Prophecy Matters Blog

Emphasizing the miracle of Israel's modern rebirth.


Why Worldview Matters

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

(See our more in-depth analysis of worldview in this week’s edition of “PM Analysis”)

 

In a September 15, 1996 piece from Parade magazine columnist Marilyn Vos Savant (whose weekly feature, “Ask Marilyn” highlights Ms. Von Savant’s high IQ), we see just how important worldview is in our everyday lives.

 

In a question posed to Ms. Savant, “Anonymous” wondered:

 

“I’m writing because you are the most intelligent person I know of, and you give reasonable answers to questions. Please do not ‘turn me off’ when you hear the subject of my letter. I am not an innocent teenager; I am a college-educated professional, and I’ve had a baffling experience. My daughter was given a Ouija board, and the two of us have used it a few times. The results were spine-tingling. We never would have spelled out some of the answers we received, consciously or subconsciously. I’ve heard that some churches are against it, but if it’s just a board game, they shouldn’t be against it, should they? Please do not consider this a trivial subject. Many people are concerned. Could you give us a rational answer about what’s happening here? I need to remain anonymous.”

 

Mr. Vos Savant answered thusly:

 

“The Ouija board is just a lot of hooey, and it scares people for nothing. Those who touch the planchette (the little rolling platform that ‘points’ to the letters of the alphabet and other symbols on the Ouija board) are definitely directing it, either consciously or subconsciously.

 

“Here’s proof, and I hope that every Ouija board owner in the country tries this experience as many times as needed to convince himself and herself to dump the whole thing into the wastebasket. Both participants should blindfold themselves and play the board in the presence of bystanders—friends or family who should record the so-called answers and messages but not tell the participants the results until they’re finished. The outcome will be utter nonsense.”

 

Ms. Vos Savant’s IQ is said to be 228. How sad that she is so wrong about the Ouija board!

 

The Bible tells us explicitly that necromancy (seeking to communicate with the dead) is forbidden. As with all of His “rules”—guides for life found in Scripture—the Lord God knows that harmful entities have a particular loathing of humans (see Job 4), and among other places, we are warned in Deuteronomy 18:11 against attempting to communicate with the deceased, or “familiar spirits.”

 

Marilyn Vos Savant has been writing for Parade for almost a quarter-century, and the magazine’s circulation is almost 72 million!

 

Worldview matters greatly. If we believe the Bible is true and the true guide for life, we know that Ouija boards are lethal. The alternative view, as espoused by the worldly wisdom and intelligence by Marilyn Vos Savant, is tragically misguided.

 

jim@prophecymatters.com

 

 

 

 

 

 


A real shame

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

I recently re-read an article that appeared in a Christian magazine a dozen years ago. The writer, who has had extensive experience working with youth and college students, stated that the real problem for today's younger generations is that their sin has weighted them down with shame.

Isn't that interesting? Guilt of course is part of the equation, but it is deep shame because of sin that is the bane of today's young people.

Today's culture in America is a moral sewer. Everywhere people are becoming more self-centered.

The writer of the article also stated that when truth is jettisoned, the result is that youth especially look to all manner of earthly "wisdom" in their search for meaning.

At the same time this situation exists, we see the American Church relinquishing whatever good effect it ever had on society.

How sad to see churches ramping-up the emphasis on style over substance in church. They even talk of having "relevant" sermons/talks/messages for attendees.

The Bible is relevant! Its history, philosophy, and prophecy make for the ultimate message of meaning. The Church today however fairly shows its disrespect for Scripture by elevating lights, cameras, action over the instruction of Paul: Preach the Word.

I have a theory: people want someone to stand up and tell them the Bible is true, and THE guide for life. Tell them why. Show them. Explain. Preach. Teach.

The American Church today has largely abandoned this call.

