Posted on 06/25/2009 1:58:34 PM PDT by bdeaner
Three years ago I mentioned to a Catholic friend that I was starting to work on a book critiquing the Left Behind novels. I explained that it would thoroughly examine premillennial dispensationalism, the unique apocalyptic belief system presented, in fictional format, within those books. Premillennial dispensationalism teaches that the Rapture and the Second Coming are two events separated by a time of tribulation and that there will be a future millennial reign of Christ on earth. Why? she asked, obviously bewildered. No one really takes that stuff seriously.
That revealing remark merely reinforced my desire to write Will Catholics Be Left Behind? (Ignatius, 2003). Other conversations brought home the same point. Far too many peopleincluding a significant number of Catholicsdont recognize the attraction and power of this Fundamentalist phenomenon. Nor do they appear to appreciate how much curiosity exists about the end times, the book of Revelation, and the pretribulation Rapturethe belief that Christians will be taken up from earth prior to a time of tribulation and the Second Coming.
In the course of writing articles, giving talks, and writing the book, Ive encountered a number of questions and commentsalmost all from Catholicsthat indicate how much confusion exists about matters of eschatology (theology of the end times), not to mention ecclesiology, historical theology, and the interpretation of Scripture. The five myths I present here summarize many of those questions.
MYTH 1
The Left Behind books represent a fringe belief system that very few people take seriously.
Exactly how many copies of the Left Behind books must be sold before the theology they propagate can be taken seriously? Fifty-seven million? Thats actually where sales stand as I write this, making the novels (consisting now of eleven books and supposedly ending with book 14) the biggest-selling series of Christian fiction ever. Then there are the two movies, CDs, childrens books, devotionals, greeting cards, and a host of other products, along with a Web site that attracts hundreds of thousands of fans every month.
But thats only part of the larger picture. The biggest-selling work of non-fiction (other than the Bible) since 1970 is dispensationalist Hal Lindseys The Late Great Planet Earth (Bantam, 1970), which sold more than 40 million copies and established the blueprint for a number of other popular, self-described Bible prophecy experts (including Tim LaHaye, creator and coauthor of the Left Behind series). LaHayes first work of Bible prophecy was The Beginning of the End (Tyndale, 1972), essentially a carbon copy of Lindseys mega-seller. In the years that followed, Lindsey and LaHaye, along with authors such as Salem Kirban, David Wilkinson, Dave Hunt, Grant Jeffrey, John Walvoord, and others, produced a string of best-selling books warning of the rapidly approaching pretribulation Rapture, the Antichrist, and the tribulation.
The success of these books and of the dispensationalist system isnt fringe. Far from ittheyre actually quite mainstream, influencing even nominal Christians and non-Christians. It reflects a trend that has been steadily growing for several decades. While Lutherans, Methodists, and Episcopalians dwindle in number and influence, Fundamentalist and conservative Evangelical groups continue to form and grow vigorously, making their mark increasingly in the secular realm. Many of these Fundamentalistsincluding non-denominational Christians, Bible-believing Christians, born-again Christians, Baptists, and Assembly of God membersare antagonistic toward the Catholic Church and her teachings, and a majority of them believe in some form of dispensationalism.
Harvard historian Paul Boyer, author of When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief in Modern American Culture (Harvard University Press, 1998), estimates that 30 to 40 percent of Americans believe in Bible prophecy and hold to eschatological beliefs such as those taught in the Left Behind novels. Admittedly, such numbers are difficult, if not impossible, to verify with any real accuracy. Still, it can be safely said that tens of millions of Americans believe in a pretribulation Rapture and would readily accept the Left Behind books as a fairly accurate, fictionalized depiction of the fast-approaching end of the world.
MYTH 2
Catholic beliefs about the end times are quite similar to those of Fundamentalists such as Tim LaHaye.
Studying dispensationalism (as in studying almost any theological system) is like exploring an icebergthe vast majority lies beneath the surface, out of sight and unnoticed by the casual observer. On the surface, dispensationalists and Catholics appear to agree about the Second Coming, a future Antichrist, and an impending trial and time of apostasy. And, in fact, common beliefs about aspects of these teachings do exist. Although it comes as a surprise to many Fundamentalists, the Catholic Church clearly believes in the Second Coming, a final trial, and a supreme religious deception...of the Antichrist (Catechism of the Catholic Church [CCC], 675).
As noteworthy as these agreements are, the differences between premillennial dispensationalism and Catholic doctrine are even more striking. Stripped to their bare essentials, these include three premises about the past and present, and two beliefs about the future.
