The end of the world is
coming ... well, eventually
January 5, 2007
BY CATHLEEN FALSANI
Religion Writer
If poll results released this week are accurate, a quarter
of you think it's at least somewhat likely that Jesus Christ will return to
Earth this year.
The
same Associated Press/AOL News poll showed 46 percent of white evangelical
Christians, 17 percent of Roman Catholics and 10 percent of those who described
themselves as "nonreligious" believe Christ's return will occur in
2007.
I
happen to know a few of you who believe this and you're not all nutjobs walking
around dressed in a "The End Is Nigh" sandwich board and muttering
about conspiracy theories. A couple of members of my family, in fact, are
convinced that the Rapture and/or Second Coming will happen before Rosh
Hashanah -- the Jewish New Year -- next fall.
When
they tell me such things, I generally just smile and say, "OK." When
they launch into explanations of the complicated reasoning behind their
timelines, I get up for another cup of coffee or excuse myself to the powder
room.
Do
I think Jesus is coming back? Yes. My faith and religious tradition tells me
that He is.
Spiritual Boy Scouts
Do I think it will be this year? Not really. Do I have any
idea whether we're living in the end of days? Nope.
And
neither does anybody else.
I
thought the whole point was to behave like spiritual Boy Scouts -- always
prepared -- by living lovingly, not by peeking at the skies from behind the
shutters of our metaphorical bomb shelters for evidence of Jesus' right foot
stepping through the clouds.
There
are people who make a good living trying to read the signs and wonders,
decipher the biblical prophecies and turn Scripture into numerical codes that
can be tallied to a sum that equals the date of Jesus' return. Take Left Behind
authors Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins, for instance.
Such
guesstimating is a glorious waste of time. After all, in the biblical Book of
Acts, Jesus Himself, when asked about His return, said: "It is not for you
to know the times or periods that the Father has set by His own
authority."
But
I suppose it is part of human nature -- the part that got us into trouble in
the first place, if my memory of the biblical account of the Garden of Eden is
correct -- to know the unknowable, to unveil the Big Picture.
'We're still waiting'
"Over the course of Christian history, particularly in
the last, oh, 500 years or so, there have been periodic attempts to determine
the nearness of the end of time based on signs around us, whether it's natural
disasters or a perceived increase in sinful behavior, or evil or war,"
says Craig Koester, a New Testament professor at Luther Seminary in St. Paul,
Minn.
This
is to be expected because the New Testament instructs readers to be watchful,
expectant, Koester says. At the same time, though, Scripture warns against
trying to figure out where we are in God's timeline, he says.
Even
in the Book of Revelation, the last book of the Christian Bible in which
details of the so-called "end times" are revealed, "the book
keeps warning readers, 'Don't be so confident in your ability to determine
where we are in terms of God's great plans for the world,' " he says.
2007
is hardly the first time some people have thought Christ's return was imminent.
"Martin
Luther expected it in the 16th century and we're still waiting," says
David Aune, professor of New Testament and Christian Origins at the University
of Notre Dame.
Chinese
Christians oppressed by Mao Zedong thought Jesus would reappear in time to save
them. So did some folks in the Middle Ages who determined, using some biblical
arithmetic, that 1260 would be the year of Christ's return. Even
"When
people are involved in this terrible thing, they just assume that's what the
Bible was talking about and what they're experiencing is the worst thing they
can imagine," Aune says. "When things get really bad, that's the
beginning of the end."
In
the mid-19th century, a whole religious movement, known as the Millerites, grew
up around a prediction made by a Baptist farmer named William Miller (who used
calculations based on the biblical Book of Daniel) that Jesus Christ would
return on Oct. 22, 1844.
"And
when [Jesus] didn't, that became known as 'The Great Disappointment,' "
Koester says.
Robertson's prediction
Someone should remind Pat Robertson about great
disappointments and the danger in prognosticating God's plans. This week, the
religious broadcaster reprised his role as Armageddon's
Robertson
doesn't think it'll be a nuclear bomb attack -- "the Lord didn't say 'nuclear,'"
he said on his "700 Club" television show -- but probably a
"very serious terrorist attack."
I
certainly hope Robertson is wrong. He's been wrong before, but he's also been
right.
Either
way, it seems to me that Robertson and his fellow predictors simply are trying
to scare people into heaven, or, at the very least, frighten them into behaving
themselves.
Or,
as the bumper sticker says: "Jesus is coming soon. Look busy."
as of 1-2007