Chapter Two | THE MEN WHO WEIGH THE WORLD
The False Prophets of Monetary Policy | The Federal Reserve, Bitcoin, and the Future of Money
When Dot Plots Become Oracles
Jeremiah stood almost alone.
The city of Jerusalem trembled beneath the shadow of Babylon. The political winds were shifting. Rumors spread through the streets. Merchants whispered about the future. Families wondered what would happen to their homes, their livelihoods, and their children. Uncertainty hung over the nation like a gathering storm.
Into that uncertainty stepped two very different voices.
Jeremiah delivered a message no one wanted to hear. Judgment was coming. Babylon would prevail. The people needed repentance more than reassurance. The road ahead would be difficult, and there was no shortcut around it.
Hananiah offered something far more appealing. He promised peace. He promised victory. He promised that the crisis would soon pass.
In front of the priests and the people, Hananiah confidently declared that within two years Babylon’s power would be broken and the exiles would return home. The crowd knew exactly which prophet they preferred.
Who wouldn’t? One man offered uncertainty, humility, and repentance. The other offered confidence, clarity, and immediate relief. Human nature has not changed much since then.
One of the most enduring temptations in history is the desire to know tomorrow. We tell ourselves that we want truth, but often what we really want is certainty. Truth requires patience. Truth forces us to wrestle with ambiguity. Truth frequently reminds us of our limitations. Certainty feels better. It calms our fears. It gives us the illusion of control. It allows us to believe that someone, somewhere, possesses the answers we desperately seek.
This explains why every age produces its own prophets.
The ancient world looked to priests, kings, and oracles. Later generations turned to astrologers, fortune tellers, and political visionaries. Modern society considers itself more sophisticated, yet our behavior often reveals otherwise. We simply replaced the robes with suits, the temples with television studios, and the scrolls with economic forecasts.
The need remained exactly the same. Someone tell us what happens next.
Financial markets may be the clearest example of this tendency. Investors spend countless hours searching for signals about the future. They analyze earnings reports, economic data, geopolitical developments, and market trends. There is nothing inherently wrong with that pursuit. Prudence requires preparation. Wisdom requires thoughtful analysis.
The problem begins when analysis becomes prophecy. The problem begins when forecasts become objects of faith.
Every few months, members of the Federal Open Market Committee release what is commonly known as the dot plot. The chart contains individual projections showing where committee members believe interest rates may be headed in the future. In theory, the exercise is modest. Intelligent people provide their best assessment based upon current information.
In practice, something very different often happens. Markets treat the dots as revelations.
Financial journalists scrutinize them. Economists interpret them. Investors rearrange portfolios around them. Trillions of dollars respond not to what has happened, but to what a group of policymakers believes might happen.
Notice how subtle the transformation is. A forecast becomes a signal. A signal becomes guidance. Guidance becomes authority. Authority becomes dependency.
The Federal Reserve never intended to become an oracle. Most central bankers understand better than anyone the difficulty of forecasting complex economies. Yet over time, investors began treating future projections as though they possessed a degree of certainty they were never meant to carry. Every speech became a clue. Every press conference became an exercise in interpretation. Every sentence was searched for hidden meaning about the future.
The institution managing monetary policy gradually became one of the most powerful expectation-setting machines in the world.
George Washington warned repeatedly about the dangers of concentrated influence. His concern centered on political factions, but the principle reaches much further. Whenever large groups of people begin outsourcing their judgment to a single authority, they slowly lose the habit of thinking independently. They stop observing reality directly and instead observe reality through the lens of whatever the authority predicts.
That danger extends far beyond politics. It extends into finance.
The market’s most important question slowly shifted. Instead of asking, “What is happening?” investors increasingly asked, “What does the Federal Reserve think is happening?”
Those are not the same question. This is where bitcoin enters the story, not as a prophecy, but as a rejection of prophecy itself.
Bitcoin does not forecast future interest rates. It does not publish guidance. It does not hold press conferences. It does not ask investors to interpret the intentions of a committee. Its monetary policy is visible to everyone and changes for no one. Every participant operates under the same rules. Every participant can verify those rules independently.
The future price of bitcoin remains uncertain because all markets involve uncertainty. But the future supply of Bitcoin is not uncertain. The rules governing its issuance are transparent, predictable, and known in advance.
This distinction matters more than most people realize. Bitcoin does not remove uncertainty from life. Nothing can.
What it removes is the need for monetary prophecy.
James confronted this same human tendency centuries ago when he wrote, “You who say, ‘Today or tomorrow we will go to this city or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.’ Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow.”
His warning was not against planning. It was against presumption.
Only God stands outside time. Only God sees the end from the beginning. Only God possesses perfect knowledge of what tomorrow holds.
The problem with false prophets is not that they predict the future poorly. It is that they convince people they can predict it at all.
Jeremiah understood this. Hananiah did not.
The lesson reaches far beyond ancient Israel. It applies equally to economists, investors, policymakers, and every one of us. Wisdom is not found in possessing certainty about the future. Wisdom is found in recognizing the limits of our knowledge while faithfully stewarding what God has placed before us today.
The most dangerous prophecy is not the one that proves wrong. Maybe the most dangerous prophecy is the one that convinces us we no longer need humility. Because long before we trusted central bankers, markets, or forecasts, humanity was wrestling with a much older temptation.
The temptation to know what only God knows. And that raises a deeper question.
If our desire for certainty can be manipulated, what happens when the measurement itself becomes dishonest?
Kingdom Principle 👑
Only God knows tomorrow.
The desire for certainty is not wrong, but placing our trust in human predictions will eventually disappoint us. Scripture calls us to walk by faith, not forecasts. Wise stewardship does not require knowing the future. It requires faithfully obeying God in the present.
Prayer 🙏
Heavenly Father, forgive us for the times we place our confidence in predictions, experts, and forecasts more than we place it in You. Remind us that You alone see the end from the beginning and that our security rests in Your character, not our ability to predict tomorrow.
Give us wisdom, humility, and discernment as we steward the resources You have entrusted to us. Help us trust You in uncertain times and remain faithful regardless of what the future may bring. May our confidence rest not in human prophecy, but in Your unchanging truth.
In Jesus’ name, Amen. 🙏📖⚖️₿🕊️👑



How do you know so much. I hope things are going better for you. I am praying for you. Love Dad