Oh brother, here we go again.
Another false prophet---dare
I say that?---is predicting exactly when Christ is coming again, even though
Jesus Himself said that no man knows the hour of His return, including
Himself.
From the early days of the
Church to the present day, hundreds of millions of Christians have affirmed,
“Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again.”
But now a group is trying
to fear people into thinking they know when Jesus is coming. May 21, 2011
is the day, supposedly, of Christ’s “secret” rapture. (Doesn’t sound too
secret to me.)
The latest prophets of doom
have managed to get their message out in a series of billboards and bus
ads. In my humble opinion: What a waste of money and what a mockery they
make of people’s faith. (If the message said simply Judgment Day is coming---get
ready to meet your Maker, then I would whole-heartedly endorse that message.
It’s the specific date that’s the problem.)
Do I think Judgment Day
is coming on May 21? Well, let’s talk it over, on May 22.
In addition, October 21,
2011, according to these people, is Judgment Day.
Who are “these people”?
The main leader is Harold
Camping, who has a network of Christian radio stations. You would think
he would be gun shy about setting a date for Christ’s return.
He wrote a book about it,
predicting that 1994 would be the year. I own a copy of his book explaining
the details. It’s called 1994.
Another man predicted that
Jesus would return in 1988, and he listed 88 reasons for it.
But you can always tell
that such predictions are wrong. Why? Because they are specific.
With all due respect, how
do I know that these people are always wrong? The fact that they’re setting
a date in the first place violates what Jesus said.
In Matthew’s Gospel, He
said about His return: “But about that day or hour no one knows, not even
the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. As it was in the
days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man” (24:36-37).
I’m tempted to say to these
people who give a specific date---like May 21, 2011---What part of “no”
as in “no man knows the hour” don’t you understand?
I even read one such prophet who essentially said—with a straight face:
Christ didn’t tell us the day or the hour of His return, but that doesn’t
mean we can’t know the year, the month, or the week!
It’s tragic to me that the
watching world looks at such predictions that come and go and just laugh,
justifiably so, at those who think Christ will return one day.
I am as sure of the return
of Jesus Christ to planet earth some day, as I am that the sun will rise
tomorrow.
But I have no idea when,
nor will I engage in speculation based on “jigsaw theology.”
Jigsaw theology is when
you cobble a Bible verse over here with a Bible verse over there to create
some sort of timeline for the Second Coming.
The group that has made
the May 21, 2011 prediction says this: “The Bible has opened up its secrets
concerning the timeline of history. This information was never previously
known because God had closed up His Word blocking any attempt to gain knowledge
of the end of the world.”
But now they know, supposedly.
A friend of mine noted this
is like modern day Gnosticism.
The Gnostics were an early
Church heresy that got the basics of the faith wrong. They claimed that
the way of salvation was not Christ crucified, for sinners died and raised
from the dead, but rather some sort of secret knowledge.
People have been wrong often
throughout Church history as to the return of Christ.
Many were convinced that
Jesus would come in AD 1000, so they sold everything and went to Jerusalem
and waited. And waited.
Others sold everything they
had and waited for Christ to return in America in the 1840s. And waited.
The Seventh Day Adventist denomination was born out of that experience.
When Hitler was alive, some
people thought he was the Anti-Christ. Can you blame them? But they were
wrong.
Through the ages, even otherwise-wise
servants of Christ have made the mistake of predicting a specific date
of the end of the world. Included in this category are Christopher Columbus,
Sir Isaac Newton, and Cotton Mather.
How come we keep repeating
this same mistake? I’m reminded of the little poem by British poet Steve
Turner: “History repeats itself. It has to. No one is listening.”
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