| "If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land." II Chronicles 7:14; |
NEWSWEEK THE WAY THE WORLD ENDS The 3rd millennium approaches, bringing with
it visions of peace, apocalyptic terror -- and a stream of new books about
the last days. What the Bible says about the end of time, and how prophecy
has shaped our world. The "Christian" Bible begins with the creation of the world, before time
itself began. It closes with a harrowing vision of the world's end, when
time will be no more. For most of Western history, when the world began
has been a matter of curiosity. But predicting when the world will end
has been an all-consuming passion. Of all the books of the Bible, none has fired the imagination of
the West more than the last: the mysterious Apocalypse. The four horsemen
of the apocalypse, the heavenly book with seven seals, the beast with the
mark of 666, the Whore of Babylon, the deceitful Antichrist -- these are
just a few of the powerful and troubling images that Revelation injected
into Western art and consciousness. Its prophecies have been of even greater
consequence: the return of the Jews to the Holy Land, the millennial kingdom
of Christ on earth, the Battle of Armageddon and the promise of a new heaven
and earth have justified numerous wars and revolutions and inspired utopias
and religious sects of every sort. Millennial dreams and apocalyptic nightmares are never far below
the surface of the American psyche -- especially now, as the 3rd millennium
approaches. Of course, few people seriously think the apocalypse will come
at 12:01 on New Year's Eve; some of those who do will descend on Jerusalem
at the year-end with millennial expectations, putting Israeli police on
high alert. The deeper and more interesting phenomenon is the enormous
role prophecy has played in Western religious and popular culture. A
Newsweek Poll found that 40% of American adults do believe that the world
will one day end, as Revelation describes, in the Battle of Armageddon.
Every choir that sings "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" or
the Salvation Army's "Onward, "Christian" Soldiers" resurrects
martial images and themes from "Christian" prophecy. In the 1970s, the best-selling
book of the decade was Hal Lindsey's apocalyptic "The Late Great Planet
Earth," with 28 million copies sold by 1990. More recently, a series
of "Left Behind" novels by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins based
on "Christian" prophecies, including two published this year, have sold more
than 9 million copies. Among academics, studies of the apocalyptic tradition
have produced dozens of new books. "Over the past 30 years,"
says Bernard McGinn, a medieval specialist at the University of Chicago
Divinity School, "more scholarship has been devoted to apocalypticism
than in the last 300." Like "Christian"s and Jews, Muslims also see an apocalyptic end to
the world: there will be natural calamities, followed by the war of Armageddon
led by the "hidden" imam, a descendant of Muhammad, and "Jesus"
against the forces of evil, led by Dajjal, an Antichrist figure. After
a millennium of peace, both "Jesus" and the imam will die and the final judgment
will take place. For Hindus and Buddhists, time is cyclical, and so
the world renews itself after each cycle but never ends. "Christian" apocalypticism -- the vision of the endtimes -- comes from
a mysterious book written by John, a "Christian" prophet living in exile
on the island of Patmos toward the end of the 1st century. His intention
was to warn the fledgling "Christian" communities of Asia Minor against compromising
with the Roman Empire and its cult of the divine emperor. His message,
though, took the form of a personal revelation from Christ filled with
mythic beasts, avenging angels and terrifying tribulations for humankind
amid clashing cosmic forces. Much suffering would come to the world, John prophesied, before Christ
himself would return to defeat his human adversary, the Antichrist, in
the Battle of Armageddon. Christ would then establish a millennial kingdom
on earth for the just. Then, after a final clash with Satan, Christ would
pass judgment on all the living and the dead. For the just, there would
be a heavenly Jerusalem -- a new heaven and a new earth. But the precise
meaning of John's figurative revelation was hidden in strange and
forbidding symbols that "Christian"s have tried to decipher ever since. "The whole of Western history can be read through the prism of
John's Apocalypse," says historian McGinn, coeditor of a recent three-volume
Encyclopedia of Apocalypticism. In the 12th century, for example, the Crusaders
saw the recapture of Jerusalem from the Muslims as a defeat of the Antichrist.
