The
prophets and prognosticators have come out in full force in the wake
of the terrorist attack on America on September 11, 2001. And perhaps
it is good they've come out with their predictions because they've caused
Americans, many for the first time, to begin to ask questions about
the future. Uncertainty mingled with a very real and present danger
has a way of giving us intellectual, if not spiritual, hiccups.
Those
whose Christianity is a nominal visit to the church on special holidays
have now begun showing up in services with a little more regularity.
They clutch their songbooks with a firmer grip, and instead of glancing
down at their watch, or fiddling with the treasure trove in a purse,
their full attention is on the message. They seek to glean seeds of
hope, anything that suggests that "everything is going to be all right."
Some
of the pulpiteers well versed in the politics of congregational
growth and unity know there's a time for balms and a time for the stinging
salve that brings the proverbial wince to the face. John Hagee, a Texas
pulpiteer of no small renown was quoted by Christianity Today as saying
that he believes "WWIII actually began on September 11, 2001."
(1)
Still
others see opportunity to almost literally rivet the pants of those
new faces to their seats, insuring they never again leave the church.
Their messages of doom and gloom predict horrid ends for America, but
always manage to weave into their rhetoric that there is "safety" in
the church. There are, of course, some who are more clever, and they
manage to gloss their message with the "true safety being found in Christ,"
a truth of course, even if preached by some with ulterior motives, to
wit, to make their church a foxhole and thereby gain more "foxhole converts,"
all of which has the effect of boosting attendance. The longevity as
a church member of these "foxhole converts" remains to be seen.
Some
prognosticators began their drum roll of "the end" in the nineties,
predicting that the year 2000 of course was such a monumental event
that it would no doubt usher in "the end," that phrase holding various
meanings depending on what "tribe" was holding forth on the issue. In
1998, Daniel Wojcik, author of the book, "The End of the World As We
Know It," said he was "shocked" to find 20% of Christians believe Christ
will return somewhere around the year 2000. (2)
David
Bay, Director of Old Paths Ministries, a ministry of Grace Baptist Church,
wrote: "Also remember that the #1 objective of the New Age is to successfully
stage the appearance of Anti-Christ. When the anti-christ stages his
appearance, he will claim to be an ascended master from another dimension,
i.e., an alien being. He is just as friendly as those aliens you have
been seeing on tv and movies. He just has our best interests at heart
and wants to lead the world into a new, peaceful existence."
(3) (It is not clear from Scripture that
the anti-christ will claim alien status, and the Bible does not indicate
that he will be an alien.)
Another
writer, Chuck Loefke, who began predicting the "end of the world" some
time ago, has a theory that suggests that America is the "seventh" great
empire of history and is the last empire prior to the eighth one set
up by Satan. (4) Loefke suggests through
his article that the American system has become corrupt and that it
has corrupted the entire world with its worldliness and materialism.
He says, of the end, that it will not come from Russia or China, or
anyone else, but directly from the Lord. As Loefke put it: "Personally,
I believe the Lord will destroy America without the help of mankind.
When it happens, it will be quick, complete, and without a doubt, the
world will know who allowed it." Then, just to let us know that he has
a special "hotline" to God, he suggests if will come from
a huge natural reservoir of gas located under the states of Texas, Oklahoma,
Colorado and Kansas called the Hugoton-Panhandle Natural Gas Reserve.
He then describes an extra-biblical "vision" of America's destruction
as seen by a man by the name of Vince Diehl of Albuquerque, New Mexico
(Loefke's apparent "hotline" of revelations from God). Mr.
Diehl said he saw a huge comet or asteroid hit the earth precisely over
this reservoir of gas which destroyed America.
Prophets
of the "end times" have existed almost from day one. The heretic Montanus
claimed to have some special insight as to when Christ would return.
Of course, he didn't and he knows that now. And we know it, too. And
now, so do all those who followed him into his error.
Tertullian,
who was a supporter and follower of Montanus (2nd Centruy
BC), in writing of the nearness of the return of Christ, said: "What
terrible wars, both foreign and domestic! What pestilences, famines
. . . and quakings of the earth has history recorded!"
