No matter how rose-colored one’s glasses might be, one cannot
conclude that the portrait the Bible paints regarding these last days is
cheerful, optimistic, or carefree. Whether the words of Jesus, Paul, or John on
the isle of Patmos, we are repeatedly told what to expect and what the world
will look like on the eve of Christ’s return.
As we read the warnings contained within the pages of
Scripture, some might conclude that, for the most part, the things the Bible
warns about have been a part of the lexicon of human misery since the beginning
of creation itself. There have always been earthquakes, there have always been
wars, and there has always been some sort of pestilence in some part of the
world, so being told they will take place during the last days seems obvious. It’s
by no means revelatory, is it?
That Jesus would take the time to warn of these things ought
to give us reason to ponder the more profound implications thereof, but who’s
got time for pondering things nowadays? We’re on the fast track to nowhere and
too busy doing nothing to concern ourselves with the things Jesus said. This is
the instant generation; raised on jet fuel and unrealistic expectations.
None of it matters anyway since we’re not even going to be
here. Sure the pre-thanksgiving rapture theory was a bust, but there’s always
Christmas, New Year, International Women’s Day, and maybe even International
Pretzel Day to shoot for. If it didn’t happen today, there’s always tomorrow to
look forward to, just as long as we don’t have to face the reality that we’re
all still here and it’s getting a wee bit hot in the kitchen.
If something Jesus said would be a harbinger of His return
was already happening during His time, the only conclusion we can draw is that
those things would increase in frequency and intensity. Sure, there have always
been wars, earthquakes, famines, and pestilences, but their frequency will
increase the closer we get to His return, as will their intensity.
Jesus wasn’t guessing at what the last days would look like;
He knew exactly what they would look like and forewarned us so we would tamper
our expectations of ruling the nations with a rod of iron or getting that
long-awaited wealth transfer from the wicked to the righteous. It’s not a
purely American problem, either. Even Romanians have gotten in on the game.
Okay, technically, Romanian Americans, but a guest speaker at a sizeable Romanian
church in Chicago encouraged the congregation to buy Shiba Inu crypto coins
before they cut off his mic.
It would have been funny if it wasn’t so off-putting because
he didn’t pronounce Shiba coin correctly.
I want to believe it as much as the next guy, but the whole
thing about the sinner’s wealth being laid up for the righteous is a proverb,
not an end-times prophecy. It is found in the same proverb as sparing the rod spoils
the child, and hope deferred makes the heart sick.
I get that we live in a clickbait culture, and we’ll butcher
a scripture passage ten ways from Sunday until we get it to say what we want,
but trying to make the Bible say something it doesn’t isn’t worth it for the
momentary endorphin rush.
So why do I keep harping on this? Because Jesus also said
something that hasn’t been happening since the begging of time, that has
nothing to do with the violent ways of men, the natural cycles of pandemics, or
the ever-present earthquakes in various places.
Matthew 24:10 says, “And then many will be offended, will
betray one another, and will hate one another.”
If you knew how many hours I’ve spent looking at this one
verse from every conceivable angle, you would think me either mad or a genius.
What we know by reading the text is the following: the
offense will be widespread, it will be so deeply felt that it will lead to
betrayal, and the rift it will cause will be such that men will come to hate
each other.
Here’s a hypothetical for you: A solid 75% of the world’s 2.2
billion Christians believe that they will either be gone before the things the
Bible says comes to pass or they stand to get their grubby hands on the wealth
of the wicked. Everything the Bible says will happen begins to happen, they’re
still here, with no wealth transfer in sight, but rather religious persecution
on a grand scale breaks out globally.
If you believed what they believe and the opposite happened, wouldn’t you be offended? If you believed what they believe because your pastor, elder, deacon, bishop, or pink-haired prophetess told you it would be so, then suddenly you were faced with torture and death, wouldn’t betrayal be a viable option? Wouldn’t you hate the people that lulled you to sleep and insisted that cotton candy clouds and chubby cherubs playing harps were just a love offering away?
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
I've always said, those who believe they will be raptured out before the mark is a requisite for living, had better be right. Nowadays, given all the push back from those who staunchly believe and defend the false doctrine of Rapture before tribulation, I have to believe there will be quite a few who will reject Christianity for 'failing' them.
I know you are frustrated. I feel your pain. I know you also feel the door is closing and you want to reach as many as possible before it is too late. I'm hanging on by a thread, constantly arguing with myself - why bother, they aren't going to hear. But then I argue back, what is the downside to saying what needs to be said until the door is fully shut. Even if just one wakes up and slips through.
A few years ago I put my thoughts in a small book - Where Is Wisdom? - made it into a pdf download. I have no idea if it might ring a bell with someone. I can't see a downside to making it available.
http://bagsallpacked.com/pdfs/WIW.pdf
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