Are We Watching The Birth Pains Increase? 3 Major Earthquakes In 24hrs
By PNW StaffJune 25, 2026
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Within just a matter of hours, the earth delivered a powerful reminder that humanity lives on a restless planet.
A devastating series of earthquakes struck Venezuela. A powerful 6.9-magnitude earthquake rattled Japan. Northern California was shaken by a magnitude 5.6 quake that triggered dozens of aftershocks.
Individually, none of these events prove anything prophetically. Earthquakes happen every year, and geologists rightly caution against drawing conclusions from any single event.
But when several significant earthquakes occur almost simultaneously, they capture people's attention—and they naturally raise an uncomfortable question:
How prepared are we if something much larger is coming?
The most devastating event is still unfolding in Venezuela, where back-to-back earthquakes measuring 7.2 and 7.5 struck west of Caracas. Buildings collapsed, airports closed, rescue workers rushed into damaged neighborhoods, and the U.S. Geological Survey's rapid assessment warned that casualties could ultimately be very high. Search-and-rescue operations continue as authorities attempt to determine the full scope of the disaster.
Across the Pacific, Japan was struck by a magnitude 6.9 earthquake. Meanwhile, Northern California experienced a magnitude 5.6 earthquake centered in Mendocino County. Although California escaped catastrophic damage this time, the quake injured several people, damaged buildings, knocked out power, and produced dozens of aftershocks that kept residents on edge.
For many Americans, however, the California quake immediately brought another name to mind:
The San Andreas Fault.
The Fault Everyone Knows Is There
The San Andreas Fault stretches roughly 800 miles through California, marking the boundary between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates.
Scientists have long emphasized that it is not a question of if another major rupture will occur, but when.
No one can predict the day or hour.
No responsible scientist claims they can.
But nearly everyone agrees another major earthquake along portions of the fault is inevitable.
USGS modeling has examined what could happen if the southern San Andreas produced approximately a magnitude 7.8 earthquake.
The projections are sobering:
Roughly 1,800 deaths
More than 50,000 injuries
Hundreds of billions of dollars in economic losses
Thousands of fires
Widespread water-main failures
Long-term power outages
Major transportation disruptions
Millions of people affected throughout Southern California
Those numbers assume modern emergency response and engineering.
A slightly smaller event—perhaps magnitude 6.8 to 7.0—would likely remain a severe regional disaster, damaging older buildings, highways, utilities, and infrastructure while causing billions in losses.
A magnitude 7.3 to 7.5 rupture would likely impact much larger portions of Southern California, disrupting transportation corridors, communications, hospitals, and supply chains.
A full-scale 7.8 "Big One," similar to USGS planning scenarios, would be remembered for generations.
Even Americans living thousands of miles away would feel its economic consequences.
California's ports move enormous volumes of imported goods. Interstate highways, fuel pipelines, data infrastructure, food distribution, and financial markets all depend upon systems that could be disrupted for weeks or months.
In today's interconnected economy, a California megaquake would not remain California's problem.
It would become America's problem.
Is The San Andreas "Waking Up"?
Every time California experiences moderate earthquakes, headlines begin asking whether "the Big One" is next.
The truthful answer is:
No one knows.
Most moderate earthquakes do not lead directly to catastrophic ruptures.
In fact, the overwhelming majority do not.
At the same time, scientists acknowledge that earthquake sequences can redistribute stress throughout nearby fault systems. Sometimes stress is relieved. Occasionally it is transferred elsewhere. Unfortunately, the Earth is simply too complex to determine exactly how one event affects another in the long term.
The Northern California earthquake occurred on the Maacama Fault system, not directly on the primary San Andreas rupture zone, although the regional fault systems are interconnected. That reality understandably keeps seismologists watching closely—but not predicting catastrophe.
Preparation—not panic—is the consistent advice from experts.
Birth Pains
For Christians, however, earthquakes represent more than geology.
Jesus specifically included them among the signs that would characterize the approach of His return.
In Matthew 24:7-8, He said:
"Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be famines and earthquakes in various places. All these are the beginning of birth pains."
That phrase—birth pains—is especially significant.
Pregnancy contractions do not arrive at perfectly regular intervals.
Sometimes they intensify.
Sometimes they appear to slow.
Sometimes there is a lull that convinces everyone nothing is happening.
But the pauses never mean the birth has been canceled.
They mean the process is continuing.
Likewise, Scripture does not suggest the world will experience an uninterrupted daily increase in earthquakes. Rather, Jesus describes a pattern that resembles labor itself—periods of relative calm interrupted by increasingly intense events as history moves toward its conclusion.
That perspective keeps Christians from sensationalizing every earthquake while also preventing us from dismissing the larger picture.
The Earthquakes Still To Come
The Bible indicates that some of history's greatest earthquakes have not yet occurred.
At Christ's crucifixion, Matthew 27:51 records a great earthquake that accompanied His death.
Another earthquake opened prison doors for Paul and Silas in Acts 16.
But Revelation describes events on an entirely different scale.
When the Sixth Seal is opened (Revelation 6:12), John writes that "there was a great earthquake," accompanied by dramatic cosmic disturbances that terrify the inhabitants of the earth.
Later, during the Seventh Bowl Judgment, Revelation 16 describes what may be the most devastating earthquake in human history:
"There was a great earthquake such as there had not been since man was on the earth, so great was that earthquake."
The passage says cities collapse, islands flee, mountains disappear, and the world's geography is dramatically altered.
The overall message is unmistakable:
God's final judgments will include seismic events beyond anything humanity has ever experienced.
A Reminder We Shouldn't Ignore
Civilization often gives us the illusion of security. Concrete skyscrapers, highways, technology, and modern engineering make us feel in control.
Then, in less than a minute, entire cities can be reduced to rubble.
The Bible repeatedly reminds us that the only truly unshakable foundation is not found in geology, governments, economies, or technology.
It is found in Jesus Christ.
As today's headlines remind us once again, the earth beneath us continues to groan. And while geologists study tectonic plates, Christians are also reminded to watch the signs Jesus told us to watch—not with fear, but with hope, knowing that the same Savior who foretold these things also promised that when these events begin to unfold, His followers should "lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near."