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The Spirit of The Age

 

That Bible prophecy is a vast subject, I have no doubt. For many believers, just getting a grasp on the fact that our God is a God of prophecy and understanding why that is important is a major step to knowing Him better. Beyond that concept, sadly, the average believer knows nothing of significance of the times in which we live, if they even understand THAT much. If the church is not asleep, she is awfully drowsy and definitely nodding off periodically.


Jesus is coming soon. How easy it is to say that, to mean it, and even moreso, to sense it in your heart of hearts. But do we say it, and do we mean it, and do we sense it? Does the church at large live as though this is true, and if we believe it, are we communicating it with all confidence to a dying world and to friends and family who are spiritually clueless? Many years ago, fresh from my first Revelation Bible study after a lifetime of Biblical illiteracy, I had the notion that I could know that I know that I know that what the Bible says would take place near the time of His coming was not only taking place before my very eyes, but that I could point to it and show others what I saw. This notion was from the Lord, I know that for certain. So, armed with nothing but a library card, an unwavering love of truth, and a two-year-old in tow with limited patience for the somber atmosphere of such a place, I scoured multiple periodicals for any sign of the times. I knew this information was out there, because in several major newspapers in the early 80s, someone took out full-page ads announcing, “The Christ is Now Here”. A New Age guru named Benjamin Crème of the Tara Center spent a boatload of money to take ads out in 25 or so of the world’s biggest newspapers to communicate that a great spiritual leader named Lord Maitreya was about to enter the world scene as a savior and miracle worker. Remember, this was years before the dawn of the PC and the internet. I would spend hours and hours digging for information with nothing but my convictions and not a computer mouse in sight. A card catalog and a patient librarian were my best friends at the time.


Anyway, these amazing ads told me as a young believer that someone was following some cosmic calendar and would take the stage at the proper time. These ads told me that the desire for a world leader, a cosmic Christ who would lead the masses into last-days Aquarian nirvana, was so strong that people would rejoice and rally around such a person. Funny, my Pastor had just told me that the Bible warns us that this very thing would take place! That was all I needed to actively pursue my studies of contemporary prophetic fulfillment and I never looked back.


Bible prophecy is not a simple subject, and it takes years of study to bring it into focus as you peel back the layers of subject matter and learn the Bible as an entire unit, understanding God’s plan for both the Gentiles and His people Israel. Sub-topics abound, such as global economics, geo-political issues, religious issues, and more. But I am not going to touch on any of those in this series. My desire first and foremost is to hover at around 10,000 feet, bringing you an overview if you will, of the times in which we live outside of specific issues. I firmly believe that having a grasp on the “big picture” is invaluable and gives us a basis for our confidence in the Lord and what He says will come to pass. Remember, this will be a time of intense spiritual activity, so understanding the spiritual climate is essential.

We live in a time like no other. Can anyone argue with that? Even unbelievers know that these are ‘perilous times’ in one way or another, and if they don’t, they aren’t paying very close attention to the world around them, or are bent on tuning everything else out but self – which is also a part of what the Bible calls perilous! There is a mood, a climate, a prevailing social state of mind and heart that is unmistakable today. There have been momentous changes in the last century that have brought us to a point of no return in our culture that can only be rectified by heavenly intervention. I call this prevailing mood ‘the Spirit of the Age’, my definition for the spiritual mood or climate of the times. I firmly believe we live in no ordinary time, especially when you combine the spiritual mood of the times with so much other fulfilled prophecy, not the least of which is the sign of Israel being back in her land.

 


Perilous Times.

Scripture indicates that we can expect a specific time, unlike any other time man has known, in which the sin of mankind will become full and ripe for judgment. The book of 2Timothy Chapter 3 tells us to expect perilous times, and proceeds to give a laundry list of behaviors and attitudes of heart that will define these times: Lovers of self; lovers of money, disobedient, ungrateful, lacking self-control, haters of good, unholy, unloving; these things and more define our ‘perilous times’. From the first time I read these verses, I found it interesting that what makes the times perilous is the condition of the human heart, not necessarily outward events, as one might think of perilous or difficult times.


