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THE
BIBLE AND THE APOCALYPSE
The biggest
book of the summer is about the end of
the world. It's also a sign of our troubled
times
BY NANCY GIBBS
Sunday, Jun. 23, 2002

What do
you watch for, when you are watching the
news? Signs that interest rates might
be climbing, maybe it's time to refinance.
Signs of global warming, maybe forget
that new SUV. Signs of new terrorist activity,
maybe think twice about that flight to
Chicago.
Or signs that the world
may be coming to an end, and the last
battle between good and evil is about
to unfold?
For evangelical Christians
with an interest in prophecy, the headlines
always come with asterisks pointing to
scriptural footnotes. That is how Todd
Strandberg reads his paper. By day, he
is fixing planes at Offutt Air Force Base
in Bellevue, Neb. But in his off-hours,
he's the webmaster at raptureready.com
and the inventor of the Rapture Index,
which he calls a "Dow Jones Industrial
Average of End Time activity." Instead
of stocks, it tracks prophecies: earthquakes,
floods, plagues, crime, false prophets
and economic measurements like unemployment
that add to instability and civil unrest,
thereby easing the way for the Antichrist.
In other words, how close are we to the
end of the world? The index hit an all-time
high of 182 on Sept. 24, as the bandwidth
nearly melted under the weight of 8 million
visitors: any reading over 145, Strandberg
says, means "Fasten your seat belt."
It's not the end of the
world, our mothers always told us. This
was helpful for putting spilled milk in
perspective, but it was also our introduction
to a basic human reference point. We seem
to be born with an instinct that the end
is out there somewhere. We have a cultural
impulse to imagine it—and keep it
at bay. Just as all cultures have their
creation stories, so too they have their
visions of the end, from the Bible to
the Mayan millennial stories. Usually
the fables dwell in the back of the mind,
or not at all, since we go about our lives
conditioned to think that however bad
things get, it's not you know what. But
there are times in human history when
instinct, faith, myth and current events
work together to create a perfect storm
of preoccupation. Visions of an end point
lodge in people's minds in many forms,
ranging from entertainment to superstitious
fascination to earnest belief. Now seems
to be one of those times.
The experience of last fall—the
terrorist attacks, the anthrax deaths—not
only deepened the interest among Christians
fluent in the language of Armageddon and
Apocalypse. It broadened it as well, to
an audience that had never paid much attention
to the predictions of the doomsday prophet
Nostradamus, or been worried about an
epic battle that marks the end of time,
or for that matter, read the Book of Revelation.
Since Sept. 11, people from cooler corners
of Christianity have begun asking questions
about what the Bible has to say about
how the world ends, and preachers have
answered their questions with sermons
they could not have imagined giving a
year ago. And even among more secular
Americans, there were some who were primed
to see an omen in the smoke of the flaming
towers—though it had more to do
with their beach reading than with their
Bible studies.
That is because among the
best-selling fiction books of our times—right
up there with Tom Clancy and Stephen King—is
a series about the End Times, written
by Tim F. LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins,
based on the Book of Revelation. That
part of the Bible has always held its
mysteries, but for millions of people
the code was broken in 1995, when LaHaye
and Jenkins published Left Behind: A Novel
of the Earth's Last Days. People who haven't
read the book and its sequels often haven't
even heard of them, yet their success
provides new evidence that interest in
the End Times is no fringe phenomenon.
Only about half of Left Behind readers
are Evangelicals, which suggests there
is a broader audience of people who are
having this conversation.
A TIME/CNN poll finds that
more than one-third of Americans say they
are paying more attention now to how the
news might relate to the end of the world,
and have talked about what the Bible has
to say on the subject. Fully 59% say they
believe the events in Revelation are going
to come true, and nearly one-quarter think
the Bible predicted the Sept. 11 attack.
