. Identity and ministry: who she says she is and how she operates

Julie Green describes herself as a prophet who “receives” words from God, preaching since about 2010 and serving as an associate pastor at Faith Family Fellowship from 2013, with a ministry that streams video prophecies on platforms like Rumble and a website that cautions about impersonators [1] [2] [6].

2. The catalogue of prominent prophecies

Reporting catalogs Green’s high-profile predictions: she publicly predicted a “not guilty” or innocent verdict for Donald Trump in at least one trial, forecast the collapse of indictments against Trump more generally, prophesied the death of Democratic Representative Nancy Pelosi before the 2022 midterms, foretold that a coup would be “disrupted and annihilated” and promised an “overthrow” and “takeover” of the U.S. from “wicked” hands to “righteous” hands, and made sensational claims about the British royal family and President Joe Biden’s identity—among other claims that surfaced in her videos and at political events [4] [3] [7] [5].

3. Accuracy, failures and how critics summarize them

Multiple outlets and watchdogs document that several of Green’s named predictions either failed to occur or are viewed as demonstrably false—Newsweek and Rolling Stone report specific missed predictions (including Pelosi’s death and the Prince Charles claim) and note her incorrect Trump verdict forecast, while critics categorize many of her prophecies as vague, politically aligned, or empirically unfulfilled [3] [4] [5] [8].

4. Political alignment and platforms for influence

Green is regularly associated with pro-Trump and MAGA-adjacent circles: she has appeared at Christian-nationalist events like the ReAwaken America Tour, has been embraced by some GOP-aligned figures, and uses conservative-friendly social platforms to broadcast prophecies—coverage emphasizes her alignment with political actors and movements that amplify her messages [9] [3] [2].

5. Supporters’ defenses and scholarly context for prophetic speech

Supporters and some analysts frame Green’s work within a broader understanding of prophecy as political and visionary performance rather than literal forecasting, arguing that prophecy’s role can be to embolden communities or challenge established authorities; commentators like Diana Butler Bass note that prophecy need not be judged solely on predictive accuracy but also on its rhetorical and communal function [10].

6. Assessment: pattern, reach, and limits of reporting

The record assembled in mainstream and faith-focused sources shows a consistent pattern: Green issues frequent prophetic statements that mix vague spiritual language with specific political claims; several named, falsifiable predictions have been reported as incorrect or unfulfilled, generating criticism and labels such as “false prophet” from watchdog groups, while she retains an audience in conservative religious networks [4] [5] [9] [8]. Publicly available reporting documents her major, controversial prophecies and political ties, but available sources do not provide independent verification of her private life beyond her own statements nor a comprehensive catalogue of every prophecy she has offered [1] [2].

Want to dive deeper?
What documented false prophecies by public religious figures influenced U.S. politics in the 2020s?
How do platforms like Rumble and ReAwaken America Tour amplify prophetic political messages?
What criteria do theologians use to judge contemporary prophetic claims as legitimate or false?