We are also told the last days will be like the days of Noah, a time in which the ‘intents of the thoughts of men’s hearts were only evil continually’ (Genesis 6:5)…a world where the inhabitants are utterly clueless that judgment is imminent. If that’s not bad enough, the church of Jesus Christ will also suffer from spiritual ailments; 1Timothy tells us many will depart from the faith and give heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of demons. Also in 2Timothy, we read that there will be a time when men will not endure sound doctrine but gather around themselves teachers who will tell them what they want to hear. It is these verses that scare me the most; I have come to expect little of the world, but when the Spirit of the Age invades the church, it makes me feel particularly uneasy. Has the Spirit of the Age invaded the church? You be the judge.


As believers, we should be the most sensitive and restless about the prevailing spiritual climate. Unbelievers may not know why they feel a sense of fear or apprehension, and often desperation, but many are perceptive enough to know that in the last few decades, life has become increasingly difficult on many fronts.


In fact, many vocalize fears today that the very survival of the human race is at risk. People cope differently to the stress of living in these times; some choose to tune out. Some more sensitive souls despair of living, which is reflected in suicide rates among our young. Others seek to find peace in some type of spirituality, maybe meditation or the latest Oprah-induced spiritual coma.


Still others jump in with an activist attitude and try to save the world one cause at a time. Some think the world will end from environmental disaster, so they pour all their energy into saving the oceans and the ozone and trying to convince us it’s overly warm out. (Excuse me? It’s April 9th here in Wisconsin and snowing to beat the band.)

Some think the problem is over-population; so they pour themselves into saving the world through the vehicle of Planned Parenthood and the evils that go with that. Still others think it is war that will eliminate the human race and actively oppose any military action no matter how necessary or how evil the enemy is. Maybe the problem is intolerance, so let’s legislate political correctness to force everyone to play nicely together in the global neighborhood; and on and on it goes as we seek a social cure for our social ills.

 


They remind me of that old fable about the blind men trying to describe an elephant, which none of them, of course, have ever seen. Perhaps you have heard this one:


Six blind men were told there was an elephant in their village. They had no idea what an elephant was, but to satisfy a natural curiosity, they decided they would all go and make contact with that elephant. The first man touched it’s side and decided ’it’s a wall’.


The second man touched the tail, and declared, ‘it’s a rope’. ‘No, it’s a snake,’ said the third, who touched its trunk. The fourth man felt a knee, and said,’ no, it must be a tree’.


The next one grabbed an ear and decided it was a huge fan; the last man felt the tusk and insisted that it had to be a spear. Over the years, many different religions have tried to give deep philosophical meaning to this story, and all have pretty much come to the same conclusion: it means we can’t really know God, that when it comes to understanding life’s mysteries, everyone is partly right, and everyone is partly wrong, there is no final answer. But what it reminds me of is the way people approach the times in which we live. As they seek to find a solution to the various dangers they perceive, they sound a bit like blind men defining an elephant—they are partly right…and mostly wrong. The unbelieving man and woman are indeed blind, and simply trying to convince each other – and us – that they can see.


But we as believers, having the great gift of spiritual eyes to see the big picture, can offer the world Biblical answers to their questions. We know without a doubt that the problem is spiritual. And as is often the case with a pitiful spiritual condition, this one did not happen overnight. The seeds of change that are bearing fruit in our days were planted some time ago, and I am going to show you that the chickens have indeed come home to roost in these last days.


If you were a citizen of my upper Midwest town in the mid 1800s, when it was new, you would have lived a pretty simple life. You would not have had a phone, a bathroom, a radio or television, largely due to the fact that you had no electricity or running water. Your contact with the outside world would have been very limited, even the weekly paper would have had only local news. You would not have seen a McDonalds, a Walgreens, a Walmart, or a gas station for decades to come. No surprises there.


