What timeline and archived videos exist of Julie Green’s recorded prophecies so researchers can verify dates and wording?
Executive summary
Julie Green’s recorded prophecies are publicly archived across multiple hubs — the Internet Archive, her official Julie Green Ministries (JGM / JGMI) site and third‑party reposts — with dated videos and accompanying transcripts that cover at least 2022–2024 uploads [1] [2] [3]. While many individual prophecy videos on Rumble, the JGM media pages, and mirror sites display dates and short descriptions useful for verifying wording, researchers should treat platform metadata, reposts and secondary blogs cautiously and consult original JGM-hosted transcripts where available [1] [2] [4].
1. Archive hubs and platform footprints
The principal public locations where Julie Green’s prophecies appear are the Internet Archive (which hosts collections labeled “Prophecies Fulfilled” and individual dated MP4 uploads) and Julie Green Ministries’ own media and prophecies pages that link to video platforms such as Rumble and YouTube [1] [2] [3]. Secondary aggregators and sympathetic outlets — MaryPatriotNews, blog reposts like Rose Rambles, Call Me Stormy and niche sites — also host highlights, embeds or transcripts, expanding discoverability but increasing the number of copies with varying metadata [4] [5] [6].
2. Earliest and clearly dated recordings available
Public evidence in the reviewed reporting shows dated recordings going back at least to mid‑2022, with specific entries cited for July 2, July 18 and July 23, 2022, and a headline prophecy dated August 17, 2022; more recent items include a January 15, 2024 prophecy uploaded into an Internet Archive collection [1] [4] [5]. The JGM media pages explicitly list “recent prophecies” and link to Rumble entries and older files, indicating an organized chronology on the ministry’s platforms [2].
3. Notable prophecy titles and quoted wording researchers can trace
Some prophecies and quoted phrases are repeated in archive descriptions and third‑party posts: a January 15, 2024 entry with the lines “You will not destroy this nation. You will not steal another election… You will not kill him” appears in the Internet Archive’s metadata [1], and an August 17, 2022 entry titled “A Shot Heard Round The World” is also indexed there [1]. JGMI’s “Prophecies” page publishes text excerpts — for example proclamations about “Babylon has fallen!” — which provide wording researchers can compare against audio/video files [3].
4. Transcripts, metadata and verification practices
Julie Green Ministries asserts written prophecy archives and downloadable transcripts exist on its site and other resources pages, providing a path for verifying wording against video [7] [2]. The Internet Archive copies include embedded text snippets and timestamps that assist independent verification [1]. Researchers should prioritize JGMI’s original transcripts and the Internet Archive master files for date stamps and file provenance, while noting that reposts and blog summaries may omit full wording or modify headlines [1] [2] [4].
5. Gaps, attribution risks and limits of the available reporting
The reviewed sources document many dated videos and transcripts but do not provide an exhaustive, centralized catalogue from Julie Green’s earliest broadcasts through today; JGMI pages warn that multiple social accounts claim affiliation and that users should beware impersonators, a disclosure that signals attribution risk when following reposts [2]. The public reporting does not include a complete audit trail (e.g., original upload timestamps across every platform, signed transcripts, or independent archival verification of unedited master files), so absolute provenance beyond the JGMI site and Internet Archive copies cannot be confirmed from these sources alone [2] [1].
6. Practical next steps for researchers wanting to verify dates and wording
Researchers should first collect the JGMI-hosted transcript pages and the Internet Archive MP4 recordings (both contain explicit dates and quoted lines such as the 1/15/24 prophecy) as primary references, then cross‑check Rumble/YouTube uploads and third‑party reposts for matching timestamps and unedited audio [1] [2] [4]. Where precision matters, preserve archived copies (Internet Archive snapshots) and request original files or timestamps from JGMI; be mindful that secondary blogs and aggregator sites may paraphrase or select highlights rather than present full, verifiable transcripts [5] [6].