Christopher Columbus set sail thinking his voyage to India would hasten
the return of Christ to earth. For the same reason, Oliver Cromwell
readmitted Jews to England after the English civil war, thinking his victory
would establish the New Jerusalem on British soil. Isaac Newton wrote a
book on the Biblical prophecy, hoping to prove that "the world is
governed by providence." In Puritan New England, America's greatest
theologian, Jonathan Edwards, studied John's Apocalypse and calculated
that the millennium of Christ's kingdom on earth would begin in the year
2000. "Apocalypticism" -- the belief that "God" will shortly intervene
in history, destroy the wicked and initiate his own kingdom on earth --
did not begin with John of Patmos. "Jesus" himself was a Jewish prophet "who
taught and expected the end of the world as he knew it," argues New
Testament scholar Bart D. Ehrman in his new book, ""Jesus": Apocalyptic
Prophet of the New Millennium." The apostle Paul, writing two decades
after the death of "Jesus", expected to witness Christ's return to earth.
But the Gospel of Matthew, reflecting views of "Christian"s some 60 years
later, has "Jesus" warning his disciples to look out for signs of the endtimes
-- among them, wars and famines and earthquakes. But he also warned that
"the end is not yet." Whether John's Apocalypse (the word means "unveiling") is
a foretelling of the future or a symbolic interpretation of the then current
situation of "Christian"s has long vexed church theologians. Early
"Christian"ity had revived the long-dormant spirit of Hebrew prophecy, and
in doing so relied on Jewish precedents. Much of John's arcane imagery
is borrowed from Ezekiel, Zachariah and especially the dreams of Daniel.
He also uses numbers as a code for letters. Thus the beast whose number
is 666 translates to Nero, the mad emperor who had persecuted "Christian"s;
his seven heads refer to the first seven Roman emperors. Similarly, the
number 1,000 does not denote a period of 10 centuries but symbolizes an
indefinite period of long duration. In short, most contemporary Biblical scholars now believe that John
was not predicting a distant future. Rather, he was locating the trials
of the 1st-century churches within a wider cosmic battle between Christ
and Satan. Like the earlier prophets, he wanted "Christian"s to know
that the faithful would be rewarded and their oppressors punished. For
as long as the early church suffered persecution, John's vision of a divine
rescue was both compelling and consoling. By the 3rd century, however, John's Apocalypse was widely considered
unworthy of being included among the canonical books of the Bible. Jerome
and other church fathers thought that John's endtimes vision encouraged
religious fanaticism (reading it, one bishop led his flock out to the desert
to await the end) and that his anti-Roman polemics provoked unnecessary
civil discord. Augustine defined what soon became the official Catholic
position: John's Revelation should not be interpreted literally or as future-telling,
but as an allegory of the everyday struggle between good and evil, the
church and the world. On that basis, the Apocalypse was officially
accepted as Scripture. Even so, medieval "Christian"s wanted to know where they stood on "God"'s
timetable. They had no clocks or watches, no universal calendar
to record the passing of the centuries, much less mark the
end of the first millennium. But they did have an abundance of wars, famines
and natural calamities -- precisely the signs that "Jesus" said would signal
the endtime. Medieval society lived in the shadow of imminent apocalypse,
but this apprehension often spurred missionary action. Convinced that Christ's
return was near, Pope Gregory I (590-604) sent a group of monks north to
convert England where its leader, Augustine, became both the first Archbishop
of Canterbury and a saint. The Middle Ages were rich in speculations by learned monks about where
their own age stood in relation to the endtimes. Chief among these was
Joachim of Fiore, who claimed that a personal revelation had unlocked the
secret of John's Apocalypse as the key to the whole Bible. In essence,
Joachim found that all of history was divided into three progressively
more spiritual epochs: the age of the Father (the period of the Old Testament),
the age of the Son (the period since Christ) and a soon-to-come age of
the Holy Spirit, in which new religious orders would renew the church and
through it purify the entire human race. His own age, he saw, was one of
transition and crisis: the Antichrist, he believed, was already alive in
Rome and his defeat would bring about the end of the present era in 1260. Joachim's scheme of progressively purer ages influenced millenarian
movements for the next 700 years. Never mind that he -- and others -- miscalculated
specific dates. What mattered was his vision of a purified world, which
appealed to spiritual reformers of every stripe. Radical followers of Saint
Francis (whom some saw as the sixth angel of John's Apocalypse) proposed
the abolition of property and other institutions in favor of a pure communist
society. In the 16th century a group of Anabaptists, convinced the millennium
was near, took over the town of Leiden. John, their leader, proclaimed
himself king and messiah. Through terror, he abolished private ownership
of money, instituted polygamy and banned all books but the Bible. In the
late 19th century, early Marxists could claim this radical tradition as
a precursor of true communism. Indeed, millenarian dreams were a constant problem for Europe's established
churches. When a visionary friar informed Pope Benedict XIV that the Antichrist
had arrived and was already 3 years of age, the pope was visibly relieved.