(5) Each century following had their "predictors" of the return
of Christ. Novation was one in the third century, Donatus in the fourth,
and in the sixth century the Catholic Pope Gregory predicted the end
was near. He wrote of this imminent return of Christ the following words:
Of
all the signs described by our Lord as presaging the end of the
world, some we see already accomplished.... For we now see that
nation arises against nation and that they press and weigh upon
the land in our own times as never before in the annals of the past.
Earthquakes overwhelm countless cities as we often hear from other
parts of the world. Pestilence we endure without interruption. It
is true that we do not behold signs in the sun and moon and stars
but that these are not far off we may infer from the changes of
the atmosphere. (6)
History's
trail is littered with the shards of broken promises made by "prophets"
of the end times. Popes and monks, laymen, preachers, women, and even
kings have made their mark on the pages of history, putting themselves
down as somehow having special understanding of the "end times." Far
too often, their error has caused many problems in Christianity. Joachim
(AD 1135-1202), a Calabrian monk whose writings would later heavily
influence the Catholic Franciscan order, planted seeds which would later
cause scores who followed after him to enlarge his prophetic errors,
ranging from believing Frederick II would usher in the new Millenium,
(7) to belief by one group, the Taborites, that they were
to assist in the return of Christ by forced conversion and
murder of those who were "enemies" of the Cross. Their position is summed
up in these words they wrote: "Accursed be the man who withholds his
sword from shedding the blood of the enemies of Christ."
(8)
In
the 14th Century, during the Black Plague, predictions of
"the end" were rampant. Estimates of the numbers of dead range widely,
with most scholars agreeing that up to a third of the population of
the planet may have died during the cyclical plague years. There is
little doubt that many millions perished. Victims tyically died within
four to six days from the onset of symptoms (unlike Anthrax which can
take a week or more) . (9)
In
Asia, the disease was seen as a foreign disease brought to them by merchants.
In what is believed to be the first germ warfare military action, the
Asians attacked the Genoese city of Caffa and during the course of the
campaign, put the rotting corpses, victims of the plague found amongst
themselves and along the way, and catapulted them into the city.
(10) The result was catastrophic in more ways than the spread
of the disease into the city. Some of the merchants who escaped, brought
the deadly disease with them and thus spread the disease ever further
into Europe.
The
dark sweep of plague would strike periodically over the next three centuries,
perhaps the most devastating being the bubonic plague that struck the
London area in 1665-66, where over 100,000 perished. Imagine if such
a number were to begin dying in one of America's largest cities. (Imagine
the book sales! Prophets would come forth to tell us all the great mystery
of "why" this occurred.)
The
invisible death angel that came upon London in those years was seen
as "the end" by tens of thousands, including the leading clergy of the
day. (The fact that it was 1666 and the "number of the beast" coincided
didn't help.) Bodies were stacked like cordwood. London, and other towns,
villages and cities, had regular carts come around picking up bodies,
though this became problematic when those who were hired to pick up
the bodies became scheduled for "pick up."
In
the June 24, 1997 issue of Sun Magazine, (11)
they reported that in 1961 the then Pope John XXIII predicted that
Doomsday will begin with the detonation of an atomic bomb in a major
European city by a Libyan terrorist group. Of course, we recall the
prognosticators' dire predictions as to what was going to happen with
the "Y2K" event. Many Christian leaders (who ought to have known better)
were making "gloom and doom" predictions about the event ushering in
calamity that would precipitate "the end." Some of them no doubt made
a lot of money with their message.
In
the December 21, 1999 issue of Weekly World News
(12), Nick Mann reported that thousands of Christians have
reported sightings of angels swarming to the Holy Land. He predicted
that Jesus Christ "is coming home...within a few months." Gary North,
a Christian Reconstructionist, predicted doomsday with a collapse of
civilization on or before January 3, 2000. It would appear to those
of us still reading this material, that we missed the bus. And, it is
probable that somewhere buried in a maze of writings, Mr. North and
Mr. Mann has put some "loopholes" in their End Time Contracts with
God which permit them to "explain" away their predictions.
A
Mormon splinter group called The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, (13)
allegedly predicted the end of the world would occur somewhere around
mid-September of the year 2000. Scores of members pulled their children
out of school and began home schooling them. Presumably, the kids are
back in school. Hopefully, they're learning that not all the leadership
tells them is true.
The
Terrorist Attacks
Henry
Kissinger, former Secretary of State under President Richard Nixon said,
in remarks about the September 11, 2001 terrorists attacks on America:
"The USA may be at the height of its powers, but we need to define our
national purposes. We used to be confident of our place in the world.