Some of that interest is
fueled by faith, some by fear, some by
imagination, but all three are fed by
the Left Behind series. The books offer
readers a vivid, violent and utterly detailed
description of just what happens to those
who are left behind on earth to fight
the Antichrist after Jesus raptures, or
lifts, the faithful up to heaven. At the
start of Book 1, on a 747 bound for Heathrow
from Chicago, the flight attendants suddenly
find about half the seats empty, except
for the clothes and wedding rings and
dental fillings of the believers who have
suddenly been swept up to heaven. Down
on the ground, cars are crashing, husbands
are waking up to find only a nightgown
in bed next to them, and all children
under 12 have disappeared as well. The
next nine books chronicle the tribulations
suffered by those left behind and their
struggle to be saved.
The series has sold some
32 million copies—50 million if
you count the graphic novels and children's
versions—and sales jumped 60% after
Sept. 11. Book 9, published in October,
was the best-selling novel of 2001. Evangelical
pastors promote the books as devotional
reading; mainline pastors read them to
find out what their congregations are
thinking, as do politicians and scholars
and people whose job it is to know what
fears and hopes are settling in the back
of people's minds in a time of deep uncertainty.
Now the 10th book, The Remnant,
is arriving in stores, a breathtaking
2.75 million hard-cover copies, and its
impact may be felt far beyond the book
clubs and Bible classes. To some evangelical
readers, the Left Behind books provide
more than a spiritual guide: they are
a political agenda. When they read in
the papers about the growing threats to
Israel, they are not only concerned for
a fellow democratic ally in the war against
terror; they are also worried about God's
chosen people and the fate of the land
where events must unfold in a specific
way for Jesus to return. That combination
helps explain why some Christian leaders
have not only bonded with Jews this winter
as rarely before but have also pressed
their case in the Bush White House as
if their salvation depended on it.
Walter Russell Mead is sitting in his
office at the Council on Foreign Relations
in midtown Manhattan on a soft June afternoon,
at work on a book that was born last September.
He published an acclaimed history of U.S.
foreign policy last year and was working
on a study about building a global middle
class. But he has put that aside. Piled
around him now are the Koran, a Bible,
books on technology and a stack of Left
Behind books. When Mead predicts that
our century will be remembered as the
Age of Apocalypse, he does not mean to
suggest that the world will soon end in
a fiery holocaust. "The word apocalypse,"
he observes, "comes from a Greek
word that literally means 'lifting of
the veil.' In an apocalyptic age, people
feel that the veil of normal, secular
reality is lifting, and we can see behind
the scenes, see where God and the devil,
good and evil are fighting to control
the future." To the extent that more
people in the U.S. and around the world
believe history is accelerating, that
ancient prophecies are being fulfilled
in real time, "it changes the way
people feel about their circumstances,
and the way they act. The grays are beginning
to leak out of the way people view the
world, and they're seeing things in more
black-and-white terms."
At the religious extremes
within Islam, that means we see more suicide
bombers: if God's judgment is just around
the corner, martyrdom has a special appeal.
The more they cast their cause as a fight
against the Great Satan, the more they
reinforce the belief in some U.S. quarters
that the war on terror is not one that
can ever end with a treaty or communique,
only total victory or defeat. Extremists
on each side look to contemporary events
as validation of their sacred texts; each
uses the others to define its view of
the divine scheme.
In such a time of uncertainty,
it's a natural human instinct to look
for some good purpose in the shadows of
even the scariest events—and for
some readers the theology of the Left
Behind books provides it. Some stumbled
on the series by accident, and were hooked.
Deborah Vargas, 46, of San Francisco bought
her first Left Behind book in January
at a Target, looking for a good read.
She got much more than she had bargained
for, especially after Sept. 11. "It
was almost a message right out of the
Bible," she says. "Something
within me started to change, and I started
to question myself. What was I waiting
for? A sign?" Since then, she says,
her life has been transformed, and she
is now a regular in the Left Behind chat
rooms. "I want to talk about it all
the time."
Talk to the people who were
already inclined to read omens in the
headlines, and you hear their excitement,
even eagerness to see what happens next.
"We sense we are very close to something
apocalyptic, but that something positive
will come out of it," says Doron
Schneider, an Evangelical based in Jerusalem.
"It's like a woman having labor pains.
A woman can feel this pain reaching its
height when the child is born—and
then doesn't feel the pain anymore, only
the joy of the happy event." Even
the horror of Sept. 11 was experienced
differently by people primed to see God's
hand in all things. Strandberg admits
that he was "joyful" that the
attacks could be a sign that the End Times
were at hand. "A lot of prophetic
commentators have what I consider a phony
sadness over certain events," he
says. "In their hearts they know
it means them getting closer to their
ultimate desire."