The first dispensationalist premise is that Jesus Christ failed to establish the kingdom for the Jews during His first coming. Dispensationalists believe that Christ offered a material and earthly kingdom, but the Jews rejected Him. John Nelson Darby (1800-1882), the ex-Anglican priest who formed the dispensationalist system, wrote, The Lord, having been rejected by the Jewish people, is become wholly a heavenly person. This dualistic notion was echoed and articulated by Darbys disciples, including Cyrus I. Scofield (editor of the Scofield Reference Bible), Lewis Sperry Chafer, and many of the popularizers of the system. Leading dispensationalist theologian Charles C. Ryrie, in his systematic Basic Theology, gives this convoluted explanation: Throughout his earthly ministry Jesus Davidic kingship was offered to Israel (Matthew 2:2 and 27:11; John 12:13), but He was rejected.... Because the King was rejected, the messianic, Davidic kingdom was (from a human viewpoint) postponed. Though He never ceases to be King and, of course, is King today as always, Christ is never designated as King of the Church.... Though Christ is a King today, He does not rule as King. This awaits His second coming. Then the Davidic kingdom will be realized (Matthew 25:31; Revelation 19:15 and 20).
This supposed failure leads to the second premise that the Church is a parenthetical insert into history. Put another way, the Church was created out of necessity when the Jews rejected Christ. Lewis Sperry Chafer (1871-1952), whose eight-volume Systematic Theology is the dispensationalist Summa, wrote, The present age of the Church is an intercalation into the revealed calendar or program of God as that program was foreseen by the prophets of old. Such, indeed, is the precise nature of the present age. The Church is not, in dispensationalist theology, the new Israel spoken of by St. Paul (see Galatians 6:16) but is utterly separate from Old Testament Israel. So long as the Church age continues, the Old Testament promises made to Israel are on hold, waiting to be fulfilled.
The third premise, so vital to dispensationalism, is the existence of two people of God: the Jews (the earthly people) and the Christians (the heavenly people). This is the language and theological vision established by Darby and taken up by leading dispensationalists ever since. In Rapture Under Attack (Multnomah, 1998), LaHaye notes that the pretribulational dispensationalist view is the only view that distinguishes between Israel and the church, and then remarks that the confusion of Israel and the church is one of the major reasons for confusion in prophecy as a whole.... Pre-Tribulationism is the only position which clearly outlines the program of the church.
As LaHayes statement indicates, these premises result in the belief of the pretribulation Rapture. This event is necessary because the heavenly people (Christians) must eventually be taken from the earthly stage so that the prophetic timeline can be restarted and Gods work with the earthly people (Jews) resumed. That work will involve seven years of tribulation, which dispensationalists believe will be a period of Gods chastisement on the Jewish people, resulting in the vast majority of Jews being killed, but also in the conversion of those remaining.
This, finally, leads to the second belief about the future: an earthly, millennial kingdom established by Christ for the Jews. Based on passages such as Revelation 20 and Ezekiel 40-48, this includes the claim that animal sacrifices will be renewed in a rebuilt Temple. Some dispensationalists think these sacrifices will be symbolic; others believe they will have salvific value, befitting a theocratic government.
All five of these points are incompatible with Catholic doctrine. Christ did not offer an earthly kingdom, nor did He fail, nor was He rejected by all of the Jews; His mother, the apostles, and the disciples were all Jews who accepted Him as the Messiah. The Church is not a sort of Plan B, but is, according to the Catechism, the goal of all things, reflecting the Catholic recognition of how intimately Christ has joined Himself to the Church (cf. Ephesians 5). The Old Covenant is fulfilled in the New, and there is only one People of God of the New Covenant, which transcends all the natural or human limits of nations, cultures, races, and sexes: For by one Spirit we were all baptized into one body (CCC 1267).
Flowing from incorrect, flawed premises, the idea of a pretribulation Rapture is foreign to Catholic theology. Based largely on St. Augustines City of God, the millennium has long been understood (if not formally defined) to be the Church agea time when the King rules, even though the Kingdom has not been fully revealed (cf. CCC 567, 669).
MYTH 3
The Rapture is a biblical and orthodox belief.
LaHaye declares, in Rapture Under Attack, that virtually all Christians who take the Bible literally expect to be raptured before the Lord comes in power to this earth. This would have been news to Christiansboth Catholic and Protestantliving prior to the 18th century, since the concept of a pretribulation Rapture was unheard of prior to that time. Vague notions had been considered by the Puritan preachers Increase (1639-1723) and Cotton Mather (1663-1728), and the late 18th-century Baptist minister Morgan Edwards, but it was John Nelson Darby who solidified the belief in the 1830s and placed it into a larger theological framework.