Now, there's no consensus about what the danger is."
(14) Even the politicians are unsure of the future. Kissinger's
view matches President Bush's view, to wit, extermination of the enemy.
But, clearly he and the rest of the nation are unsure of the future.
Talk abounds on the news networks about nuclear threats from the terrorists
and of biological weapons that, if unleashed, have the potential of
decimating the American population (as well as the entire world, since
containment of such contaminents is unpredictable).
D.A.
Henderson, Director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Bio-defense
Studies, feels it isn't a matter of if America will be hit
with a biological attach, but when. In his opinion, "We're
likely to see an attack within the next five to 10 years,"
(15) It is believed that those that hate America will surely
bring it here. The fact that unleashing deadly organisms may destroy
others of "like faith" doesn't seem to bother the suicide-oriented terrorists.
In their hate and ignorance, they may well destroy themselves, and may
make their own place uninhabitable.
We
don't understand that kind of suicidal hate. We don't comprehend suicide
bombers. In the modern era, it's a phenomenon that was, until recently,
rarely seen. America first saw it with the Japanese Kamikazi fighters.
Israel saw it in the 1980's with the advent of the Palestinian suicide
bombers. But, its origins go far back in history.
The
principle of suicide as a means of killing one's enemy reaches all the
way to the 12th century, with the assassins of Alamut who
horrified the leadership and the populace living under the Persian caliphate.
The Crusaders called them "assassins," and they believed that the madness
that caused their foe to commit suicide was the result of hashish. They
were partially correct, since hashish did indeed propel many to leap
into that dark void of death with a smile on their face. But, the Crusaders
didn't really know about nor understand the tenants of Islam that gave
promises of lovely virgins and endless sexual pleasures. It's only been
in recent days that America has learned what Israel has understood for
many years.
One
man, Dr Rohan Gunaratna, a specialist on insurgency, predicted long
ago suicide terrorism would reach America. According to him, there are
at least 10 religious and secular terrorist groups wiling to use suicide
as a weapon against their own governments and/or foreign governments.
(16) He indicates that besides Osama Bin Laden's network,
known as Al-Qaeda, "they include Palestinian groups and organizations
in Lebanon, Egypt, Algeria, India, Sri Lanka and Turkey." Such words
lend themselves to our fears. We see terrorists everywhere, surrounding
us. And rhetoric like that is bombarding us on a daily basis, coming
from the politicians, the news media, Hollywood, and of course, the
"prophets." Unfortunately, unless we take steps to guard
out mind, such deluges of "horror information" makes us vulnerable
to the prophets of doom.
America
in the Bible?
Many
of the modern prognosticators have placed America into the Scriptures
as Babylon, a place mentioned 260 times in the Bible, second only to
Jerusalem. Scholars differ as to the interpretations of who and/or what
Babylon means. Some feel it is a religious/political system.
(17) Others feel it is a specific city (New York is a favorite
choice of the writers), while others have argued it is a nation. And
not a few have selected America.
A
typical conservative interpretation is the one given by author Larry
Fox: "In Isaiah 18, there are two identical descriptions of an unidentified
nation. In verses 2 and 7, it describes 'a people tall and smooth-skinned,
. . . a people feared far and wide, an aggressive nation of strange
speech, whose land is divided by rivers.' That is a pretty good description
of today's America." (18)
While
Fox does not commit to America being found in Scripture, his position
is that regardless, in the "end times," America will not play a significant
role. This seems to be the consensus of many of the conservative biblical
scholars. Others hold to the view that America will be destroyed, and
that America is not mentioned in the Bible because our nation does not
exist or is so reduced in power and influence as to relagated to a third-world
status. Many of them hold to the view that New York is the Babylon of
the Bible and will be destroyed by a nuclear bomb.
Take
a healthy mix of pulpiteers, the political prophets with their
hidden agendas, and the "profiteers" (prophets who churn out the various
End of The World books for lots of profit), mix it all up with
a healthy dose of some brutally stark, catastrophic events, and you
have a recipe guaranteed to make the most lethargic of us pay close
attention to the doom and gloom prophets and everyone else included.
We're all looking for answers. We're looking for security.
