1. The Significance of Hal Lindsey to Christian Zionism
2. Lindsey's Literalistic Dispensational Hermeneutic
3. Lindsey's View of Prophecy
4. The Distinctive Apocalyptic Zionism of Hal Lindsey
4.1 The Jews of the Bible and the Modern State of Israel
4.2 The Territorial Extent of Eretz Israel
4.3 The Significance of Jerusalem
4.4 The Rebuilding of the Jewish Temple
4.5 The Implacable Enemies of Israel: Communists and Moslems
4.6 The Fall and Rise of the United States
4.7 Europe and the Emergence of a Revived Roman Empire
4.8 The Coming Holocaust: Armageddon Theology in Practice
4.8.1 The Motivation for the War of Armageddon
4.8.2 The Strategy for the Soviet Occupation of Israel
4.8.3 The Samson Option: Israel's Response to the Coming Holocaust
4.8.4 The Extent of the Final Holocaust
4.8.5 Supernatural Deliverance from the Holocaust
4.9 Dating the Second Coming of Christ
4.9.1 This Generation
4.9.2 The Anti-Christ is Alive and Well
4.9.3 Signs of the Times
5. Lindseyism and Charges of Anti-Semitism
6. A Summary and Critique of Hal Lindsey's Christian Zionism
1. The Significance of Hal Lindsey to Christian Zionism
Hal Lindsey is undoubtedly the most influential of all Christian
Zionists of the 20th century. Although rarely quoted by others, he
has nevertheless been described by Time as 'The Jeremiah for
this Generation', and by the New York Times as 'the best selling
author of the decade.'1 His newest publisher describes him as
'The Father of the Modern-Day Bible Prophecy Movement,'2 and,
'the best known prophecy teacher in the world.'3 He is apparently
one of very few authors to have had three books on the New
York Times best seller list at the same time.4
This chapter will explore the significance of Hal Lindsey within
Christian Zionism, his dispensational hermeneutic, uncoventional view of prophecy and
eschatology, his distinctive apocalyptic Zionism and his stand against anti-Semitism.
Lindsey acknowledges that 'The future is big business,'5 and has proved the axiom true.
He is a prolific writer, the author of at least twenty books spanning 27 years, most of
which deal explicitly or implicitly with a dispensational interpretation of the future, biblical
prophecy and Christian Zionism.6 He hosts his own radio7 and television programmes,
leads regular pro-Israeli Holy Land tours, and by subscription makes available a monthly
Christian Intelligence Journal called Countdown as well as the International Intelligence
Briefing8. Lindsey, along with fellow Zionist, Grant Jeffries, hosts a weekly news
programme, International Intelligence Briefing on the fundamentalist Trinity Broadcasting
Network television station.9
Lindsey's most famous book, The Late Great Planet Earth has been described by the
New York Times as the '#1 Non-fiction Bestseller of the Decade.' It has gone through
more than 108 printings with sales, by 1993, of more than 18 million copies in English,
with estimates varying between 18-20 million further copies in 54 foreign languages.10
Despite dramatic changes in the world since its publication in 1970, Lindsey maintains
that the prophetic and apocalyptic scenario depicted in the book is biblically accurate
and therefore it remains in print in its original un-revised form. Sales increased 83%
during August and September 1990 amidst fears in the United States that Saddam
Hussein would drag the world into total world war. Paul Van Duinen, an executive of
Lindsey's publishers, admitted, ' Often times we see during a crisis that people more
actively turn toward God and things spiritual.'11
Lindsey's popularity may be attributed to a combination of factors including his readable,
journalistic style of writing, his imaginative, if apocalyptic, insistence that contemporary
geo-political events are the fulfilment of biblical prophecy and, above all, his categorical
assertion that the end of the world is imminent.
What makes Lindsey's writings distinctive, however, is that like J. N. Darby12 and C. I.
Scofield13, he confidently claims his interpretation of the Bible shows what will happen in
the future.
Today, almost before I finish explaining a developing trend - it's already an
accomplished fact.14
This book describes in more detail and explicitness than any other just what will happen
to humanity and to the Earth, not a thousand years from now, but in our lifetime-indeed
in this very generation.15
In this riveting non-fiction book, the father of modern-day Bible prophecy cracks the
"Apocalypse Code" and deciphers long-hidden messages about man's future and the
fate of the earth.16
Hal will be your guide on a chilling tour of the world's future battlefields as the Great
Tribulation, foretold more than two thousand years ago by Old and New Testament
prophets, begins to unfold, You'll meet the world leaders who will bring man to the very
edge of extinction and examine the causes of the current global situation - what it all
means, what will shortly come to pass, and how it will all turn out.17
Like Darby, Lindsey claims his novel interpretations to have been revealed directly and
personally by God.
I believe that the Spirit of God gave me a special insight, not only into how John
described what he actually experienced, but also into how this whole phenomenon
encoded the prophecies so that they could be fully understood only when their fulfillment
drew near... I prayerfully sought for a confirmation for my apocalypse code theory...18
His popularity may also in part, however, have to do with his tendency to revise those
predictions in the light of changing world events. So for example The Final Battle (1994)
is essentially an unacknowledged rewrite of the 'Late Great Planet Earth' (1970);
'Apocalypse Code' (1997) is a rewrite of 'There's a New World Coming' (1973); and
'Planet Earth 2000 A.D.' (1994, & 1996) are both revisions of 'The 1980's Countdown to
Armageddon' (1980). Planet Earth: The Final Chapter (1998) is, the latest version in the
'Planet Earth' series.
A good example of Lindsey's prophetic revisions concerns the future of the United
States. In Planet Earth 2000 A.D. Lindsey specifically draws attention to a prophecy
made in The Late Great Planet Earth as evidence of his prophetic accuracy. A
comparison, however, shows that he has edited out the prediction of communist
subversion which did not occur.
The Late Great Planet Earth
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Planet Earth 2000 A. D.
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The United States will not hold its present
position of leadership in the western world;
financially, the future leader will be Western
Europe. Internal political chaos caused by
student rebellion and Communist
subversion will begin to erode the economy
of our nation. Lack of moral principle by
citizens and leaders will so weaken law and
order that a state of anarchy will finally
result. The military capability of the United
States, though it is at present the most
powerful in the world, has already been
neutralized because no one has the
courage to use it decisively. When the
economy collapses so will the military.19
|
"The United States will not hold its present
position of leadership in the western world,"
I wrote in The Late Great Planet Earth.
"Lack of moral principle by citizens and
leaders will so weaken law and order that a
state of anarchy will finally result. The
military capability of the United States,
though it is at present the most powerful in
the world, has already been neutralized
because no one has the courage to use it
decisively. When the economy collapses so
will the military." Remember folks, these
words were written in 1969, not the
1990's!20
|
Without access to all Lindsey's books one would not necessarily be aware that he has
adapted his material to fit the changing world since he rarely acknowledges his sources
or uses footnotes. The Introduction to two of his books serves as a good example.
Reading Planet Earth 2000 A.D. (1994), one is led to believe this, and not 1980's
Countdown to Armageddon (1981), was the long awaited sequel to The Late Great
Planet Earth (1970).
1980's Countdown to Armageddon
|
Planet Earth 2000 A. D.
|
Ever since The Late Great Planet Earth I
have thought about writing another book on
how prophecy relates to current events.
But only recently have I felt compelled to do
so. So many of the things which have
occurred during the past 10 years are so
directly related to prophecy that I now
sense an urgent, even desperate
compulsion to bring readers up to date.
The goal of this book is not merely to show
which prophecies have been fulfilled since
Late Great came out in 1970, however.
Even more important, it is intended to
analyze what will occur in the decade we
have just entered...
The decade of the 1980's could very well
be the last decade of history as we know
it.21
|
Meanwhile, for 25 years I resisted the
mammoth undertaking of writing a book that
would go beyond where The Late Great
Planet Earth left off, mostly because
prophetically meaningful events were
occurring so quickly, I wasn't sure how a
book could do justice to the subject. Instead
of focussing on writing prophecy books that
might be out of date by the time they
reached the stores, I devoted my attention
to radio and television shows, video and
audio tapes and a monthly news and
prophecy journal.
Only now, as mankind approaches the third
millennium, do I feel like the Holy Spirit has
provided me with the proper perspective -
the Big Picture, so to speak - on the mind
blowing experiences of the modern world...
This book doesn't dwell on the past, it looks
to the future. Because we are so close to
the final, climactic stages of world history, it
is considerably easier today for the student
of Bible prophecy to see with some
accuracy what's coming next...
I am certain... The Second Advent will occur
in the next few years - probably in your
lifetime.22
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With the decade of the 1980's coming to an end, and the Second Advent still some way
off, Lindsey also needed to revise the title if it was to remain in print. Without
acknowledging he had rewritten the book, Lindsey changed his publisher and implied
that Planet Earth 2000 A.D. was actually the sequel to The Late Great Planet Earth. Ten
years on, and with the new Millennium fast approaching, the date has been removed
altogether from the title in the latest edition, Planet Earth, the Final Chapter.23
Lindsey also makes use of previously published material in his later books. Unattributed
paragraphs and sentences from earlier works reappear with regularity. So for example,
in two unrelated books, published just a year apart, the same sentences are repeated.
Planet Earth 2000 A.D. (1994)
|
The Final Battle (1995)
|
The greatest threat to freedom and world
peace today - is Islamic fundamentalism...
Tragically, the world's sole remaining
superpower - the United States -has
responded to this monumental threat by
embarking on a suicidal, unilateral
demilitarization process of unprecedented
speed and recklessness. Like the
Scriptures warn, the West is blithely saying
'Peace and safety'...24
As the Bible tells us, the dispute over
Jerusalem and Israel's borders will never be
settled by any peace agreements nor any
whiz-bang diplomatic breakthrough.25
Right now, as you read this, preparations
are being made to rebuild the Third
Temple.26
Folks, the footsteps of our Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, can already be heard as He
approaches the doors of heaven to return.27
'Land for Peace!' Is the cry heard 'round the
world.28
...the Arab world has been successful at
framing the debate over the Middle East as
a struggle between downtrodden
Palestinians and powerful, heavily armed
Jews...29
Heading up what will evolve into a 10-nation
confederacy will be a man of such
magnetism and power that he will become
the greatest dictator the world has ever
known...30
There is a potential dictator waiting in the
wings somewhere in Europe who will make
Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin look like choir
boys. Right now he is preparing to take his
throne, inflaming his soul with visions of
what he will be able to do for mankind with
his grand schemes and revolutionary
ideas.31
There will be no peace in the Middle East
as long as the world entertains the Arab's
fanciful visions of dividing and conquering
Jerusalem.
Peace would only be possible, if, by some
miracle, the Arabs realized that their
ambitions for military and economic
hegemony over Israel were delusional.
Don't hold your breath... the Arab world has
been successful at framing the debate over
the Middle East as a struggle between
downtrodden Palestinians and powerful,
heavily armed Jews...32
|
...the greatest threat to freedom and world
peace today - is Islamic fundamentalism...
Tragically, the world's sole remaining
superpower for the moment - the United
States - has responded to this monumental
threat by embarking on a suicidal
demilitarization process of unprecedented
proportions. Like the Scriptures warned, the
West is blithely saying 'Peace and
safety'...33
As the Bible tells us, the dispute over
Jerusalem and Israel's borders will never be
settled by any peace agreements nor any
whiz-bang diplomatic breakthrough.34
Right now, as you read this, preparations
are being made to rebuild the Third
Temple...35
Truly, the footsteps of our Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, can already be heard as He
approaches the doors of heaven to return.36
"Land for peace!" is the cry heard 'round the
world.37
Because the Muslim nations have been
successful at framing the debate over the
Middle East as a struggle between
downtrodden Palestinians and powerful,
heavily armed Jews...38
And heading up this 10-nation confederacy
will be a man of such magnetism and power
that he will become the greatest dictator the
world has ever known.39
There is a potential dictator waiting in the
wings somewhere in Europe who will make
Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin look like choir
boys. Right now he is preparing to take his
throne, inflaming his soul with visions of
what he will be able to do for mankind with
his grand schemes and revolutionary
ideas.40
There will be no peace in the Middle East
as long as the world entertains the Arab's
fanciful visions of dividing and conquering
Jerusalem and driving all the Jews into the
sea. Peace would only be possible, if, by
some miracle, the Arabs realize that their
ambitions for military and economic
hegemony over Israel were delusional. But
don't hold your breath... Because the Arab
world has been successful at framing the
debate over the Middle East as a struggle
between downtrodden Palestinians and
powerful, heavily armed Jews...41
|
On one occasion in The Final Battle (1995), Lindsey even makes use of the same
material in subsequent chapters.
Israel is facing world pressure like never
before. Because the Muslim nations have
been successful at framing the debate over
the Middle East as a struggle between
downtrodden Palestinians and powerful,
heavily armed Jews. Israel is precipitously
close to compromising its own security
needs42
|
Israel is facing world pressure like never
before. Because the Arab world have been
successful at framing the debate over the
Middle East as a struggle between
downtrodden Palestinians and powerful,
heavily armed Jews. Israel is dangerously
close to compromising its own security
needs.43
|
In criticising clergy for getting caught up in 'the save-the-earth gospel,' Lindsey reveals
something of his estimation of himself,
Don't get me wrong. No one can deny that the earth is facing grave ecological crises.
There is probably no one in the church that has done more than me in calling this fact to
the attention of millions.44
There is no doubt that Lindsey has had a profound and lasting impact on the American
as well as British Christian scene. Indeed, the popular influence Christian Zionists such
as Lindsey have had, even in American political circles, is highlighted by Don Wagner
who claims that as long ago as 1980,
The election of Ronald Reagan ushered in not only the most pro-Israel administration in
history but gave several Christian Zionists prominent political posts... Once the Reagan
Administration opened the door, leading Evangelical Christian Zionist televangelists and
writers were given direct access to the President and cabinet members. Rev. Jerry
Falwell, Christian Zionist televangelist Mike Evans and author Hal Lindsey among
them.45
'White House Seminars' became a regular feature of Reagan's administration bringing
Lindsey into direct personal contact with national and Congressional leaders. Lindsey
subsequently became a consultant on Middle Eastern affairs not only to the Pentagon
but also to the Israeli Government.46
2. Lindsey's Literalistic Dispensational Hermeneutic
Like other dispensationalists, Lindsey holds dogmatically to a literalist approach to
biblical hermeneutics. He attributes the development of erroneous views concerning
Israel to an allegorical, non-literal hermeneutic supposedly popularised by Origen.
The man most responsible for changing the way the Church interpreted prophecy is
Origen... [He] powerfully introduced, taught and spread the allegorical method of
interpreting the Scriptures, particularly in the area of prophecy. From this seemingly
harmless fact of Church history evolved a system of prophetic interpretation that created
the atmosphere in which 'Christian' anti-Semitism took root and spread. Using this
method of prophetic interpretation, Church theologians began to develop the idea that
the Israelites had permanently forfeited all their covenants by rejecting Jesus as the
Messiah.47
As has been shown in an earlier chapter, it was the consistent approach of the
Post-Apostolic Fathers to interpret the Hebrew Scriptures typologically as the Apostles
had done before them.48 In his commitment to literalism, Lindsey does not appear to
distinguish between figurative or typological approaches acknowledged by covenantal
theologians from the allegorical methods of interpretation seen typically in
pre-Reformation Roman Catholicism.49 The distinction between these two methods of
interpretation are significant since the former places particular emphasis on the historical
context of passages as well as the way scripture interprets scripture. An allegorical
approach finds eternal truths in the bible without reference to their historical setting. A
typological approach highlights the way New Testament writers see Jesus Christ to be
the fulfilment of many Old Testament images and types.50 There is good evidence that a
typological interpretation of the Old Testament was consistently followed by the Church
from the 1st Century, and did not arise with Origen as Lindsey alleges.
Origen defended the historical sense of Scripture, tried to reconcile the historical and
allegorical senses, attempted to interpret Scripture with Scripture, and was respectful of
the church's tradition.51
Ironically, Lindsey admits to using typology on occasions. In explaining his hermenutical
approach to interpreting the Book of Revelation, Lindsey makes the following
assumptions,
How could this first-century man describe the scientific wonders of the latter twentieth
century? He had to illustrate them with phenomena of the first century; for instance, a
thermonuclear war looked to him like a giant volcanic eruption spewing fire and
brimstone... Much of the symbolism John used was the result of a first century man
being catapulted in God's time machine up to the end of the twentieth century, then
returned to his own time and commanded to write what he had seen and heard. The
only way that John could obey that instruction was to use phenomena with which he was
familiar to illustrate the scientific and technical marvels that he predicts.52 Some writers
have chosen to interpret each symbol quite literally. For example, a locust with the face
of a man, the teeth of a lion, a breastplate of iron, a tail than can sting, and wings that
make the sound of many chariots would have to be specially created by God to look just
like that description. I personally tend to think that God might utilize in his judgments
some modern devices of man which the Apostle John was at a loss for words to
describe nineteen centuries ago! In the case just mentioned, the locusts might symbolize
an advanced kind of helicopter. This is just one example of the fast-moving,
contemporary, and often deductive manner in which I have chosen to approach the
Book of Revelation. I realize I'll be accused by some of making wild speculations...53
In Apocalypse Code (1997), essentially an unattributed revision
of There's a New World Coming (1973), Lindsey's speculations
become more dogmatic and categorical, and so phrases such
as "might symbolize" become "actually saw."
Just exactly how could a first century prophet describe, much
less understand, the incredible advances in science and
technology that exist at the end of the 20th and the beginning of
the 21st centuries? Yet he testified and God bore witness that
he actually saw and heard things like:
● supersonic jet aircraft with missiles...
● advanced attack helicopters
● modern main battle tanks
● intercontinental ballistic missiles with Multiple Independently Targeted Reentry
Vehicles tipped with thermonuclear warheads (ICBM's that are MIRVed).
● battlefield artillery and missiles with neutron-nuclear warheads
● biological and chemical weapons
● aircraft carriers, missile cruisers, nuclear submarines
● laser weapons
● space stations and satellites
● the new super secret HAARP weapon system (High-frequency Active Auroral
Research Program)54
So, in Lindsey's inspired bible code, John's 'locusts' become helicopters, 'horses
prepared for battle' are heavily armed attack helicopters, 'crowns of gold' are the
helmets worn by pilots, and the 'sound of their wings' are the 'thunderous sound of many
attack helicopters flying overhead."55 Just as imaginatively, the 'bow' wielded by the
Antichrist in Revelation 6:1-2, is apparently, "...a code for long range weapons like
ICBM's."56 The reference to the "colour of fire and of hyacinth and of brimstone" in
Revelation 9:17 becomes the "Chinese national flag"..."emblazoned on the military
vehicles."57 Lindsey applies the same hermeneutical technique to Zechariah 14:12.
This is exactly the way a neutron bomb works. A soldier is hit by a burst of radiation that
leaves only a skeleton within a nanosecond. How could Zechariah have known such a
thing 2500 years ago? Once again, the Apocalypse code unlocks the meaning of
something not understood for centuries, because the technology for such things did not
exist until now.58
Like Darby and Scofield before him, Lindsey also interprets references to ancient tribes
and nations mentioned in Old Testament prophecies as applying to contemporary
peoples and countries in the Middle East.59 In Psalm 83, some 3,000 years ago, God
gave a warning of what would happen in the last days... In these verses the Philistia or
Philistines are the modern Palestinians. Tyre is modern Lebanon. Assyria is modern
Syria.60 Ezekiel 38 also talks about a confederacy of powers - including Russia and
Germany - coming against Israel... Ezekiel Chapter 38, verse 8 describes modern-day
Israel, after the Jews have returned from many nations and "are living securely."61 I
know from my study of the Bible that the final great war includes Turkey as part of the
Islamic grouping allied with Russia.62 The great nations that do get Biblical reference are
the Kings of the East, (China, India, Pakistan - all openly nuclear), Russia (Gog and
Magog), Libya, Egypt, Iran, Iraq and so on.63 On other occasions, with reference to
Exodus 9:9, Lindsey is content to acknowledge, "Egypt is often used as a metaphor in
the Bible for the "world" as oppesed to the Church."64
It is not clear, however, when the term should be taken litrerally or as a metaphor.
