Jesus was coming back and I didn’t want him to. I hadn’t
had a chance to have sex yet. It was 1987. I was fourteen. I had about a year
left to live! 1988 was just around the corner and the year signalled forty
years since Israel had become a nation in 1948. It was obvious to some that this
was a fulfillment of biblical prophecy about to usher in “the end of the
world.” A man by the name of Edgar Whisenant was so convinced that he published
a book called “88 Reasons Why the Rapture will be in 1988.” 300,000 copies were
mailed free of charge to ministers across America and 4.5 million copies were
sold in bookstores. Whisenant was even quoted as saying, “Only if the Bible is
in error am I wrong; and I say that to every preacher in town.” Ironically, when
nothing happened, instead of declaring that “the Bible was wrong” Whisenant went
on to make predictions (and write books) for 1989, 1993 and 1994.
As a teenager I was inundated with predictions about events
like the “rapture” - a belief in some church circles that says that Jesus will
take all the Christians off of the earth a few years before his second coming. Our
youth group watched cheesy Christian horror movies like “A Thief in the Night”
where God’s people suddenly disappear. When those “left behind” refuse to get
their MasterCard tattooed on their forehead and bow down to the world leader (a
Russian of course) they are persecuted. Their execution was by guillotine resurrected
from the French revolution. I guess the point of these movies was to scare the
hell out of us so we would make sure we were part of the rapture.
We were warned
that the satanic number 666 was hidden in the bar codes of our cereal boxes. Other
products were to be boycotted because they were in league with a world banking
system that was going to take over the world alongside of the United Nations. The Russian leader
Mikhail Gorbachev was the obvious up-and-coming anti-Christ. The birthmark on
his forehead was proof that he was even born with the “Mark of the Beast.”
It was like living in a science fiction movie and being constantly
told the sky was falling. The problem was that it never fell. How many times
can the boy cry wolf and people still come running? This question baffles me as
I see people, a lot older than me, who have been through many more predictions than
I have, still running after the next prediction. It’s Y2K at the turn of the
millennium. It’s the Mayan calendar running out in December of 2012. Now
preachers are doing “Christian” astrology and making predictions about 2014 and
2015 according to the “Blood Moons.” The Russians are the bad guys, or is it
North Korea, or Iraq, Iran, China or the Russians again. It’s never America. Is
that because most of these predictions come from Americans!?*
I’ve become cynical of the whole thing. Plus, when I
started to study the Bible I just couldn’t see it fitting with the way people
were ramming the newspaper into it. I’m not denying that scripture teaches that
Christ is going to come back. It does! And I believe that he will! But the
rapture? Israel needing to rebuild the temple? People getting a 666 computer
chip implanted in their forehead to purchase food at Superstore? A one world government?
I then started looking into history and saw how people
from every generation have seen their world events “predicted” in the Bible.
This made me wonder if the Bible is meant to be interpreted like the writings
of Nostradamus or the ink blots psychologists hold up in front of your face –
everybody seeing whatever they want to see. As Lorne L. Dawson notes in
his book Comprehending Cults:
Biblical sources have stimulated
speculation about the preparation for a time when ‘time will be no more….’ In
1525, for example, during the Protestant Reformation, visions of a new age and
the final triumph of good over evil inspired the radical and charismatic
Protestant theologian Thomas Munster to lead a mass revolt, known as the
Peasants’ War…. A similar gruesome fate befell the Anabaptist followers of Jan
Matthys….
The Middle Ages were marked by
hundreds of apocalyptic uprisings, all with disastrous results. Similar beliefs
have persisted into the modern world, playing a prominent role in the cultural
history of the United States…. The colonizing venture that began at a time of
intense apocalyptic awareness in England meant that it, like everything else in
these years, took on an aura of eschatology (i.e. involving doom and judgment).
Though less prevalent in the nineteenth century, prophecies of the imminent end
of the world inspired many uniquely American religious groups, like the
Millerite movement of the 1830s and 40s, which gave rise to the Seventh Day
Adventists; the new apocalyptic vision of Joseph Smith, which laid the foundations
of the Church of Latter Day Saints (that is, the Mormons); and the apocalyptic
claims of Charles Taze Russell, which undergird the teaching of the Jehovah’s
Witnesses. In fact, talk of the apocalypse permeated the revivalistic cultural
of the Methodist and Baptist churches throughout the nineteenth century and
continues to this day.**
I began to discover that all this “rapture” stuff is a
relatively recent theological “invention” coming out of America from the mid
1800’s – the same time numerous “ends times groups” developed in America, like
the Seven-Day Adventists, Jehovah’s
Witnesses and even stranger groups like the Mormons and Christian
Science. The Rapture was also only accepted by a small, fundamentalist wing
of the church. As these positions grew in popularity some groups, like Dallas Theological Seminary, have made the
rapture a point of orthodoxy.