We're looking for hope. Some of us find hope in the warriors' rhetoric
and in their deeds of valor. We see something being done. And that helps.
It gives us a sense of security. The concept of "payback" as a deterrent
has always been a part of mankind's psyche, and though flawed, it does
have something of a calming effect on us. We hope that now that we've
bloodied them, they'll go away. But, deep down inside, we've got that
funny feeling they will come back, either them or their sons or cousins—blood,
spiritual, and ideological relations.
Some
of us wrap ourselves in a blanket of doom and gloom rhetoric, going
from book to book, prophet to prophet, looking to see who has the answers.
We listen closely, hanging on every word and highlighting morsels of
"truth" gleaned in scouring the writings of the learned. A
few, perhaps a rare few, go about their business with little change.
These folk see the danger of the prophet's rhetoric as well as it value
and have learned to hear but not react, to not accept as a declaration
by God, the "prophet's" declaration of the "end" time. They've learned
to take the truths they hear about the end-times for what they were
intended by God: biblical truths given to make us wise in our lives
and to give us confidence, not fear.
They've
also learned from history. (19) As was
once said by Hank Hanegraaff of Christian Research Institute: "People
who are obsessed with end times have never learned from history. They've
been 100 percent wrong, 100 percent of the time."
(20)
What Can We Know?
America's
future cannot be known by anyone but God. We can make educated guesses
about a large number of things about her future. We know, for example
that, absent the intervention of God, the probability of America being
hurt again by terrorism is fairly high. But, there isn't a whole lot
we can do about it. The lot
is in the hand of God, not us. We like to think of control as
something we have but in reality, if a terrorist with a nuclear device
comes into our land, only God
is going to stop him. God can stop him in more ways than we can
count. The terrorist will not be stopped by our vigilance, though we
ought to be vigilant. He will not be stopped by our superior technology,
though we ought to employ it and use it. No, in the end, he will be
stopped, if he is to be stopped, by God. Now God may use us. He may
direct our attention to a certain place, or may cause the terrorist
to make a mistake. And, God will certainly raise up some to intervene
in prayer. But, the future is absolutely, unequivocally in the hands
of God.
That
may not sound soothing to some of you but consider this: (Nahum 1:7)
"The LORD is good, a strong hold in the day of
trouble; and he knoweth them that trust in him." It
would be better to be at ground zero with the Lord, trusting Him, than
a thousand miles away without Him.
Is
the end near?
I
like to think it is. Like Paul, I believe the time is short. But, we
are told to look expectantly for our Savior's appearance.
(21) We are to trust in the Lord and not lean unto our own
understanding. (22) We can make our
present circumstances look bleak and unpromising, as did countless Christians,
pagans and citizens of our history before us did. Did they have cause
to think the end was near? Absolutely. World War II was a cataclysmic
event. If a Christian were in those times, it certainly would be a time
of wars and rumors of wars. There was famine. There was disease. There
were signs in the heavens with missiles and bombs raining down on London.
And, across Europe, the raining death that came from Allied bombers
must have brought conviction to many Christians there that the end had
come upon them.
But
the end was not yet come.
America
faces some serious days ahead. None of us know the path that God will
lead America down. It is possible that the reason America does not seem
to be mentioned in Scriptures related to the end times is because God
spares America. Perhaps America has true revival, and God, willing to
show His power, refuses to permit America to engage in the end-time
wars in order to show His power. Perhaps God wants Israel to know the
power of God to deliver and not the technological weaponry of America.
Is that not a possibility?
Speculation
does us no good on this issue. Jesus said specifically:
"But of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels which
are in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father. 33/ Take ye heed, watch
and pray: for ye know not when the time is." (Mark 13:32-33).
Note that Jesus said twice, emphasizing, that we
do not know the time.
He
gave us an assignment, though. He said to (1) take heed;
and (2) watch; and (3) pray. That
is all we can do. And if you wonder what it is that we are to "take
heed" about and to "watch" for and to "pray" about, well, if you read
the rest of that passage, Jesus says: "For
the Son of man is as a man taking a far journey, who left his house,
and gave authority to his servants, and to every man his work, and commanded
the porter to watch. 35/ Watch ye therefore: for ye know not when the
master of the house cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the cock
crowing, or in the morning: 36/ Lest coming suddenly he find you sleeping.
37/ And what I say unto you I say unto all, Watch." (Mark 13:34-37).
