Israel isn’t literally planning a state event called “blowing the 100 trumpets” as an official government action; the phrase online is a mix of two things:

  1. the traditional Jewish blowing of 100 shofar blasts on Rosh Hashanah (Feast of Trumpets), and
  2. newer Christian–prophecy style videos hyping a special 100‑trumpet (or 100‑shofar) event around the Feast of Trumpets in 2025, especially on 24 September.

What “100 trumpets” usually means

In Jewish practice, it’s traditional in many communities to blow the shofar 100 times during the Rosh Hashanah services each year.

Key points:

  • It’s a shofar (ram’s horn), not a metal trumpet.
  • The blasts are distributed across the synagogue services over two days of Rosh Hashanah.
  • This happens every year, not just once.

So religiously, “Israel blowing 100 trumpets” is basically a dramatic way of talking about Rosh Hashanah / Feast of Trumpets shofar blasts, which are already part of long‑standing Jewish tradition.

The viral “100 trumpets” / “100 shofars at once” thing

Recently, prophecy and end‑times YouTube channels and Christian forums picked up a story that “Israel” would blow 100 trumpets or shofars at once and live‑stream it worldwide, tying it to the return of Jesus and the rapture.

Common elements you’ll see:

  • Date highlighted: 24 September 2025, during the Feast of Trumpets.
  • Phrasing like “Israel is summoning something,” “100 powerful trumpets will sound,” “why is Israel blowing 100 shofars at once?”
  • Strong prophetic spin: videos suggest this is a major end‑times sign, linked to the Second Coming, rapture, or “the great trumpet.”

These are religious and speculative interpretations, mostly from individual creators or ministries, not official announcements of a national ritual with a guaranteed prophetic meaning.

In other words: yes, there is talk of 100 shofars/trumpets around the Feast of Trumpets 2025, but that’s coming from religious media and content creators, not from any globally binding prophetic schedule.

So, “when is Israel blowing the 100 trumpets”?

If your question is about that specific viral prophecy topic :

  • The main date being talked about in current videos is 24 September 2025, during the Feast of Trumpets (Rosh Hashanah) season, when some ministries say 100 shofars will be sounded and streamed worldwide.
  • That is framed by them as spiritually significant and possibly linked to end‑times prophecy, but it is not an officially recognized, universally agreed prophetic event.

If your question is about Jewish practice in general :

  • Every year, during Rosh Hashanah, observant communities in Israel and worldwide blow the shofar 100 times over the course of the services, usually in early autumn (September/early October), according to the Hebrew calendar.

Mini FAQ

  1. Is this in the Bible as a dated event?
    • The Bible speaks about trumpets, shofars, and end‑time trumpet blasts symbolically (for example in Joel, Isaiah, 1 Corinthians, Revelation), but it does not give a calendar date like “24 September 2025.”
  1. Is the Israeli government officially announcing “100 trumpets to summon the Messiah”?
    • Current hype mostly comes from Christian YouTube and social media; they reference government permission and streaming, but the prophetic meaning they attach is their interpretation, not an official state doctrine.
  1. Does this guarantee the rapture or Second Coming?
    • No specific date in such videos has any guarantee; even many Christian teachers caution against date‑setting and emphasize being ready at all times rather than pinning hope on a single event.

TL;DR:

  • In Jewish tradition, 100 shofar blasts are blown every Rosh Hashanah, including in Israel.
  • Viral “Israel blowing 100 trumpets” content is pointing in particular to 24 September 2025 (Feast of Trumpets), framed as a major prophetic sign by some Christian creators, but that is their religious interpretation, not an officially scheduled “world‑ending” event.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.