The
rapture notion goes like this: Jesus is coming back, and when he does, he will
first return before a time of so-called tribulation begins, calling up into the
clouds with him those who are "saved." Horrible suffering will then
occur on the miserable Earth for seven years. Then Jesus will come yet again,
for a final judging. There are many different versions of this scenario, so
it's difficult to summarize. It's fair to say, however, that only
fundamentalist Protestant churches bother to think about the rapture at all.
(Catholics discount the idea completely.)
The
rapture concept is relatively new. It started with an Anglo-Irish
theologian, who in the 1830s invented the concept. This may come as a
shocker to many, but it's a fact: Before John Nelson Darby imagined this
scenario in the clouds, no Christian had ever heard of the rapture.
The idea
was popularized by Cyrus I. Scofield, an American minister who published a
famous reference Bible in 1908, one that developed the idea of an elaborate
series of final periods in history known as dispensations. Scofield, like
Darby, read the Book of Revelation as a vision of the future, not a fiery dream
of the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in A.D. 70.***
Today I stand with the majority of Christians and
denominations in believing that Jesus Christ will come back and, when he does, the
dead will be bodily resurrected, the heavens and the earth will be made new,
and his children will live with him forever.
I am an amillennialist. I believe the millennium is the spiritual
reign of Christ now. I believe that God has only one people, not two. The true
children of Abraham are both Jews and Gentiles whose faith is in God’s messiah.
In the Old Testament the majority of these people were from the nation of Israel.
In the new covenant, the majority are Gentiles. I believe that this was God’s
plan from the beginning. This is not replacement theology because the church is
not replacing the nation of Israel. There only ever was one Israel - that is, Jews and Gentiles who share in the faith of
Abraham. This means that not all who are from the nation of Israel are of the
spiritual seed of Abraham. To say this is anti-Semitic is absurd because even
orthodox Jews believe this, although their understanding of who “true” Israel is
would be different from mine.
I love the Jewish people just as I love people from
every nationality and religion. I believe all people should be treated fairly
and with respect. All people should have fundamental human rights, as laid out by
the United Nations. I do not believe it
is wise for Christians to support the nation of Israel in whatever they do
simply because of (in my view) shoddy biblical interpretation. And, even if those
interpretations are correct, we see many biblical and historical examples of messing
up when we try and “help” God fulfil his prophecies.
I believe that Christ fulfilled what God set up in the
Old Testament. God does not have to still fulfil his promises to Israel. He already
has fulfilled them. Jesus is the fulfilment of them. Christ is the temple.
Christ is the Sabbath. Christ is the lamb. Christ is the High Priest. Christ is
the Davidic king. Christ is the land. Christ is Israel. In Christ, God’s purpose and plan to reveal himself to
the world through Israel has been fulfilled. There is no need to “go backward”
and rebuild the temple, retake the land and reinstated the sacrificial system. Those
were only illustrations. Christ is the reality. This is the message of the New
Testament, especially of books like Matthew, Acts, Romans, Galatians and Hebrews.
When it comes to the end of the world I do not
believe we should live in fear, especially if it disengages us from involvement
in the world. I believe Christians are biblically mandated to live in such a
way as to make the world a better place today
for everyone, regardless of their race, religion or gender. I want to live each
day the way Martin Luther put it when he said, “Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.”
There is no need to write you, friends,
about the times and occasions when these things will happen. (1
Thessalonians 5:1).
* In
his memoirs, theologian Lewis B. Smedes discusses his childhood through the
Great Depression and how difficult it was for his mom to trust getting
government help. She was warned by a grocer that Roosevelt was probably the
Antichrist and that the New Deal was the beginning of the Great Apostasy. –
Lewis B. Smedes, My God and I: A
Spiritual Memoir (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003), 20-21.
** Lorne
L. Dawson, Comprehending Cults: The
Sociology of New Religious Movements, (Don Mills, ON: Oxford, 2006),
146-147.
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End times predictions? I've lost track, there have been THAT many! Which means they've had no impact on my faith ;-)
ReplyDeleteI was twelve years old when I first heard of the world coming to an end. There were different versions of how it was going to end, I remember looking to the sky, trying to find something in the clouds, something that would let me know “The end is now!” I remember being a little afraid. I wasn't a Christian then, my parent were nominal Catholics and did not pay any attention to the warnings. I remember the next morning after the predicted day in which the world was going to end. I opened the window of my bedroom just to see if the “world” was still there and when I saw that it was, I remember feeling a little disappointed. Nothing had change! That meant I needed to do my chores just like any other day. Growing up in rural South America in the 50’s an 60’s there were not very many exiting things going on and the prediction of the end brought a mixture of fear and excitement to my other way boring life.
ReplyDeleteAfter that I remember hearing about the end multiple times and finally when I became a Christian I learnt what the bible had to say about this matter.
