Are
Embedded Microchips the "Mark of the Beast"?
by Gary
DeMar
In an attempt to
make the Bible conform to the latest advances in technology, modern-day
prophecy writers look for anything that will support their view of
the end-times, even if it means reading things into the Bible that
aren’t there. For example Peter and Paul Lalonde misrepresent
what Revelation 13:16–18 says about the mark of the beast. In an
advertisement for their This Week in Bible Prophecy television
program, the prophecy authors wrote, “The Mark of the Beast—it’s
one of the clearest and most dramatic prophecies in the Bible. It states
simply that in the last days1 that
no man will be able to buy or sell unless he has the mark IN his right
hand or forehead.” According to the Lalondes, the “IN” refers
to an embedded microchip or something similar placed under the
skin; they emphasize the word IN.
In
an article that appeared in The Wall Street Journal, a self-described “Internet
prophet who calls himself Tony G,” claims “the mark of the
beast (Revelation 13 tells us) will be ‘in’ not ‘on’ the
right hand, and ‘in’ not ‘on’ the forehead.” That
means, he concludes, “that ‘the mark’ will almost certainly
be ‘a microchip implant such as the Digital Angel,’ a conveniently
named microchip implant.”2
When it comes to
prophetic speculation, there’s nothing new under
the Sun. Chuck Smith was warning against credit cards in a sermon delivered
to his Calvary Chapel audience on December 31, 1979, and Mary Stewart
Relfe was warning against the “New Money System” and the
UPC Symbols (Bar Codes) in 1981.3 Some
have speculated that the UPC Symbol has three sixes imbedded in its design.
Of course, so far, except in the case of George Washington, UPC symbols
have not been tattooed to our foreheads.
The
Greek preposition epi (“upon”), not en (“in”),
is used twice in Revelation 13:16 to describe where the mark was to be
placed. Epi (επι) is best translated as “on” or “upon.” This
is why the passage states that the mark was to be given “on [επι]
their right hand or on [επι] their forehead,” not“in [εν]
their right hand or in [εν] their forehead.”
The
interpretation advocated by these self-styled prophecy experts believe
the message behind the mark of the Beast has been unintelligible for
nearly two thousand years since computer chips and scanning technologies
are late-twentieth-century innovations. Yet low-tech methods of screening
a population have been quite effective throughout history, as the men
from Ephraim found out when they could not pronounce “Shibboleth” (Judg.
12:4–7). During the reign of Caesar Augustus, Rome was able to
identify and tax the entire empire without sophisticated scanning devices
(Luke 2:1–4). And there was nothing high tech about the numbering
system Hitler used to identify and catalog Jews.
Should
we be concerned about imbedded microchips? Yes. Should we be wary of
civil government when it says “Just trust us”? Yes. Does
everything that happens in the world today have to be tied to some prophetic
text before we can determine its virtues? Absolutely not. Let’s
begin to think biblically without always having to think prophetically.
1. Actually
nothing is said about “the
last days” in Revelation 13. But even if Revelation 13 did use “the
last days” to designate the time in which the prophetic events
were to take place, other passages indicate that “the last days” were
in the first century (see Heb. 1:1–2 and James 5:3, 8–9;
1 Cor. 10:11; 1 Tim. 4:1–3).
2. Dave
Shiflett, “Satan’s
Micro Minions: Is Radio Frequency Identification a tool
of the Antichrist?,” The Wall Street Journal (December
30, 2005): www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=110007748
3. Mary
Stewart Relfe, When Your
Money Fails: 666 (Montgomery, AL: Ministries, Inc., 1981). This
book got a ringing endorsement from Colin Deal, author of the “best
seller” Christ Returns by 1988. I’m writing this
in 2006.
Gary
DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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