This historical background leaves the dispensationalist with two options: claim the pretribulation Rapture is biblical but went undiscovered for 1,800 years, or argue that it has been the belief of true Christians ever since Christ walked the earth. Ryrie, in his apologetic Dispensationalism Today (Moody, 1965), makes a case for the former by stating: The fact that the church taught something in the first century does not make it true, and likewise if the church did not teach something until the twentieth century, it is not necessarily false. LaHaye and others argue for the latter, pointing to passages such as 1 Thessalonians 4:15-18, 1 Corinthians 15:51-53, and Matthew 24 as clear evidence for the pretribulation Rapture (those passages make several appearances, for instance, in the Left Behind novels).
1 Thessalonians 4:16-17 is especially vital to the dispensationalist:
"For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the archangels call, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first; then we who are alive, who are left, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so we shall always be with the Lord."
There are three problems with claiming this passage refers to the Rapture. First, neither it nor the entire book of 1 Thessalonians mentions Christ returning two more times, or makes any reference to such a distinction. Second, dispensationalists believe the Rapture will be a secret and silent event, yet this passage describes a very loud and public event. This is all the more problematic because dispensationalists insist that they interpret Scripture plainly and literally, allowing for symbolism only when such is the obvious intent of the author. Finally, dispensationalists teach that all other New Testament references to Christ coming in the clouds (Matthew 24:30 and 26:64; Mark 14:62; Revelation 1:7) refer to His Second Coming but inexplicably deny that that is the case here.
1 Corinthians 15 and its reference to the twinkling of an eye is often used as a proof text but is equally unconvincing. The point of the passage is that Christians will be glorified at the Second Coming, not that theyll be secretly whisked off the planet prior to the tribulation. It describes an event that will occur at the last trumpet and states that the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed (1 Corinthians 15:52).
Yet LaHaye and Left Behind coauthor Jerry B. Jenkins, reflecting the common dispensationalist interpretation, claim in Are We Living in the End Times? (Tyndale, 1999) that Matthew 24:29-31 describes the Second Coming, which will include a great sound of a trumpet (Matthew 24:31). So how can 1 Corinthians 15, which speaks of the last trumpet, refer to the Rapture when there is yet another trumpet to be sounded, several years later, at the Second Coming?
Some dispensationalists have admitted, at least in a backhanded fashion, the recent roots of the pretribulation Rapture. In an article titled The Origin of the Pre-Trib Rapture (Biblical Perspectives, March/April 1989), LaHayes colleague at the Pre-Trib Research Institute, Thomas D. Ice, writes that a certain theological climate needed to be created before premillennialism would restore the Biblical doctrine of the pre-trib Rapture. He continues: Sufficient development did not take place until after the French Revolution. The factor of the Rapture has been clearly known by the church all along; therefore the issue is the timing of the event. Since neither pre- nor post-tribs have a proof text for the time of the Rapture...then it is clear that this issue is the product of a deduction from ones overall system of theology, both for pre- and post-tribbers. In fact, the Rapture as dispensationalists conceive of it was never part of the early or medieval Churchs theology but is the modern creation of Darby less than 200 years ago.
MYTH 4
The early Church Fathers believed in the Rapture and the millennial kingdom on earth.
This clever argument, used by Ryrie, LaHaye, Lindsey, and others, is effective in persuading those with little knowledge of historical theology or the beliefs of the early Church. True, several early Christian writersnotably Papias, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Hippolytus, Methodius, Commodianus, and Lactanituswere premillennialists who believed that Christs Second Coming would lead to a visible, earthly reign. But the premillennialism they embraced was quite different from that taught by modern dispensationalists.
Catholic scholars acknowledge that some of the Fathers were influenced by the Jewish belief in an earthly Messianic kingdom, while others embraced millennarianism as a reaction to the Gnostic antagonism toward the material realm. But the Catholic Church does not look to one Church Father in isolationor even a select group of Fathersand claim their teachings are infallible or definitive. Rather, the Church views their writings as valuable guides providing insights and perspectives that assist the Magisteriumthe teaching office of the Churchin defining, clarifying, and defending Church doctrine.
