In ancient scripture, beasts emerged from the deep—horned monsters, winged abominations, creatures with lion heads and locust wings and faces like men. Today, the beasts walk again. Only now they come not from the Abyss, but from a biotech lab.
From the revival of dire wolves to pigs bred to grow human hearts, from synthetic T. rex leather to chimera embryos pulsing with human DNA, mankind stands at the threshold of what some call progress—and others call prophecy fulfilled.
The New Creatures Among Us
Colossal Biosciences, a Dallas-based firm, made headlines this year with the live births of three genetically engineered dire wolves, recreated from ancient DNA and birthed via surrogate hounds. These aren’t domestic pets. These are Ice Age predators—reborn.
The same company is now working on woolly mammoths, Tasmanian tigers, and a chimeric creature nicknamed the “woolly mouse”—a fat-coated rodent carrying mammoth traits. Their vision? A rewilded Earth… or a Jurassic Park with moral window dressing.
Meanwhile, a trio of companies—The Organoid Company, Lab-Grown Leather Ltd., and VML—has announced a plan to produce T. rex leather handbags, built using reconstructed protein from fossil fragments. Though no living T. rex exists, they claim the collagen structure can be revived and grown in custom cell lines to produce “ethically sourced” dinosaur skin.
And Then Came the Chimera
Scientists at the Salk Institute and other labs have succeeded in growing human-animal embryos, known as chimeras, that contain human cells within pig embryos. While touted as a way to grow transplantable organs, these creatures carry implications far beyond the surgical table.
Even pigs raised strictly for organ harvesting—like those at Revivicor in Virginia—are now genetically modified to carry up to 10 human-compatible alterations, including blood-clot resistance, smaller organ size, and reduced immune rejection.
Some call it life-saving. Others call it blasphemy in a Petri dish.
Prophecy in the Petri Dish?
Revelation 13 describes a beast that rises from the sea: “like a leopard, with feet like a bear, and a mouth like a lion.” Another follows, with horns like a lamb and speech like a dragon. Sound symbolic? Maybe. But read the latest CRISPR update and tell us it doesn’t track.
The locusts with human faces in Revelation 9? We now have insect-human genetic work underway. The great red dragon of Revelation 12? Researchers are actively building synthetic dragon-like bodies using bio-mechanical and genetic structures for display and military concept modeling.
The line between parable and prototype is fading.
What If It Falls Into the Wrong Hands?
What happens when this tech hits Gog and Magog? The end-times coalitions described in Ezekiel and Revelation—often linked to Russia, Iran, or Turkey—may one day possess genetic weapons that don’t just destroy cities, but create monsters.
Imagine battlefield biolabs cooking up synthetic beasts immune to conventional weapons. Lion-sized predators, aquatic leviathans, skyborne horrors with engineered wings and talons. In an era of drone swarms and AI soldiers, don’t count out bioengineered terror.
Israel and the U.S. already lead the world in military biotech—what happens when that power is mirrored by enemies with no moral restraint?
Moral Mandate or Messianic Madness?
Companies like Colossal and Revivicor pitch their work as a moral duty: a way to correct past human errors, stop extinctions, save lives. But critics argue we’re crossing lines we don’t fully understand—waking beasts, opening gates, rewriting creation.
As the biotech frontier rushes ahead, the world must decide: Are we curing disease? Or crafting the beasts of judgment day?
This is no longer sci-fi.
It’s prophecy with a pulse.