To assist his readers in their understanding of otherwise obscure passages of Scripture,
Lindsey also has the tendency to add words to biblical texts which are not there in the
original. So, in The Road to Holocaust, for example, where Lindsey is anxious to stress
how the promises made in Romans 11 apply to the State of Israel and not merely to
Jews generally, Lindsey 'interprets' this passage dispensationally adding the word
'national' to the text.
The whole point of this passage revolves around Israel's being restored to a position of
preeminence as a believing nation. This could not be true if those who are converted in
the future are made part of the Church, since the national distinction would be lost... The
exact meaning of the future 'riches of the world' and of the 'fullness for national Israel' is
of utmost importance.65
In a quotation of Matthew 24:15-18, Lindsey adds a reference to the rebuilding of the
temple, necessary for this prophecy to refer to some future date,
Therefore when you see the Abomination which was spoken of through Daniel the
prophet, standing in the holy place [of the rebuilt temple] (let the reader understand),
then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains...66
Lindsey's interpretation of Daniel 11:40-45 is similarly colourful,
This will be the sign that immediately precedes the Russian-led Islamic invasion of
Israel... "At the time of the end the King of the South [the Muslim Confederacy] will
engage him [the False Prophet of Israel] in battle, and the King of the North [Russia] will
storm out against him with chariots and cavalry and a great fleet of ships. He [the
Russian Commander] will invade many countries and sweep through them like a flood.
He will also invade the Beautiful Land [Israel]. Many countries will fall, but Edom, Moab
and the leaders of Ammon [Jordan] will be delivered from his hand...67
Likewise, in quoting Ezekiel 38:15-16, Lindsey adds the word 'Russia' to reinforce his
interpretation.
And you (Russia) will come from your place out of the remote parts of the north, you and
many peoples with you...68
His preoccupation with reading the Soviet Union into Old Testament prophecies leads to
some novel definitions of chronology and time. In commenting on Isaiah 10:25, for
example, Lindsey insists,
Carefully note also that right after the LORD predicts the restoration of the remnant of
Israel and the destruction of the Assyrian enemy (which must be applied to a yet future
enemy), He says, 'VERY SOON my anger against you will end and my wrath will be
directed to their [Israel's enemies] destruction' (Isaiah 10:25) What the LORD called
'Very soon' has already been some 2700 years.69
Lindsey's rather unusual understanding of time also extends to his view of prophecy.
3. Lindsey's Unconventional View of Prophecy
Integral to his literalist hermeneutic, Lindsey has largely been responsible for
popularising a rather controversial approach to eschatology. In his first work, The Late
Great Planet Earth, Lindsey surveys the apparent revival in interest in astrology,
spiritualism and clairvoyancy. He then asserts,
However, compared to the speculation of most that is called prophetic today, the Bible
contains clear and unmistakable prophetic signs. We are able to see right now in this
Best Seller predictions made centuries ago being fulfilled before our eyes. The Bible
makes fantastic claims; but these claims are no more startling that those of present day
astrologers, prophets and seers. Furthermore, the claims of the Bible have a greater
basis in historical evidence and fact.70
In his third book, There's A New World Coming: A Prophetic Odessey, published three
years later in 1973, Lindsey continues to take a comparative approach to prophecy,
likening the claims of the Old Testament prophets to those of the druids of Stonehenge.
Through these stones, 4000 years ago, priests could site the sun, moon and stars and
predict with exact accuracy the seasons, sun risings and eclipses of the sun and moon...
There have been many, throughout the centuries of man's long history, who have
sought to predict the course of human events, but none have had the incredible
accuracy of the ancient Hebrew prophets.71
In 1994, looking back at the popularity of The Late Great Planet Earth, Lindsey
challenged his critics,
Not surprisingly, then, I'll confidently hold up my track record against that of any
modern-day astrological charlatan or New Age clairvoyant.72
Lindsey appears therefore to believe that predictive accuracy is the hallmark of divinely
inspired prophecy. In taking a comparative approach to prophecy he has been criticised
for blurring the distinction between biblical and occult sources.73 Ironically, the last
chapter of The Late Great Planet Earth is entitled, 'Polishing the Crystal Ball,'74 while a
paragraph heading in There's a New World Coming, describing the Book of Revelation,
is entitled, 'John's Chain of ESP'.75
Lindsey makes a second questionable assumption regarding prophecy. He assumes
that biblical prophecy is essentially futuristic and predictive, that is, the foretelling of the
future, and the future of the State of Israel, in particular.
The center of the entire prophetic forecast is the State of Israel. Certain events in that
nation's recent history prove the accuracy of the prophets. They also force us to accept
the fact that the 'countdown' has begun.76 The information in the book you're about to
read is more up-to-date than tomorrow's newspaper... I think you will be surprised to see
what kind of predictions were made almost two thousand years ago!77 ...it is intended to
analyze what will occur in the decade we have just entered.78 The world is spinning out
of control - or so it seems. But, as you will discover, everything is in order. God told us
these things would happen - in advance...79 These weapons are so new, so secret, and
so deadly that few people outside of military circles even know such weapons exist. But
God knew, and he told Zechariah all about them when he was given details of another,
upcoming battle for Jerusalem.80
Following Darby, Lindsey believes 'prophecy is prewritten history'.81 In so doing he
detaches predictions concerning the future from the covenantal context within which the
prophecies were given. Lindsey's view is at variance with the Hebrew prophets who
consistently stress that their intention is to call God's people back to the terms of their
covenant relationship. Their role was not primarily to reveal arbitrary and otherwise
hidden facts about predestined future events. The prophet speaks the Word of God. He
appeals to his people to be true to Yahweh, the God of the covenant... He comes to his
people with a threat or with words of comfort. Insofar as his message touches on the
future, he does point to events down the road. But the prophet never makes predictions
as such. His message is conditional; it is tied in with God's promises, on the one hand,
and his threats, on the other.82 Authentic biblical prophecy was always conditional rather
than fatalistic and given within the context of the covenant between God and his chosen
people. It was the false prophets who flattered the people with promises of peace and
prosperity without specifying the covenantal preconditions of repentance and faith. The
true prophets were not concerned with authenticating their prophecies by presenting
predictions that came true. In fact, some of the predictions didn't come true at all. When
Micah prophesied that Jerusalem would be plowed as a field and turn into a heap of
ruins, his words led to repentance under King Hezekiah. As a result, the Lord held back
his judgment He had in mind (Mic. 3:12; Jer. 26:17-19).83 Since Lindsey, like other
Dispensationalists, believes God gave the Middle East to Abraham's Jewish
descendants as an unconditional and everlasting possession, he does not acknowledge
a correlation between the prophetic message and covenant relationship. Instead, he
understands the prophets to be predicting predetermined events thousands of years
later, giving an 'exciting view'84 of human destiny.
Three millenniums of history are strewn with evidence of their prophetic marksmanship
and to ignore their incredible predictions of man's destiny and the events which are soon
to affect this planet will be perhaps the greatest folly of this generation.85 Hal Lindsey
claims to have uncovered prophetic puzzles throughout the Bible. Hidden away within
these enigmas are specific predictions concerning the present and imminent future. In
the wake of the 'Bible Code' debate, Lindsey rewrote There's a New World Coming,
renaming it Apocalypse Code claiming to have deciphered, 'long-hidden messages
about man's future and the fate of the earth.'86 To do so Lindsey performs 'acrobatic
stunts',87 twisting biblical texts to fit his future scenario, propounding what some critics
regard as a 'new form of Christian Gnosticism,'88 since only those who read his books
will be able to understand them.
Perhaps we could speak of a post-Rapture complex in Lindsey's hermeneutics. As a
result of this complex, all sorts of ancient prophecies about nations that have
disappeared must be modernized, right down to the weaponry used in warfare... In his
books, Hal Lindsey uses Biblical prophecy to open a supermarket in which he sells the
curious inside information about the near future, especially World War III.89
Responding to criticism that he did not foresee the collapse of Soviet Communism,
Lindsey carefully denies that he himself ever claimed to a prophet.90 He does, however,
confess to making 'a series of predictions'91 and is happy to quote others who believe he
is a prophet. For example, Lindsey allows his publishers to use the accolade of Time
magazine that he is "The Jeremiah for this generation.'92 Reviewing the prophecies
made in The Late Great Planet Earth, 25 years later, Lindsey lists 23 of these
predictions and then asks the rhetorical question, 'Did I miss any?'93
The back cover of The Final Battle (1995), which is an amplified
and significantly more politicised rewriting of The Late Great
Planet Earth, says,
You couldn't get a better picture of what World War III will be
like without being bodily transported into the future. Hal Lindsey
has done it again! 94
4. The Distinctive Apocalyptic Zionism of Hal Lindsey
The titles of Lindsey's books show an increasingly exaggerated
and almost pathological preoccupation with the apocalyptic.95
His books are replete with dogmatic and categorical assertions of the imminent
destruction of the world.
We are the generation the prophets were talking about. We have witnessed biblical
prophecies come true. The birth of Israel. The decline in American power and morality.
The rise of Russian and Chinese might. The threat of war in the Middle East. The
increase of earthquakes, volcanoes, famine and drought. The Bible foretells the signs
that precede Armageddon... We are the generation that will see the end times... and the
return of Jesus.96 Lindsey has been described as, 'a long haired reincarnation of
Scofield.'97
This may be because of the similarities between the pessimistic pronouncements of both
authors.
Cyrus Scofield (1918)
|
Hal Lindsey (1970)
|
So far as the prophetic Word has
spoken there is not the least
warrant for the expectation that the
nations engaged in the present
gigantic struggle will or can make a
permanent peace. It is fondly
dreamed that out of all the suffering
and carnage and destruction of this
war will be born such a hatred of
war as will bring to pass a
federation of the nations-The
United States of the World-in which
will exist but one army, and that an
international peace, rather than an
army... For that Word certainly
points to a federated world-empire
in the end-time of the age... It is, of
course, possible, nay, probable that
some temporary truce may end, or
suspend for a time, the present
world-war, for ten kingdoms will
exist at the end-time in the territory
once ruled over by Rome.98
|
In spite of the vain striving of man, of
the bold and infamous conquerors
throughout the ages who failed in their
human attempts, we are beginning to
see the Ancient Roman Empire draw
together, just as predicted... We
believe that the Common Market and
the trend toward unification in Europe
may well be the beginning of the
ten-nation confederacy predicted by
Daniel and the Book of Revelation... In
spite of those who propose the
alternatives to the United States of
Europe, and the temporary setbacks it
appears to have, it seems that the
trend is ever onward... At about 1980
we may fully expect the great fusion of
all economic, military, and political
communities into the United States of
Europe... Imagine that. A "ten-nation
economic entity." Is it any wonder that
men who have studied prophecy for
many years believe that the basic
beginning of the unification of Europe
has begun?99
|
Lindsey's book, The Final Battle, is a good example of "Armageddon Theology". It
includes this statement on the cover,
Never before, in one book, has there been such a complete and detailed look at the
events leading up to 'The Battle of Armageddon.'"100
Lindsey asserts that the world is degenerating and that the forces of evil manifest in
godless Communism and militant Islam are the real enemies of Israel. An apocalyptic
scenario is predicted, centred upon a great battle at Megiddo between massive
continental armies that will attempt but fail to destroy Israel.
Based on his interpretation of Ezekiel 38 & 39, and selective quotations from speculative
19th Century commentators, Lindsey insists the references to Gog, Rosh and Tubal
reveal that the chief enemy of Israel in the final days will be Russia.
You need only to take a globe to verify this exact geographical fix. There is only one
nation to the 'uttermost north' of Israel - the U.S.S.R... General Dyan's statement that
'The next war will not be with the Arabs but with the Russians' has a considerably
deeper significance, doesn't it? Just think for a moment how incredible a thing we are
considering here. How could Ezekiel 2600 years ago have forecast so accurately the
rise of Russia to its current military might and its direct and obvious designs upon the
Middle East, not to mention that fact that it is now an implacable enemy of the new state
of Israel? How could men like Chamberlain and Cummings, for that matter, one hundred
years ago have so clearly seen the rise of Russia to its present world-threatening
position? The answer is again, it seems to this writer, obvious, Ezekiel once again
passes 'the test of a prophet'.101 Lindsey offers detailed illustrated plans showing future
military movements of armies and naval convoys, including the American 6th Fleet,
leading up to the battle of Armageddon.102 He claims these cataclysmic events indicate
the imminent return of Jesus Christ as King of the Jews who will rule the world from the
rebuilt Jewish temple on the site of the destroyed Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.103
Lindsey believes that the great battle of Armageddon is imminent and unavoidable. His
motive for writing is to shock people into believing in Jesus Christ as their Lord and
Saviour. Only then can they be raptured to heaven and avoid suffering in the coming
global holocaust. Like a sinking ship, Lindsey portrays a world in which there is no hope
or purpose, other than trying to get off as quickly as possible. There is therefore no point
in trying to care for the world or getting involved in charitable or humanitarian work.
Every human tragedy, be it earthquake, hurricane or war merely adds to the mounting
evidence and proves his contention that the end of the world is nigh.
You won't find another book quite like this one. We will examine why and how the world
is hurtling toward disaster... My background as a student of prophecy allows me to place
all this information in perspective in a way that is sure to lead many people to the
ultimate truth about the coming global holocaust - and, if they are open, to a wonderful
way of escaping it. Read this book. Learn from it. Pass it on to your friends. It may be
the last chance some of them will ever have to avoid the horrible fate this book
describes.104
According to Lindsey, the key to deliverance from Armageddon is bound up with God's
purposes for, and our attitude toward, the Jews.
4.1 The Jews of the Bible and the Modern State of Israel
Lindsey's empathy for the Jews is highlighted in his emotive description of a visit he
made to the Western Wall.
The wall is a symbol of the unity of the Jews as a race and of their ancient ties to God.
Even battle-hardened soldiers wept when they first approached the wall. I stood by
many a Jew when he first touched the wall, and all have felt that at last they had come
home. So did I.105
He also claims to have been motivated by concern for the Jews in writing his first book,
In writing The Late Great Planet Earth, I had the Jews constantly in mind. I prayerfully
and deliberately sought to present my prophetic case in such a way that it would
especially appeal to them. It has been published in more than fifty foreign editions and
has been instrumental all around the world in bringing tens of thousands of Jews to faith
in Jesus as their Messiah. I run into them everywhere. They continue to write to me from
virtually every part of the world. The first Prime Minister of Israel, David Ben Gurion, was
reading it shortly before he died. Since everything in his room has been kept the way it
was before he died, a copy of The Late Great Planet Earth remains on his desk. A friend
of mine who is one of Israel's top military commanders passed out hundreds of copies of
the Hebrew translation to the Israeli Defence forces, even though he personally hasn't
as yet believed in Jesus as the Messiah.106
Lindsey's sympathies clearly lie with the State of Israel rather than with her Arab
neighbours, the Palestinians, or even with the ancient indigenous Christian community
of Israel and the Occupied Territories. Under a heading 'Why the Bias?' Lindsey insists,
Because Israel is a pro-Western, democratic nation committed to the ideals of free
speech and press, there is good access for journalists... And because Israel is a
staunch U.S. Ally, it is always under the microscope... This kind of distortion and bias
has placed Israel center stage in the court of world opinion and helped to make the
Jewish state something of a pariah nation. Funny, how that's just what the Bible
predicted for Israel in the last days.107
Lamenting the isolation the United States experiences in the United Nations when
vetoing repeated censure motions against Israel, Lindsey points out,
Up to the time of the 1991 Madrid Conference, the Arabs were 'called upon' to 'comply,'
'desist,' 'refrain' etc. four times. Israel was 'demanded,' ordered,' etc. to do General
Assembly bidding three hundred and five times. The UN voted six hundred and five
resolutions between its inception and the Gulf War. Four hundred and twenty nine of
those resolutions, or, sixty-two percent of the total of the UN's resolutions were against
Israel or its interests.108
Israeli society is far from homogeneous politically. While the majority of secular Jews
favour a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians, Lindsey identifies with the
fundamentalist settlers and political far right.
...it was a pity that Israel chose to recognize, negotiate and compromise with sworn
enemy and terrorist Yasser Arafat... It was a risky tactic - one fraught with danger not
only for the Jewish state but for the entire world. The stage is now set for the kind of
explosive developments students of Bible prophecy have long anticipated. What the
Israelis have actually done by establishing autonomous Arab states in Jericho and Gaza
is to create the kind of bridgehead in Israel that Arafat has, until now, only dreamed
about.109 Lindsey's preoccupation with Israel is largely due to his dispensational
presuppositions which distinguish Israel from the Church in the present and future
purposes of God, although the origins of this theological position are never discussed,
nor attributed in any of his writings apart from three pages in his latest book.110
Like other dispensationalists, Lindsey insists that the promises of blessing and
protection made to Abraham are unconditional and eternal and that it is specifically the
State of Israel rather than merely people of Jewish descent who are the beneficiaries
today.
There has been much infidelity in Jewish history, and their present worldwide dispersion
and persecution have been their divine discipline. However, God made unconditional
promises of eternal blessings to the Jewish patriarchs and will someday restore the
Jews to a position of special favour with Himself... God has promised never to abandon
His chosen people, no matter how despicably they treat Him (Romans 11:1,2). The
divine hand of protection of the Jews during their recent Six-Day War was just a token of
that protective care.111 ...God clearly reveals that the tree into which we Gentiles have
been grafted contrary to nature is still the Jew's own olive tree. The simple meaning of
this is that the covenants are still valid to the physical race of Israel. Their fulfilment only
awaits that predicted time when God will bring them back to faith again.112
Rather than apply these ancient promises to the Jewish people generally, Lindsey quite
specifically, and increasingly more explicitly, applies them to the State of Israel and
Israeli citizens.
The God of Israel has sworn in the prophecies that He will not forsake the Israelis, nor
let them be destroyed.113 To Israel as a nation were made unique promises... All other
nations received blessings only through Israel. They were the only nation that was
promised a specific plot of land, a city, and a kingdom on an earth from which the
original curse would be removed.114 Unless one goes off into allegorical la-la land, these
prophecies literally demand a National restoration of Israel as a distinct and unique
believing Nation in the future kingdom.115 To reinforce the link with the Jews of the Old
Testament, in his later books, Lindsey increasingly refers to Israeli citizens as
'Israelites'116 as well, the land as 'Judea and Samaria'117
One of Lindsey's strongest critics is David Chilton. With regard to the promise in
Romans 11 that many Jews would recognise Jesus as their Messiah, Chilton insists,
The Bible promises the restoration of Israel as a people, but not necessarily as a State;
nothing requires that the two must go together. Even assuming, that there is still a State
of Israel when the Jews are converted, Israel would simply be one Christian nation
among many, with no special standing. The people of genetic Israel will be part of the
covenantal tree of life, but there is no longer any religious significance belonging to
Palestine.118
To even classical dispensationalists, such as Schuyler English, who revised the Scofield
Reference Bible in 1967, Israel as a State has no prophetic significance during the
'church age' until after the so-called 'rapture'.