I never cared much for the “whens” and the “hows” I could say that is my intellectual laziness that keeps me from studding the end times, or I could say that it is because I trust the One who saved me, to take care of all those detail of when and how, rapture, millenniums, heaven and earth.
I know it is a rather simplistic approach but I hold on to the salvation God provided for me through Jesus. I hold on to the promise that he is going to return. I hold on to the promise of eternity with Him and to the knowledge that I have to live for Him now, abundantly, completely joyfully.
I have a large number of Christian Pentecostal friends and they are these days going through the revived belief of Jesus’ imminent return. Do they know something I don’t? Probably, so while I wait I’ll keep on living this precious life God gave me to live.
A little secret though; in those days when there are rare and heavy clouds formations in the sky I find myself observing them and imaging the sky opening wide and seeing my Saviour in all his glory!
Alicia
One incident which caused me to question the wisdom of some Bible prophecy teachers involved the prophecy regarding the war of God and Magog, described in Ezekiel 38 and 39. I heard Hal Lindsey, author of "Late Great Planet Earth" speak on these prophecies when I was a student at UBC way back in the late '60's. He proclaimed that the invasion of Israel described in these two chapters was imminent and that all the nations described that would form an alliance, principally the Soviet Union (now Russia) and Iran were ready to gang up on the tiny nation of Israel. I pondered this message from time to time over the years, and when the fall of the Iron Curtain occurred in 1989, the Soviet Union disintegrated and Russia became more aligned with the west I knew something was wrong. I went back and re-read the two chapters of Ezekiel and decided that Hal Lindsey and other teachers had skipped over or decided to ignore a few key verses, specifically Ez. 38: 8 and 11. These verses state that a re-born nation of Israel will be living safely, in un-walled villages, without bars or gates, i.e. without defences. They will probably have entrusted responsibility for their security to the United Nations or a similar world governing body. I believe that any nation that is surrounded by hostile neighbouring nations who have stated they want to drive her into the sea is not living safely. The Palestinians, in yet another attempt to arrive at a peace agreement last year refused to even recognize the existence of a Jewish state!
ReplyDeleteOverall I think it is important to read the scripture carefully and not to dismiss end time prophecies as useless just because someone tries to force current events to match it. We are told in the Olivet discourse to take a lesson from the fig tree and other trees, and closely follow scripture and signs in the world so we are not caught unaware by things going on in the world.
Ernie Hamm
I remember clearly as a young person my mother telling us about an iterant preacher who came to their church. She said he outlined Scripture so clearly, describing history in dispensations. This included the dispensation of the church where believers would be raptured before Christ returned. As far as I can remember, I always believed in the gospel message. However, whenever I couldn’t find my mother, I would panic and think I had been left behind. I would also have nightmares, wake up and run to my parent’s bedroom to make sure I hadn’t missed the rapture. To deal with this, I prayed to receive Christ many times to make sure I had done it correctly and sincerely.
ReplyDeleteIt wasn’t until I attended Bible School that doubt was raised in my mind as to some of the existing interpretations of the text in Matthew 24: 40 and 41 where one will be taken and the other left to be understood as taken into judgment not raptured. Consistent with the context of the flood. Also, the idea of an invading army coming and taking away prisoners to be executed.
In recent years, due to exposure to other interpretations through preaching, classes, and personal study with my husband Bill, my faith has developed so I no longer live in fear because I know that I have been forgiven (2 Peter 1: 3-10).
In the past, we have spiritualized the kingdom of God to mean the kingdom of God is not of this world and we will be taken out of this world. We believe that the kingdom of God was inaugurated when Christ died and rose and will bring about full restoration of His creation when He returns.
I was in grade 7 during the Y2K paranoia. I remember having to skip computer lab lessons while workers came and made our computers safe for the year 2000 so it seemed pretty serious to me... but at the same time, it also seemed pretty silly how so many grown ups were freaking out, "Y2K proofing" their homes, etc. Growing up in a Christian home, I remember wondering why people would be so scared if the world ended. I mean sure, I liked Earth and wanted to live a nice long life, but if the world ended I would be in Heaven, so no loss, really. Now I look back and understand the fear so many people had, not knowing what fate would await them if all of those armageddon movies came true. I'm so thankful that I don't have to deal with those kind of worries in my life because I know that my salvation is secure in Christ.
ReplyDeleteMy parents were not worried about Y2K. However, that New Years Eve stands out pretty clearly in my mind compared to many other countdowns I spent with my family. We stayed home and watched the count down on TV together. I remember my dad telling us that chances are, nothing would happen, that worrying doesn't do anything to help us and that we can always trust God's plan. We did pray as a family, not that God would stall our impending doom but thanking him that we knew him and knew we would be safe regardless. I'm thankful my parents are logical in their faith and never paid much attention to those kind of end--of-the-world stories or put fear in our little hearts!