To its great shame.

jim@prophecymatters.com 


Campfire Stories

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

I routinely receive emails from people who lament the lack of Bible study and Bible preaching in American churches today. A gentleman this week wrote and said that for years, he has encountered relatively few people in the pews who seem interested in studying the Bible.

Of course, we've all heard for years that the Bible is often hard to understand. That is nonsense, if one believes in a Creator God who is able to communicate clearly with humans.

It is important to understand that the seeds for this lethargy were sown a very long time ago, as Enlightenment thinkers began to propose that Scripture was not the Word of God.

I have open in front of me a popular Bible study that was hatched in mainline churches two decades ago. The workbook looks like an intensive, wonderful Bible study. A lot of text, blank lines, etc.

Sadly, what unfolds as one reads it is an Enlightenment-soaked bias against the reality that the Bible is in fact the Word of God.

For example, the author of the study writes, about Genesis:

"The second (and much older of the two) Creation story (2:4-25) is a very ancient story, told long ago around campfires, under a star-studded sky. It was recited for centuries before it was written down."

The author prefaced that by saying that the "first Creation story" (Genesis 1:1-2; 4) is a "carefully worded poem of praise to God."

The "two Creation stories" heresy has been around for years and has influenced many people.

The truth is, a third-grader could read the first two chapters of Genesis and conclude that it is straightforward history of the creation of all things. Poems and campfire stories are not straightforward history.

These allegations against Scripture were necessary as liberal scholars sought to convince listeners that Genesis could be harmonized with the philosophy of naturalism, better known as Darwinism.

In other words, when liberal scholars attempt to attack the veracity of Scripture, they eventually take the heart and meaning out of it, at least in the minds of church members who assume the scholar is simply an unbiased, learned man.

In fact, the author of the particular Bible study I refer to became incensed during our correspondence some years ago, as I attempted to simply understand why he wrote, for example, that many OT figures were—according to him—fictional.

In the end, he told me that he had been a scholar for 40 years, as if that sealed it.

How sad. He played a significant role in turning people away from Bible study, in reality. At one time, his views were seen as heresy.

Today they have become mainstream.

And we wonder why people are leaving churches in droves.

jim@prophecymatters.com 


Dividing Jerusalem?

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

It was reported today that Israel's Defense Minister, Ehud Barak, told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Israel would consider ceding east Jerusalem to the Palestinians in a peace deal. It is exceedingly rare to hear an Israeli official talk like this, even those on the left.

For Christian supporters of Israel, it is important to keep one thing in mind: it's no cause for panic. In the past several years, since the disastrous and evil Oslo Accords, pro Israel Christians have fretted over several possible scenarios, the scariest being the establishment of a Palestinian state.

 Don't worry! Remember that Zechariah predicts a last-days battle centered in Jerusalem and "half the city" will be taken.

Ezekiel quotes Israel's enemies (36th chapter) as saying, "Aha, even the ancient heights are ours").

The Bible doesn't say of course that the Palestinian Arabs in the last days will not have a state in what is traditionally known as the Holy Land. It does not even say Jerusalem will not be divided, as it were.

 It does tell us that the Jews who settle the biblical heartland will never be expelled again.

 (We should also be cautious about castigating Israeli leaders, like Barak, as if they were thwarting the Lord's plans. They can't, so that is not a worry. In fact, even men like Barak, who might not be aware of the divine plan, have staked their lives on the defense of the state. Barak is a decorated war hero and member of Israel's elite commando unit, Sayarat Matkat. Ariel Sharon, demonized by pro Israel supporters for giving up Gaza, brought about the almost biblical crossing of the Suez Canal during the Yom Kippur War, thus staving off a disastrous defeat for Israel. Let's give these men their due and pray for them.) 

Geopolitics are virtually meaningless for us who support and love Israel and the Jewish people. I say this in the context of Bible prophecy.

I would detest the division of Jerusalem; the very thought is hateful. But if we wake up one day and the "unthinkable" has happened and Mahmoud Abbas is celebrating from east Jerusalem, in "Palestine," we should not worry at all. Far from it.