An intercalary period of history, after Christ's death and resurrection and the destruction
of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 has intervened. This is the present age. During this time God
has not been dealing with Israel nationally, for they have been blinded concerning God's
mercy in Christ... However, God will again deal with Israel as a nation. This will be in
Daniel's seventieth week, a seven-year period yet to come.119
Daniel 9:24-27 states,
"Seventy 'sevens' are decreed for your people and your holy city to finish transgression,
to put an end to sin, to atone for wickedness, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to
seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the most holy.
25"Know and understand this: From the issuing of the decree to restore and rebuild
Jerusalem until the Anointed One, the ruler, comes, there will be seven 'sevens,' and
sixty-two 'sevens.' It will be rebuilt with streets and a trench, but in times of trouble.
26After the sixty-two 'sevens,' the Anointed One will be cut off and will have nothing. The
people of the ruler who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end will
come like a flood: War will continue until the end, and desolations have been decreed.
27He will confirm a covenant with many for one 'seven.' In the middle of the 'seven' he
will put an end to sacrifice and offering. And on a wing of the temple he will set up an
abomination that causes desolation, until the end that is decreed is poured out on him."
Lindsey believes,
...this amazing prediction of the future events of Israel's career sets forth a divinely
ordained time period of 'seventy weeks' of years (490 years) in which God would, in
specific ways, deal with the sin of the nation, bring in everlasting righteousness, and
send the Messiah to the world. This allotted time period was like a great divine
'time-clock'... Countdown began clicking off April, 444 B.C.E... Then Daniel predicted a
strange thing. He said that after sixty-nine weeks of years (483 years) had clicked off on
this allotment of time, the Messiah of Israel would be revealed to the Jews and then
killed, and the city of Jerusalem and their Temple would be destroyed and their 490 year
special time allotment would be temporarily cut short by 7 years...
Jesus himself had thoroughly studied this prophecy of Daniel and related its meaning to
his disciples... Then he added something which Daniel hadn't predicted, but Moses had:
'...Jerusalem would be trampled under foot by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles
were fulfilled' (Luke 21:23, 24)... For nearly two thousand years now, this prophecy has
been a horrible reality in the life of God's chosen people... Even though Israel is now
partially back in her ancient homeland, she isn't at peace with the world around her...
We have one thing to give substance to our hope for Israel. We know that God will
never break a promise and He still owes Israel seven years of her allotted 490 years in
which to bring about righteousness in her land and purge her people of sin. Then God's
Messiah will come again to Israel and give to those of His chosen people and the world
who receive Him, the Kingdom of God which He promised so long ago.120
Lindsey does not explain how he fits the nearly 1878 year gap between 70 A.D. and
1948 into Daniel 9:24-27. The seven years he claims is still 'allotted' to Israel during
which they will be 'purged' is actually a euphemism for the 'tribulation' in which Lindsey
believes many Israelis will suffer and die in the nuclear war of Armageddon. In order to
strengthen his argument that the prophets predicted the restoration of Israel in 1948,
Lindsey believes that Moses predicted two separate destructions of Israel in
Deuteronomy 28:49-52 and 28:62-66. The passages actually state,
The Lord will bring a nation against you from far away, from the ends of the earth, like
an eagle swooping down, a nation whose language you will not understand, 50a
fierce-looking nation without respect for the old or pity for the young. 51They will devour
the young of your livestock and the crops of your land until you are destroyed. They will
leave you no grain, new wine or oil, nor any calves of your herds or lambs of your flocks
until you are ruined. 52They will lay siege to all the cities throughout your land until the
high fortified walls in which you trust fall down. They will besiege all the cities throughout
the land the Lord your God is giving you. (Deut. 28:49-52)
You who were as numerous as the stars in the sky will be left but few in number,
because you did not obey the Lord your God. 63Just as it pleased the Lord to make you
prosper and increase in number, so it will please him to ruin and destroy you. You will be
uprooted from the land you are entering to possess.
64Then the Lord will scatter you among all nations, from one end of the earth to the
other. There you will worship other gods--gods of wood and stone, which neither you nor
your fathers have known. 65Among those nations you will find no repose, no resting
place for the sole of your foot. There the Lord will give you an anxious mind, eyes weary
with longing, and a despairing heart. 66You will live in constant suspense, filled with
dread both night and day, never sure of your life. (Deut. 28:62-66)
Lindsey claims these verses teach that,
Just before the Hebrews conquered the Promised Land, Moses predicted that Israel
would twice be destroyed as a nation and twice be driven out of the land because of
persistent unbelief. He also predicted that the first destruction and dispersion would
come by the hand of one mighty nation. He specifically predicted that in this dispersion
the Israelites would be taken captive into this one invading nation (Deuteronomy
28:49-57). This prophecy was fulfilled when the Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem in 586
B.C. And took the survivors back to Babylon as slaves (2 Chronicles 36:9-21)...
When Moses predicted the second destruction of the nation, he warned that the second
dispersion would be much more extensive and severe than the first... This part of
Moses' prophecy was fulfilled in A.D. 70 when Titus and the Roman Tenth Legion
crushed Jerusalem, destroyed the Temple and scattered the surviving Jews throughout
the known world... Moses, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Amos, Zechariah and many other prophets
predicted Israel's second restoration as a nation in the 'latter days'. They predicted that
the Jews would return to their ancient homeland after a long and terrible dispersion
among the nations, and that they would miraculously become a nation again (Ezekiel 36,
37). The most important factor in these prophecies is that God promises the Jews that
once they have returned in the second restoration, their nation will never be destroyed
again.121
Lindsey neglects to point out that the warnings uttered by Moses in Deuteronomy 28
were not predictions of future events but conditional warnings, dependent on whether
the Israelites kept the covenant. In between the two selective passages which Lindsey
highlights, Moses also warned that the Israelites would suffer all the plagues witnessed
in Egypt if they were disobedient, something Lindsey conveniently ignores.
More significantly, the passages Lindsey quotes do not actually specify that the
Israelites will be taken captive 'into this one invading nation', nor that two distinct
dispersions would occur. The reference in Deuteronomy 28:63-66 which Lindsey claims
predicts a second universal exile actually goes on two verses later to indicate that
Egypt, still a feared and great power in Moses day, would be their return destination.
Lindsey's insistence on two dispersions is itself a very selective reading of Jewish
history ignoring the earlier Assyrian conquest of Tiglath-Pileser in 721 B.C. when the ten
tribes of the Northern kingdom were deported and absorbed into other parts of the
Assyrian Empire.
Instead of following the position of Schuyler English and other traditional
dispensationalists, Lindsey develops his own innovative scheme claiming that there is
great significance in the events of 1948 and especially 1967. He insists, 'The center of
the entire prophetic forecast is the State of Israel,'122 and Israel is the 'center of world
destiny.' 123
Lindsey's entire reading of the Bible and of contemporary events in the world are shaped
by this conviction and perspective.
In 1970, in The Late Great Planet Earth, under the sub-title 'Keys to the Prophetic
Puzzle', Lindsey explained why his interpretation of contemporary events concerning
Israel is more reliable than previous attempts. Then in 1980 Lindsey reiterated this
conviction more dogmatically, insisting the 'rebirth' of Israel to be the only 'sign' that the
'countdown' to Armageddon had begun.
Late Great Planet Earth
|
1980's Countdown to Armageddon
|
Many Bible students in recent years have
tried to fit the events of World War I and II to
the prophetic signs which would herald the
imminent return of Christ. Their failure
discredited prophecy... It is because of
these unscriptural attempts at calculating
days that some eyebrows rise when we
speak of Bible prophecy today. The one
event which many Bible students in the past
overlooked was this paramount prophetic
sign: Israel had to be a nation again in the
land of its forefathers.124
|
Many skeptics point out that during World
War I and II, some well-meaning students
of prophecy claimed that the end of history
was at hand and the Messiah would return
soon... Naturally, when the world didn't end,
all prophecy was discredited. These
skeptics have asked me, 'Why do you think
that all the various prophecies will come to
pass during this generation? The answer is
simple. The prophets told us that the rebirth
of Israel-no other event-would be the sign
that the countdown had begun. Since that
rebirth, the rest of the prophecies have
begun to be fulfilled quite rapidly. For this
reason I am convinced that we are now in
the unique time so clearly and precisely
forecast by the Hebrew prophets.125
|
Lindsey bases his interpretation of contemporary events largely on the prophecies of
Ezekiel 37-39, and, in particular, the vision of the valley of dry bones in Ezekiel 37. Most
commentators see in these chapters the promise of the return of the remnant from
Babylon under Ezra and Nehemiah.126
Lindsey, however, chooses instead to apply them to 1948 and 1967 when Israel
occupied the West Bank and the Old City of Jerusalem.
Some 2600 years ago Ezekiel showed that the Jewish nation would be reborn after a
long world-wide dispersion, but before the coming of the Messiah...127 Ezekiel 37:7-8... Is
phase one of the prophecy which predicts the PHYSICAL RESTORATION of the Nation
without Spiritual life which began May 14, 1948... Ezekiel 37:9-10... Is phase two of the
prophecy which predicts the SPIRITUAL REBIRTH of the nation AFTER they are
physically restored to the land as a nation... The Lord identifies the bones in the allegory
as representing 'the whole house of Israel.' It is crystal clear that this is literally predicting
the restoration and rebirth of the whole nation at the time of Messiah's coming [Ezekiel
37:21-27].128
In like manner, where first Century Christians understood Jesus to be warning them to
flee Jerusalem because of its imminent destruction, Lindsey claims that Jesus was
actually predicting the restoration of the Jews to Palestine in the 20th Century.
But the most important sign in Matthew has to be the restoration of the Jews to the land
in the rebirth of Israel. Even the figure of speech 'fig tree' has been a historic symbol of
national Israel. When the Jewish people, after nearly 2,000 years of exile, under
relentless persecution, became a nation again on 14 May 1948 the 'fig tree' put forth its
first leaves.129 Nothing, however, in Matthew 24:32 indicates that Jesus intended his
hearers to understand that he was promising Israel would become a nation once more.
The New Testament is silent on the question of whether the Jews would ever become a
national state again. Nevertheless, Lindsey has popularised the notion that the return of
Jewish people to Palestine since 1948 is the fulfilment of biblical prophecy. Lindsey
speaks repeatedly of the 'rebirth'130
of Israel, insisting,
The nation of Israel cannot be ignored; we see the Jews as a miracle of history.'131 ...all
the unconditional covenants... Were made only with the physical descendants of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob as a unique nation.132
This logic leads Lindsey to suggest that had the Jewish people accepted Jesus as their
Messiah, the rest of the world would not have been offered the Gospel.
The Gospel and the age of grace would not have come to us Gentiles unless Israel had
fallen into unbelief.133
Aware of criticism of attempts to apply biblical prophecy to contemporary events,
Lindsey qualifies his own particular interpretation, but in so doing advocates both a
massive secularisation of biblical prophecy as well as a questionable 'second chance'
way of salvation for the Jews.
Right here a careful distinction must be made between 'the physical restoration' to the
land of Palestine as a nation, which clearly occurs shortly before the Messiah's coming
and the 'spiritual restoration' of all Jews who have believed in the Messiah just after His
return to this earth. The 'physical restoration' is accomplished by unbelieving Jews
through their human effort. As a matter of fact, the great catastrophic events which are
to happen to this nation during 'the tribulation' are primarily designed to shock the people
into believing in their true Messiah (Ezekiel 38; 39).134
In The Road to Holocaust, Lindsey draws a distinction between
those who are Jews racially and religiously from those who are
regenerate Jews, claiming only the latter are God's chosen
people.
The Regenerate Israelite has always been the True Israelite.
This group combines together both the racial and spiritual
factors that the Bible describes as 'the remnant of Israel.'... The
Bible reveals the insufficiency of being only a racial and
religious Jew... The Bible has always taught that only the racial
Jew who is born spiritually is a true Israelite and heir to the
eternal promises... And that they continue to be God's special
people.135
Lindsey does not accept that the privileged status of covenant people was taken away
from the Jews at some time between Pentecost and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70
A. D. Based on his interpretation of Romans 11, Lindsey argues, in line with classical
dispensationalism, that the Church will be replaced by Israel as the people of God on
earth,
...at some point in history - very soon, I believe - God's special focus and blessing is
going to shift back to the Jews. At that moment, the Jews will once again be
responsible, as God's representatives, to take His message to the whole world. This
mission - incomplete and seemingly impossible for the last 2,000 years - will be
accomplished by the 144,000 Jewish Billy Graham's in seven years.136
In his latest work, Lindsey continues to insist on a radical distinction between the church
and Israel.
He redeemed the Church (both Jew and Gentile who trusted in Him) at the Cross. That
is an accomplished fact. Israel's national redemption in accordance with the Abrahamic
covenant takes place at the Second Advent.137
An alternative reading of the New Testament would suggest that, while the apostles
Peter and Paul could appeal to the historical link between the Jews and their privileges
(Acts 3:25; Romans 9:4-5, 11:28), time was running out and that there was a limit to that
appeal. In the plan of redemptive history, the rejection of the Messiah by the majority of
Jewish people led to their rejection under the terms of the covenant. In Acts 3:22-23
Peter applies the Mosaic warning of Deuteronomy 18:15-19 and Leviticus 23:29 to his
generation and makes their response to Jesus Christ the critical test.
For Moses said, 'The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among
your own people; you must listen to everything he tells you. Anyone who does not listen
to him will be completely cut off from among his people.' (Acts 3:22-23)
Likewise, Paul explains how only those who believe in Jesus Christ, including both Jews
and Gentiles, are now the true children of Abraham.
It was not through law that Abraham and his offspring received the promise that he
would be heir of the world, but through the righteousness that comes by faith. For if
those who live by law are heirs, faith has no value and the promise is worthless,
because law brings wrath. And where there is no law there is no transgression.
Therefore, the promise comes by faith, so that it may be by grace and may be
guaranteed to all Abraham's offspring - not only to those who are of the law but also to
those who are of the faith of Abraham. He is the father of us all. As it is written: "I have
made you a father of many nations." (Romans 4:13-17)
Consider Abraham: "He believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness."
Understand, then, that those who believe are children of Abraham. The Scripture
foresaw that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, and announced the gospel in
advance to Abraham: "All nations will be blessed through you." So those who have faith
are blessed along with Abraham, the man of faith. (Galatians 3:6-9)
The New Testament therefore insists on a limited time when the initial offer of salvation
would be made to the Jews as the chosen people of God. This was probably confined to
the generation that witnessed the life and ministry of Jesus Christ. Failure to respond to
the claims of Christ led to the removal of the covenant status and privileges from the
Jewish people and their application to the Church (1 Peter 2:9-10). Paul goes so far as
to describe the consequences as a complete reversal of the status of Jews and
Gentiles. 'Jerusalem' symbolic of the Jews who had rejected Jesus Christ were now
regarded as the offspring of Hagar not Sarah.
24These things may be taken figuratively, for the women represent two covenants. One covenant
is from Mount Sinai and bears children who are to be slaves: This is Hagar. 25Now Hagar stands
for Mount Sinai in Arabia and corresponds to the present city of Jerusalem, because she is in
slavery with her children. 26But the Jerusalem that is above is free, and she is our mother... 28Now
you, brothers, like Isaac, are children of promise... 30But what does the Scripture say? "Get rid of
the slave woman and her son, for the slave woman's son will never share in the inheritance with
the free woman's son." 31Therefore, brothers, we are not children of the slave woman, but of the
free woman. (Galatians 4:24-31)
Ignoring the flow of redemptive history, the status of Israel under the terms of the
Hebrew covenant, and ultimately the impact of their rejection of Jesus Christ, Lindsey
applies conditional and superseded Old Testament promises made to Israel, at times to
the contemporary State of Israel and on other occasions to Jews who believe in Jesus
as their Messiah. This ambivalence is perpetuated in Lindsey's speculations concerning
which, and how many, Israelis will survive the war of Armageddon, explored later.
4.2 The Territorial Extent of Eretz Israel
Christian Zionists clearly see the founding of the State of Israel in 1948 as highly
significant, signalling the end of 2000 years of exile. They have therefore actively
encouraged Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe to make Aliya, seeing this as another
'Exodus.'138
The settlement and integration of the Occupied Territories within Eretz Israel, now
imbued with the evocative biblical names of 'Judea and Samaria', is deemed essential to
maintain Israeli security as well as to fulfil the land promise made to Abraham and his
descendants. In this Lindsey was the first and probably most successful to popularise a
Christian Zionist reading of Scripture and contemporary events since 1967.
What the average Israeli understands-in part because their sons and fathers and
brothers fought to gallantly to gain this high ground-is this... Giving away the Golan
Heights might be enough to cause a political uprising among the Israeli people. But if it
isn't, surely concessions that involve Judea and Samaria would be. There are 100,000
Jewish settlers living in these lands now. They are biblically Jewish lands. To evacuate
Jews from them would be an enormous psychological blow to the whole concept of
Jewish nationhood. Frankly, such an attempt might be enough to trigger a civil war.139
And God has promised the land of Israel to the Jews forever. Period.140
Lindsey is at his most critical when contemplating the implications of a 'land for peace'
resolution to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
If Israel would just give the Palestinians a homeland, the Arabs would be satisfied and
peace would reign. If you believe that, I have some lakefront property in the Sahara
Desert I'd like to sell you.141
Having listed the various military threats Israel faces from Jordan, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon,
Iran and other Arab nations, Lindsey finds negotiation incomprehensible.
...despite all of these facts, Israel has still agreed to give up more occupied land in the
Gaza strip and Jericho and is discussing turning over more strategic territory in Judea,
Samaria and the Golan Heights. This series of developments was enough to make the
most confident warriors scared.142 With its all-consuming desire for peace at any price,
Israel has now placed itself in an indefensible position.143
Speaking of the Wye, Oslo and Hebron Accords, Lindsey offers this pessimistic
assessment.
Basically, the agreement calls for Israel to surrender more land in exchange for Arafat's
promises to abide by the agreements he has already signed. Something for less than
nothing is the best way to term it.144 'Land for Peace!' Is the cry heard 'round the world.
In 1993 we saw Israel bullied and blackmailed into turning over more land to the Arabs -
this time to its sworn enemy, the terrorist Yasser Arafat. Objective military and
intelligence say any more land concessions would be strategically foolhardy... Further
land concessions would leave Israel with indefensible borders and no effective
conventional deterrent against attack. The world should take note that if it stands by and
lets Israel be over run, the Samson Option is still very much in readiness... Does the
world really want to force Israel to rely exclusively on nuclear weapons for its defence?
145
Although the rhetorical answer is presumably 'no,' Lindsey predicts, yet again, an
apocalyptic scenario.
There is no question, in reviewing Bible prophecy, that a cataclysmic, apocalyptic war
will engulf the Mideast prior to the return of Jesus Christ. In this nuclear age, it makes
sense to us that the mass annihilation we read about might be the result of a nuclear
exchange. Because the Bible talks about mass destruction by fire, this scenario seems
to make sense. 'And I will send fire on Magog [Russia],' Ezekiel recorded. If faced with
annihilation you can count on Israel to protect its civilian population by any means
necessary... Its clear that the Bible can't be talking about any other time in history but
today.146
Quoting a defence expert, Joseph De Courcy, Lindsey insists,
The absolute minimum territory Israel requires to deter war is the territory it is controlling
today... If Israel gives back Judea, Samaria, the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights, it
woill simply no longer be able to defend itself against the Muslim nations with
conventional weapons.147
4.3 The Significance of Jerusalem
Lindsey insists that the occupation of the Old City of Jerusalem in 1967 by the Jews was
another significant sign of the imminent return of the Messiah, since unfulfilled
prophecies concerning the Jewish people must occur within the ancient city.