Those early premillennialists did not hold to distinctively modern and dispensationalist beliefs, especially not the belief in a pretribulation Rapture and the radical distinction between an earthly and a heavenly people of God; such beliefs didnt come about until many centuries later. The early Church Fathers, whether premillennialist or otherwise, believed that the Church was the New Israel and that Christiansconsisting of both Jews and Gentiles (cf. Romans 10:12)had replaced the Jews as Gods chosen people.
In attempting to prove the validity of their beliefs by appealing to early Church Fathers, dispensationalists always ignore the Church Fathers unanimous teachings about the nature of the Eucharist, the authority and nature of the Church, and a host of other distinctively Catholic beliefs. They also conveniently blur the lines between the historical premillennialism of certain early Church writers and the dispensational premillennialism of Darby and his disciples.
MYTH 5
The Left Behind books are harmless entertainment that encourage Christians in their faith and help them better understand the Book of Revelation.
Even when presented with the faulty theological premises underlying dispensationalism, some Catholics still insist that the Left Behind series is just good funa light read with a sound moral message. Some, however, go even further and claim the books have changed their lives, provided answers about the end of the world, and made sense of the Bible, particularly the Book of Revelation. Responding to my book, a Catholic reader wrote, I personally believe that the dispensationalists have done Catholics a favor by alerting them to the serious times we live in and by encouraging them to search out the Scriptures. She never makes mention of Catholic scholarship or magisterial documents.
Another Catholic reader of the series told me, You condemn these books because they are successful. In fact, Ive strongly critiqued the Left Behind books because theyre written by a noted Fundamentalist (with serious animus toward the Catholic Church) in order to propagate a theology that is incorrect, misleading, and contrary to historic Christianity.
One message of LaHayes that comes across clearly in books such as Are We Living in the End Times?, Rapture Under Attack, and Revelation Unveiled is that the Catholic Church is apostate, Catholicism is Babylonian mysticism and an idolatrous religion, and Catholics worship Mary, knowing little about the real Jesus Christ. Its difficult to overstate the dislikeeven hatredLaHaye has for the Catholic Church or to exaggerate the ridiculous character of his attacks. He condemns the use of candles in Catholic churches, insists theres hardly any difference between Hinduism and Catholicism, and emphatically declares that the Catholic Church killed at least 40 million people during the dark ages.
When I asked LaHaye, via e-mail, why he never refers to Catholic sources or official documents in his writings, he replied:
"Because I think that for centuries the Catholic Church has presented church history in a manner protective of 'Mother church.' ...I have seen more concern on the part of your church for Hindus, Buddhists, and other pagan religions than they do [sic] for those who love Jesus Christ as He is presented in the Bible and are committed to making Him known to the lost so they will not be Left Behind."
In other words, the Catholic Church is simply wrong and doesnt deserve a fair hearing. LaHaye has not only revealed himself to be an anti-Catholic polemicist but a theologian with a seriously skewed view of Gods salvific work. In a newspaper interview, LaHaye said, Weve [himself and Jenkins] created a series of books about the greatest cosmic event that will happen in the history of the world. What is that greatest cosmic event? The Incarnation? The Cross? The Resurrection? No, the Rapturea modern, man-made belief based on a distorted Christology and an anemic ecclesiology.
But dont the books help people understand the Bible? According to contemporary Christian music star Michael W. Smith, Left Behind has brought understanding and clarity to [the Book of] Revelation, a book of the Bible usually seen as confusing and dark. This echoes LaHayes assertion that St. Johns Apocalypse gives a detailed description of the future. But a perusal of dispensationalist interpretations of the Book of Revelation written over the last several decades suggests otherwise. Dispensationalists disagree about nearly every major element of the book, including the identity of the Whore of Babylon (i.e., a reformed Roman Empire, the Catholic Church, Iraq, the United States), the mark of the Beast (i.e., computer chips, bar codes, social security numbers, laser technology), and numerous other entities, personages, nations, and events.
More importantly, dispensationalists give little attention to the rich Old Testament allusions or the first-century context of the Book of Revelation. To the contrary, Hal Lindsey proffers in Theres a New World Coming (Vision House, 1973) that Revelation is written in such a way that its meaning becomes clear with the unfolding of current world events. Considering that none of Lindseys interpretations of the books prophetic utterances has come to pass over the past 30 yearsincluding his conviction that the Rapture would occur in the 1980sone can only wonder at Lindseys unflagging confidence. Futurists such as dispensationalists have always been prone to read current events into the Book of Revelations mysterious passages, and prophetic speculators of the past connected it to the French Revolution, the Civil War, World Wars I and II, and the founding of the modern Israeli state in 1948. More recent events supposedly shedding light on St. Johns vision include the Cold War, the Persian Gulf War, and the conflict with terrorism and Iraq.
