Visual Theology – Bible Prophecy Charts
The Visual Theology charts are designed to help you see the structure and movement of Scripture. They highlight patterns, contrasts, and developments that are often difficult to hold together when reading line by line.
These charts show the structure of the argument. The accompanying articles develop each part in full.
This approach follows a long tradition of visual teaching in the Church. The well-known charts of Clarence Larkin helped many grasp the broad outline of Scripture. In the same spirit, these charts aim to make visible what the Word of God is revealing.
Charts and teaching notes for the book of Bible Prophecy Charts. Select a chart below to view the image and article.
About this chart set
Visual Theology – Bible Prophecy Charts. These charts are not just about "end times" trivia; they are about the integrity of the gospel of grace and the unique identity of the Body of Christ.
Daniel’s prophecy of the Seventy Weeks functions as the chronological skeleton upon which every other prophetic word must be hung. Far from being a vague poetic gesture, Gabriel’s message to Daniel established a precise timetable of 490 years "determined upon" the people of Israel and the city of Jerusalem. While the first sixty-nine weeks unfolded with mathematical accuracy leading to the "cutting off" of the Messiah, the prophetic clock stopped before the final seven-year period began. This divinely appointed gap is the Church Age—a "mystery" hidden from previous generations—forming a vast valley between the mountain peaks of Messiah’s suffering and His future glory.
Rightly dividing these seventy weeks is a matter of profound pastoral necessity. When this structure is ignored, the Church is often incorrectly absorbed into Israel’s program, leaving believers to wonder if they must face the terrors of the Tribulation or "endure to the end" to secure their salvation. Such confusion produces a "mixture" of law and grace, turning the joyful expectation of the Body of Christ into a gospel of fear. By isolating the seventieth week as a future period of Jewish national restoration, we protect the purity of the grace-based message entrusted to the Church today.
This distinction is essential for understanding the words of Jesus and the apostles. Without the master key of Daniel’s framework, the warnings of the Olivet Discourse are easily misapplied to the Church, resulting in a legalistic focus on social works or survival rather than the finished work of Christ. Recognizing the "prophetic parenthesis" allows us to see the difference between the judgment of the nations and the Bema Seat evaluation of the believer, where our standing is not in question, but our service is rewarded.
Ultimately, these charts demonstrate that God is not improvising; He is a God of order who maintains distinct programs for Israel and the Body of Christ. Understanding this chronological structure anchors your soul in the truth that while the seventieth week is surely coming for the earth, the Church stands on the ground of a different inheritance. We are a new creation, secured by the Spirit and waiting for a hope rooted entirely in the riches of God's grace.
These charts are based on the following book:
The Master Key: Daniel's 70th Week
The Bible's Framework for Understanding Prophecy - 230 Page Paperback Edition
View Related BookSelect a chart from the list to view it here.
Every chart in this library is free, and it's going to stay that way. But while these are hosted freely, they are not free to make. A chart series might start at $15–20 in production costs, but by the time I've curated the output, reworked the logic, regenerated images that didn't land, and rewritten the companion articles — sometimes multiple times — a single series can run $60–100 in API costs alone, plus weeks of full-time work. The pipeline I've built that allows me to do things like this at scale is amazing, expensive to run, and rarely gets it right on the first pass. Most of these charts have been through dozens of iterations to get the theology and the visuals to say the same thing.
There's a long list of topics I want to build next — the everlasting covenant, our death with Christ, Christ as our reward, the mystery of the one body — material that's hard to access and harder to visualize. The kind of thing people hear taught once and say "I wish I could see that laid out."
That's what this project does. And if you've been helped by what's here, you can be part of what comes next.