But did you also know, that in our humble town in 1850, you would never had a Jehovah’s Witness knock at your door? Nor would you have seen a pair of Mormons ride down Main Street USA on a bicycle. Your children would not have been seduced by the lies of Darwinism in the school system as there WAS no publicly funded school system yet, and Charles Darwin had not yet been seduced by the spirit of his OWN age. Your sons would not have been diagnosed with ADD since it did not exist, your daughters would not have been deceived by the agenda of Planned Parenthood. There was no pornography industry, no R-rated movies or music (or any movies for that matter), no alternative lifestyles; sin was sin and shame was shame.


To help you see the profound spiritual changes the world went through in a relatively short time, and to underscore the lateness of the hour, I have included a visual listing just some of the more obvious spiritual movements that all had their beginnings in modern history and have had a huge impact on our lives today. While there have always been false teachers and cultic movements, as I look into this it seems for all the world that Satan saved a particularly mixed and large bag of tricks for these latter times. On this list, you will find the beginnings of most of the major humanistic movements of today that distract and deceive people and draw them away from true Christianity. From cults, to psychology, from ecumenism to evolution, it’s all there. And I will lay odds that everyone you share your faith with has been conditioned by one or more of these religions or philosophies, and so these things impact all of us no matter what our spiritual state.

The Spirit of the Age

1800s

Post-tribulationalism dominates biblical eschatology

1830

- Joseph Smith founds Mormon movement;

- Visions of Mary at Lourdes claimed

1851

Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton pair up to form the beginnings of the women’s movement

1859

Darwin’s Origin of the Species is published

1860

New Thought Movement begun by Phineas Quimby; father of

Positive Thinking/Word Faith Teachings adopted by N. V. Peale, Kenneth Copeland, et al

1870

The dogma of papal infallibility is instituted

1875

Mary Baker Eddy publishes first Christian Science texts

1879

Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, is born

1879

Jehovah’s Witness organization founded by Charles Taze Russell

1882

First New Age Bible published

1893

First Parliament of World Religions held in Chicago

1894

The Women’s Bible is published

1895

Sigmund Freud begins his work in the field of psychoanalysis

1897

John Dewey, father of public education, publishes The School and Society

1912

- Annie Besant founds the magazine Herald of the Star to promote Krishnamurti as the coming World Teacher

- Fatima visions of Mary claimed

1917

Lenin facilitates Communist Revolution

1919

Sri Yogendra introduces Yoga to the West

1923

American Astrological Society is founded

1939

Gerald Gardner initiates modern Neo-Pagan/Wicca movement in England

1945

Birth of the UN

1947

Age of the UFO begins with supposed sightings in WA state

1955

Church of Scientology opens its doors in Washington, DC

1867: Charles Spurgeon publishes series of articles in Sword and Trowel designed to bring to light doctrinal irregularities in the Protestant church of his day.

Scripture References: 1Timothy 4; 2Timothy 3


Now, to further make this point, I want to show you what was happening in the church of Jesus Christ at this same time. Remember, not only is rampant deception prophesied for the world at large, but we are warned there will be a simultaneous falling away from the true faith.
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Posted by Mary on Apr 10th 2007 | Filed in Commentary | Comments (1)

A Tale of Two Bestsellers

Thirty-seven years ago this summer, in June of 1970, a book was published that I believe caused a great and timely acceleration of understanding of bible prophecy, and brought an entire generation a new understanding of God’s plan for the ages. This book sold over 30 million copies in 54 languages; the New York Times called its author “The Jeremiah of Today” and credited him with being the best-selling non-fiction author in the world, for the entire decade of the 1970s.This book has touched millions of lives with the gospel and exhorted many to live as though Christ could come at any moment. It spoke of His imminent return, detailed the signs of the times and God’s plan for Israel. It emphasized the idea that life on earth was temporal but heaven was the real goal anyway, and it just might be closer than we think. The title? The Late Great Planet Earth, by Hal Lindsey, one of the best known authors of my generation and whose name is now synonymous with Bible prophecy.

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Posted by Mary on Apr 1st 2007 | Filed in Commentary | Comments (0)