>>515170582
>No, I don't need to do anything.
In the scenario you do though. Let's assume it is Gods will ( or you believe it is) that you must do X to kick everything off, you're the guy.
Would you do it? Knowing the suffering and torment of billions will be the result?
Like those Christian faith healers who don't use any sort of medicine and leave it up to God, not thinking maybe the medicine is God's will.
Or the joke about the religious flood survivor waiting on his roof for God to save him, turning away the boats and helicopters. Proclaiming
>Im waiting for God to save me
Eventually dying, getting to heaven and asking God
>Why didn't you save me?
To which the reply is
>Who do you think sent the rescuers?
So again. You're presented with an opportunity that will lead to events unfolding exactly as it is prophesied. No one else is around, and the opportunity is fleeting. It's something bad though, something that would have people afraid of you if they knew you did it, but doing it gets the ball rolling. Would you do it?
Even better. Even though that opportunity is fleeting, somehow you know someone else may be presented with it later, much later lets say. Long after you're dead. Now, with that little bit of extra information, do you do it?
Keep in mind, you don't know if the next person will do it or not either, just that the opportunity will be there again.
Do you do it? Do you fulfill the prophecy?