Forbidden Book Tui Bei Tu: Image 53 Names the 'Lord of Guanzhong'? Final Countdown to 2026

Forbidden Book Tui Bei Tu: Image 53 Names the 'Lord of Guanzhong'? Final Countdown to 2026

A "heavenly book" banned for centuries—did it really foretell our era? Starting from the Tang-dynasty mystics Li Chunfeng and Yuan Tiangang, this video traces the Tui Bei Tu from Image 44 to Image 53, closely reading the Da Zhuang hexagram, the "Lord of Guanzhong," and key phrases such as "half-old with a son" and "a filial son comes from the west," citing Jin Shengtan's commentary. It links Wu Zetian, the An Lushan Rebellion, the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, and classic correspondences like "a bird without feet, a mountain with a moon," comparing Liu Bowen's stele text, the Huangbo poem, and Shao Yong's "Huangji Jingshi" to sketch a timeline pointing to around 2026. It also looks ahead to Images 54–57 and their visions of war and ceasefire (the Taiwan Strait, "the flyer is not a bird," the clash of Kan and Li). We also caution about the risks of hindsight interpretation and later textual additions: prophecy may be a mirror reflecting the human heart. After great chaos, must great order follow? Can the Lord of Guanzhong and the saving sage appear in turn to bring "peace under heaven"? We invite you to view this thousand-year-old prophecy with a calm mind.