Jerusalem's importance in history is infinitely beyond its size and economic significance.
From ages past, Jerusalem has been the most important city on this planet... More
prophecies have been made concerning Jerusalem than any other place on earth.148
He concedes that the status of Jerusalem is contested, claiming, in the context of the
Oslo Peace Accord,
The Arabs still demand Jerusalem as the ransom price for any lasting peace. Israeli
Prime Minister Netanyahu went on record in Washington repeating his promise that
Jerusalem will never be divided.149
Nevertheless, Lindsey insists, pessimistically, Arab aspirations are futile.
As the Bible tells us, the dispute over Jerusalem and Israel's borders will never be
settled by any peace agreements nor any whiz-bang diplomatic breakthrough.
Jerusalem, the Bible says, will be a stumbling block for the entire world... In Luke 21:24,
the Bible tells us that 'Jerusalem will be trampled under foot by the Gentiles until the
times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.' We are literally witnessing the end of the times of the
Gentiles.150
A year later, Lindsey is more specific and emphatic in his dispensational timing,
We are literally witnessing the last hours of the times of the Gentiles. God's focus is
shifting back to His people Israel.151 Lindsey interprets the prophecies of Zechariah
12-14 as foretelling events that are about to happen including a fearful siege of
Jerusalem by the Soviet army.152 It is clear from these chapters that the Jews would
have to be dwelling in and have possession of the ancient city of Jerusalem at the time
of the Messiah's triumphant advent.153 There couldn't be a more perfect modern-day
description of what was predicted hundreds of years ago in Zechariah 12-14. There it
tells us that the last war of the world will be started by a dispute over Jerusalem. We've
got that dispute right now. As a matter of fact, the West helped guaranty the world a
dispute over Jerusalem by forcing the Israelis into a pact with the Palestinians.154
How much of Jerusalem will be left standing when Jesus returns is a matter of
speculation, given Lindsey's terrifying description of the war of Armageddon.
The Bible also makes clear that Jerusalem - the focal point of the endtimes fighting - will
be vanquished by Israel's enemies in the hours just before the Lord comes. In fact, it
seems that the destruction of the holy city is the final straw that angers God and
provokes Jesus' return.155
He nevertheless looks forward to a better day after Armageddon, when, during the
Millennium,
Jerusalem will be the spiritual centre of the entire world... all people of the earth will
come annually to worship Jesus who will rule there.156
4.4 The Rebuilding of the Jewish Temple
Right now, as you read this, preparations are being made to rebuild the Third Temple.157
Lindsey not only regards the founding of the State of Israel and capture of Jerusalem as
the fulfilment of biblical prophecy but insists, controversially, that the Jewish Temple
must also be rebuilt. Initially, in 1970, he insisted this would have to be in place of the
Dome of the Rock.
There remains but one more event to completely set the stage for Israel's part in the last
great act of her historical drama. This is to rebuild the ancient Temple of worship upon
its old site... There is one major problem barring the construction of a third Temple. That
obstacle is the second holiest place of the Moslem faith, the Dome of the Rock. This is
believed to be built squarely in the middle of the old temple site. Obstacle or no
obstacle, it is certain that the Temple will be rebuilt. Prophecy demands it.158 This quote
reveals Lindsey's basic ignorance of Islam. The Temple Mount on which the Dome of
the Rock and Alaqsa Mosque are built constitutes the third most holy shrine to Moslems
after Medina and Mecca not the second as Lindsey erroneously asserts here and
repeats later in There's a New World Coming.159
Dispensationalists like Lindsey believe in the imminent rebuilding of the Temple based
on the somewhat enigmatic passage of Daniel 9:24-27. The sanctuary already appears
to have been destroyed in verse 26 yet sacrifices are brought to an end in verse 27 and
then the 'abomination that causes desolation' desecrates the Temple.
After the sixty-two 'sevens,' the Anointed One will be cut off and will have nothing. The
people of the ruler who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end will
come like a flood: War will continue until the end, and desolations have been decreed.
27He will confirm a covenant with many for one 'seven.' In the middle of the 'seven' he
will put an end to sacrifice and offering. And on a wing of the temple he will set up an
abomination that causes desolation, until the end that is decreed is poured out on him."
(Daniel 9:26-27)
On the basis of a rather tenuous interpretation, Lindsey confidently argues,
This prophecy speaks of sacrifice and offerings which demand that the Jews rebuild the
Temple for the third time upon its original site. At that point, Judaism and Islam will be
placed on an inevitable course of war over the site, a war that will start Armageddon.
Many prophecies demand rebuilding of the ancient Temple, indicating that the event is a
significant prophetic sign (see Matthew 24:15 and 2 Thessalonians 2:3,4). Therefore any
move toward that direction is a crucial clue to what hour it is on God's prophetic
timetable.160
Lindsey insists Jesus concurred with this interpretation.
Of course, for Temple rites to be stopped in the last days, we know they must be
restarted. The words of Jesus Himself in Matthew 24:15 require that a new holy place be
built and a complete sacrificial system re-instituted. And since only a consecrated temple
can be defiled, this prophecy shows that the physical Temple must not only be rebuilt,
but a functioning priesthood must begin practising once again.161
He also sees evidence for the rebuilding of the Temple in the instructions given to the
Apostle John to measure the Temple in Revelation 11:1-2.
The Apostle John wrote the Book of Revelation about the year A.D. 95. This means that
the Temple... was non-existent for the twenty-five years preceding John's writing... What
Temple, then, was John referring to? There can be only one answer - a yet-to-be-built
structure!162 Lindsey quotes Israel Eldad, an Israeli historian, who claims that devout
Jews, 'some of whom are in powerful positions in the Israeli government' expect the
Dome of the Rock to be destroyed, whether by natural or supernatural intervention, and
the Jewish Temple to be rebuilt very soon after.163
Lindsey quotes Eldad again three years later,
"When the Jewish people took over Jerusalem the first time, under King David, only one
generation passed before they built the Temple, and so it shall be with us." When asked
about the problem of the Dome of the Rock being on the Jewish Temple site, he replied
with a wink, "Who knows, perhaps there will be an earthquake!" What Eldad said in jest
may be just the thing that will happen.164
Clearly, in 1970, Lindsey believed that the Dome of the Rock would need to be
destroyed in order for the Jewish Temple to be rebuilt. He even appeared to know the
exact location of the former structure.
Archaeologists have uncovered a pillar from Solomon's porch as the first major find from
the Herodian Temple. From its location in relation to the Wailing Wall they have now
ascertained where the ancient Holy of Holies in the Temple was located. Imagine my
emotions as I stood under a sign at the Wall which read in Hebrew: 'Holy of Holies, 10
Metres,' with an arrow pointing towards a spot thirty feet behind the existing Wall in the
direction of the Dome of the Rock!165
By 1983 Lindsey had changed his mind about the location of the Herodian Temple.
Based apparently on the findings of a 16 year investigation undertaken by Dr Kaufman
of the Hebrew University and published in the Biblical Archaeology Review, Lindsey now
claimed,
I also believe that this discovery has accelerated the countdown to the events that will
bring the Messiah Jesus back to earth. The reason for this belief is that the predicted
Third Temple can now be built without disturbing the Dome of the Rock. ...the Temple
and its immediate guard wall could be rebuilt and still be twenty-six meters away from
the Dome of the Rock. 166
Having discovered the true site of the Herodian Temple, in 1980 Lindsey proceeded to
find scriptural verification for this new location.
Revelation chapter 11 indicates this very situation: 'I was given a reed like a measuring
rod and told, 'Go and measure the temple of God and the altar, and count the
worshippers there. But exclude the outer court; do not measure it, because it has been
given to the Gentiles. They will trample on the holy city for 42 months.'' (Revelation
11:1,2 NIV). The outer court, which includes the area where the Dome of the Rock is
situated, was given to the Gentiles. So this prophecy accurately reflects the situation
that is present today... All of these things are tremendously exciting to those who know
Bible prophecy. We are literally in the very last days of the Church Age. The Temple will
be rebuilt soon!167
In 1994, Lindsey heightened speculation still further with the following assertion.
I remember my whole body tingling with excitement when I measured the distances on
the Temple platform and realized that God had left out the outer court because it
allowed for the Gentile temple to remain alongside the rebuilt Jewish Temple during the
Tribulation. Folks, the footsteps of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, can already be
heard as He approaches the doors of heaven to return. The Temple is the last sign that
needs to fall into place before events irreversibly speed toward the return of Jesus.168
Despite being aware of the hypersensitivity felt by Moslems about the Temple Mount
area and their justifiable fear that Jewish and Christian fundamentalists might try to
destroy it again,169 Lindsey assumes that, since a Jewish Temple could now be built
alongside the Dome of the Rock, the Moslem authorities would tolerate this, so that the
Jewish Temple could become 'the greatest tourist attraction in the world'.170 But lets
think even more practically. Not only would the Temple become a unifying force for
Israel's diverse and pluralistic society, it would also, without doubt, become the greatest
tourist attraction in the world. Its basic economics. Imagine what a new Temple would do
for the Israeli economy, which relies so heavily on tourism. The Temple would also
serve to attract more Jews from all over the world-and... The Bible tells us that
eventually all of the dispersed will return to their homeland. The Temple would serve as
a kind of spiritual magnet. This, too, would fit into the prophetic scenario, which indicates
that Israel is destined to play a major role in the world and experience vast wealth,
power and prestige in the last days. Why else would the Antichrist choose to set up his
throne in Jerusalem unless Israel had moved center stage in the world's political and
economic picture.171
Lindsey points to the existence of two talmudic schools training some 200 Levite priests
and the accumulation of vessels and clothing necessary to perform sacrifices, as further
proof of the imminent plans to rebuild the Temple.
Near the site of the Temple, the seminary of Aterat Kohanim (Glory of the Priests) is
reviving an extinct class of Jewish priests and their servants known as Levites so they
will be ready when the ancient prophecies are fulfilled and the Temple, twice destroyed,
is rebuilt.172
Lindsey's belief in the imminent rebuilding of the Temple is reinforced by his
understanding of Jesus' words in Matthew 24.
Jesus Christ predicted an event which would trigger a time of unparalleled catastrophe
for the Jewish nation shortly before His second coming... With the Jewish nation reborn
in the land of Palestine, ancient Jerusalem once again under total Jewish control for the
first time in 2600 years, and talk of rebuilding the great Temple, the most important sign
of Jesus Christ's soon coming is before us... It is like the key piece of a jigsaw puzzle
being found... For all those who trust in Jesus Christ, it is a time of electrifying
excitement.173
Although Lindsey's speculations are popular and have an immediacy in terms of
interpreting contemporary events, they bear little relation to the events described in
Matthew 24. Many commentators note that the predictions of Jesus were fulfilled in the
events leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. when Jewish Zealots
desecrated the temple using it as a fortress against the Romans. Eusebius, for example,
the 4th Century Bishop and historian refers to the eye witness accounts of Josephus,
the Jewish historian of the 1st Century, to show how these predictions of Jesus had
already been fulfilled.
It is fitting to add to these accounts the true prediction of our Saviour in which he
foretold these very events.174 Lindsey ignores this historical position preferring to
interpret Matthew 24 as prophecy still awaiting fulfilment. So when Jesus promised
these events would be witnessed by 'this generation'175, Lindsey understands 'this' to be
his own generation.176
There is no room for negotiation or debate on this issue, Lindsey is emphatic.
So the rebuilding of the Temple is significant not only because of the potential firestorm
it will create between Jews and Muslims in the Middle East. It is also a critical
development in the entire prophetic scenario. The Bible makes it clear that in the last
days the Antichrist will establish his reign in the Temple of Jerusalem. Therefore, the
Temple must and will be rebuilt.177
4.5 The Implacable Enemies of Israel: Communists and Moslems
Lindsey claims biblical warrant for his hostility toward Communism and Islam.
Ezekiel, Daniel and Zechariah all said that a nation to the extreme north of Israel would
achieve great influence and become a threat to the whole world. They said this power
would be Israel's mortal enemy. The prophets predicted that this nation would launch an
all-out land and sea attack on Israel, the Arab nations and the continent of Africa. This
country, Bible scholars agree, is the Soviet Union. A line drawn due north of Israel
crosses only one land mass - Russia. And the three tribes Ezekiel predicted would
people the nation to the north are in fact the ancestors of today's Russians. Throughout
its history, the single most consistent motive of the Soviet Union's military invasions has
been the acquisition of warm water ports for its merchant and naval fleets. 178 As
previously quoted the Russians will make both an amphibious and land invasion of
Israel. The current build-up of Russian ships in the Mediterranean serves as another
significant sign of the possible nearness of Armageddon.179
Lindsey's speculations concerning Russia show remarkable similarity to those of earlier
Dispensationalists such as Arno Gaebelein.
Arno Gaebelein (1916)
|
Hal Lindsey (1980)
|
The time cannot be far off when Russia's millions,
augmented by the armies that she will gather
from these and other nations, will be thrown by
their rulers into Palestine in order to destroy the
nation of the Jews.180
|
...I predicted that the Soviets would
begin their Middle East campaign with
a sweep through the Persian Gulf
area into Iran. The recent Russian
invasion of Afghanistan was a first
step in that direction.181...to utterly
destroy the Jewish people.182
|
Attempting to keep pace with the dramatic geo-political changes in Eastern Europe and
the Soviet Union, Lindsey insisted in 1981 and 1994 that his shifting views of Russia,
were nevertheless both predicted in the Bible.
1980's Countdown to Armageddon
|
Planet Earth 2000 A.D.
|
Today, the Soviets are without question the
strongest power on the face of the earth. Lets look
at recent history to see how the Russians rose to
the might predicted for them thousands of years
ago.183
|
We see Russia as no longer a world
threat, but a regional power with a
world-class military - exactly what
Ezekiel 38 and 39 predicted it would
be.184
|
While at the time believing Russia had a preordained destiny to dominate the world,
attack Israel and precipitate a nuclear holocaust, in 1980 Lindsey nevertheless berated
successive American governments for allowing the Russians to gain this military
superiority. He does not explain how on the one hand he believed this to be the
fulfilment of biblical prophecy yet 'incomprehensible'.
The United States was far ahead in the nuclear arms race until the end of the 1960's.
Then the situation began to change rapidly. The change occurred because of the U.S.
leadership's almost unbelievable misreading of the Soviet goals and intentions. In light of
the clearly-stated communist goal of world domination and their constant efforts to attain
that status, it is incomprehensible to me that America allowed the Russians to take the
lead in the arms race. To understand how the U.S. slipped into this perilous position we
must review some recent history.185 Lindsey provides five pages of graphs to show how
Russia had by the 1980's gained military superiority over the United States in
conventional forces, tactical aircraft, military personnel, combat ships, tanks, artillery,
anti-ballistic missiles, interceptor aircraft, strategic bombers and nuclear warheads.186
Lindsey laments,
Beginning with President Kennedy, each U.S. Administration has grossly misjudged the
goals of the Soviet Union and communism in general. Each successive administration
has hoped that its own example of fairness and good will toward the world would
somehow encourage the communists to abandon their drive toward world domination.187
Lindsey repeats this inexplicable contradiction, one the one hand criticising the U.S.
Government for allowing the Russians to gain superiority, while at the same time
claiming this to be their divinely determined destiny.
In carefully researching this chapter, one thing came through with sickening clarity: The
foreign policies of the western nations, especially the U.S., have done more to aid the
tremendous buildup of Soviet power than has any other single factor... The Soviet Union
and its satellites have now reached the position of military superiority and strategic world
power to fulfill their predicted dreadful role in history. The pages of Ezekiel's and
Daniel's prophecies are beginning to look like today's headlines.188
With the demise of the Soviet empire, Lindsey's predictions appeared more like
'yesterdays' headlines. Nevertheless, in 1994, despite the fall of the Communist
government, Lindsey continued to speculate a possible revival of the Russian threat.
In the 1980s and early 1990s, I criticized Ronald Reagan and George Bush for making
foreign policy based on the life and health of one man - Mikhail Gorbachev. It is even
more true today that the United States is taking a great gamble - because of its rapid
savaging of our whole military-industrial complex - that Boris Yeltsin will prevail and turn
Russia permanently away from its expansionist, imperialist dreams. That's a gamble, by
the way, that the Bible prophecies hint may lead to our destruction.189
By 1995, just a year later, Lindsey was now extolling Reagan's foreign policy and
denying that it was ever predicted in Scripture that the Soviet Union would gain world
domination.
In fact, the Soviet Union was on the verge of dominating the world militarily in the period
leading up to 1985... Fortunately, a confident and bold leader, Ronald Reagan, was
elected president of the United States and set in place policies which resulted in a series
of reversals - militarily and economic - for the Soviet Union. I believe God's providential
hand was working behind the scenes because it was never on the cards for the Kremlin
to rule the world.190 With the gradual demise of Russia as a world power, and the
disintegration of her communist empire, Lindsey began to switch his emphasis to Islam
as the real threat to Israel and world peace.191
It is interesting to observe this transition.
Late Great Planet Earth (1970)
|
Apocalypse Code (1997)
|
The Russian force will establish command
headquarters on Mount Moriah or the Temple area
in Jerusalem. ...he seeks to utterly destroy the
Jewish people.192
|
In response to these two deadly
threats, the Russian-Muslim force
retreats back to Israel and sets up
command HQs on the Temple Mount
in Jerusalem. These forces try to
annihilate the Jews as they do this.193
|
1980's Countdown to Armageddon
|
Planet Earth 2000 A.D. (1994)
|
Today, the Soviets are without a question the
strongest power on the face of the earth... As the
Biblical prophets predicted long ago, the Russians
now possess a 'splendidly equipped' army. In fact,
the Russian military is the most destructive war
machine ever assembled... The Soviet Union and
its satellites have now reached the position of
military superiority and strategic world power to
fulfill their predicted dreadful role in history...
Today, we are in a life-or-death contest with the
totalitarian system of communism. If we cannot
build a credible deterrent to the growing Soviet
military machine, then we will soon be taken over,
and we will cease to exist as a free society...194
|
The greatest threat to freedom and
world peace today - is Islamic
fundamentalism... Tragically, the
world's sole remaining superpower -
the United States -has responded to
this monumental threat by embarking
on a suicidal, unilateral
demilitarization process of
unprecedented speed and
recklessness. Like the Scriptures
warn, the West is blithely saying
'Peace and safety'... Yet the free
world today is facing greater danger
than anything since World War II.195
|
Throughout his books, but increasingly in the latter editions, Lindsey denigrates Arabs
generally and Palestinians, in particular. He appears to show little understanding or
compassion for their plight. Instead he offers a novel reinterpretation of the events of
1948.
Although the new Israeli government pleaded with them to stay and fight together for a
common homeland, all but a handful crossed over into Jordan to wait for total victory
against the Jews.196 The Palestinians are determined to trouble the world until they
repossess what they feel is their land.197 While it is true that "the Palestinian issue" is a
mere mirage, an excuse for hating Jews and Israel and turning the world against them, it
is also true that the radical Islamic world will never accept the existence of the Jewish
state no matter what concessions it makes toward peace.198 ...there is no such thing as
Palestine.199 ...the Palestinians who have attempted to usurp control ovewr a city that
holds no genuine significance for them and a land they never particularly wanted until
the Jews occupied it again.200
Lindsey's antipathy toward Islam, expressed in quite inflammatory remarks, is typical of
Christian Zionism generally.
