Years after the
rapture theory was introduced in Christian eschatology the Scofield Reference
Bible was published in 1909, imbibed in its interpretation of end time events. Not
long after that the earth went through a deeply distressing period: World War
I, the Great Depression, and World War II. During this distressing period, this new found pessimistic theory grew deeply rooted itself in American mentality.
In 1948, Israel
regained its independent statehood, and many began to say that Matthew 24:32-33
was the pointer that when Israel became a state again the end was near.
Now
learn this lesson from the fig tree: As soon as its twigs get tender and its
leaves come out, you know that summer is near. Even so, when you see all
these things, you know that it is near, right at the door (Matthew 24:32-33).
In the next
verse it says, "Truly I tell you, this generation will certainly
not pass away until all these things have happened" (Matt.
24:34). Since the Bible teaches that a generation is 40 years, this led to
millions of Christians believing and teaching that the rapture would occur in
1988. Edgar Whisenant based on the supposition sold 4.5 million copies of his
book, 88 Reasons Why Jesus Will Return in 1988. Whisenant was
quoted as saying, "Only if the Bible is in error am I wrong; and I say
that to every preacher in town," and "If there were a king in this
country and I could gamble with my life, I would stake my life on Rosh Hashanah
in 1988."
Whisenant's
predictions were swallowed deeply in some parts of the evangelical
Christian community. As the predicted great day approached, regular
programming on the Christian Trinity Broadcast Network (TBN) was interrupted to
provide special instructions on preparing for the rapture. When the
predicted rapture failed to occur, Whisenant followed up with later books with
predictions for various dates in 1989, 1993, 1994, and 1997.
At this point
and up till now, some of the modern teachers have started to redefine what generation means.
They say that the clock started at 1948, but since a forty-year generation is
wrong, they are now saying a generation is seventy or even one hundred years
while some one hundred and twenty years.
In 1970, Hal
Lindsey wrote The Late Great Planet Earth. He sold
approximately 35 million copies and deeply influenced a generation of pastors
and Christian leaders growing up in the Jesus People Movement of the early
1970s. This has created a generation that believes more in Lindsey's mythology
than understanding what the Bible and history actually teach. In his book, Hal
Lindsey concluded that, since the United States was not mentioned in Daniel or
Revelation, the U.S. would not be a major player on the world scene when the
Great Tribulation happened. Based on his interpretation of various biblical
texts, he also presumed that the European Economic Community (now the European
Union) would become what he termed the "United States of Europe."
This union would have ten members and would become, according to Lindsey, the
revived Roman Empire, ruled by the antichrist, needed to fulfill Bible
prophecy. Currently, the European Union has twenty-seven members.
There are some
who have been influenced by Lindsey’s end time theory but play safe by choosing
not to make dates prediction. What they don’t know it is the same system that
forces a date. If the system is wrong, it is wrong.
As Gary DeMar stated recently, "the vast majority of modern day preachers who preach on the Rapture are far more dangerous to society and the church than the date-setters like Harold Camping. Camping did his evil and had some evil effects, but he will become an infamous footnote in history. These others who refuse to set a date simply keep saying, “soon”—and they oppress, ruin lives, turn people off from the church, and ignore societyperpetually."
Later, Hal
Lindsey released another book titled The 1980s: Countdown to
Armageddon, implying that the battle of Armageddon would happen soon.
He even stated that, "The decade of the 1980s could very well be the last
decade of history as we know it," and he suggested that the U.S. would be
destroyed by a surprise Soviet attack. The book was quietly taken out of print
in the early 1990s. Lindsey, however, would not give up. In the early 1990s, he
published Planet Earth—2000 A.D., which warned Christians that
they should not plan to still be living on earth by the year 2000.
Then in 1995,
the first of the mega-bestselling book series, Left Behind, was
released. Due to the paranoia and fear regarding Y2K, Christians were primed
for rapture fever. When all was said and done, Y2K was all hype, and 60 million
copies of Left Behind had been sold (as well as four terrible
feature length films inclusive of the one just released in 2014 that were
similar in nature and theology to the Thief in the Nigh tmovie
series of the 1970s).
It’s time we
stop paying attention to such teaching that produces error and is actually
anti-God kingdom. If one has proclaimed over forty different people to be the
antichrist, we should ignore him. The fact that they are well packaged wearing
suits and are on TV doesn't make them any less wrong than the crazy guy on the
street corner wearing a sandwich board sign that reads, "The end is
near!"
Jesus told us
to judge the messages of various prophets by examining the fruit of their lives
and the fruit of their prophetic words (see Matt. 7:15-20). These are fruits
that I have identified among those feed on such diet.
Fruits
Of Endtime Syndrome:
1. A dread and hatred of politics because of their
concept of the antichrist.
2. Fear and uncertainty that has characterized the
lives of many. It is important to note that faith cannot be effective in the
same environment where has taken abode.
3. There was a time when many did not make long term
investments and were not involved in real estate since as they thought
everything would soon burn up.
4.
It created a fear of
technology. There was a time Christians called the internet the devil’s web.
Some still view technology as the devil’s tool as some still link it with the
mark of the beast. It harbors a fear of politics because the
antichrist could be right around the corner.
5.
It discourages people from pushing forward in
health, medicine, the environment, or technology because they reason, "Why
would one work for the good of a world that is going to burn?"
6.
It has created a bizarre form of Christian racism
that has negatively affected evangelism in the Arab world. Many Christians have
become pro-Israel without exercing sound political judgment. If Israel were to attack
her surrounding nations, they would be justified because they are seen God's
"chosen people." Christians have literally accepted a new form of
pro-Israel and anti-Arab racism.
7.
It has bred an unhealthy suspicion toward other
countries, producing anti-Russian and anti-Chinese attitudes among many Christians.
This Christian prejudice is rooted in a wrong understanding of the endtimes.
8.
Many Christians have narrowed their hope down to
the rapture as an escape from the evil in the world.
9.
Some have lost their sense of reasoning
especially in living a normal life. I read recently of a tragic case involving
a woman. A recent and tragic
example of this is Lyn Benedetto, a 47-year old California woman who tried to
kill her children to spare them from going through the Great
Tribulation. She believed Harold Camping’s prediction that the Rapture would
take place on May 21, 2011, and apparently feared she or her daughters would
miss it. She slit the throats and wrists of her 11 and 14 year-old daughters,
and then her own.
10. This
end-time view is known to be the foundation of many cults and militias.
11. Many
always find themselves associate anything disease outreach and infection as
endtime signs like the recent outbreak of Ebola in West Africa and even AIDS. They
see a God is using sickness to punish an evil world to either bring them to Him
or send them to an early grave. WE have forgotten that the creation early
awaits the manifestation of the sons of God.
12. There is
a fearful expectation of the antichrist and low desire to seek the revelation
of Jesus in the scriptures and in their lives.
Let me leave you with the thought from Jonathan Welton.
“Some say that having a fearful future motivates evangelism.
Actually most non-Christians just think we are nuts and don't want to join us.
In fact, some famous atheists (for example Christopher Hitchens) are saying
that Jesus was a false prophet because His prophecy didn't happen in the first century
(see Matt. 24:34)7 Even when some people do get saved out of
fear for the future, this is not the Gospel of the Kingdom; Jesus never said to
preach the endtimes. Many have been brought into Christianity through fear of
hell, judgment, or rapture; they then have had to untangle their spiritual
walk, for years to come, from the fear into which they were birthed.