"Then I shall leave the problem to my successor," he said. What
made the Apocalypse of John so enduring is that any hated or revered
figure could be identified as one of the mythic players in his symbolic
endtimes scenario. For some in the late Middle Ages, it was Emperor
Frederick II; for Frederick's supporters it was Pope Innocent IV, whose
name could be translated into the dread mark of the beast -- 666. For many "Christian"s it was Muhammad or the Turks in general, whose armies
threatened to devour Europe. Eventually, Napoleon, Hitler, Stalin and even
Mikhail Gorbachev (who seemed to have the "mark of the beast on his
forehead") entered the list of Antichrists. Martin Luther was the
first to identify the papacy as such with the Antichrist. At first
he discounted the value of John's Apocalypse. But then he saw in it a revelation
of the Church of Rome as the deceiving Antichrist who secretly served
Satan. For him, the papacy was the "synagogue of Satan"
and "the kingdom of Babylon and of the true Antichrist" --
a view that was to become dogma for all Protestant churches. "By 1641,"
writes historian Eugen Weber in his brilliant new book, "Apocalypses,"
"a clergyman could be denounced to [the English] Parliament for declaring
that the pope was not Antichrist." The Puritans who settled Massachusetts were driven by prophecy as
well. Having endured a transatlantic exodus, they began to see their
theocratic colony as a real, if as yet imperfect, model of the New Jerusalem
prophesied by John. They were, it seemed to many of them, participants
with "God" in creating a millennial kingdom of "God" on earth. Eventually,
many of their descendants came to believe in a revised endtimes script:
Christ would return after -- not before, as John wrote -- his American
saints had established a millennial society. This optimistic vision was
well expressed in 1832 by revivalist Charles Grandison Finney, a president
of Oberlin College. He thought that if the church helped converts to be
educated, given just wages and thus regenerated in body as well as in soul,
then "the millennium may come in this country in three years."
Others were more pessimistic. In 19th-century America, as in 14th-century
Europe, the country was overrun with visionaries, reformers and prophets.
Among the most creative was Joseph Smith, who concluded at an early age
that the entire "Christian" enterprise was a corruption of what used
to be. In 1823, he reported angelic revelations, telling him to
gather a group of latter-day saints in preparation for Christ's return
to earth. (Mormons believe he will appear in Independence, Mo., as well
as in Jerusalem.) Twenty years later, Baptist convert William Miller concluded, after
extensive study of Biblical prophecy, that Christ would return in 1843,
then changed it to Oct. 22, 1844. Thousands of believers withdrew from
their churches in anticipation. When Christ failed to appear, Miller's
movement was shattered. But a remnant under Ellen White reinterpreted the
spiritual meaning of the prophesied date and formed the 7th-day Adventists.