'All Moslems see Israel as their enemy'201
The Arab nations are united in their fanatical obsession to destroy Israel.202 The Arab
nations consider it a matter of racial honour to destroy the State of Israel.203 The Middle
East is a powder keg, all right. But its not because of Israeli policies. Islam, with its
grand and global ambitions - not Israel - is the culprit.204 There will be no peace in the
Middle East as long as the world entertains the Arab's fanciful visions of dividing and
conquering Jerusalem. Peace would only be possible, if, by some miracle, the Arabs
realized that their ambitions for military and economic hegemony over Israel were
delusional. Don't hold your breath... the Arab world has been successful at framing the
debate over the Middle East as a struggle between downtrodden Palestinians and
powerful, heavily armed Jews...205 Agreements in the Arab nations don't mean the same
thing they mean in the Judeo-Christian world. Islam not only has a track record of
re-interpreting, denouncing and reversing settlements, such actions are actually
encouraged if they further the cause of Allah.206
Is there anyone who doubts that the Syrians are willing to push the button to launch
surface-to-surface missiles carrying chemical warheads into Israeli population
centers?... Given what you know about the long history of Islamic jealousy and hatred of
the Jews, is it difficult to imagine a decision being made in Baghdad or Tehran to fire a
nuclear warhead at Tel Aviv?207
The history of the Middle East and Islam is a landscape of tribal warfare, imperial
ambitions and oppression for all non-believers.208
This movement seeks not only to destroy the state of Israel but also the overthrow of the
Judeo-Christian culture-the very foundation of our western civilisation... They have, like
the Communists, at their philosophic core the sworn duty to "bury us."209
Lindsey claims biblical warrant for the contemporary Arab-Israeli conflict. He believes
the Psalmist, for example, predicted that the Palestinians along with the Lebanese and
Syrians would attempt but fail to destroy Israel.
Long ago the psalmist predicted the final mad attempt by the confederated Arab armies
to destroy the nation of Israel... (Psalm 83:1-8)210 In Psalm 83, some 3,000 years ago,
God gave a warning of what would happen in the last days... In these verses the
Philistia or Philistines are the modern Palestinians. Tyre is modern Lebanon. Assyria is
modern Syria. I wanted you to read this passage for yourself because it speaks of a time
in which there is a concerted effort to wipe out Israel as a nation... Even then, the
Psalmist -under Divine Inspiration-looked to the last days before the Messiah would
come to deliver Israel from the children of Ishmael. All the peoples named in those
verses make up the various tribes that became known as the Arabs. When you read
some of these verses it sounds like modern Radio Tehran, doesn't it? Why? Because
this passage of scripture is predicting the modern-day Middle East situation.211 As the
Bible tells us, the dispute over Jerusalem and Israel's borders will never be settled by
any peace agreements nor any whiz-bang diplomatic breakthrough.212
Lindsey attributes Armageddon and the destruction of most of the world's population to
the influence of Islam over the Arab-Israeli conflict.
All this destruction will be caused by the ancient hatred between Ishmael and Isaac - the
smouldering flames of hatred that have existed for 4,000 years - the jealousy of Ishmael
toward Isaac - the fact that Ishmael and his descendants have never been willing to
accept the blessings that God gave them... they have never been satisfied. They
wanted Isaac's blessing... it is what is going to touch off the war that will almost destroy
the World.213 Ezekiel's long-predicted invasion sweeps into Israel with the pent-up-fury of
four thousand years of hatred that started with Ishmael and was later enshrined by his
descendants in the Muslim religion.214 This will be the sign that immediately precedes
the Russian-led Islamic invasion of Israel.215
Lindsey claims his assessment of Middle Eastern politics is not only based upon the
bible but also privileged access to 'primary intelligence sources' within the Israeli military.
In 1994 he quoted one such source as equating Islam with Nazism,
Stopping the Iranian-Syrian axis and their lead over the Islamic world is the most
important issue of this decade. It is even more important than it was in 1939 to stop
Adolf Hitler.216 Lindsey's dogmatic and provocative views are representative of what
Edward Said calls Western cultural imperialism or 'Orientalism' typified by its "crude
stereotype imaging of the East."217
4.6 The Fall and Rise of the United States
A popular view among Christian Zionists is the belief that God will continue to bless
America only as long as she remains an ally of Israel. Lindsey is no exception.
Except for the U.S., Israel has no allies... We are still Israel's friend. But there are strong
pressures from within to turn away from Israel. I pray that we do not, for our friendship
with the Israelis is one of the reasons we've survived as a nation.218
Lindsey finds mention of the United States in the Bible. In the reference to '...the woman
were given two wings of a great eagle, so that she might fly into the wilderness...' in
Revelation 12:13-17, Lindsey speculates that this describes 'some massive airlift' that
will transport escaping Jewish believers from the holocaust of Armageddon to the safety
of places like Petra.
Since the eagle is the national symbol of the United States, its possible that the airlift will
be made available by aircraft from the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean.219
Lindsey does not explain why the symbolism of the eagle should be applied to the
United States instead of to any one of a number of countries like Germany or the Czech
Republic who also include an eagle as part of their national emblem. Nor does he
explain why this particular reference to an eagle should be understood as describing
modern aircraft and not other passages such as Exodus 19:4, Deuteronomy 32:11-12 or
Isaiah 40:31 which also refer to eagles. Such speculative interpretations hardly
corroborate Lindsey's claim to hold to a consistent literal hermeneutic.
Despite fulfilling this important biblical role of supporting Israel, Lindsey does not,
however, see a hopeful future for the United States. In 1970 he predicted,
The United States will not hold its present position of leadership in the western world;
financially, the future leader will be Western Europe. Internal political chaos caused by
student rebellion and Communist subversion will begin to erode the economy of our
nation. Lack of moral principle by citizens and leaders will so weaken law and order that
a state of anarchy will finally result. The military capability of the United States, though it
is at present the most powerful in the world, has already been neutralized because no
one has the courage to use it decisively. When the economy collapses so will the
military.220 In 1994, Lindsey drew attention to the accuracy of his predictions, made
some 24 years earlier, of a moral as well as military decline of the United States. "And
this is exactly what I have been expecting and predicting for this country since 1956."221
In the 1980's Lindsey saw further evidence that his prediction had come true. He
berated the U.S. Administration for allowing Russia to gain military superiority,
describing America as 'a second-class military power.'222
Lindsey claimed God wanted the American government to win back the lead in the arms
race.
...I believe that the Bible supports building a powerful military force. And the Bible is
telling the U.S. To become strong again. A weak military will encourage the Soviet Union
to start an all-out war... It is time to use our vast and superior technology to create the
world's strongest military power. Only this will stop the Soviet's insane rush toward
nuclear war.223
Since Lindsey believes most of the world will be destroyed in a predestined nuclear
holocaust anyway, he does not explain the point of building yet more weapons of mass
destruction. Nevertheless, he claims that American people must face some stark
choices.
So from the standpoint of Biblical prophecy, the U.S. must fade from its place of
leadership for the West and its former supreme superpower status. There are several
possible fates for the U.S. They include:
A takeover by the communists
Destruction by a surprise Soviet nuclear attack (I don't even like to think about this
possibility)
Becoming a dependent of the 10-nation European confederacy
● A far more hopeful fate than any of the above...224
His fourth option is elaborated under the heading 'The More Important Duty.' Lindsey
claims that God has preserved the United States as a 'free country' for four reasons.
These include the presence of a large community of 'true believers'; their support for
missionaries around the world; their commitment to prayer; and,
The third reason is that the U.S. has stood behind the Jews and the nation of Israel in
their times of need. Both here and in the Middle East, we have fought persecution of the
Jewish people and their nation, many times when no one else would help. God said to
Abraham, the father of all Jews: 'I'll bless those who bless you, and I will curse those
who curse you.' This promise was extended to protect all the descendants (sic) of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (Genesis 12:3 and 27:29). I believe that if the U.S. ever turns
its back on Israel, we will no longer exist as a nation. Don't take this lightly, for
throughout history the rise and fall of empires can be directly related to how they treated
the Jews.225
By 1995 Lindsey was lamenting American ambivalence toward Israel.
I believe America's fate is tied directly to the way it relates to the nation of Israel. Think
of the way America prospered from 1948 through 1967 when its support of the Jewish
state was virtually unconditional. Today the United States has joined the worldwide
chorus urging Israel to make concession after concession to the Arabs for nothing more
than promises...226
This he attributed to a failure on the part of the American establishment, and president,
in particular, to maintain a foreign policy that was unequivocally pro-Israel based on a
strategic military alliance against the Communists and Islam.
In these days of rogue Islamic nations acquiring nuclear missile capabilities, such
short-sightedness is close to national suicide... We now have had a president of the
United States who smoked marijuana but "didn't inhale." The American military is
completely demoralized. Its mission has been radically altered from fighting force to
"humanitarian" force. And as the defense budget is hacked away mercilessly, America's
naive political leadership keeps finding more remote parts of the world in which to
commit our confused young troops.227 After Jimmy Carter was elected president in 1976,
America took a more strongly pro-Cairo line... Under President Bush, things deteriorated
even further... George Bush's administration represented the most anti-Israel U.S.
presidency ever. But that was then, and this is now. The current administration and,
particularly, the new leadership emerging within the State Department, may make the
Bush years look good by comparison.228
Lindsey has been particularly outspoken in criticising the United States decision to help
monitor the Peace Accord by offering the services of the CIA both to the Palestine
Authority as well as Israel.
Last week's Middle East peace deal puts the US smack in the middle of a war zone.
President Clinton committed the Central Intelligence Agency to a role the CIA was not
designed to do. The US promised to use the CIA to openly track Palestinian compliance
with the Wye agreement... The use of the CIA in the Middle East is filled with dangerous
possibilities for America... And it's the CIA's new role to play umpire. Anybody that's ever
been to a baseball game knows what that means. The last thing the US needs is to hear
the Arabs begin to chant 'kill the umpire.' Because they won't be throwing soda
bottles.229
Appalled at the involvement of the United States in the peace agreement signed at the
White House in 1993, Lindsey insists,
Instead of peace, appeasement will lead to war in the Middle East. But not just war. This
time it will lead to catastrophe, to nightmare, to unprecedented bloodshed and human
suffering. In other words, it will lead to the Final Battle.230
Despite the fact that the United States remains the most powerful country in the world,
and while Lindsey remains convinced that the apocalypse is imminent, in 1995, he
reiterated,
But my gut reaction is that America will continue to decline in power and influence in the
coming years. Clearly, America does not appear to play an extraordinary role in the
endtimes events. If she did, there would be more scriptural evidence for it.231 I have
always believed and stated quite plainly that the fate of America is, to a great extent,
determined by how it treats Israel. Why? Because God promised to bless those nations
that were a blessing to Israel and curse those that were a curse upon the Jewish state. I
won't go so far as to suggest that America has been a curse upon Israel of late, but it
has been far from a blessing either... The U.S. has been protected by God because it
has been a haven for Israelites and an ally for their survival... Now we are turning away,
look for the "Late Great United States... Its understandable why America may be all but
irrelevant by the time of the Final Battle."232
4.7 Europe and the Emergence of a Revived Roman Empire
Like many other dispensationalists before him, Lindsey claims the Bible predicts that the
European nations are forming a revived Roman Empire out of which the Anti-Christ will
emerge. His writings show a rare ability to shape prophecy to fit the changing size of the
European Community. In 1970, quoting Walter Hallstein, former president of the
European Economic Community, Lindsey predicted,
We believe that the Common Market and the trend toward unification of Europe may
well be the beginning of the ten-nation confederacy predicted by Daniel and the Book of
Revelation... 'At about 1980 we may fully expect the great fusion of all economic,
military, and political communities together into the United States of Europe.'233
In 1973, Lindsey returns to the same theme,
You'll notice that nine countries are already members of the Community... The European
union has therefore been temporarily halted at nine members instead of ten. My
personal belief is that God Himself stopped the rapid unification because the Revised
(sic) Roman Empire was coming together too fast. Once the confederacy includes the
ten nations of God's choosing, the group will begin to look for a leader powerful enough
to make this new nation the nucleus of a one-world government.234
In 1980, Lindsey was more assured about his timetable.
When I wrote that in Late Great, the only possible successor to the Roman Empire (in
my opinion) was the European Common Market. But a decade ago, that organization
had just six member nations, not the 10 the Bible forecast. In 1979, Greece became the
10th member of the Common Market. Recently, the Common Market went beyond its
original economic and trade functions and elected a parliament. This move will
eventually fulfill the Common Market's long range goal - to unify its members into a
single political body.235
Perhaps forseeing that more countries might conceivably wish to join the European
Community, Lindsey wisely covers that eventuality also.
It is possible that more than 10 nations could at one point be admitted. But in the final
stages, it will number 10.236
In 1994, Lindsey acknowledged that there were now 12 member nations and more likely
to join, so, in order that Scripture be fulfilled, Lindsey predicted,
In phase 2 of the fourth kingdom, Rome will be in the form of a 10-nation confederacy.
Therefore we can expect two nations to withdraw from the CE or we can expect to see
mergers of nations.237
A year later, Lindsey was more specific about what would likely happen next.
I believe, for instance, that a split is very likely that will cause either Britain and/or
Germany to leave the EC. Germany could forge a closer relationship with Russia, while
Britain may turn toward the United States of America. The Bible is very clear, as we
shall see, that this union will be a confederation of ten nations.238
○
○
●
4.8 The Coming Holocaust: Armageddon Theology in Practice
Most Christian Zionists are dispensationalists and all dispensationalists are
premillennialists, holding to a pessimistic view of the future. Lindsey is no exception.
Without any hesitation or doubt he insists,
'And look what's happening in the Middle East - ground zero in the endtimes events....
This phoney peace deal in the Middle East thus only ensures that eventually there will
be a thermonuclear holocaust in the Middle East... This seems to parallel predictions in
Revelation and elsewhere almost to a T. Mark my words. It will happen.'239 Let's talk
about World War III... We can almost see the handwriting on the wall... Does this sound
like a scenario that could happen in the very near future? Perhaps at almost any
minute? You bet it does.240 Want to know what hell on earth will be like?. Hal Lindsey
gives us the best glimpse to date... You couldn't get a better picture of what World War
III will be like without being bodily transported into the future... This book focuses on a
rapidly approaching climactic war - the most brutal, barbaric and destructive conflict ever
waged on this planet.241
At times Lindsey's description of suffering inherent in this most terrible scenario of a
nuclear holocaust is tasteless if not sick.
Man has pretty much exhausted his arsenal. There are few popguns left, but not very
much left to pop them. At least four billion people have perished in the first 14
Judgments alone. Now its God's turn.242 I always get a comical mental image when I
read this next verse. In my mind's eye, I see this confused, cancer ridden, dull eyed,
war-weary soldier. He smokes a giant joint and says, "Let the weak say, I am a mighty
man"243
In two of Lindsey's much early books he includes maps showing the various stages of
this war of Armageddon. A comparison shows the evolution in Lindsey's thinking given a
changing world.
The Late Great Planet Earth (1970)
|
Israel and the Last Days (1983)
|
Phase I: Pan Arabic assault & Russian amphibious
assault.
Phase II: Russian Confederacy counterattack
Middle East into Egypt (Daniel 11:40-42)
Phase III: Russian Confederacy initiates conquest
of Africa, attacking to the West and South.
Phase IV: Russian commander hears tidings out of
the 'East' (Orient mobilizing) and out of the 'North'
(Roman confederacy mobilizing) and regroups his
troops. (Daniel 11:43-45)
Phase V: Russian army returns to Israel from Egypt
and is destroyed there.244
|
Map 1: King of the South.
Pan-Arabic Armies Attack Israel
(Daniel 11:40).
Map 2: King of the North. The
Soviet Union Launches an All-Out
Invasion. (Daniel 11:40-45)
Phases 1 & 2: Soviets and their
allies launch massive invasion from
land, sea and air.
Phase 3: Soviets launch lightning
attack on Strait of Hormuz from
Afghanistan to close off oil from
Persian Gulf.
Phase 4. Soviet navy makes large
amphibious invasion. Hits hard and
lands at Haifa, gateway to the Valley
of Armageddon. Also lands on
shores of Egypt.
Soviet commander moves rapidly
through Israel on his way to Egypt
and prepares to take Africa (See
Daniel 11:42-44.)
Map 3: Armies of the East and
West. China and Ten Nations of
Europe Counterattack (Revelation
16:12, Daniel 11:44)... The Soviets
are totally destroyed.
Map 4: The Messiah Comes. Blood
Shall Stand to the Horses Bridles
(Revelation 14:19-20).245
|
Despite the peace-process, in 1995, Lindsey maintained a predictably pessimistic stance
regarding the future.
...the Middle East is more unstable and more prone to war than any time in modern
history. Its literally on the brink of a catastrophic nuclear war. And the next time, its not
going to be a regional, self-contained conflict. It will touch every part of the globe.246
4.8.1 The Motivation for the War of Armageddon
At various times Lindsey has speculated as to the causes of the war of Armageddon. To
justify the conviction that four great super-powers, a revived Roman Empire, a Russian,
an African and the Chinese will all wish to occupy Palestine, Lindsey initially speculated
that Israel would become the wealthiest and most desirable territory on earth.
The prophetic indication is that Israel will become one of the most prosperous nations on
earth during the reign of the Antichrist... Israel will become a cultural, religious and
economic world center, especially at Jerusalem. The value of the mineral deposits in the
Dead Sea alone have been estimated at one trillion, two hundred and seventy billion
dollars. This is more than the combined wealth of France, England, and the United
States.247
Together with her strategic significance as a bridgehead between Africa, Asia and
Europe, Lindsey argues, based on his interpretation of Ezekiel, that the Russians will
invade Israel to gain control of this great material wealth.248
In 1983, Lindsey began to speculate about an alternative religious reason for the war of
Armageddon.
The dispute to trigger the war of Armageddon will arise between the Arabs and Israelis
over the Temple Mount and Old Jerusalem (Zechariah 12:2-3), the most contested and
strategic piece of real estate in the world. Even now we are witnessing the escalation of
that conflict.249 In 1994, Lindsey developed this religious theory further, describing the
Temple Mount as 'The most disputed 35 acres on the planet.'250
He confidently predicted,
Two religions, Judaism and Islam, thus are on a collision course with global and
heavenly repercussions... Islam will never accept Jerusalem as the undivided capital of
the Jewish state, and Israel will never agree to give it up. This is the intractable,
insoluble crisis that will soon result in the climax of world history.251 The whole prophetic
scenario is in place. We see the Islamic nations united in mutual hatred of Israel. The
dispute has nothing to do with borders or territory. It has to do with the existence of
Israel and its claim on Jerusalem.252
In 1995, Lindsey lay the blame for the failure of the peace process and the coming
holocaust squarely with the Moslems.
The peace process continues... But - and this is a big 'but' - any such settlement is
doomed to ultimate failure for two basic reasons. First, because it doesn't deal with the
principal causes of war between Arabs and Jews, which are rooted in the Muslim
religion. Second, because it at the same time, increases the opportunities for war. The
Muslim nations know that Israel must have the territory she has held since 1967 to
successfully defend herself with conventional weapons. So when Israel is squeezed
down to the presently agreed upon borders, the Muslims will once again figure that an all
out attack on Israel would have a high probability of victory.253
4.8.2 The Strategy for the Soviet Occupation of Israel
In the Late Great Planet Earth, Lindsey claimed that Daniel 11 and Ezekiel 38 describe
the way in which Russia will attack Israel.
When the Russians invade the Middle East with amphibious and mechanized land
forces, they will make a 'blitzkrieg' type of offensive through the area... The current
build-up of Russian ships in the Mediterranean serves as another significant sign of the
possible nearness of Armageddon.254
Ten years after making his first predictions concerning the role of Russia in the war of
Armageddon, Lindsey saw further corroboration.