In fact, the Lord of History and the Bible have never been wrong, never been out-maneuvered, and have never been in danger of being displaced.

The Bible predicts many things for the last days. We must keep our eyes on the prize—the return of the Prince of Peace—and not be distracted by the folly of mere mortals who think of the Jewish state as a negotiating chess piece.

Israel is right where she ought to be. Her God is watching.

jim@prophecymatters.com 


Going the Wrong Way

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

1This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come.

 2For men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy,

 3Without natural affection, trucebreakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good,

 4Traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God;

 5Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away.

 6For of this sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts,

 7Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.

(2 Timothy 3:1-7)
 
 
One of the most overlooked-but-fascinating prophecies in the Bible is found in Paul's letter to Timothy, in which the Apostle presents the characteristics of people in the last days.
 
I thought of these recently when watching a video on YouTube. In the short film of a high school football game, a player is mocked for running the wrong way with the ball; the play resulted in a touchdown for the opposing team.
 
Football might look relatively easy when watching someone like Jerry Rice or Tom Brady; a few players are blessed with marvelous physical gifts. It is, though, a game of chaos and requires fast-thinking. It is violent.
 
In the video mentioned above, the now infamous player was trailing his quarterback and took an option pitch, which got away from him. By the time he grabbed it, he was turned around and headed toward his own goal-line. He eventually fumbled and the ball was recovered in his team's endzone. 
 
I wondered why this young man is held up to such ridicule; let's call it what it is: blatantly cruel. Then Paul's words in 2 Timothy came to my mind. 
 
We are always looking for signs; our mail at Prophecy Matters confirms that many are looking for just the right signs of the end of the age. Certainly Israel is the key, and will always be so. However, 2 Timothy 3 shows us quite clearly that we are living in a grotesquely wicked age.
 
Humans have always been cruel, etc., but surely never to the degree we see today. People are short-tempered, disloyal, agitated, etc. Evidently in order to "make ourselves feel good," we laugh and mock a young man who made a mistake in a BALL GAME. The game will have no bearing on eternity.
 
Football season is coming up and I am a big fan. But this sad scene described above is an exceedingly sad sign that Paul's warning has settled on us like a dark shadow.
 
The only silver lining is that we can read those traits of the last days and realize that, once again, what we see in the Bible is what we see in the real world. Scripture is sure and God is alive and active.
 
Man's sick rebellion is a crystal clear proof that Bible prophecy is true.
 
jim@prophecymatters.com 

Surprise

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

Everyone and their brother is wringing hands over the Israel-Iran showdown. Increasingly, folks speculate about what Israel will do to stop Iran's nuclear program, which, as we all know, is about obtaining nuclear weapons—not for energy purposes.

Iran, as an Islamic "republic," insists its nuclear program is all about generating electricity for its citizens. That is an obvious lie, as the Iranians have promoted murder and terrorism for 30 years, since the Shah was expelled.

The last time an Islamic-based country threatened Israel with nukes, the Jewish state courageously sent a bomber group to take out Saddam Hussein's nuclear reactor at Osirik.

 (By the way, the U.S. not only condemned that action, but the Reagan-led White House also later recognized the PLO, and pulled out of Lebanon after 242 Marines were murdered by Hezbollah in 1983. Do we really think "conservative" U.S. presidents are that much better in dealing with the Israeli-Arab crisis than their Democrat counterparts?)

It was almost amusing the other week to hear of a "three-day deadline," in which it was speculated that Israel would hit Iran by the weekend.

 If you remember nothing else, remember that the Israelis always use the element of surprise, and dramatic surprise at that. They are not on the world's timetable in any way at all, and Benjamin Netanyahu's governing coalition will act and/or strike Iran when it suits them. If I am certain of one thing, it is that the Israelis are a couple steps ahead of the international community.