People who were strangers
to prophecy don't always find as much
comfort there. When Dave Cheadle, a Denver
lay pastor at an inner-city ministry,
sent out an Internet letter after 9/11
suggesting that Revelation was the relevant
text for understanding what was happening,
he got a huge—and frightened—response:
"People were asking themselves whether
they were ready to die. Very sane, well-educated
people have gone back to the storm-cellar
thing to make sure they have water and
freeze-dried stuff in their basements."
Some had trouble reconciling their warm
image of a merciful God with the chilling
warnings they were reading. "They're
asking people to believe that we have
a God who simply can't wait to zap the
Christian flight crew out of jets so they
crash?" asks Paul Maier, a professor
of ancient history at Western Michigan
University and an author of Christian
fiction, who finds in the Left Behind
books a deity he does not recognize. "You
can't believe in a God who would do this
kind of thing."
Others, already believers,
have come away from this past winter feeling
a need to change tactics, change jobs,
find a new way to get the urgent message
across. Rick Scarborough, pastor of the
First Baptist Church of Pearland, Texas,
a Houston suburb, resigned his pulpit
this month to put all his energy into
recruiting Christians to become politically
involved. "I am mobilizing Christians
and getting more Christians to vote. I
am preparing a beachhead of righteousness,"
he says. Meanwhile Wyoming state senator
Carroll Miller, a popular legislator from
Big Horn County, announced his retirement
from politics in part so that he could
spend more time speaking at churches and
men's clubs, helping people come to grips
with the prospect of the Second Coming.
"It's very important that we as a
Christian nation know what the Scriptures
have said about these days," he says.
"I'm putting forth my personal effort
for my own sake as well as for my family
and friends."
Miller knows people who
have prepared Bibles with the relevant
passages indexed about what will occur
during the Tribulation, so that their
left-behind friends and relatives will
know to prepare for the earthquakes and
locusts and scorpions: when "the
sun became as black as sackcloth and the
moon became as blood." After a while,
sightings of the Antichrist come naturally:
when U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
tells the World Economic Forum that globalization
is the best hope to solve the world's
problems, when the forum floats the idea
of a "united nations of major religions,"
when privacy is sacrificed to security,
the headlines are listed on the prophecy
websites as signs that the Antichrist
is busy about his business. "He's
probably a good-looking man," says
Kelly Sellers, who runs a decorative-stone
business in Minneapolis, Minn. "I'm
sure he's in politics right now and probably
in the public eye a little bit."
Sellers has read every Left Behind book
and is waiting for the next one—"anxiously."
"It helped me to look at the news
that's going on about Israel and Palestine,"
which, he believes, "is just ushering
in the End Times, and it's exciting for
me."
His sister-in-law Jodie
thinks technology is a key to hastening
the End Times. "'When Christ returns,
every eye shall see Him,'" she quotes
from Revelation. Thanks to CNN and the
Internet, "we're getting to a place
where every eye could actually behold
such an event." The books were enough
to persuade Sandra Keathley, a Boeing
employee in Wichita, Kans., not to buy
Microsoft's Windows XP, because she has
heard rumors that it carries a method
of tracking e-mail. (In fact, the software
had an instant-messaging bug that was
later fixed.) If the Antichrist were to
come, she fears, "and you want to
contact another Christian, they could
see that, trace it."
The growing audience for
apocalyterature extends even into mainline
Protestantism, a tradition that has spent
little time on fire and brimstone. "I
would go for years without anyone asking
about the End Times," says Thomas
Tewell, senior minister of the Fifth Avenue
Presbyterian Church in midtown Manhattan—hardly
a hothouse of apocalyptic fervor. "But
since Sept. 11, hard-core, crusty, cynical
New York lawyers and stockbrokers who
are not moved by anything are saying,
'Is the world going to end?', 'Are all
the events of the Bible coming true?'
They want to get right with God. I've
never seen anything like it in my 30 years
in ministry."