It's
pretty clear that we're not to fall asleep, that is, we're not to be
inattentive to the work of God and our duties. We're to go about with
a watchful eye towards heaven, realizing the time is short and the harvest
is ripe. We're to pay attention to our lives. We are to be on guard
against the enemies of Christianity. We're to hold up the work of God
in prayer. We are to watch for His coming as well as for the enemy's
coming. The Lord's time in the Garden of Gethsemane is instructive in
this whole area.
Ladies,
raise your kids. Cook those delicious, nutritious meals, wash their
clothes, love your husband, attend to your chores, work your work...whatever
God has placed in your hand to do. Husbands, fathers, care for
your family. Do your best for your family. Be a good and godly example
for them. Exercise yourself in a godly fashion before them and before
all. Lead them. Protect them. Care for them. Quit
yourselves like men.
And
to all, go about your lives as though Christ were not returning for
a thousand years, but be watchful, and expectant, and eager, for His
return, hoping that it will be today. Ignore the prognosticators of
doom. Satan uses many vehicles to plant fear in the minds and hearts
of God's people, knowing that fear displaces faith.
God
has not given us a spirit of fear. (23)
But
Satan will...if you let him.
The
End
copyright 2006 Voyle Glover
END NOTES
1. Christianity Today,
Week of Sept. 24, 2001: http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2001/139/32.0.html
2.
Barton, David, "2000: All eyes on the millennium," The Sacramento
Bee," 1/1/98
3.
Bay, David, Radio broadcast, "The Cutting Edge,"
4.
Chuck Loefke, "The End Times Information Center," Internet file
5.
Gary DeMar, Last Days Madness (Brentwood, Tenn.: Wolgemuth
& Hyatt, 1991), p. 7.
6.
Gary DeMar, Last Days Madness (Brentwood, Tenn.: Wolgemuth
& Hyatt, 1991), p. 7.
7.
When he died without that happening, major revisions were made
by the "prophets" of the day which had him returning from the dead to
fulfill Joachim's prophetic words
8.
Paul Boyer, When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief
in Modern American Culture (Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press,
Harvard University, 1992), p. 55.
9.
Discovery, "Black Death, http://www.discovery.com/stories/history/blackdeath/pestilence.html
10.
Id.," http://www.discovery.com/stories/history/blackdeath/caffa.html
11.
Sun Magazine makes a comfortable income making these outlandish
predictions. In 1997 it also reported Noah's Ark had been found and
inside were some scrolls. On the third scroll the "end" was predicted
to be January 31, 2001. Scroll two predicted the melting of the ice
caps resulting in world-wide flooding (contrary to the biblical promise
of God as found in Gen. 9:11.
12.
This publication has put out so many bogus predictions
that one has to wonder how they still have a subscription list. One
of the latest issues is an article about "how to act when you meet Jesus."
Unfortunately, these kind of publications are read (and believed) by
thousands of people.
13.
Formed in 1929 and ex-communicated by the Mormon
Church.
14.
Baxter, Sarah, "Kissinger Flies With the Hawks,"
The Sunday Times, Ltd., http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/sti/2001/09/16/stiusausa01009.html?
15.
Williams, Michell, "US Biological Attack Said Inevitable," Associated
Press, Feb 5, 2000: http://www.newsday.com/ap/rnmpnt0s.htm
16.
Colvin, Marie, "Suicide terrorists find a new way to marry into
death," The Sunday Times, Ltd., Sept. 16, 2001: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/sti/2001/09/16/stiusausa01013.html?
17.
See a very interesting and fascinating study on Babylon and Revelations
17 & 18 at http://www.bible.org/docs/nt/books/rev/jhk3/rev-27
18.
Fox, Larry, "The Supernatural Natural," excerpt at http://www.foxven.com/vcmr.html
19.
While I do not vouch for some of the conclusions & positions
advanced by the author, for an interesting look at some of history's
predictions of the end times, see: http://users.iafrica.com/l/ll/lloyd/6-EndTimeIssues/Predictions.htm
& http://www.sullivan-county.com/nf0/y2k/bible_ca.htm
20.
AP- Herald Courier, 10/6/2001
21.
Titus 2:13
22.
Proverbs 3:5
23.
"For God hath not given us the spirit
of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind." (2 Timothy
1:7)