Israel will not be destroyed; that is a biblical statement rooted in reality. How they go about eliminating the latest Haman is up to them...and cloaked in the shadow of surprise.

jim@prophecymatters.com 


The Threat of Prophecy

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

I well remember my reaction several years ago to a liberal scholar’s view that perhaps 11 people wrote the book of Isaiah.

 

Yes, I’m aware that what you just read seems bizarre. That’s the point.

 

We live in a time in which the Bible’s book of Isaiah, clearly written by an ancient Hebrew prophet named Isaiah, is called into question. The “11 Isaiahs” lunacy is the product of, among other things, the so-called Documentary Hypothesis, in which liberal scholars allege that the Bible was compiled by an unknown (but large) number of unknown editors, or redactors.

 

Why do they allege this?

 

The short answer is this: if biblical prophecy is in fact history written after the events took place, then it is no longer prophecy and the product of a supernatural being. It is merely history. And this has been taught, and is being taught, to Christians.

 

The answer is key to understanding where we are today as a people.

 

The official reason is that these scholars are certain that biblical accounts were in fact oral tradition for a very long time, before being set to writing. The traditional view has always been that Moses was the compiler/writer/editor of the first five books of the Bible. In fact, the Lord told him to write certain things down.

 

This won’t do for liberal scholars, many of whom question whether Moses was a real figure at all!

 

However, I maintain that the real reason these scholars allege such things is because they loathe the God of the Bible, who tasked His men and the prophets with setting down history and prophecy through written communication, thus ensuring that men and women and children in all times and places could read it for themselves.

 

But again, this won’t do for liberal scholars who have never liked the God of the Bible. They’d prefer to re-shape Him into a figure they can control.

 

You see, the idea that God knows the beginning from the end and predicts events is a great comfort to believers, but hateful to liberal scholars and other pagans. A God who is in complete charge doesn’t sit well with unbelievers.

 

Prophecy teaching today is under attack as never before, from Emergents like Brian McLaren, to liberal pastors like Tony Campolo. Here’s my own prediction:

 

It will get worse. There is a popular rise today among evangelicals in which anything that smacks of pro Israel or pro Bible prophecy is openly scorned. I discuss much of this in my 2009 book, It’s the End of the World As We Know It, and at Prophecy Matters, we make it our mission to educate the laity about the majestic nature of God revealed in predictive prophecy.

 

The coming of the Savior is our great hope, and has been the great hope not only since the first century church, but since ancient times (Job 19:25). We who endure to the end will be saved. In the meantime, we can take great comfort in knowing that the Lord used men like Isaiah to allow us to know generally how the future unfolds.

 

He is a most merciful God, and now is the time for men and women who love Him to stand for Him and His word.

 

jim@prophecymatters.com

 

 

 

 


Culturally Relevant

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

A hot topic among Church folk now is how to become culturally relevant for younger audiences. I recently stumbled across a mission statement of sorts for just such a church:

 "Our highest desire is to live in light of Biblical principle while remaining culturally relevant to our community."

 That's interesting; as if biblical principles and relevance are mutually exclusive.

Often, a thing can be repeated so long that most people begin to believe it. Such is the case with the idea that the Bible is outdated and not appropriate for modern audiences. Of course, it's never been more relevant, and what's more, the Bible is far, far ahead of humanity in terms of reality and relevance.

I (Jim) recently spoke at a youth camp in Pennsyvlvania, and the experience confirmed my suspicions: young people are not only smart enough to grasp biblical concepts, they are hungry for them. In particular, they completely understand the implications of the Bible's predictive prophecy.

It was a reminder that the truly irrelevant ones today are the liberal scholars who are so embarrassed with the old-time religion that they work day and night to change that which is unchangeable. I speak of men like John Spong and Brian McLaren. 

In the youth group I grew up in, things were fairly typical of others' experiences: an attempt to provide a wholesome atmosphere for young people. But there wasn't much Bible teaching. Today's emphases on light shows, loud music, and almost-middle-aged speakers attempting to dress and act "hip"...they miss the mark.

