The May
24, 2004 issue of Newsweek featured stories, again,
about the continuing Left Behind phenomenon. The book series
has sold over
62 million copies, and spawned movies, and even comic books. Tim LaHaye
and
Jerry Jenkins are looked upon as the leading experts on Biblical last
things by
literally millions of people. This is extremely sad.
LaHaye
says one thing I do agree with: "The worst thing a person
can do against God is to deceive people about the Bible." But, is
LaHaye
himself deceiving people about the Bible? That is a serious question,
and a
charge not to be made lightly. However, the undeniable truth is that
LaHaye is
misleading the public about what the Bible really says.
First,
LaHaye insists that the book of Revelation is being fulfilled,
or is about to be fulfilled in our day. This is a blatant contradiction
to what
the book says. Read Revelation 1:1-3. John says twice that the events
being
foretold were "at hand," and "must shortly come to pass."
There is no way to make the passing of 2000 years a statement of "at
hand" and "must shortly come to pass."
Of course
it will be responded that God does not see time as man does,
but this is hardly true. God created time. God can tell time better
than you
and I can. The question is, if "at hand" did not mean near when John
wrote Revelation, why does it mean near now? If God wanted to tell John
that
the fulfillment was at hand, back then, how else could He have said,
"these things must shortly come to pass," and really meant that it
was near?
Second,
LaHaye tells is that the Man of Sin is still future. Yet, Paul said
the Man of Sin was alive in the first century and being restrained by
the
Restrainer then (2 Thessalonians 2). Now unless Paul was wrong, if the
Man of
Sin is "alive somewhere in Europe today" as LaHaye and others have
stated, then he must be one old guy, because Paul said he was alive in
his day!
So, if Paul was right, LaHaye is wrong.
Third,
LaHaye says, depending on which of his books you read, that
Babylon of Revelation is either a restored literal city in Iraq, or,
the
apostate Christian church in the end times. The trouble is that
Revelation
teaches that Babylon was Old Covenant Jerusalem. Babylon was the city
"where the Lord was slain" (Revelation 11:8). That cannot be apostate
Christianity, and it cannot be either ancient or restored literal
Babylon.
Revelation is about the judgment of the city that had killed the
prophets, and
Jesus said it was Old Covenant Jerusalem that had killed all the
prophets:
"It is not possible for a prophets to perish outside of Jerusalem"
(Luke 13:31-33). LaHaye is guilty of misguiding people about the Bible
in
respect to this very significant and important issue.
The additional problem with the Left Behind
theology
is that it is costing the lives of America's young people in Iraq. The
Dispensational community carries a lot of weight in our White House.
Media
sources around the world are beginning to realize that the invasion of
Iraq was
driven by theology, not the presence of weapons of mass
destruction.
The American Religious Right, driven by LaHaye and other so-called
prophecy
experts, are leading America down the path to Armageddon, not because
that is
what the Bible predicts, but because of their misguided view of what
the Bible
says. This is serious stuff indeed, and as LaHaye says: "The worst
thing a
person can do against God is to deceive people about the Bible." In my
view, Mr. LaHaye, thou art the man!
Babylon the
Great of
Revelation
Spirit
of the Word - Introductory
Note - New Stuff