In the Late Great Planet Earth I predicted that the Soviets would begin their Middle East
campaign with a sweep through the Persian Gulf area into Iran. The recent Russian
invasion of Afghanistan was a first step in that direction.255 Russia's attack on
Afghanistan was its first step into the pages of Ezekiel, chapter 38. It's clear that the
Russian strategy is to cut off the supply of Persian Gulf oil to the west and then close all
sea lanes leading to that vital area.256 The Russian invasion of Afghanistan has
telegraphed the Soviet intention to take over the entire Middle East... This area has now
fit precisely into the pattern predicted for it. All that remains is for the Russians to make
their predicted move.257 When we apply this prophecy to modern times, it becomes
obvious that the Soviets will use their recent conquest of Afghanistan as a springboard
to overthrow Iran and gain control of the Persian Gulf area.258
Although apparently obvious to Lindsey, the Soviet military had another agenda and
were forced ignominiously to pull out of Afghanistan. In 1990 when asked whether
perhaps the Gulf War instead perhaps signalled the end of history, Lindsey claimed
rather more evasively,
I've never named a day or time, but I can tell you this: Prophecy is on fast forward. I do
believe we live in the generation that will see Armageddon.259 Then in early 1991
Lindsey again insisted the war against Iraq was 'setting the stage for the last, climactic
war.'260
By 1995, however, the Islamic threat to destroy Israel would come, Lindsey now
predicted, from Iran.
In Tehran, the new leader of the Islamic confederation is determined to do Allah's will
and destroy Israel and thereby prove to the world that its creation was merely a
historical anomaly. Here's the plan: Iran's Operation Grand Design includes a a (sic)
strategic amphibious invasion in a chemical weapons environment. The first step is
clearly the overthrow of the house of Saud. By taking out Saudi Arabia, the Iran-Syria
alliance would remove the vital Western military base, control the Islamic holy places
and deprive the West of its supply of oil. According to intelligence sources, the plan then
calls for an all-out airborne chemical and nuclear assault on the state of Israel. Such
draconian plans become all the more achievable as Israel's borders shrink. That's the
policy America is promoting today for Israel.261
4.8.3 The Samson Option: Israel's Response to the Coming Holocaust
Following the war of 1973, Lindsey described a conversation with one of Israel's 'most
brilliant and aggressive generals.'262
At Masada, all Israel's graduating military officers swear allegiance to the State,
promising as part of a solemn oath that 'Masada shall never fall again.' Lindsey claims
this 'Masada Complex' has now been superseded by a more aggressive retaliatory
stance known as the 'Samson Complex'.
A hint of Israel's new outlook was revealed just after the 1973 war. Time magazine
quoted a conversation between General Moshe Dayan, then chief of Israel's defense,
and the late Prime Minister Golda Meir. The conversation reportedly took place when
Israel's defences were being overwhelmed both in the Sinai and in the Golan Heights.
'The Third Temple (a term for modern Israel) is falling,' Dayan reportedly told his prime
minister. 'Arm the doomsday weapon.'... Anyone who understands the history of the
Jewish people knows what the Israelis would do if they found themselves about to fall to
their Arab enemies... I'm sure that if Israel saw its own destruction near it would use
whatever was needed to bomb key Arab cities right off the map. In fact, I wouldn't be
surprised if Israel launched an attack on Russia as well, since the Soviets have armed
and goaded Israel's Arab enemies. Remember, Israel has the capability of producing
nuclear weapons, and its pilots are legends for their skill and daring. If the world were to
stand by and allow another holocaust to occur, then, like Samson of old, Israel would
surely take its enemies along to mutual destruction.263
In 1994, Lindsey was even more dogmatic. He anticipated that the consequence of the
peace process would require Israel to relinquish more strategic territory in the Occupied
Territories and the Golan. The consequences of this for Lindsey were dire.
Soon will come the time when Israel has no alternative but to use all or part of its
nuclear arsenal - conservatively estimated at some 200 warheads. This doesn't even
count its neutron bombs.264
A year later Lindsey claimed to have had access to Israeli military intelligence reports
showing that the "Samson Option" was now operative.
Instead of just Jewish corpses, there would be millions of Arab corpses. The option is to
launch an all-out nuclear attack on all the Arab capitals. I have seen and read the
"Samson Option" a special paper that outlines a military doctrine now in force. If Israel is
being overrun, they will use the nuclear option. Like Samson, they may go down, but so
will all their enemies. And that's just a preview of how terrible things will be in the Final
Battle.265
4.8.4 The Extent of the Final Holocaust
Lindsey describes in graphic detail what this war will be like. In his earliest writings, he
predicted that there would be a Soviet invasion if Israel.
The Russian force will establish command headquarters on Mount Moriah or the Temple
area in Jerusalem. Daniel pointed this out when he said: 'And he shall pitch his palatial
tents between the seas [Dead Sea and Mediterranean Sea] and the glorious holy mount
Zion; yet he shall come to his end with none to help him' (Daniel 11:45 Amplified).266
However, Russia and her confederates will be destroyed completely by an act that Israel
will acknowledge as being from their God. This act will bring many in Israel to believe in
their true Messiah (Ezekiel 38:15ff.). The attack upon the Russian confederacy and the
resulting conflict will escalate into the last war of the world, involving all nations.267 The
armies of all nations will be gathered in the area of Israel, especially around Jerusalem.
Think of it: at least 200 million soldiers from the Orient, with millions more from the
forces of the West... Messiah Jesus will first strike those who have ravaged His city,
Jerusalem. Then he will strike the armies amassed in the Valley of Meggido. No wonder
blood will stand to the horses' bridles for a distance of two hundred miles from
Jerusalem! (Revelation 14:20). Its grizzly to think about such carnage, but just to check
all this out I measured from the point where the Valley of Armageddon sloped down to
the Jordan Valley. From that point southward down the Valley through the Dead Sea to
the port of Elath on the gulf of Aqabah measures approximately two hundred miles.
Apparently this whole valley will be filled with war materials, animals, bodies of men, and
blood!268 I have traveled the entire length of this valley... It is almost impossible to
imagine the valley covered with blood five feet high! Yet that is exactly what God
predicts, and He always fulfills His Word. Some have asked, "Wouldn't the blood
coagulate and not flow?" Blood exposed to intense radiation doesn't coagulate.269
Because of the intense radiation, blood will not coagulate. It will literally become a sea of
blood five feet deep.270
The topography between Megiddo and Eilat would make such a vision difficult. Megiddo
is approximately 50 metres above sea level while Jerusalem is over 800 metres above
sea level. Most of the Jordan Valley, however, is 300 metres below sea level while the
region around Eilat rises to around 70 metres above sea level. Without major geological
changes, Lindsey's vision cannot be accomplished. However, based on Revelation 16,
he believes, the impending '...full-scale nuclear exchange' will not only radically alter the
climate causing a 'global heat wave' but will also change the topography of the world.271
While this great battle is raging, every city in the world is going to be levelled. This will
take place by what is called an 'earthquake' (Greek seismos), but that's not the only
meaning. The word itself simply means 'a great shaking of the earth.' The earth could be
shaken either by a literal earthquake or by a full-scale nuclear exchange of all remaining
missiles. I lean towards the nuclear conflict; I believe that when these powers lock forces
here, there will be a full-scale exchange of nuclear weapons, and its at this time that 'the
cities of the nations fall.' Just think of the great cities of the world - London, Rome, Paris,
Berlin, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Mexico City, and Tokyo - all these great
cities are going to be judged at that time!272 Apparently the devastation will be so
tremendous that not only will all the cities be destroyed, but the land itself will be ripped
apart. The coastlines and continents will be changed and all the mountains will be
shifted in elevation... This chapter closes with multiplied millions of soldiers slaughtering
each other in and around Israel.273 That means half of the original population of the earth
is wiped out within a space of no more than a few years. Perhaps in only a few months
(Revelation 6:7, 8 and 9:15)... When all is said and done - after all the battles have been
waged and Jesus has conquered Satan... Only a tiny fraction of the world's population
will be left. Only a remnant will have survived... Hard to believe, isn't it? ... Think no such
thing. This is reality.274
4.8.5 Supernatural Deliverance from the Holocaust
Most dispensationalists are not afraid of the imminent holocaust. Whereas Israel is the
'Fuse of Armageddon'275
Christians accepting a dispensational eschatology will, Lindsey insists, be safely
raptured to heaven just before the tribulation of Armageddon begins. He depicts this
event seen from the perspective of the non-Christian left behind,
There I was driving down the freeway and all of a sudden the place went crazy... cars
going in all directions... and not one of them had a driver. I mean it was wild. I think
we've got an invasion from outer space.276
While Lindsey is confident that Christians will escape the holocaust and witness the
events from heaven he seems less certain concerning the fate of the Jews. His writings
offer a variety of perspectives, some more hopeful than others. In The Late Great Planet
Earth (1970), Lindsey taught,
...the great catastrophic events which are to happen to this nation during 'the tribulation'
are primarily designed to shock the people into believing in their true Messiah (Ezekiel
38; 39)... According to Zechariah, terrible fighting will center around the city of
Jerusalem (Zechariah 12:2,3; 14:1,2)... In a battle line which will extend throughout
Israel with the vortex centred at the Valley of Megiddo... Zechariah predicts that
one-third of the Jews alive during this period will be converted to Christ and miraculously
preserved.277
In There's a New World Coming (1973), Lindsey claimed God will supernaturally deliver
Messianic Jews who come to believe in Jesus during the tribulation. The fate of those
who do not believe is left unclear but presumably bleak given the carnage he envisages.
Based on his reading of Revelation 7:4-8 Lindsey insists,
The fact that God redeems 144,000 literal Jews and ordains them His evangelists not
only makes good sense but fits in with the counsel of God... So I say loud and clear: the
144,000 described here are not Jehovah Witnesses, or Mormon elders, or some symbol
of the Church; they are Jews, Jews, Jews!278 This chapter closes with multiplied millions
of soldiers slaughtering each other in and around Israel.279
In The 1980's: Countdown to Armageddon (1980), Lindsey is more hopeful for Israelis
generally.
The God of Israel has sworn in the prophecies that He will not forsake the Israelis, nor
let them be destroyed.280
By 1983, in Israel and the Last Days, Lindsey is able to reassure Jews that during the
tribulation, despite being at the 'vortex' of a world war involving hundreds of millions of
soldiers and despite enduring nuclear as well as conventional attacks from Russia,
Europe and China,
In one of the most incredible miracles of all time, Israel will be converted to faith in her
true Messiah and then miraculously protected... (Zechariah 12:8,9). As promised, God
will strengthen the Israelis to fight with a ferocity never seen before on this earth. He will
also supernaturally protect them from being annihilated.281
In 1994, Lindsey had returned to a more pessimistic forecast.
...only a tiny fraction of the world's population will be left. Only a remnant will have
survived. Many of the Jews would have been killed.282
In The Final Battle published in 1995, Lindsey seems to envisage contradictory
scenarios for Israel. Under the heading "It Will Take A Miracle To Save
Israel-Intelligence Digest", Lindsey was confident,
A miracle is just what Zechariah Chapters 12 through 14 predict and promise will save
Israel. God has promised in several passages that their nation will never, ever again be
destroyed. All the weapons of the world won't overturn that promise. But Israel is in for a
very rough time. The Jewish state will be brought to the brink of destruction.283
In a later chapter, however, he predicts in greater detail,
The land of Israel and the surrounding area will certainly be targeted for nuclear attack.
Iran and all the Muslim nations around Israel have already been targeted with Israeli
nukes. Russia clearly receives a knockout blow, probably in the form of a retaliatory
strike. Russia's Eastern European allies would also likely suffer the same fate. All of
Europe, the seat of power of the Antichrist, would surely be a nuclear battlefield, as
would the United States... Zechariah gives an unusual, detailed account of how
hundreds of thousands of soldiers in the Israel battle zone will die. Their flesh will be
consumed from their bones, their eyes from their sockets, and their tongues from their
mouths while they stand on their feet (Zechariah 14:12). This is exactly the sort of thing
that happens from the intense radiation of a neutron type bomb... But God's power is
certainly stronger than any nuclear bomb... We do know God will supernaturally
strengthen and protect the believing Israelites so that they will survive the worst
holocaust the world will ever see. Amen. But believe it or not, there's more to this story.
The world is not over. Contrary to popular belief, the Final Battle is not the end of the
world.284 Lindsey neglects to explain how this will be biologically or ecologically possible,
nor how the 144,000 Jewish evangelists will have any ministry to perform in a
post-nuclear holocaust world where the combined populations of America, Russia,
China, Europe and the Middle East have been annihilated by destructive forces
sufficient to modify the world's climate as well as topography. Since "every city in the
world will be leveled"285 it is difficult to imagine anyone alive, let alone anyone sane
enough to want to listen to "144,000 Hebrew Billy Grahams running round the world"286
4.9 Dating the Second Coming of Christ
One reason other Dispensational writers have perhaps avoided quoting Lindsey or been
reluctant to identify with his views, may be because of his tendency to set the date for
Christ's return. Lindsey was not the first to do so. In 1828, one of the founders of what
became dispensationalism, Edward Irving, set an example others have eagerly followed.
I conclude, therefore, that the last days... will begin to run from the time of God's
appearing for his ancient people, and gathering them together to the work of destroying
all Antichristian nations, of evangelising the world, and of governing it during the
Millennium... The times and fulness of the times, so often mentioned in the New
Testament, I consider as referring to the great period numbered by times... Now if this
reasoning be correct, as there can be little doubt that the one thousand two hundred and
sixty days concluded in the year 1792, and the thirty additional days in the year 1823,
we are already entered upon the last days, and the ordinary life of a man will carry many
of us to the end of them. If this be so, it gives to the subject with which we have
introduced this year's ministry a very great importance indeed.287
Lindsey has exploited that same escapist fear throughout his writings. On the back
cover of the American edition of The 1980's Countdown to Armageddon, for instance, is
the assertion, 'We are the generation that will see the end times ...and the return of
Jesus.'288 The British edition is more circumspect claiming enigmatically, 'We are the
generation the prophets were talking about...'289
In 1994, Lindsey was still insisting,
It is clear that the Bible can't be talking about any other time in history but today. No
man knows the day or hour this dramatic climax is going to occur. But there can be little
doubt that this is the generation. It could start tomorrow.290
Lindsey's dogmatism concerning the imminent return of Christ is largely based on his
interpretation of the 'signs' given in Matthew 24 and the meaning of the phrase 'this
generation.'
4.9.1 This Generation
In his first book, The Late Great Planet Earth, Lindsey interprets Matthew 24 as referring
to the events that have occurred since the State of Israel was founded in 1948. Lindsey
calculates,
Jesus said that this would indicate that He was 'at the door,' ready to return. Then He
said, 'Truly I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take
place' (Matthew 24:34 NASB). What generation? Obviously, in context, the generation
that would see the signs-chief among them the rebirth of Israel. A generation in the Bible
is something like forty years. If this is a correct deduction, then within forty years or so of
1948, all these things could take place. Many scholars who have studied Bible prophecy
all their lives believe that this is so.291 Lindsey does not elaborate on who these scholars
are but implicitly set 1988 as the date by which Jesus would return. In his later work,
'The 1980's Countdown to Armageddon', published in 1980, Lindsey continued to
speculate that the tribulation would occur before 1990. 'The decade of the 1980's could
very well be the last decade as we know It.' 292 Many of his contemporary
dispensationalists similarly placed great emphasis on 1988.293
By 1994, while persisting in his belief that Jesus meant this present generation, Lindsey
had begun to prevaricate and lengthen a 'biblical generation' since Jesus had not
returned by 1988 as he had confidently predicted. Based on his revised calculations
Lindsey claimed Jesus would return some time between now and 2067.
Jesus promised us that the generation that witnessed the restoration of the Jewish
people to their homeland would not pass until 'all these things' - including his return to
Earth - would be done. The Jewish people declared the rebirth of their nation in 1948.
They recaptured Jerusalem in 1967. A biblical generation is somewhere between 40 to
100 years, depending on whether you take the example from Abraham's day or from the
discipline of Israel in the wilderness of Sinai. In either case, you do the arithmetic, folks.
No matter how you cut it, there's not much time left.294 I also said that 'if' a generation
was 40 years and 'if' the generation of the 'fig tree' (Matthew 24:32-34) started with the
foundation of the State of Israel, then Jesus 'might come back by 1988.' But I put a lot of
ifs and maybes in because I knew that no one could be absolutely certain.295 Many
biblical scholars have pointed out the fact that a generation in the Bible is generally
regarded as 40 years. Some people point out that 40 years has already passed since
the rebirth of Israel and Jesus has not returned. Well folks, we simply don't know for
certain how long a biblical generation is. In addition, we're not certain when that final
countdown began. Did it begin in 1948 when Israel was reborn? Or could it have begun
in 1967 when Jerusalem, the apple of God's eye, was recaptured and reunified under
Jewish control? We simply don't know and that is the way God wants it.296
The failure of Lindsey's published timetable led him to reappraise the critical 'sign' upon
which his chronology was based.
My recent study of Daniel 9:24-27 has convinced me that the capture of Jerusalem in
1967 may be a more prophetically significant event than the rebirth of the nation. Think
of it. In June of that year, the Jews recaptured Jerusalem and re-established a lasting
sovereignty over it for the first time since the Babylonian destruction in the 6th Century
B.C.297
In The Final Battle, Lindsey also implied a date before 2024 A.D was now feasible,
But note carefully, Jesus said the generation would not "pass away until all was fulfilled."
In other words, many who saw the signs begin to come together would not die before
their climactic fulfillment. Life expectancy today in the U.S. is about 76 years298
In Lindsey's latest work, Planet Earth, The Final Chapter, with the benefit of hindsight,
he now claims, the period between 1948 and 1967 does not count in calculating the time
of the Lord's return.
...the prophetic time-clock stalled in 1948, and did not resume again until the pivotal
events on June 6, 1967, when for the first time in 2500 years, Jews once again had
sovereign control of Jerusalem and have maintained it.299 While Lindsey places great
emphasis on holding to a 'literal' hermeneutic, on passages such as this, he appears to
accept an interpretation that is far from literal. When Jesus refers to 'this generation' he
uses the same language as in Matthew 16:28, where he predicts, "I tell you the truth,
some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming
in his kingdom." In both cases most commentators believe Jesus is referring to those
alive at that time, rather than a generation living 2000 years or more later.300
4.9.2 The Anti-Christ is Alive and Well
Integral with the 'end times' scenario Lindsey envisages, is the conviction that the
Antichrist is alive and about to be revealed. Beginning in 1970, Lindsey has repeatedly
insisted that this individual is alive today.
We believe that the dramatic elements which are occurring in the world today are setting
the stage for this magnetic, diabolical Future Fuehrer to make his entrance.301 As I wrote
10 years ago in The Late Great Planet Earth, I believe this man is alive today-alive and
waiting to come forth... I believe this leader is alive somewhere in Europe; perhaps he is
already a member of the EEC parliament.302 He will immediately rise to prominence in
the EEC and from that post he will offer the world amazing solutions to all its complex
and terrifying problems. Because of his superhuman powers and his solutions to the
world's conflicts, the anti-Christ will be chosen to lead the EEC.303 Heading up what will
evolve into a 10-nation confederacy will be a man of such magnetism and power that he
will become the greatest dictator the world has ever known... And he is alive today.
