'2012': American Vision's Gary DeMars takes on Religious Right's 'enders'
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Thu Nov 19, 2009 at 10:22:38 AM EST
Religious Right Leader Excoriates His Own for Aiding and Abetting 'End Of Times' Hype and Hysteria

Move over Nostradamus, "Rapture" kings and queens, "End Times" prophets, and Y2K hucksters. Here comes the real "end of days," brought to you by the Mayan calendar: Not!

In its first weekend, the film "2012" was a box office sensation; it took in $225 million -- $65 million domestically and $160 million internationally. "2012" is an special effects spectacular, combining the star power of its cast with the kind of doomsday scenario -- derived from the end of the Mayan Calendar - that apparently is being lapped up by movie audiences everywhere.

Talk about going global!

In attempt to both explain and neutralize both the hype and the hysteria generated by the film's doomsday scenario, Gary DeMar, president of an organization called American Vision ("Exercising Servanthood Dominion"), recently wrote a column titled "Avoiding Doomsday Hype and Hysteria." In the piece, DeMar - who is not so well-known amongst the general public -- excoriates those Religious Right leaders that have consistently set a date for the end of time, the rapture, etc.

Targeting Tim LaHaye

While he praises Mark Hitchcock, pastor of Faith Bible Church in Edmond, Oklahoma, who is the author of "2012: The Bible and the End of the World," for, among other things, "offer[ing] a critical evaluation of the supposed Mayan prophecy," he is critical of Hitchcock's end of the age theorizing.

According to DeMar -- a member of Midway Presbyterian Church, affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in America and the author of 25 book -- in describing the film, Hitchcock told Christianity Today that "It's the eschatology of the New Age. It's basically a mystical, New Age belief system that I believe is spiritual deception. I want to take 2012 and bend the curve to God's purposes, and use this as a springboard to tell people what the Bible says."  

DeMar pointed out that Tim LaHaye, the longtime Religious Right leader, and co-author -- along with Jerry Jenkins - of "Left Behind" the mega-best-selling series of apocalyptic novels, "offers a similar evaluation."

LaHaye "believes the 2012 mania is distracting people from what the Bible predicts regarding the Rapture, Tribulation and Second Coming. 'The date has been picked up by so many groups and cults that you have to conclude that someone or something inspired all these writers to come to essentially the same period -- and that would be divination or spiritism,' LaHaye says."

"'It's probably satanic because there is nothing in the Bible about it. In fact, the Bible forbids us to even think about a day and an hour,'" LaHaye pointed out.  

DeMar finds all of this fairly amusing and, at the same time, hypocritical: "Now the dispensational prophetic sensationalists have to compete with the crazy New Agers and secular fright mongers."

"How many decades have we had to endure predictions of an imminent end from Hal Lindsey, Tim LaHaye, Jerry Falwell, and many others?", DeMar, the president of American Vision, which maintains that its "mission has been to Restore America to its Biblical Foundation -- from Genesis to Revelation since 1978," asks.

"Falwell ... stated on a December 27, 1992, television broadcast, 'I do not believe there will be another millennium . . . or another century.' He was wrong. John F. Walvoord, described as 'the world's foremost interpreter of biblical prophecy . . . [expected] the Rapture to occur in his own lifetime.' It didn't. Walvoord died in 2002 at the age of 92. These men claim to reject specific date setting, but they have no trouble and see nothing wrong with identifying the last generation. But even in this, their track record has been dismal, and yet they want respect from the non-believing world when they speak on Bible prophecy."
While the likes of Falwell and LaHaye "decry date setting, ... some don't seem to have a problem identifying what generation will be the 'last generation,'" DeMar writes.

In this regard, DeMar is especially critical of LaHaye:

"Here's how LaHaye explains it: 'I refuse to set any date limits, for the Lord didn't, but he did specify a generation's experiences and said that he would return during that period. We are in the twilight of that generation -- that I firmly believe.' He wrote this nearly 20 years ago! Moreover, Hal Lindsey and Chuck Smith, who made some very definite predictions about 'last generation' (that it would end with a 'rapture' no later than 1988), seem to get a pass by their fellow dispensationalists who claim to condemn date setting."

In a June 2000 interview with CNN's Larry King, LaHaye said that "people recognize that something is about to happen":


King: But weren't people saying this in 1890 and 1790? "It's coming. Boy, the apocalypse is coming. The end is near." They've always been saying it.

LaHaye: Well, we have more reason to believe that. Until Israel went back into the promised land, we couldn't really claim that the end times were coming. But ever since 1948, in subsequent years, we've realized that things are getting set up. It's stage setting for these momentous events.

King: Do you believe that some sort of end is coming?

LaHaye: Yes.

King: You believe that that will happen?

LaHaye: In fact, I believe there are a number of signs in Scripture that indicate it's going to come pretty soon. We say maybe within our lifetime.

DeMar points out that "Making predictions has been the stock and trade of prophecy writers like LaHaye. Of course, they don't pick a specific date, but they use words like 'pretty soon' and 'within our lifetime.' If they didn't make these concessions, their books would not sell."

More endering on the way

In 2003, Jerry Jenkins, LaHaye's co-author of the "Left Behind" series, wrote a book titled "Soon: The Beginning of the End." In May of next year, LaHaye and Craig Parshall, senior vice-president and general counsel for the National Religious Broadcasters who has authored seven bestseller suspense novels, will publish "Edge of Apocalypse," another apocalyptic novel, the first book in a new series called 'The End." In its pre-publication promo, Zondervan, the book's publisher calls it "an adrenaline-fueled political thriller laced with End Times prophecy."