Catholics, too, received prophecies and warnings of the endtimes
in the 19th century. They came in a series of apparitions of the Virgin
Mary at Lourdes and other European sites. After her appearance to Catherine
Laboure in Paris in 1830, the church struck a "miraculous" medal
for distribution among the faithful. On it was an image of the Virgin appearing
as "the woman clothed with the sun," a figure straight out of
John's Apocalypse. Although John's prophecies were aimed at "Christian"s, they have also
had enormous significance for Jews. According to one ancient tradition,
the Antichrist will be Jewish, but the predominant emphasis in "Christian"
prophecy is on the return of the Jews to the Holy Land and the rebuilding
of the Jerusalem temple as a prelude to the Jews' conversion to Christ.
This view made "Christian" fundamentalists, for whom prophecy fulfilled is
proof of the Bible's literal truth, one of Zionism's strongest supporters
over the last century. It also explains why the creation of the state of
Israel in 1948 excited fresh expectations that the countdown to Armageddon
had surely begun. Jews, of course, have their own apocalyptic traditions built around
the coming of the messiah. One view, espoused by the great medieval philosopher
Maimonides, is that the messiah will be an exceptional but human being
who will preside as king over a free Israel for a thousand peaceful years,
according to "God"'s covenant with his people. The other, more mystical view,
says philosopher Shaul Magid, of the Jewish Theological Seminary in New
York, is that "flesh will no longer exist and there will be pure spiritual
reality." Talmudic tradition divides history into three ages of 2,000
years each: an age of confusion (from creation to Abraham), the age of
Torah (from Abraham on) and the age of redemption (approaching the coming
of the messiah). This year on the Jewish calendar is 5760, leaving 240
years in which the messiah could come. "Christian" fundamentalism owes much of its continuing power and appeal
to the belief that the prophecies of John, Daniel and other Biblical writers
forecast a sequence of specific historical events. But fundamentalists
have also shown a remarkable capacity to add to the stock of apocalyptic
portents. Since the Antichrist must have the means for controlling the
world, many new technological advances are now seen as ominous signs: Social
Security numbers, bar codes, ATMs, international organizations like the
United Nations and the European Common Market, and -- most recently --
the World Wide Web. As a newly elected president, George Bush set off alarms
among many Biblical literalists when he announced in 1990 his ambition
to create a "new world order." Could he be, some fundamentalists
wondered, the cat's-paw for the Antichrist? Whether fundamentalists and other "prophetic" "Christian"s will
suffer in the endtimes remains for them a matter of some dispute. They
have built an escape clause into the endtimes scenario: "the rapture."
This means that at a trumpet's blast, all true "Christian"s will suddenly
ascend halfway to heaven the moment Christ begins his descent. Cars will
be driverless, planes will be pilotless and children will lose parents
if they are among the secret elect. Others think that even the elect will
suffer at least part of the seven years of hell on earth that "God"
plans for the wicked. At least one church, in North Hollywood, has taken
steps to preserve its property should its officers disappear during the
rapture. The church's insurance companies have agreed to delay premium
payments for seven years, when the raptured officers return. Of those who say they believe in the Bible's endtime prophecies, few
are likely to translate those beliefs into such direct action. Nor, with
a robust economy, are there too many signs of millenarian social unrest.
Next month authors LaHaye and Jenkins will publish yet another volume,
a nonfiction title that asks, "Are We Living in the End Times?"
Clearly, the answer is "Not yet"; the last in their fiction series
is planned for the year 2003. For most Americans, it appears, the Biblical account of the endtimes
continues to resonate because there are few competing narratives. Even
nuclear annihilation and ecological implosion can be fit into John's Apocalypse.
