Snatching Up End-Time Books
By Gary DeMar
8/2/2006
WorldNetDaily is
running an ad that states the following: “ Readers snatch up
end-times books.”
Prophecy-related
products continue to be popular among WorldNetDaily readers, with
two books on Israel’s involvement in end-times predictions coming in at No. 2 and 3 on ShopNetDaily’s weekly best-seller list—Dave Hunt’s “Judgment
Day! Islam, Israel and the Nations” and Greg Laurie's “Are
We Living in the Last Days?”1
Why
shouldn’t Christians snatch up these end-time books? They’re being told by prophetic writers that this is the generation that will see the rapture. Of course, previous generations of Christians were told the same thing. I predict that the prophetic scenario outlined by the authors of the books that appear on WorldNetDaily’s list will not take place as predicted. And when they don’t,
memories will fade, and a new group of authors will join well-established
prophecy writers and publish books that will start the cycle all
over again that a Middle East Armageddon is inevitable and on the
horizon.
Another book
promoted by WorldNetDaily is David Dolan’s Israel in Crisis published
in 2001. The advertisement for the book states that “Israel in Crisis not
only takes a probing look into what’s happening in Israel today,
it also gives you a full picture on where the Middle East crisis
may be leading and how it is linked to biblical prophecy. Dolan weaves
events with Scripture in a fast-paced journalistic style that is
sure to inform, entertain, and inspire.”2
This book is
a perfect example of forcing the Bible to fit an already developed
prophetic system. Dolan tries to explain Jesus’ comments in John 21:18–23 in which Jesus says to Peter about John, “If I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you? You follow Me” (21:22). Dolan tries to explain the meaning of this passage by forcing it into his dispensational mold: “In further nonbiblical research, I discovered that many early church authorities believed that John had never died. This was based on the Lord’s
mysterious words in John 21 and also on the fact that, unlike the
other apostles, no credible account exists about his death. I suspect
that may be because John did not die.”3
Dolan
speculates that John could have been living on a Greek island for two
millennia, wandering around the world hiding his true identity disguised,
or caught up into heaven like Elijah where he has been supernaturally
preserved until he is needed. John 21:23 refutes this notion: “yet
Jesus did not say to [Peter] that [John] would not die, but only, ‘If
I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you.’”
So what is the
meaning of Jesus’ words? John Gill offers the best explanation. The “coming” referred to here by Jesus refers, “not till his second coming to judge the quick and the dead at the last day” but the coming “in his power . . . on the Jewish nation, in the destruction of their city and temple by the Romans [in AD 70].” As Gill points out, “till
which time John did live, and many years after; and was the only
one of the disciples that lived till that time, and who did not die
a violent death.”
1. http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=51311
2. http://shop.wnd.com/store/item.asp?ITEM_ID=335
3. David
Dolan, Israel in Crisis: What Lies Ahead? (Grand Rapids, MI: Fleming H. Revell, 2001), 143.
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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