There has never really been
a common religious experience in America,
and that is as true as ever now: some
ministers report that these days when
they announce they will be preaching on
the Apocalypse, attendance jumps at least
20%. But elsewhere church attendance is
back down to where it was before Sept.
11, and those pastors see little sign
of existential dread. Pastor Ted Haggard,
who started a church in his Colorado Springs,
Colo., basement that now has 9,000 members,
attributes the surge in End Times interest
to the Christian media empire as much
as anything else: "Because of the
theology of our church, I don't think
we're close to a Second Coming,"
he says. "But many of the major Christian
media outlets believe that there is fulfillment,
and people respond to that. People love
gloom and doom. People love pending judgment.
No. 1, they long to see Jesus, and No.
2, they look for the justice that Jesus
will bring to the earth in his Second
Coming."
Go into a seminary library, and it's hard
to find scholarly books on apocalyptic
theology; academics tend to treat this
tradition as sociology. They see End Times
interest rising and falling on waves of
cataclysm and calm. Masses of people became
convinced the end was nigh when Rome was
sacked in 410, when the Black Death wiped
out one-third of the population of 14th
century Europe, when the tectonic shudders
of the Lisbon earthquake in 1755 caused
church bells to ring as far away as England,
and certainly after 1945, when for the
first time human beings harnessed the
power to bring about their total destruction,
not an act of God, but an act of mankind.
America, a country born
with a sense that divine providence was
paying close attention from the start,
has always had a weakness for prophecy.
With its deep religious history but no
established church, this country welcomes
religious free-lancers and entrepreneurs.
Both the visionaries and the con artists
have access to the altar. It took the
shocking events of the last mid-century
to draw apocalyptic thinking off the Fundamentalist
margins and into the mainstream. The rise
of Hitler, a wicked man who wanted to
murder the Jews, read like a Bible story;
his utter destruction, and the subsequent
return of the Jews to Israel after 2,000
years and the capture of Jerusalem's Old
City by the Israelis in 1967, were taken
by devout Christians and Jews alike as
evidence of God's handiwork. Israel once
again controlled the Temple Mount, a site
so holy to Islam and Christianity as well
as Judaism that Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon's simple act of visiting
the mount was sufficient to ignite the
current Palestinian uprising. The Temple
Mount is the location of al-Aqsa Mosque,
one of the holiest sites in Islam, and
is also the very place where Christians
and Jews believe a new temple must one
day be rebuilt before the Messiah can
come. An Australian Evangelical once set
fire to the mosque to clear the way, and
to this day security remains exceptionally
tight for fear that those who take Scripture
literally might not just believe in what
the prophets promised, but might also
try to help it along.
But it took something more,
a pre-eminent theological entrepreneur,
to bring a wider American audience to
the apocalyptic tradition. Hal Lindsey's
The Late Great Planet Earth, published
in 1970, became the best-selling nonfiction
book of its decade; Time called Lindsey
"the Jeremiah of our generation"
for his detailed argument that the end
was approaching. "That's the first
book I ever read about last days, and
it changed my life," says George
Morrison, pastor of Faith Bible Chapel
in Arvada, Colo., where average Sunday-morning
attendance is 4,000. "All of a sudden,
I was made aware that wow, there's an
order to this thing." Lindsey's explanation
of the Bible's warnings came just as a
backlash was stirring against '60s liberalism,
an echo of the 18th century reaction to
the Enlightenment. Lindsey caught the
moment that launched a decade of evangelical
resurgence, when for the first time in
generations believers organized to put
their stamp on this world, rather than
the next.
The election of Ronald Reagan
brought "Christian Zionism"
deeper into the White House: Lindsey served
as a consultant on Middle East affairs
to the Pentagon and the Israeli government.
Interior Secretary James Watt, a Pentecostalist,
in discussing environmental concerns,
observed, "I don't know how many
future generations we can count on until
the Lord returns." Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger affirmed, "I have
read the Book of Revelation, and, yes,
I believe the world is going to end—by
an act of God, I hope—but every
day I think time is running out."
It was no accident that Reagan made his
"evil empire" speech at a meeting
of the National Association of Evangelicals.