When Ronald Reagan was president, recalls University of Wisconsin historian
Paul Boyer, who has studied modern apocalyptic movements, he suggested
that "we may be the generation that sees Armageddon." But on
leaving the White House in 1989, Reagan allowed that "America's greatest
moment is yet to come." He wasn't thinking of the millennium. Exiled on his island, John of Patmos never imagined that his apocalyptic
writing would become a handbook for interpreting historical events. Like
most 1st-century "Christian"s, he thought the end was imminent. And one can
only wonder how he'd react to those throughout history who have used his
vision to justify violence, war, paranoia and even hate. Though widely read for the wrong reasons, John's Apocalypse nonetheless
insists on hard truths that no serious believer can discount. One is that
sinners have reason to fear a "God" who, having chosen to create the world,
can also choose to destroy it. The second is that the just have reason
to hope in a "God" who stands by those who trust their lives to him. Thinking
of the end of the world -- like contemplating one's own end -- is a painful
process. But studying the Apocalypse presumes that even the end of the
world is within the province of "God". And who's to say that John's mythic
battle between Christ and Antichrist is not a valid insight into what the
history of humankind is ultimately all about? MILLENNIUM MADNESS For those who see the Bible as a literal blueprint
and 2000 as an apocalyptic pivot, these are days of portents, hopes --
and fears For most of the 1990s, the man who called himself only Elijah was
one of Jerusalem's lesser curiosities, an American who claimed to be the
Biblical prophet. He called himself a witness from the Book of Revelation,
predicting that 2000 would usher in the end of the world. Then in the last
year he attracted a small following from among the thousands of "Christian"s,
many of them American, who have lately flocked to the city to be on
hand for the prophesied return of Christ. For Israeli authorities, Elijah
was no longer a harmless eccentric. In this most tense of nations, which
expects 3 million visitors during the millennial year, officials
fear that some may try to hasten the Second Coming by sparking a violent
conflict. Elijah was asked to leave the country. "We don't expect masses of cults coming over," says an Israeli
police officer who declined to be identified. "The majority will be
innocent pilgrims. But we have to be prepared." For millions of
Americans the prophecies found in Revelation are not literary allegories
but a blueprint of the events to comeóif not in 2000, then soon enough.
According to a new Newsweek Poll, about 18% of Americans expect the
endtimes to come within their lifetime. This translates to roughly 36 million
peopleónot just fringe extremists but your office mate, mail carrier
or soccer coach. Or your U.S. representative: House Majority Whip
Tom DeLay has a wood carving in his office that reads this could be the
day, a phrase widely used to refer to the Rapture. The Rev. Jerry Falwell recently announced that the Antichrist was "probably"
already among us. Speaking to Newsweek last week, Falwell avoided setting
a date for the big dayó"That's usually the tragedy of these surges
of prophecy preaching"óbut applauded what he sees as a grass-roots
rise in endtimes sermons. "There are happenings today: the approach
of one world government, the global-nation syndrome that is so prevalent
today, the cashless society," he said. "There are many who believe
that we could be in the last century." Tapping this spirit, a rash of best-selling novels and moviesóincluding
the stealth-hit film "The Omega Code," which grossed $2.4 million
in its opening weekend this month after being marketed strictly through
"Christian" networksóhas rechanneled the last days as popular entertainment.
Monitoring all these rumblings, the FBI is warning local police departments
to be on the lookout for increased militia activities as the new year approaches.
As many as 239 Web sites, by one recent count, are multiplying millennial
scenarios. "Doomsday sayers aren't standing on street corners proclaiming
the end of time," says Ted Daniels, director of the one-man Millennium
Watch Institute in Philadelphia. "Instead they've all gone on the
Internet." In his small, nondenominational End Time Ministries in Elizabeth, N.J.,
the Rev. Al Horta is one of the keepers of the apocalyptic faith. The signs,
he believes, are all around: wars, school shootings, AIDS, earthquakes,
the Y2K bug. The founding of the state of Israel in 1948óan oft-cited precondition
for Armageddonómeans to Horta that we are "of the generation"
and "in the season" that will see Christ's return. Carmen Lanier,
39, a member of the New Hope Revival Church in Columbus, Ga., concurs.
For her, these "last days" are a time to get right with "God".
As "things get darker on the earth and the perversion of man increases,"
she says, she and other faithful will be "emboldened" to minister
to lost souls. "I will have the power of "Jesus" Christ," she says.