"Don't these guys know when to stop?" asks DeMar. "Like those who are attracted to the prophecies of Nostradamus and the Mayan calendar, there is a steady stream of gullible Christians who know nothing about the failed predictions of some of their favorite Christian prophecy writers but are willing to shell out money for prophecy books that in the end fail to deliver."

DeMar concludes by quoting New Testament scholar Ben Witherington: "The Mayans no more knew when the end would come than anyone else does. It's time for theological weather forecasting to be given up entirely. Even TV weathermen predicting ordinary events are more accurate."

And, writes DeMar, "this includes the 'we know the generation' prophecy writers like LaHaye, Jenkins, Hitchcock, and Parshall."

While DeMar stews, cine-plexians have more doomsday films to look forward to including "The Road," a tale about a father and son attempting to survive in post apocalyptic America, based on Cormac McCarthy's Pulitzer Prize winning novel of the same name, which opens next week. And, for those that eschew doomsday fare, James Cameron's long-awaited 500 million-dollar 3-D science-fiction film "Avatar," will premiere in December.




Display:
Gary DeMar's comments are neither surprising nor new.  He is a Christian Reconstructionist (he coauthored Christian Reconstruction:  What It Is and What It Isn't with Gary North after all) and thus is a strident postmillenial dominionist.  In his book which dates from the early 90s he and North also sneeringly labeled anyone who didn't go along with Christian Reconstructionist dominionist eschatology as "dispensationalists," even those who were more accurately Reformed amillenialists.  I first became acquainted with DeMar's views after seeing him quoted very liberally in my former church's "graduate school" teachings on eschatology, in which the Left Behind books were called the "Big Behind" and any eschatological viewpoint not resulting in Christians literally taking over the world now or sooner were "defeatist," "pessimist," and therefore were to be considered almost heretical.

by ulyankee on Thu Nov 19, 2009 at 10:41:19 PM EST

I'm actually familiar with DeMar and American Vision--this merely is an indication, unfortunately, of a pissing-war between Christian Reconstructionists (who are generally postmillenial) and "neopentecostal dominionists" including NAR promoters (who tend to be premillenial or quasi-premillenial in practice).  American Vision, of note, is in the former category (Christian Reconstructionist) whilst LaHaye is in the latter category.

American Vision, of note, is considered so virulently anti-LGBT that it is considered a hate group by Southern Poverty Law Center; the group has advocated execution of LGBT people and workers at women's clinics that provide abortion services.  They also assisted Cobb County in passing an anti-LGBT resolution that was so strong it attracted national protest.

American Vision is in part listed as a hate group (equivalent to neo-Nazi and KKK groups in their ratings of a threat to national security) in part due to their known sympathies for and support of the Army of God domestic terrorist network.  Specifically, American Vision has been known to support a Posse Comitatus-esque call for armed insurrection against the US promoted in Army of God circles (involving essentially infiltration of lower levels of government such as state and mayoral authorities, and then getting official sanction from sympathetic executives to conduct a coup-de-etat).

Of note, it's one of only a very few groups of its sort listed; the most well-known groups of its type listed as hate orgs include Traditional Values Coalition, MASS Resistance, and Family Research Institute.

THAT SAID...

The fact that there DOES seem to be a bit of a "pissing war of philosophies" between Christian Reconstructionists and "neopentcostal dominionists" may still be useful for us.  If a wedge can be driven in, that makes it harder for them to join together.

I do advise not making of this a sign of true reform, though. :P

by dogemperor on Thu Nov 19, 2009 at 11:13:22 PM EST

While NAR adherents tend to see themselves as premillennial (though I think your term quasi-premillennial is extremely accurate) most of the NAR's leaders are becoming more openly postmillennial, although it's very syncretic in that there are a lot of dispensationalist elements that aren't found in the Christian Reconstructionist variety.  There was an article in last month's Charisma magazine on charismatic eschatologies where C. Peter Wagner made the argument for postmillennial domionist theology.

The leaders of my former movement (Every Nation, nee Maranatha) have tried to merge Christian Reconstructionist with NAR theologies with limited results.  It takes a lot of cognitive dissonance to try to be a reactionary neo-Puritan and a radical neo-Pietist at the same time.  But given their cultic history, navigating cognitive dissonance is nothing new to them.

by ulyankee on Fri Nov 20, 2009 at 08:18:46 PM EST
Parent



for providing some very interesting notes concerning the two eschatologies, and filling in Mr. Berkowitz' excellent piece.

by trog69 on Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 07:03:01 PM EST

I read 'The Road'  and found it the most depressing thing, fiction or non-fiction, that I have ever read in my 74 years, and that is a lot I tell you. The entire apocalypse filmed in 3-D would be more  exciting!  I can't wait for the  four horses and the whore of Babylon in film.

Jim of olym

by rdrjames on Sun Nov 22, 2009 at 07:16:26 PM EST


(saw this on the net just now!)

It's perfectly clear that Tim knows how to make LaHay while LaSun is shining and before the San Andreas Fault gets a big jolt out of his theological skullduggery. And Blundervan Publishers up in Grand Rapture, Me-Itch-Again, knows which multi-millionaire to team up with for more of that "cankered" stuff they've been "wanton" for their "last days," according to James, chapter 5!

by LoueyNorey44 on Tue Dec 01, 2009 at 01:04:49 AM EST



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