Which Julie Green prophecies have been independently archived (e.g., Internet Archive) with explicit dates and how were they titled?
Executive summary
Independent archival evidence available in the provided reporting shows at least one Internet Archive item explicitly preserving Julie Green material with dated prophetic labels — notably a July 14, 2024 Internet Archive upload that lists prophecies dated 8/17/22 and 1/15/24 and gives their on-record titles or phrases (for example, "A Shot Heard Round The World") [1]. Julie Green’s own ministry pages and third‑party trackers also present dated prophecies and indices, but beyond the Internet Archive upload cited there is limited, verifiable evidence in the supplied sources of other separately archived files with explicit dates and exact titles [2] [3] [4].
1. Internet Archive capture and the dated items it contains
The clearest independent archive in the material provided is an Internet Archive entry titled "Prophecies Fulfilled: By God Through Julie Green + Julie Green & Manuel Johnson Do Special Prayers For President Trump, His Family, & Others.", which was uploaded on July 14, 2024 and includes a file that enumerates specific dated prophecies such as "Julie Green prophecy from God 8/17/22: 'A Shot Heard Round The World' This Phrase Will Be In Your News For A Significant Reason" and "Julie Green prophecy from God 1/15/24: You will not destroy this nation..." — the entry therefore supplies both explicit dates and the language used to title or describe the prophecies [1].
2. How those archived items are titled and presented
The Internet Archive item presents prophecies using a hybrid format: a date followed by a short descriptive phrase or quotation serving as the title (for example, 8/17/22 followed by the quoted phrase "A Shot Heard Round The World") and 1/15/24 followed by a longer declarative excerpt that functions as the prophecy’s headline [1]. The archive uploader’s naming convention is visible in the entry title as well, which bundles multiple prophecies and related prayers into one archived item rather than issuing standalone, uniformly formatted files for each prophecy [1].
3. Julie Green Ministries’ own publication practices and dating conventions
Julie Green Ministries’ official site and media pages state that prophecies are categorized by the date the “word was received” rather than the publication date on platforms like Rumble, indicating an internal practice of associating a specific date with each prophetic utterance [2]. That practice supports how archive descriptions and third‑party trackers list prophecies by date, but the ministry pages themselves are not shown in the provided reporting as independently archived with Internet Archive timestamps in this dataset [2].
4. Third‑party trackers and claims of searchable, timestamped records
Independent trackers and prophecy indices referenced in the reporting catalog many Julie Green prophecies and sometimes indicate fulfillment status or thematic titles (for example, the Prophecy Index entry and commentary noting phrases like "Season of Extreme Weather") but these sources often aggregate from ministry posts and broadcasts rather than always pointing to separate archival snapshots; one community comment asserts she is "far more accountable than most, with timestamps, searchable archives, and even links to 3rd‑party checkers," a claim reported as commentary rather than independently verified archival evidence in the supplied material [3] [4].
5. What is verifiably archived versus what remains asserted or aggregated
From the provided corpus, the verifiable independent archive evidence consists chiefly of the Internet Archive item dated July 14, 2024 that contains explicit dated prophecy entries (notably 8/17/22 and 1/15/24 with their accompanying titles/phrases) [1]. Julie Green Ministries’ site catalogs prophecies by received date [2] and third‑party indexes track dozens of entries [3], but the reporting supplied does not include additional independent archival URLs or archived snapshots for each listed prophecy beyond the Internet Archive instance already cited [1] [3] [4].
6. Alternative viewpoints, limitations, and implicit agendas
Observers and critics in the reporting frame Green’s prophecies as politically freighted and scrutinize their accuracy—Diana Butler Bass and other commentators emphasize her prominence in MAGA and QAnon circles and note high‑profile, contested predictions such as "Year of Death 2022" prophecies, highlighting a partisan interpretive frame that may drive both archiving efforts and public scrutiny [5]. The sources also show pro‑Green communities claiming extensive timestamped archives [4], a claim that may reflect partisan incentives to document predictive accuracy; the current dataset, however, does not independently corroborate more exhaustive third‑party archiving beyond the Internet Archive entry already cited [1] [4].