"I will be able to heal the sick, to speak to the dead." For
those not saved in the Rapture, she envisions a world sunk in "complete
madness, a period of darkness, a horrible time to be alive." Yet among "Christian" communities, the coming millennium has inspired
a surprisingly low count of doomsday survivalist cults, says J. Gordon
Melton, a researcher at the University of California, Santa Barbara. After
two decades of studying "Christian" schisms, splinter groups and rogue denominations,
Melton finally concluded that the millennium is a bust, apocalypsewise.
Except for the odd group hoarding water or fretting over the Y2K computer
bug, the Armageddon wires have been surprisingly quiet. "I expected
to have a field day with millennial groups," he says. "And there
was nothing." But for true believers, ground zero for apocalyptic zealotry remains
the city of Jerusalem. There are already about 100 "Christian"s living
on the Mount of Olives, the spot where the Bible says "Jesus" will return
to earth. On a recent Jerusalem evening, an American named Brother David
led five congregants in an ecstatic prayer vigil, singing and speaking
in tongues. David once had a ministry in Brooklyn, N.Y., but he sold everything
18 years ago to launch his House of Prayer group in Jerusalem, where he
expects to be on hand for the day of days. "I feel the Lord's returning,"
he told Newsweek, "and the millennium is to be the time of his coming."
He hastens to distance his sect from those who would commit violence. Such
groups, he says, "are not "Christian"s, they are cults. Nobody I know
would do any violence. But with these cults, well, you never can tell." Even among such dedicated millennialists, the deadline of all deadlines
remains fungible. History has not been kind to prophets who fixed a date
for Christ's return, only to see it pass. After one 19th-century believer
sold his worldly possessions, his son sued him for squandering his inheritance.
For modern would-be prophets, maybe it's just too soon to know. Some
doomsayers are already looking ahead to 2033, the second millennium of
the Crucifixion and the Resurrection. And why not? In this game, you
only have to be right once. The End Is Nigh - But When Exactly Is Nigh?
If you are making plans for the year 2000, here are some predictions
that you may want to factor in. Followers of New Age prophet Edgar Cayce
believe that the North and South Poles will flop, causing worldwide floods
and earthquakes. In his best seller "The Bible Code," former
Wall Street Journal reporter Michael Drosnin uses computer analysis of
the Torah to divine that World War III may start in that year. Or maybe
in 2006--he's not sure. In a trailer park in Eula, Texas, 500 or so members of a doomsday
sect called the House of Yahweh are hunkering down for the last, grim years
of life on earth. Their "overseer," a onetime Abilene cop and
rockabilly musician named Yisrayl Hawkins, preaches that the last days
started with the satanically inspired Middle East peace accords of 1993.
The finale will arrive on Oct. 13, 2000, "when nuclear bombs will
block out the sun, and life as we know it will end." Hawkins's followers probably shouldn't stop their car payments. The
end, much predicted throughout history, has never turned out to be quite
so nigh as our soothsayers had hoped or feared. This has not, however,
discouraged the soothsayers. Between the Woman in the Wilderness cult in
1694, whose members deployed rooftop telescopes to scan the heavens for
signs of Christ's second coming, and this year's Heaven's Gaters, whose
telescopes were set on the comet Hale-Bopp, American prophets alone have
set dozens of dates for doomsday. When the end fails to materialize on schedule, most millennialists tend
to plow ahead. "Some of them set a new date," notes G. Gordon
Melton, an adjunct professor of religion at the University of California,
Santa Barbara, who's writing a book called the "Encyclopedia of the
End of the World." The other strategy is "to invisibilize the
date," as Melton says. In other words, the end has come, but we haven't
noticed.
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Greetings from the Editor of The Hope of Israel which is the United Hebrew Congregation's weekly news page of The Hope of Israel on the web. These news articles are produced by Michael Turner . If you would like to correspond with him or request back issues you can e-mail him at Michael Turner.