There is a potential dictator waiting in the wings somewhere in Europe who will make
Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin look like choir boys. Right now he is preparing to take his
throne, inflaming his soul with visions of what he will be able to do for mankind with his
grand schemes and revolutionary ideas... Is alive and well on planet Earth... Lets go
meet him.304
Today, the man who will command this budding economic and military colossus - this
phony savior of Jerusalem - is alive and well somewhere in Europe. The man who will
make a pact with Satan for a few months of glory in this world is planning his
ascendancy.
Despite promising in 1995, 'I will show you who will be the key players in this endtimes
drama,'305
and for thirty years, making detailed predictions about this 'someone', supposedly alive
today, Lindsey is still unable to identify the anti-Christ.
4.9.3 Signs of the Times
Consistently and repeatedly, Lindsey draws attention to 'signs' which he believes
indicate that the return of Jesus is very near. In this respect, Lindsey is simply reiterating
a conviction held by earlier dispensationalists. John Walvoord, a member of the faculty
at Dallas Theological Seminary while Lindsey was a student, held very similar views to
Lindsey some twenty years earlier.
John Walvoord (1962)
|
Hal Lindsey (1980 & 1994)
|
In the present world scene there are many
indications pointing to the conclusion that
the end of the age may soon be upon
us... In this generation.
Never before in the history of the world
has there been a confluence of major
evidences of preparation for the end.306
|
We are the generation he was talking about. I
say this because, unmistakably, for the first
time in history, all the signs are coming
together at an accelerating rate.307 ...never
before in the history of the planet have events
and conditions so coincided as to set the
stage for this history-stopping event.308
|
In 1983 Lindsey was even more emphatic.
All the predicted signs are before us. No other generation has ever witnessed the
simultaneous coming together of these prophetic events. It is because of this that I
believe we are the generation that will see the Lord Jesus' return. World events viewed
through the grid of Bible prophecy indicate that we are rapidly moving toward the end of
history as we know it.309
Lindsey goes to great lengths to show that the 'signs' of his imminent return predicted by
Jesus, such as wars, earthquakes, famines, etc. are increasing dramatically.
There have been many great earthquakes throughout history, but, according to
surprisingly well-kept records, in the past they did not occur very frequently. The 20th
Century, however, has experienced an unprecedented increase in the frequency of
these calamities. In fact, the number of earthquakes per decade has roughly doubled in
each of the ten year periods since 1950... The 1970's experienced the largest increase
in the number of killer quakes known in history.310
Whilst Lindsey lists the major earthquakes which occurred in the 1970's, he offers no
evidence to substantiate his assertion that such disturbances are increasing
exponentially. In 1994 he quoted from a U.S. Geological Survey, which allegedly shows
the number of earthquakes increasing.311 Others remain unconvinced and quote
seismologists to that effect.312 Lindsey's apocalyptic claim that in 1982, the so-called
'Jupiter Effect' would cause 'history's greatest outbreak of earthquakes' did not
materialise.313
While other contemporary dispensationalists like Thomas Ice could insist,
'...there are no signs relating to the rapture. The fruit of date setting... has not been
gathered from the root called dispensationalism,'314
Lindsey and others have proved that date-setting sells books.315 So in a foreword to The
Coming Russian Invasion of Israel, by Thomas McCall and Zola Levitt, Lindsey claims, 'I
feel this book is a must for everyone who wants to know where we are on God's
time-table.'316
In 1994, with an eye on the Middle East, Lindsey was still insisting,
It is clear that the Bible can't be talking about any other time in history but today. No
man knows the day or hour this dramatic climax is going to occur. But there can be little
doubt that this is the generation. It could start tomorrow. We are on the brink of some
startling prophetic development. Never before has the world stage been set for the
climax of history as it is today. Pray for God's intervention. The 'times of the Gentiles'
are rapidly drawing to a close.317
In describing the Apostle John's description of Armageddon, Lindsey reminds his
readers in 1994, '...of this endtimes battle, which I believe is coming in this decade or
the next.'318
Lindsey appears able to hold in tension his declared agnosticism over the precise timing
of the Lord's return with the ability to predict the decade, always just a few years hence.
Since 1970, as each decade has passed, Lindsey has offered with each new book
another 'imminent' prediction when the old one has been superceded. For example, he
reflects,
I remember saying to myself a little over 13 years ago while writing the book, The 1980s:
Countdown to Armageddon, that if the Lord doesn't come by the mid 1990s, we'll be
able to see the end more clearly from there. And now that we're here, wow, can we see
it.319
In an 'Afterword' Lindsey looked on toward the celebrations being planned for the 31st
December 1999.
Just for the record: I'm not planning to attend. In fact looking at the state of the world
today, I wouldn't make any long-term earthly plans. We may be caught up to meet Christ
in the clouds, between now and then - just as I described in an earlier chapter. Could I
be wrong? Of course. The rapture may not occur between now and the year 2000. But
never before in the history of the planet have events and conditions so coincided as to
set the stage for this history-stopping event... I want to spend the final pages of this
book discussing what I expect to see happen in the hours and minutes we have left.320
In the same work, Lindsey made his most provocative claim, repeated word for word a
year later in 1995, concerning the imminent return of Christ.
Folks, the footsteps of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, can already be heard as He
approaches the doors of heaven to return.321
5. Lindseyism and Charges of Anti-Semitism
Assured of the veracity of his own interpretation of Biblical prophecy and contemporary
events, like Darby, Lindsey has sought to inoculate his followers from the criticisms
levelled against him.322
Peter... even warned that in 'the latter times' men posing as religious leaders would rise
from within the Church and deny, even ridicule, the prophetic word (II Peter 2:1-3;
3:1-18). If you pass this book around to many ministers you'll find how true this
prediction has become.323 No self-respecting scholar who looks at the world conditions
and the accelerating decline in Christian influence today is a 'postmillennialist.'324 I've
said it before and I will no doubt say it again: When the Rapture occurs, many churches
will not have to find a new pastor. That's how badly infected the modern church is with
deceiving spirits.325
○
○
●
Given his controversial reading of Scripture, Lindsey has attracted criticism particularly
from postmillennialists326 as well as from fellow dispensationalists who distance
themselves from what they term the popular 'apocalyptism' of 'Lindseyism'.327
It's obvious that Lindsey does nor represent 'orthodox' dispensationalism. But Lindsey's
brand of date-setting dispensationalism is the prevailing system. If Lindsey had not
intimated at dates, and used the regathering of unbelieving ethnic Israel to their land as
the basis for his speculations, The Late Great Planet Earth would not have been an
eschatological novelty. It was the predictions that sold the books. Therefore, many who
call themselves dispensationalists are really 'Lindseyite dispensationalists.'328
Lindsey's most controversial book is probably Road to Holocaust. In it, like Darby, he
makes eschatology a test of orthodoxy.329
He accuses those who refuse to accept dispensationalism's distinction between the
Church and Israel of actually encouraging anti-Semitism since they deny any future role
for the State of Israel within the purposes of God.
...the same error that founded the legacy of contempt for the Jews and ultimately led to
the Holocaust of Nazi Germany.330 The purpose of this book is to warn about a rapidly
expanding new movement in the Church that is subtly introducing the same errors that
eventually and inevitably led to centuries of atrocities against the Jews and culminated in
the Holocaust of the Third Reich... They are setting up a philosophical system that will
result in anti-Semitism.331 As I wrote in my book. The Road to Holocaust, the allegorizing
of prophetic passages and the unconditional covenants made to the believing Jewish
remnant, in which future national blessings are guaranteed to them, open the door to
Christian anti-Jewish attitudes.332
Given that Lindsey's form of pre-tribulational dispensationalism with its rigid distinction
between Israel and the Church, was unheard of prior to 1830, he is essentially
condemning all Christians before then as well as those since who hold contrary views of
the relationship of Israel to the Church. Lindsey is less than charitable toward those
affirming a covenantal post-millennial eschatology.
Man, this is one of the things that's dangerous. This is the most anti-Semitic movement
I've seen since Adolf Hitler.333
Critics argue that it is actually Lindsey who is perpetuating the legacy of racism and
anti-Semitism.
The ongoing attempt to identify the real Antichrist is still spawning racism, polarization,
and conflict. In a chapter of The Late Great Planet Earth entitled 'The Yellow Peril,'
Lindsey describes how 'vast hordes of the Orient' are likely to threaten our future... I am
convinced that the relentless and impassioned search for the Antichrist through the
years has produced a tragic amount of racism, religious hatred, and violence. It both
nourishes and feeds off the illusion that the world can best be understood in simple
black-and-white apocalyptic terms - the powers of Antichrist verses the powers of
God.334
Harold Brown traces the link between Marcion's heretical view of a radical discontinuity
between the Old and New Testaments and anti-Semitism.
One consequence of Marcion's rejection of the Old Testament was hostility to the Jews.
Both Roman Catholicism and Lutheranism which were much more critical of Old
Testament Law than the Reformed tradition are also more inclined to anti-Semitism. The
rejection of the authenticity and authority of the Old Testament by nineteenth-century
liberalism was followed by virulent anti-Semitism, especially in Germany.335
Following traditional dispensationalism, Lindsey does not believe the moral law
enshrined in the Ten Commandments has any abiding relevance for Christians.
The Law of Moses was specifically given only to the Nation of Israel. More than 150,000
of the first believers in Jesus as Messiah were all Israelites. When the early Jewish
believers first had to deal with the problem of Gentile converts, many were still confused
about the purpose of the Law. They tried to put the Gentiles under the Mosaic Law...
Israel's failure under the Law serves as an historical lesson to all of us today that religion
of all kinds blinds us to the truth.336
Brown's observations concerning the environment which gave rise to anti-Semitism
could therefore justifiably apply to dispensationalists such as Darby, Scofield337 and
Lindsey who deny the validity of the Old Testament moral law, such as the prohibition to
commit murder, on the Gentiles.
Dispensationalism creates an environment for any despot to do what he wants, even
murder, since Jewish law, the Old Testament was never intended for the Gentile
nations. Hitler murdered millions of Jews, but what law would Hal Lindsey use to judge
him? The Ten Commandments? But that's Jewish law.338
Donald Grey Barnhouse, another leading dispensationalist insisted, however,
It was a tragic hour when the reformation churches wrote the Ten Commandments into
their creeds and catechisms and sought to bring Gentile believers into bondage to
Jewish law, which was never intended either for the Gentile nations or for the church.339
Without the law of God, protection against anti-Semitism and other forms of racism are
removed. It is ironic that Lindsey should charge his critics with anti-Semitism while he
believes Israel will make a 'Treaty with Hell',340 that two-thirds of all Jews will die in the
battle of Armageddon, that the 200 mile valley from the Sea of Galilee to Eilat will flow
with blood several feet deep,341 and with,
...death on a massive scale... One-fourth of the world's population will be destroyed
within a matter of days... Nearly one billion people.342
Given his apocalyptic dispensational eschatology in which the 'church age' will fail just
like the previous five, Lindsey is intensely pessimistic about the Middle East peace
process and any possibility of co-existence between Jews and Arabs. He insists,
It is this kind of fierce pride and smoldering hatred against Israel that will keep the
Middle East a dangerous trouble spot. No Arab leader could hope to remain in power if
he were willing to make concessions in negotiating with Israel.343
Demar suggests a reason why Lindsey should charge his critics with anti-Semitism.
The futuristic and unwarranted literalistic interpretation of these passages forces the
dispensationalist to predict the greatest holocaust the world has ever seen, all in the
name of dispensational premillennialism! Is it any wonder that Hal Lindsey wants to paint
non-dispensational premillennialist (sic) as holocaust-orientated? He must cover up the
inevitable holocaust predicted by dispensationalism.344
Perceptive Jews are not surprisingly cynical of Christian Zionist support for the State of
Israel when it is realised that they largely share Lindsey's dispensational views on the
fate of the Jews, while Christians are safely 'raptured' to heaven to escape the mother of
all holocausts.
6. A Summary and Critique of Hal Lindsey's Christian Zionism
Lindsey's particular kind of reading of history, coloured by a literal exegesis of highly
selective biblical scriptures, is essentially polarised, dualistic, racist and confrontational.
He justifies the continued demonisation of Russia, China, Islam and the Arab nations; he
encourages the continued military and economic funding of Israel by the United States;
he urges Israelis to resist negotiating land for peace and instead, maintain their
apartheid policies, settling and incorporating the Occupied Territories within the State of
Israel; and he incites fundamentalist groups committed to destroying the Dome of the
Rock and rebuilding the Jewish Temple. In so doing Lindsey identifies unconditionally
with the political as well as religious far right both in the United States as well as in
Israel. Ironically, as the 'father' of 'armageddon theology' his attempts to defend Israel
and to refute anti-Semitism may actually be leading to the very holocaust he abhors but
repeatedly predicts.
Revised 11 April 1999
29,000 words
Stephen R. Sizer
1 Hal Lindsey, The 1980's: Countdown to Armageddon (New York, Bantam, 1981), p.
179.
2 Hal Lindsey, The Final Battle (Palos Verdes, California, Western Front, 1995), back
cover.
3 Hal Lindsey, The Apocalypse Code (Palos Verdes, California, Western Front, 1997),
back cover.
4 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 179
5 Hal Lindsey, The Late Great Planet Earth (London, Lakeland, 1970), p. 16.
6 Hal Lindsey, The Late Great Planet Earth (London, Lakeland, 1970); Satan is Alive
and Well on Planet Earth (London, Lakeland, 1973); There's A New World Coming, A
Prophetic Odyssey (Santa Ana, California, Vision House, 1973); The Liberation of
Planet Earth (London, Lakeland, 1974); The World's Final Hour: Evacuation or
Extinction? (1976); The 1980's: Countdown to Armageddon (New York, Bantam, 1981);
The Promise (Eugene, Oregon, Harvest House, 1982); The Rapture: Truth or
Consequences (New York, Bantam, 1983); The Terminal Generation (New York,
Bantam,1983); A Prophetical Walk Through the Holy Land (Eugene, Oregon, Harvest
House, 1983); Israel and the Last Days (Eugene, Oregon, Harvest House, 1983);
Combat Faith (1986); The Road to Holocaust (New York, Bantam, 1989); Planet
Earth-2000 A.D. (Palos Verdes, California, Western Front, 1994); The Final Battle
(Palos Verdes, California, Western Front, 1995); Planet Earth-2000 A.D. Rev. Edn.
(Palos Verdes, California, Western Front, 1996); Amazing Grace (Palos Verdes,
California, Western Front, 1996); Blood Moon (Palos Verdes, California, Western Front,
1996); The Apocalypse Code (Palos Verdes, California, Western Front, 1997); Planet
Earth: The Final Chapter (Beverley Hills, California, Western Front, 1998); International
Intelligence Briefing (Palos Verdes, California, HLM), monthly journal.
7 Lindsey's weekly radio programme is called 'Week in Review' and is aired by several
Christian radio stations.
http://%20http://www.audiocentral.com/rshows/weekinview/default.html
8 For more information see http://www.iib-report.com/
9 http://www.iib-report.com/
10 Lindsey, Road., p. 195. For other statistics see George Marsden, Understanding
Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism (Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1991) p. 77, and
Michael Lienesch, Redeeming America: Piety and Politics in the New Christian Right
(Chapel Hill, North Carolina, North Carolina Press, 1993), p. 311. See also Gary
Friesen, 'A Return Visit,' Moody Monthly (May 1988), p. 30; Lindsey's latest publisher,
Western Front, is more conservative referring to 'a dozen books with combined world
sales of more than 35 million.' Lindsey, The Final Battle (Palos Verdes, California,
Western Front, 1995), p. xiii & back cover.
11 National & International Religion Report (22 October 1990), p. 1, cited in Gary Demar,
Last Days Madness, Obsession of the Modern Church (Atlanta, Georgia, American
Vision, 1997), p. 196.
12 J. N. Darby, "Evidence from Scripture for the passing away of the present
dispensations' Collected Writings., Prophetic I, Vol II. p. 108.
13 C. I. Scofield, What do the Prophets Say? (Philadelphia, The Sunday School Times
Co, 1918), pp. 18-19.
14 Lindsey, Planet., Rev. Edn. p. 3
15 Lindsey, Final., p. xiii
16 Lindsey, Apocalypse., back cover.
17 Lindsey, Planet Earth The Final Chapter, back cover.
18 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 37. Compare with Darby, Collected Writings., Prophetic I,
Vol. II. pp. 6-7, 108.
19 Lindsey, Late., p. 184.
20 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 15-16.
21 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 7.
22 Lindsey, Planet., p. 3.
23 Hal Lindsey, The Late Great Planet Earth (London, Lakeland, 1970); The 1980's:
Countdown to Armageddon (New York, Bantam, 1981); Planet Earth-2000 A.D. (Palos
Verdes, California, Western Front, 1994); Earth-2000 A.D. Rev. Edn. (Palos Verdes,
California, Western Front, 1996); Planet Earth: The Final Chapter (Beverley Hills,
California, Western Front, 1998).
24 Lindsey, Planet., p. 171.
25 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 162, 164.
26 Lindsey, Planet., p. 156.
27 Lindsey, Planet., p. 160.
28 Lindsey, Planet., p. 149.
29 Lindsey, Planet., p. 310.
30 Lindsey, Planet., p. 232.
31 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 232, 235.
32 Lindsey, Planet., p. 310.
33 Lindsey, Final., p. 5.
34 Lindsey, Final., p. 93.
35 Lindsey, Final., p. 103.
36 Lindsey, Final., p. 108.
37 Lindsey, Final., p. 118.
38 Lindsey, Final., p. 116.
39 Lindsey, Final., p. 163.
40 Lindsey, Final., p. 165.
41 Lindsey, Final., pp. 260-261.
42 Lindsey, Final., p. 116.
43 Lindsey, Final., p. 261. In his last book, Planet Earth, The Final Chapter, the page
numbers in the index do not correspond to the chapters in the book.
44 Lindsey, Planet., p. 32.
45 Wagner, Beyond., p. 5.
46 Wagner, Beyond., p. 4.
47 Hal Lindsey, The Road to Holocaust (New York, Bantam, 1989), pp. 7-8.
48 Chapter 2. Early Christian Attitudes Towards the Jews.
49 J. N. D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrine, rev. ed. (San Francisco, Harper & Row, 1978),
pp. 69-75.
50 Gary DeMar and Peter J. Leithart, The Legacy of Hatred Continues: A response to
Hal Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust (Tyler, Texas, Institute for Christian Economics,
1989), p. 34. See also E. A. Martens, Plot and Purpose in the Old Testament.
(Leicester, IVP, 1981); Graeme Goldsworthy, Gospel and Kingdom, A Christian
Interpretation of the Old Testament, (Exeter, Paternoster, 1981); According to Plan, The
Unfolding Revelation of God in the Bible, (Leicester, IVP, 1991).
51 DeMar and Leithart, Legacy., p. 37.
52 Lindsey, Israel., pp. 32-33. This chapter is reused heavily in Apocalypse Code, pp.
30-44.
53 Lindsey, There's., p. 8. The idea that the locusts mentioned in Revelation 9 are Cobra
helicopters is raised again on page 141.
54
Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 36.
55 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 42.
56 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 72.
57 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 247.
58 Lindsey, Apocalypse., pp. 110-111.
59 J. N. Darby, 'The Hopes.,' The Collected Writings, Prophetic I, Vol. II, p. 380; C. I.
Scofield, Scofield Reference Bible, fn. 1, p. 883.
60 Lindsey, Final., p. 2.
61 Lindsey, Final., pp. 140, 142.
62 Lindsey, Final., p. 183.
63 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 213.
64 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 255.
65 Lindsey, Road., p. 176.
66 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 78.
