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Video : https://pixabay.com/ What are you allowed to do with Content? Subject to the Prohibited Uses (see below), the Content License allows users to: ✓ Use Content for free ✓ Use Content without having to attribute the author (although giving credit is always appreciated by our community!) ✓ Modify or adapt Content into new works Background Music : YouTube Audio Library This video is made using Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe Audition. Do not upload elsewhere. You will receive a Copyright Strike if it is uploaded without my permission. In some interpretations, particularly within certain Christian eschatological frameworks, the Middle East is viewed as a focal point for end-times prophecies and events. This perspective often links current events in the region, especially the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and regional tensions, with biblical prophecies concerning the "end of days". Specific events, such as the rebuilding of a temple in Jerusalem, the gathering of nations against Israel, and the battle of Armageddon, are often cited as potential fulfillments of these prophecies. The Middle East is not the literal geographic center of the world. While it holds historical and strategic importance, it's not at the exact center of any commonly used definitions of the world's center. Different methods of calculation or perspective can lead to different geographical centers. Turkey and the Middle East are not considered the center of the world. While Turkey has a unique geographic position, bridging Europe and Asia, and the Middle East is a region with historical and cultural significance, neither constitutes the literal or figurative center of the world. The concept of a "center" is subjective and depends on the context, whether geographical, cultural, or historical. The Second Coming of Christ is a fundamental belief in Christianity and Islam, referring to the prophesied return of Jesus Christ to Earth. In Christianity, it's a central tenet of most eschatologies, the study of end times, and is often associated with the establishment of Christ's kingdom, judgment, and the reward of the faithful. Similarly, in Islamic eschatology, Jesus (Isa) is also believed to return in the end times.