The
Prophetic Hurricane Strikes Again: "The
sea and the waves roaring"
(PART
TWO) • (PART ONE) • (PART THREE)
by Gary
DeMar
One of the keys that opens prophetic texts is the time
element. Abraham’s
descendants were strangers in the land of Egypt where they would be “enslaved
and oppressed four hundred years” (Gen. 15:13). This prophecy was
fulfilled “to the very day” (Ex. 12:40). Joseph was told
of seven years of plenty and seven years of famine (Gen. 45:6). Times
of famine and plenty that follow these two seven-year intervals of time
are irrelevant as a fulfillment of this prophecy. Israel was to remain
in the wilderness for forty years, a year for each day that the spies
spied out the land (Num. 14:33–34). Subsequent forty-year periods
of time are not a fulfillment of this prophecy. Israel’s captivity
was seventy years in length, a year of captivity for each year of Sabbath
rest violated (2 Chron. 36:21; Lev. 26:33). Based on this certain timetable
of God’s binding word, Daniel prayed, petitioning God for the restoration
of Israel to the land. To Daniel’s method of calculation, the seventy
years were nearing their completion (Dan. 9:2).
Exactly
490 years were to pass for Daniel’s people and the Holy City before
the Messiah would appear (9:24). Those living in Jesus’ day had
made the calculations and were expecting “Messiah the Prince” to
appear (9:25). The “magi from the east” were aware of the
prophecy concerning the coming of a great king. This is why an unusual
stellar phenomenon led them to Jerusalem to inquire about His birth (Matt.
2:1B2). It’s possible that Daniel’s prophecy of the “seventy
weeks of years” (490 years) was known outside of Israel since Daniel
was a ruler and wise man in Babylon (Dan. 2:46B49). Since Babylon was
a center for trade and learning, Babylon's “wisdom,” including
Daniel’s true wisdom, was in all likelihood exported with its commercial
goods. Simeon was “looking for the consolation of Israel” (Luke
2:25), as was Anna (2:36B38). Israel was beset with false messiahs. They,
too, had calculated the time for His arrival and hoped to counterfeit
His work (Acts 5:36B37). There was an anticipation of the “fullness
of the time” (Gal. 4:4; cf. Mark 1:15).
Those
who futurize prophecies, that is, those who see their fulfillment beyond
A.D. 70, also realize the importance of time texts. Hal Lindsey sees
Israel’s becoming a nation again as a time indicator. He knows
that a prophecy without a time text is almost impossible to interpret.
With the establishment of the Jewish state in Israel in 1948, Lindsey
believes “the whole prophetic scenario began to fall together with
dizzying speed.”1 There is,
however, no justification for Lindsey’s timing scenario. He understands
the “budding” of the fig tree in Matthew 24:32 to be a symbol
of a restored national Israel. This is why he interprets “this
generation,” a generation of 40 years, as the generation alive
when Israel became a nation (1948–1988). Matthew 24:32 does not
address Israel’s nationhood. The New Testament is silent on the
subject. The OT prophecies of Israel's restoration had been fulfilled
in the return from the Babylonian captivity.2
We
are back to determining what Jesus meant by the time text of “this
generation.” As I’ve shown in Last Days Madness, “this
generation” always means the generation to whom Jesus
was speaking. There are no exceptions! This can only mean that
the generation alive between A.D. 30 and 70 experienced the events described
by Jesus in Matthew 24, Mark 13, and Luke 21. Therefore, when we read
of wars, earthquakes, plagues, and famines in our generation, they are
not prophetic signs for our day.
This
brings us to Greg Laurie’s claim that Hurricane Katrina may be
a fulfillment of Bible prophecy. He wrote the following in a September
5, 2005 article that appeared on WorldNetDaily’s website:
When Jesus was asked what the signs of His return would
be, He painted a picture of a world torn by strife and war; famine
in the midst of plenty; the Earth rocked by great earthquakes and ravaged
by pestilences. Jesus said: “And there will be great earthquakes in various places, and
famines and pestilences; and there will be fearful sights and great signs
from heaven” (Luke 21:11, NKJV). Jesus indicates that natural disasters
along with global conflict will begin to increase in frequency and intensity
in concert with each other shortly before His return.3
Joe Kovacs, in a story about George Nooray’s belief
that we are living in the last days, also appeals to present-day natural
disasters as a fulfillment of Luke 21:
Katrina’s storm surge and flooding have some recollecting the
post-Christmas tsunami which killed 200,000 people and left up to 5 million
in need of basic services in a dozen Indian Ocean nations. At that time,
some people reflected on the End-time warning from the Gospel of Luke,
where Jesus stated: “And there shall be signs in the sun, and in
the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with
perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring” (Luke 21:25).4
There are a number of obvious problems with the above
interpretations of the passages from Luke’s version of the Olivet Discourse. First,
natural disasters, even those related to “waves roaring,” have
a long history. The Lisbon earthquake of 1755 and the Galveston hurricane
of 1900 caused far more damage, destruction, and loss of life than Katrina.
Second, Luke 21 is a prophetic description of what took place before
that first-century generation passed away. In fact, a number of dispensational
authors teach that Luke 21 describes Jerusalem’s destruction in
A.D. 70 while Matthew’s version describes a future tribulation
period. This means that Luke 21:25 must refer to the events leading up
to and including the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70.
Laurie
and Nooray are in a long line of prophetic prognosticators that have
something in common—they’ve all been wrong.
Read Part Three of this article...
Read Part One of this article...
1. Hal Lindsey, The Promise (New
York: Bantam Books, [1982] 1984), 199.
2. William Hendriksen, Israel
and the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1968), 16–31.
3. Greg Laurie, “Hurricane Katrina:
A sign of the Last Days?”: www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=46148 (September
5, 2005).
4. Joe Kovaks, “Radio host:
No doubt ‘End Times’ here—‘Why would divine Providence
want this to happen to us now?’”: www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=46090 (September
1, 2005).
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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