The appeal of the pretribulational Rapture is understandable. The idea that those living today are the generation who will see Christs return is attractive and intoxicating. My prophetic studies have convinced me, LaHaye writes, in Rapture Under Attack, that we Christians living today have more evidence to believe we are the generation of His coming than any generation before us. Its no surprise that many people want to hear that they wont have to die. Such promises of escape from suffering, illness, pain, and potential martyrdom are tempting, but they arent an option for Catholics. Each of us will endure suffering, and the Church will, one day, have to endure a final, great trial: The Church will enter the glory of the kingdom only through this final Passover, when she will follow her Lord in his death and Resurrection (CCC 677). The pretribulation Rapture, dispensationalism, and the Left Behind books, in the end, are long on promises and short on biblical, historical, and theological evidence.
Carl E. Olson is the editor of Envoy magazine (www.envoymagazine.com) and the author of Will Catholics Be Left Behind?: A Catholic Critique of the Rapture and Todays Prophecy Preachers (Ignatius, 2003). He has written for First Things, This Rock, National Catholic Register, and other periodicals. Crisis Magazine
I'm not sure what that has to do with Republican government.
I HATE the left behind series. I could go on for volumes on this, but to cut to the chase, I am mid tribulation pre wrath. If I were to nail down one scripture that sets a “time” for me it would be the beginning of Revelation 7. Pre-tribulationists put it at the beginning of Revelation 4.
This is a really good site on the whole subject:
http://watchmanbiblestudy.com/BibleStudies/Definitions/Def_Pretrib.htm
Reading current events into prophecy has yielded the result that the apocalypse has happened already multiple times. Ha.
pre, mid or post.........you just better be ready.
>>The biggest myth is that there will be a rapture.<< The word has so many different meanings to so many different people that I don’t know how to take that statement.
I do believe that some will be changed in the “twinkling of an eye” and that Revelation 7:9 is real. And when you think about it being preceeded by 8 verses that very specifically call out 144,000 but it describes “...a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language...”. That is a LOT of people. There needs to be an explanation for who the book is talking about, especially when the answer to the elder’s question about their identity is: “These are they who have come out of the great tribulation; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”
One must ask, “how did they come out?” Rapture? Nuclear war? A space ship?
I'm sure in the past, say, one thousand five hundred years, you will find one thousand five hundred prophecies all certain as the sun rises, that year would be the one.
The bible says there will be a catching away. The only point that can be debated is when that will occur.
Of course, those who don't believe in the bible wouldn't believe in the rapture.
This is in the religion forum with the following topics selected:
TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Evangelical Christian; Theology;
The girl in the foreground is pretty cute. Interesting pose the artist chose. Nice suggestive wafting up of the really short skirt.
No. I am not trying to be irreverent. Rather, I am critiquing the drawing and exactly what the artist was trying to portray. It is overtly sexual.That is just wierd.
Is that a real book? Or is it a satire? That is seriously twisted stuff right there.
>>pre, mid or post.........you just better be ready.<<
Of course. For most people it will be at death. Everyone dies alone.
But if you are not ready? Then what?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/2240648/posts
Yes! The girl in the pic is definitely, DEFINITELY, sexualized. This is an actual picture from a Christian, premillenialist comic strip used as propaganda. Pretty twisted, isn’t it? I mean seriously, of all the possible choices, the chick getting raptured in the front is wearing a TIGHT sweater?!?!? My goodness.
I think the “secret rapture” is potentially the greatest deception within Christianity today. SO many Christians are going to begin to doubt their faith when they begin to suffer under the Antichrist, saying “but, but, we’re not supposed to be here”.
Years ago, I found that the pretribulation secret rapture just didn’t make Biblical sense. Why does Christ tell his followers that “YOU will be persecuted” by the Antichrist? How can this rapture be secret, when “every eye shall see”? Where exactly is this secret rapture described? I sat down and studied and just looked at what Scripture had to say. It really isn’t complicated, nor does it need much “interpretation” (there’s too much “bible interpretation” going on...we need to stop “interpreting” the Bible, and just take what it says and do it). For a long time, I thought I was the only one who had “figured it out”, but recently, I found that I would be considered as holding a “Pre wrath” position.... and I’m not alone! I also found out that the popular doctrine was quite recent in invention, and simply was not believed by anyone prior to about the 1830’s.
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