It never seemed to hurt
that Lindsey's predictions passed their
"sell by" date: during the Gulf
War, sales of his book jumped 83%, as
people feared Saddam Hussein was rebuilding
Babylon and dragging the world to its
last battle. Nowadays Lindsey sees his
early warnings being vindicated almost
daily. "The Muslim terrorists are
going to strike the U.S. again and strike
us hard so that we cease to be one of
the world's great powers," he says.
"It's not far off." When he
wrote his best seller, he says, not many
people took prophecy seriously. "I
was called a false prophet for saying
there'd be a United States of Europe back
in 1970, but there is one now. People
have watched this scenario continue to
come together, and that's why so many
people today are believing we are in the
midst of last days."
Actually, the more Evangelicals
became involved in politics, the more
they engaged with the world here and now,
the more interest in End Times theology
drifted back into the realm of entertainment.
And many argued that was a healthy sign.
Not all Evangelicals embrace End Times
theology, and some see in it a dangerous
distraction. Jesus said that when it comes
to the time of judgment, "no one
knows, not even the angels in heaven,
but My Father only." In that light,
if Christians are called to put their
faith in Christ, whatever trials they
face, then it undermines that trust to
try to read the signs, unlock the code,
focus on what can't be known rather than
on what must be done: heal the sick, tend
the poor, spread the Gospel.
It is one thing to become
politically active to deploy that Gospel
to improve people's lives, another to
try to promote a specific religious scenario.
Intercessors for America, a 30-year-old
prayer ministry, helps keep people politically
connected through e-mail alerts and telephone-prayer
chains. The June 11 Prayer Alert implored,
"Lord, raise up government leaders
in Israel, the United States (and worldwide)
who will not seek to 'divide the land,'
and who would recognize the unique significance
of Jerusalem in God's end-time purposes."
A refusal to consider Israel's withdrawal
from any occupied territory would tend
to complicate the peace process: virtually
every proposal has involved a land-for-peace
swap. Yet at the same time, "if this
wave of terrorism continues without a
meaningful peace treaty soon," predicts
John Hagee, pastor of the 17,000-member
Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, Texas,
"the sparks of war will produce a
third world war. And that will be the
coming of the End Times. That will be
the end of the world as we know it."
To the true believers, that
seems less a threat than the fulfillment
of a promise. "If we keep our eyes
on Israel, we will know about the return
of Christ," says Oleeta Herrmann,
77, of Xenia, Ohio. "Everything that
is happening—wars, rumors of war—in
the Middle East is happening according
to Scripture." Herrmann is a member
of the End-Time Handmaidens and Servants,
a group of global missionaries who preach
the Gospel with an emphasis on End Times
teachings. Sept. 11 is proof of her belief
that the Second Coming of Christ is "closer
than it ever has been," Herrmann
says.
And therein lies the central
paradox in this wave of End Times interest.
If you believe the end is near, is the
reaction hope, or dread? "Even though
the Left Behind series has been popular,
many people still think of the End Times
as negative," wrote Kyle Watson on
his prophecy news website, AtlantaChristianWeekly.com.
He thinks believers should be excited
about the end of the world. "Try
viewing prophecy and current events [as]
how much closer we are to being with Christ
in heaven."
That impulse to hope for
a good ending is one Cal Thomas, the conservative
columnist, sees even in the disciples'
questions for Jesus. He cites Bible passages
in which the Apostles press Jesus for
clues about how the future unfolds. "This
is intellectual comfort food, the whole
Left Behind phenomenon, because it says
to people, in a popularized way, it's
all going to pan out in the end,"
he says. "It assures them, in the
midst of a general cultural breakdown
and a time of growing danger, that God
is going to redeem the time." Evangelicals
who had felt somehow left behind in secular
terms, by a coarse culture and a fear
of general moral decay, welcome arguments
that even the most tragic events may be
evidence of God's larger plan. In fact,
you don't have to be religious to be hoping
for that as well.
—With reporting
by Amanda Bower/New York, Rita Healy/
Denver, Marc Hequet/St. Paul, Tom Morton/
Casper, Adam Pitluk/San Antonio, Matt
Rees/ Jerusalem, Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles,
Melissa Sattley/Austin and Daniel Terdiman/San
Francisco
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