Prophecy Matters has begun creating specific seminar topics aimed at a younger audience, and the reaction so far has been terrific. Contact us for more information, and in the meantime, remember this:

 The Bible is eternal, life-giving, and life-affirming. In it we find God, in the person of Jesus Christ. In Him is all we ever need. 

Let us resolve to have the courage, in today's climate of postmodernism, Emergent, and liberal Christianity, to present biblical truth the way people need to hear it: unvarnished and exposed in all its glory.

jim@prophecymatters.com 

 


The Era of Me

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

Have you ever in your life seen so much selfishness in our society? Although humans have been self-centered for a very long time — see Genesis — I would argue that we haven’t seen anything like what we’re experiencing now.

 

An online Sports Illustrated blog illustrates this in a powerful way, and those of us who love college football lament the present realities (sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/jeff_pearlman/05/28/ditka.loyalty/index.html)

 

The truth is, the creeping narcissism is a sign of what the apostle Paul warned about in his letter to Timothy (2 Timothy 3). The laundry list of bad traits is chilling.

 

Increasingly, our world feels lonely and cold. I don’t need to detail some of the horrific events in our world today.

 

However, along with the metastasizing narcissism, we also have the promises of God, which are infinitely stronger. For example, when the daily news is too much, I read the later chapters of Isaiah. Because I believe the Bible is God’s Word, and wholly true, those verses are powerful and life-affirming. This is the message people everywhere need to learn.

 

The recent death of actor Gary Coleman reminded me of this. As with many television or film projects, the actors from the popular 70s sitcom “Different Strokes” have dealt with their share of tragedies. Todd Bridges has had problems with drugs and the law. Coleman battled health problems for most of his 42 years. Dana Plato apparently ended her life in 1999, and her son recently followed suit, compounding that tragedy.

 

In the Era of Me, it is incumbent upon all of us who call on the name of the Lord to share the Good News wherever and whenever we can. Not only is it the only hope of the world, it is a marvelous and wholly satisfying promise.

 

One of the ways I spread this Good News is to remind people, or teach them first-hand, since so many haven’t read the Bible, that God’s provisions for the Jews are in full effect. His people, wanderers for millennia, have come back to the land just as He said they would.

 

The prophecy that Paul outlined 2,000 years ago is finding its fulfillment in our day. At the same time, we have the great, end-time promises of God finding their fulfillment as well. In the winter of this dying world, spring is just around the corner.

 

The wildflowers are blooming, and the fragrance of God’s love is wonderful indeed.

 

jim@prophecymatters.com


The Paradox and the Piper

Posted by: Jim in Untagged  on

 

 

As one who watched the salad days of the Dispensational movement, the “Pre-Tribbers” of the years immediately following Hal Lindsey’s The Late Great Planet Earth release, and then having spent a number of years in mainline churches…I feel that I’ve seen quite a few perspectives on eschatology.

 

In those years just following the Six Day War, and the Yom Kippur War, Bible prophecy enthusiasts were so overwhelmed with anticipation, they just knew Jesus was coming back in the next five minutes. I well remember reading Lindsey’s book, The 1980s: Countdown to Armageddon, as a high school senior, and wondering if I’d get the light turned out next to my bed before the Lord returned.

 

All that to say, the country’s best-known Bible prophecy teachers have spread the word well, but also incorrectly at times. A side-note: we should understand that Hal Lindsey wasn’t responsible for some of the conclusions certain readers jumped to.

 

As a person who lives somewhat in the Bible prophecy community, I am both frustrated by some of the teachers, yet thankful that they are much, much closer to the truth than their vicious critics, among them the Emergent crowd.

 

Bible prophecy teachers have gotten some things wrong, but their “wrong” is tiny compared to the planet-sized, speeding meteor of their critics.