67 Lindsey, Planet Earth, The Final Chapter, pp. 182-183.
68 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 65.
69 Lindsey, Road., pp. 143-144.
70 Lindsey, Late., pp. 17-18.
71 Lindsey, There's., Back page.
72 Lindsey, Planet., p. 4.
73 C. Van der Waal, Hal Lindsey and Biblical Prophecy (Neerlandia, Alberta, Canada,
Inheritance Publications, 1991), p. 51.
74 Lindsey, Late., p. 180. See also Demar, Last., p. 197.
75 Lindsey, There's., p. 12.
76 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 11.
77 Lindsey, There's., p. 7.
78 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 7.
79 Lindsey, Planet., Rev. Edn. p. 2.
80 Lindsey, Planet Earth, The Final Chapter, p. 227.
81 C. Van der Waal, Hal Lindsey and Biblical Prophecy (Neerlandia, Alberta, Canada,
Inheritance Publications, 1991), p. 51.
82 Van der Waal, Hal., p. 51.
83 Van der Waal, Hal., p. 52, 53.
84 Lindsey, Late., p. 18.
85 Lindsey, Late., back cover.
86 Lindsey, Apocalypse., back cover.
87 Van der Waal, Hal., p. 54.
88 Van der Waal, Hal., p. 55.
89 Van der Waal, Hal., p. 53.
90 Lindsey, Planet., p. 191.
91 Lindsey, Planet., p. 4.
92 Lindsey, Planet., back cover; Final., back cover;
93 Lindsey, Planet., p. 5. These predictions included the rise of ecumenism, the
persecution of Christians, a one-world religion, plans to rebuild the Jewish Temple,
European unification, the decline of US influence in the world, Israeli prosperity, papal
influence, global catastrophes, and increases in crime, riots, unemployment, poverty,
illiteracy, etc. Lindsey does not, however, footnote where these predictions were made
in The Late Great Planet Earth.
94 Lindsey, Final., back cover.
95 Hal Lindsey, The 1980's: Countdown to Armageddon (New York, Bantam, 1981);
Israel and the Last Days (Eugene, Oregon, Harvest House, 1983); The Road to
Holocaust (New York, Bantam, 1989); The Final Battle (Palos Verdes, California,
Western Front, 1995); Planet Earth-2000, Will Man Survive? Rev. Edn. (Palos Verdes,
California, Western Front, 1996); The Apocalypse Code (Palos Verdes, California,
Western Front, 1997).
96 Lindsey, 1980's., back cover.
97 Van der Waal, Hal., p. 48.
98 C. I. Scofield, What Do The Prophets Say? (Philadelphia, The Sunday School Times
Co., 1918), pp. 18-19. Cited in Canfield, Incredible., pp. 274-275.
99 Lindsey, Late., pp. 96-97.
100 Lindsey, Final., front cover.
101 Lindsey, Late., p. 66.
102 Lindsey, Late., pp. 155, 159.
103 Lindsey, Israel., pp. 31-48.
104 Lindsey, Final., p. xxi.
105 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 41.
106 Lindsey, Road., p. 195.
107 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 142-143.
108 Hal Lindsey, International Intelligence Briefing, 29th October 1998. His underlining.
http://www.iib-report.com/pages/transcripts/10.29.98/oct29.htm
109 Lindsey, Planet., p. 182.
110 Lindsey, Planet Earth, The Final Chapter. pp.32-34.
111 Lindsey, There's., p. 115
112 Lindsey, Road., p. 197.
113 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 45.
114 Lindsey, Road., p. 127.
115 Lindsey, Road., p. 208.
116 Lindsey, Road., pp. 7-8; Final., pp. 231, 255-7.
117 Lindsey, Final., p. 122.
118 Lindsey, Road., p. 208.
119 E. Schuyler English, A Companion to the New Scofield Reference Bible (New York,
Oxford University Press, 1972), p. 135.
120 Hal Lindsey, The Promise (Eastbourne, Kingsway, 1983), pp. 187-191.
121 Lindsey, Israel., pp. 18-19.
122 Cited in 'The Church and Israel' by Michael Horton, Modern Reformation (May/June
1994), p. 1.
123 Lindsey, Planet., p. 133.
124 Lindsey, Late., p. 43.
125 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 12
126 See Moshe Greenberg, Ezekiel 21-37 Anchor Bible Commentary (New York,
Doubleday, 1997); Walther Zimmerli, Ezekiel 25-48, Hermeneia Series (Philadelphia,
Fortress, 1979); John B. Taylor, Ezekiel (Leicester, IVP, 1969), pp. 234-250.
127 Lindsey, Late., p. 51.
128 Lindsey, Road., p. 180.
129 Lindsey, Late., p. 53.
130 Lindsey, Israel., p. 19; Lindsey, 1980's., p. 11.
131 Lindsey, Late., p. 45.
132 Lindsey, Road., p. 186.
133 Lindsey, Road., p. 208.
134 Lindsey, Late., p. 48. The idea of Jewish evangelists replacing the Church during the
Tribulation offering people a second opportunity to believe in Jesus is also taught in
There's a New World Coming, pp. 121ff.
135 Lindsey, Road., pp. 134-135, 143.
136 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 121.
137 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 98.
138 Leon Uris, Exodus (New York, Bantam, 1958); Steve Lightle, Exodus II (Chepstow,
Bridge, 1983); Tom Hess, Let My People Go (Charlotte, Morning Star, 1996); Gustav
Scheller, Operation Exodus, Prophecy Being Fulfilled (London, Sovereign World, 1998).
139 Lindsey, Final., p. 122.
140 Lindsey, Final., p. 262.
141 Lindsey, Final., p. 42.
142 Lindsey, Planet., p. 146. See also page 174.
143 Lindsey, Planet., p. 243.
144 Hal Lindsey, International Intelligence Briefing, 29th October 1998.
145 Lindsey, Planet., p. 149.
146 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 150-151.
147 Lindsey, Final., pp. 117, 127-128.
148 Lindsey, Israel., p. 20.
149 Hal Lindsey, International Intelligence Briefing, 29th October 1998.
150 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 162, 164.
151 Lindsey, Final., p. 95.
152 Lindsey, Late., p. 54.
153 Lindsey, Late., p. 55.
154 Lindsey, Planet., p. 247.
155 Lindsey, Planet., p. 262.
156 Lindsey, Israel., p. 165.
157 Lindsey, Planet., p. 156, Final., p. 103.
158 Lindsey, Late., pp. 56-58.
159
Lindsey, There's., p. 160. 'This site is second only to Mecca in sacredness to the
millions of Moslems in the world.'
160 Lindsey, Israel., p. 23.
161 Lindsey, Planet., p. 158.
162 Lindsey, There's., p. 160.
163 Lindsey, Late., p. 57.
164 Lindsey, There's., p. 164
165 Lindsey, There's., p. 163.
166 Lindsey, Israel., p. 29.
167 Lindsey, Israel., p. 30.
168 Lindsey, Planet., p. 160.
169 Ross Dunn, 'Israel holds disciples of 'Second Coming' cult' Times, 4 January 1999, p.
12.
170 Lindsey, Planet., p. 163.
171 Lindsey, Planet., p. 163.
172 Lindsey, Planet., p. 156.
173 Lindsey, Late., pp. 56-58.
174 Eusebius Pamphilus, 'Predictions of Christ' The Ecclesiastical History of Eusebius
Pamphilus (Grand Rapids, Baker Book House, 1988), 3:7, 92-94.
175 Matthew 24:34
176 Lindsey, Late., p. 54.
177 Lindsey, Final, p. 104.
178 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 13.
179 Lindsey, Late., p. 157.
180 Arno C. Gaebelein, Our Hope XXIII (August 1916), 110. Cited in Dwight Wilson,
Armageddon Now! The Premillennial Response to Russia and Israel Since 1917 (Tyler,
Texas, Institute for Christian Economics, [1977], 1991), p. 36.
181 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 13.
182 Lindsey, Late., p. 160.
183 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 68.
184 Lindsey, Planet., p. 216.
185 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 69.
186 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 70-74.
187 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 81.
188 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 86.
189 Lindsey, Planet., p. 190.
190 Lindsey, Final., p. 4.
191 Lindsey, Chapter 1 of The Final Battle, (Palos Verdes, California, Western Front,
1995), is entitled "The New Islamic Global Threat". p. 1.
192 Lindsey, Late., p. 160.
193 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 153.
194 Lindsey, 1980's., pp. 68, 85-86, 144.
195 Lindsey, Planet., p. 171.
196 Lindsey, Planet Earth The Final Chapter, p. 71.
197 Lindsey, Israel., pp. 38-39.
198 Lindsey, Final., p. 52.
199 Lindsey, Final., p. 260.
200 Lindsey, Planet Earth The Final Chapter, p. 264.
201 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 45.
202 Lindsey, Israel., p. 33.
203 Lindsey, Israel., pp. 38.
204 Lindsey, Planet., p. 175.
205 Lindsey, Planet., p. 310.
206 Lindsey, Planet., p. 256.
207 Lindsey, Planet., p. 151.
208 Lindsey, Final., p. 42.
209 Lindsey, Final., pp. 4-5.
210 Lindsey, Israel., p. 38.
211 Lindsey, Final., pp. 2-3.
212 Lindsey, Final., p. 93.
213 Lindsey, Final., p. 256.
214 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 79.
215 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 182.
216 Lindsey, Planet., p. 172.
217 Edward Said, Orientalism. pp. 47-48.
218 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 45.
219 Lindsey, There's., p. 185.
220 Lindsey, Late., p. 184.
221 Lindsey, Planet., p. 15.
222 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 107.
223 Lindsey, 1980's., pp. 149, 154.
224
Lindsey, 1980's., p. 132.
225 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 158.
226 Lindsey, Final., p. 111.
227 Lindsey, Final., p. 225.
228 Lindsey, Final., p. 228.
229 Lindsey, International Intelligence Briefing, 4th November 1998.
230 Lindsey, Final., p. 114.
231 Lindsey, Final., p. 215.
232 Lindsey, Final., pp. 227, 231, 232.
233 Lindsey, Late., p. 96.
234 Lindsey, There's., p. 194.
235 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 15.
236 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 104.
237 Lindsey, Planet., p. 223.
238 Lindsey, Final., p. 153.
239 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 243-244.
240 Lindsey, Planet., p. 255.
241 Lindsey, Final., pp. back cover, xv.
242 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 254.
243 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 266.
244 Lindsey, Late., pp. 155-159
245 Lindsey, Israel., pp.37-44.
246 Lindsey, Final., p. xix.
247 Lindsey, Late., p. 156.
248 Lindsey, Late., p. 156.
249 Lindsey, Israel., p. 19.
250 Lindsey, Planet., p. 156.
251 Lindsey, Planet., p. 155.
252 Lindsey, Planet., p. 216.
253 Lindsey, Final., p. xix.
254 Lindsey, Late., p. 157.
255 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 13.
256 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 47.
257 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 63.
258 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 68.
259 National Review (19 November 1990) 49, cited in Demar, Last., p. 200.
260 'Artswatch,' World (2 March 1991), 15, quoted in Gary Demar, Last Days Madness,
Obsession of the Modern Church (Atlanta, Georgia, American Vision, 1997), p. 107.
261 Lindsey, Final., p. 114.
262 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 37.
263 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 39.
264 Lindsey, Planet., p. 247.
265 Lindsey, Final., p. 128.
266 Lindsey, Late., p. 160.
267 Lindsey, Late., p. 71.
268 Lindsey, There's., p. 215.
269 Lindsey, Final, pp. 251-252.
270 Lindsey, Planet Earth: The Final Chapter, p. 284.
271 Lindsey, There's., p. 230.
272 Lindsey, There's., p. 237.
273 Lindsey, There's., p. 238.
274 Lindsey, Planet., p. 264.
275 Lindsey, Late., p. 44.
276 Lindsey, Late., p. 136.
277 Lindsey, Late., pp. 48, 165, 167.
278 Lindsey, There's., p. 121.
279 Lindsey, There's., p. 238.
280 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 45.
281 Lindsey, Israel., pp. 45-46.
282 Lindsey, Planet., p. 264.
283 Lindsey, Final., p. 184.
284 Lindsey, Final., pp. 255-7.
285 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 237.
286 Lindsey, Apocalypse., p. 118.
287 Edward Irving, The Last Days A Discourse on the Evil Character of These Our
Times, Proving Them to be The 'Perilous Times' and the 'Last Days' (London, James
Nisbit, 1850), pp. 10-22.
288 Hal Lindsey, The 1980's: Countdown to Armageddon (New York, Bantam, 1982),
back cover.
289 Hal Lindsey, The 1980's: Countdown to Armageddon (Basingstoke, Lakeland, 1983),
back cover.
290 Lindsey, Planet., p. 151.
291 Lindsey, Late., p. 54.
292 Lindsey, 1980's., back page.
293 A classic example was, Edgar Whisenant, who predicted the return of Christ some
time between 11-13 September 1988 in his book, 88 Reasons Why the Rapture Will Be
in 1988 (Nashville, World Bible Society, 1988), pp. 3, 36, 56, which sold 2 million copies.
See also Tom Sine, Cease Fire (Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1995), p. 57, and Richard
Kyle, The Last Days are Here Again (Grand Rapids, Baker, 1998) p. 121.
294 Lindsey, Planet., p. 3.
295 Lindsey, Planet., p. 6.
296 Lindsey, Planet., p. 144.
297 Lindsey, Planet., p. 144.
298 Lindsey, Final., p. 263.
299 Lindsey, Planet Earth, The Final Chapter (Beverly Hills, Western Front, 1998), p. 76.
300 David Hill, The Gospel of Matthew (London, Oliphants, 1972), pp. 323-324; David E.
Garland, Reading Matthew, a Literary and Theological Commentary on the First Gospel
(London, SPCK, 1993), pp. 234-238; R.T. France, Matthew, Evangelist & Teacher
(Exeter, Paternoster, 1989), 315.
301 Lindsey, Late., p. 113.
302 Lindsey, 1980's., pp. 15, 106.
303 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 109.
304 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 232, 235.
305 Lindsey, Final., p. xv.
306 John Walvoord, Israel in Prophecy (Grand Rapids, Zondervan, 1962), p. 129.
307 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 162.
308 Lindsey, Planet., p. 306.
309 Lindsey, Israel., p. 47.
310 Lindsey, 1980's., pp. 29-30.
311 Lindsey, Planet., pp. 83-84.
312 Demar, Last., p. 331. See also http://www.bible.ca/pre-earthquakes-history-data.htm
313 Lindsey, 1980's., p. 29.
314 Thomas D. Ice, 'Dispensationalism, Date-Setting and Distortion,' Biblical Perspectives
(September/October, 1988), p. 1.
315 Gary DeMar & Peter J. Leithart, The Legacy of Hatred Continues, A Response to Hal
Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust, (Tyler, Texas, Institute for Christian Economics,
1989), p. 31.
316 Cited in C. Van der Waal, Hal Lindsey and Biblical Prophecy (Neerlandia, Alberta,
Canada, Inheritance Publications, 1991), p. 14.
317 Lindsey, Planet., p. 151.
318 Lindsey, Planet., p. 213.
319 Lindsey, Planet., p. 164.
320 Lindsey, Planet., p. 306.
321 Lindsey, Planet., p. 160, Final., p. 108.
322 Roy Coad, A History of the Brethren Movement (Exeter, Paternoster, 1968), p. 135.
323 Lindsey, Late., p. 67.
324 Lindsey, Late., p. 176.
325 Lindsey, Planet., p. 29.
326 Samuele Bacciochi, Hal Lindsey's Prophetic Jigsaw Puzzle, Five Predictions That
Failed (Berrien Springs, Biblical Perspectives); Gary DeMar & Peter J. Leithart, The
Legacy of Hatred Continues, A Response to Hal Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust,
(Tyler, Texas, Institute for Christian Economics, 1989); Kenneth Gentry,
'Dispensationalism's Achilles' Head: Comments on Hal Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust'
Dispensationalism in Transition, Institute of Christian Economics, Vol II, No. 8 & 9, 1989;
Steve Schlissel & David Brown, Hal Lindsey and the Restoration of the Jews
(Edmonton, Alberta, Still Waters Revival Books, 1990); Curtis Crenshaw, a review of
Steve Schlissel & David Brown, Hal Lindsey and the Restoration of the Jews
(Edmonton, Alberta, Still Waters Revival Books, 1990) Contra Mundum No. 3, Spring
1992.; C. Van der Waal, Hal Lindsey and Biblical Prophecy, (Neerlandia, Alberta,
Inheritance Publications, 1991); Stephen O'Leary, Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of
Millennial Rhetoric (Oxford, Oxford University Press); John Mann, a review of Stephen
O'Leary's, Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of Millennial Rhetoric (Oxford, Oxford
University Press), http://homepages.anglianet.co.uk/johnm/apoc.html . See also
Dispensationalism in Transition (Institute of Christian Economics, Tyler, Texas); Center
for the Refutation of Dispensational Falsehoods (CRDF) web site:
http://village.ios.com/~dougg/biblstud/crdf/crdf.htm; ; Contra Mundum web site:
http://www.wavefront.com/~contra_M/cm/reviews.cm03_rev_jewish.html ;
327 Blaising & Bock, Dispensationalism., pp. 14-15.
328 Gary DeMar and Peter J. Leithart, The Legacy of Hatred Continues: A response to
Hal Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust (Tyler, Texas, Institute for Christian Economics,
1989), p. 17.
329 J. N. Darby, 'The Rapture of the Saints and the Character of the Jewish Remnant,'
Collected Writings, Prophetic. IV, Vol. II, p. 154.
330 Lindsey, Road., back page. Refuted by Gary DeMar and Peter J. Leithart, The
Legacy of Hatred Continues: A Response to Hal Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust (Fort
Worth, Dominion Press, 1989)
331 Lindsey, Road., p. 3
332 Lindsey, Final., p. 36.
333 Hal Lindsey, The Dominion Theology Heresy, Tape 217, 1987, quoted in DeMar &
Leithart, Legacy., p. viii.
334 Tom Sine, Cease Fire: Searching for Sanity in America's Culture Wars (Grand
Rapids, Eerdmans, 1995), p. 58.
335 Harold O. J. Brown, Heresies: The Image of Christ in the Mirror of Heresy and
Orthodoxy from the Apostles to the Present (Garden City, New York, Doubleday, 1984),
p. 455, note 38.
336 Lindsey, Road., pp. 153-154. Lindsey's disdain for the Mosaic Law may have
contributory in his justification in divorcing not just one wife but two and his marrying a
third, Kim, 25 years his junior.
http://www.rapidnet.com/~jbeard/bdm/exposes/lindsey/lindsey.htm
337 Scofield, Scofield Reference Bible., fn. 1, p. 20, p. 989.
338 Gary DeMar and Peter J. Leithart, Legacy., p. 25.
339 S. Lewis Johnson, 'The Paralaysis of Legalism' Bibliotheca Sacra (April/June 1963),
p. 109. Cited in Gary DeMar and Peter J. Leithart, The Legacy., p. 24.
340 Lindsey, Late., p. 151.
341 Hal Lindsey, The Final Battle (Palos Verdes, Western Front, 1995), pp. 250-252;
Israel and the Last Days (Eugene, Oregon, Harvest House, 1983), pp. 20-30.
342 Hal Lindsey, There's a New World Coming (New York, Bantam Books, 1984, p. 90.
343 Lindsey, Late., p. 76.
344 Gary DeMar and Peter J. Leithart, The Legacy of Hatred Continues: A response to
Hal Lindsey's The Road to Holocaust (Tyler, Texas, Institute for Christian Economics,
1989), p. 27.