Christians have long awaited the Second Coming. Jesus said, “No one knows the day or the hour.” Now, a prediction market called Polymarket lets people bet on if Jesus will return by December 31, 2026. Traders give it roughly 3% odds, betting 'No' is far more likely. The 'Yes' bet plans to pay $1 if it happens, or nothing if not. This is a follow-up to a 2025 wager. That year, about $3.3 million was bet, mostly against Jesus returning. The odds never rose above 4%, and dropped below 1% by December. The contract ended with no event. Polymarket resolves results from "a consensus of credible sources." Those betting 'No' in 2025 earned about 5.5% before fees, beating some treasury returns. Betting on faith is not new. In the 1600s, Blaise Pascal said belief in God was a bet with huge rewards and small costs. Today’s contract doesn't ask for belief, but for betting on a precise event happening by a set date. Polymarket offers similar bets on aliens, disasters, and politics. The Jesus bet stands out. It puts a sacred, unknowable belief into real-time money odds. Some experts call it distracting or absurd. Others say it's like buying a lottery ticket, not a sign of true belief. For traders, the appeal is technical. The clear deadline and strong preference for 'No' create stable pricing. The rare event makes the bet predictable and profitable for betting against it. The market remains mostly on "No," about 97%. The outcome will follow the same rules as last year—simply waiting for time to pass. Despite social media talk of heavy betting, the market moves slowly, with small shifts in odds. Traders watch closely as 2026 ends. The wager is less a faith statement than a rare financial game on a timeless question.