 

What many people fail to grasp is that when a Bible prophecy teacher is wrong, it doesn’t mean the Bible is wrong. Prophecy critics love to pounce on the more sensational claims of some teachers and then present the futurist approach to prophecy as hopelessly flawed.

 

Which brings us to our present situation in the world: as prophecies from the Bible become more pronounced, fewer people are paying attention. This paradox is quite astonishing to watch unfold.

 

One of the major reasons fewer people “get it” (such as the rebirth of Israel) is because Christian leaders who are considered authoritative pontificate on the subject. In reality, they are presenting their bias and because Americans have somehow become conditioned to believe what spokesmen tell them, many people assume an “A-list” Christian leader is right.

 

Take John Piper, for instance. Virtually a celebrity among evangelicals, Piper dispenses his wisdom on any number of subjects. In a 2004 article by Bill Koenig, entitled “Influential Christian Leaders Speak Against Israel’s Biblical Significance and Her Land,” we learn just where Piper’s biased theology is taking him:

 

“So now we ask, is the so-called ‘Promised Land’ part of the inheritance and salvation that ‘all Israel’(v. 26) will receive? And if so, what does that say about the rights of Israel today to the Land?

“The promises made to Abraham, including the promise of the Land, will be inherited as an everlasting gift only by true, spiritual Israel, not disobedient, unbelieving Israel.

“Being born Jewish does not make one an heir of the promises neither the promise of the Land nor any other promise.

“Throughout the history of Israel, covenant breaking and disobedience and idolatry disqualified Israel from the present divine right to the Land. (See also Daniel 9:4-7; Psalm 78:54-61.)”

 

Wow.

 

Piper is simply wrong, on multiple levels. In Scripture, the Lord repeatedly tells the Jews that they will inherit the land for eternity; He speaks very forcefully about their unbelief and the punishments for that (such as in Deuteronomy). He also constantly and forcefully states that He will bring them back from their dispersions to the nations, and that He will plant them in their land again, in the last days of world history.

 

(You can read the entire article at www.watch.org/showart.php3?idx=62726&rtn=/index.html&showsubj=1&mcat=4)

 

Further in the article, Piper makes the huge error of stating that both Jews and Muslims claim the Holy Land through divine right. The Jews certainly do, but Muslims do not. Their Koran makes no such claim. Either Piper is uninformed, or he employs the same techniques Uncle Walter Cronkite did: fit the evidence to your bias.

 

Piper’s bias against the Jews of Israel compels him to say exactly the opposite of what the Bible tells us about the tortured history of the Jewish people.

 

Replacement Theology, the idea that God has replaced Israel with the Church, and has “transferred” her promises to the gentile Church, is simply wrong. It is also dangerous. In this abhorrent worldview, we are seeing an almost identical repeat of the teachings that led to the destruction of European Jewry by the demonic Adolf Hitler.

 

For this reason alone, if Martin Luther were alive today — the notorious anti-Semite lived in the 16th century and today is the darling of many evangelicals — and he told me the sky is blue, I’d have to check for myself. The Bereans learned to test what they were taught, and we would do well to follow their example.

 

Piper’s arrogant bias compels me to say that he and other Christian leaders like him have nothing to say to me that will help me navigate through this world. If he’s wrong about Israel, what else is he wrong about?

 

And make no mistake; we are merely discussing John Piper. He has a lot of company in his wrong-headed views about Israel.

 

The biblical record is quite clear, and reaches from Genesis to Revelation: the Jews are God’s chosen people and His covenants with them are unbreakable…they are unconditional. That was the point of Genesis 15. Those “covenant-breaking” Jews that Piper likes to pontificate about have never broken the epic covenant in Genesis 15, and they never will.

 

How Christian leaders can miss this is beyond me. It is part of the great Paradox of our age: Bible prophecy heats up, and more people aren’t paying attention.

 

In large part, we can thank our leadership for this dismal, dismaying reality.

 

jim@prophecymatters.com

 

 


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