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Hurricanes, tsunamis, earthquakes, and the threat of a deadly flu
pandemic: Are global events unfolding something bigger?©
RaidersNewsNetwork.com PERMISSION TO USE FREELY GRANTED
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“And there shall be signs in the sun, and in
the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with
perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring” (Like
21:25).
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Several years of epic events have witnessed a growing
number of the world’s population wondering if something prophetic is
transpiring.
First came 9/11 and the beginning of the war on
terror. Then a tsunami in Asia killed approximately 250,000 people. Hurricanes
Katrina, Wilma, and an earthquake In South Asia followed, which claimed tens of
thousands more lives. 2006 witnessed leaders of countries referencing terms like
“Apocalypse” and “Armageddon” to describe the uneasy times. 2007 has started out
with record snowfalls in parts of the US, the national weather service is
predicting even more blizzards, and experts warn that a deadly avian flu virus
could pass over to the human population at any time in a full-blown pandemic,
potentially bringing global markets to their knees.
It’s enough to make anybody wonder what in the world
is going on.
For many folk, these are the signs of the End
Times.
Over at RaptureReady.com, a popular website that serves as a kind of
Dow Jones Industrial Average of end time activity, the “Rapture Index” is
hovering at 160, a rating meant to indicate when loyal Christians will disappear
from earth just before the beginning of the Great Tribulation. The website keeps
tally of a wide variety of world events based on reflection to Bible prophecy,
and anything above a score of 145 means “Fasten your seatbelt” for departure.
The website’s owner, Terry James, has a new book called The Rapture Dialogues that is endorsed by Dr. Tim LaHaye,
co-author of the Left Behind series of books. Rapture Dialogues
envisions an imminent “great deception” in which “aliens” deceive the world
following the Rapture of the Church. A sequel to the book is planned for later
this year.
Another
book due out this month purports to explain current global events as the
fulfillment of ancient prophecy. Published by Anomalos Publishing, Apocalypse
Soon: The Beginning of the End documents recent history in light of the
books of Revelation, Ezekiel, and Daniel, and concludes that the Four Horsemen
of the Apocalypse have started their destructive ride. The book is already the
subject of two made for television documentaries.
So close is the correlation between recent events and
end times prophecy, that even President George W. Bush was asked last year
following a speech on the War on Terror whether he believed the war in Iraq and
the rise of terrorism were signs of the Apocalypse. Bush said he hadn’t thought
of it that way, but author Bob Woodward noted in his book Bush at War,
that just three days after 9/11, the president during the National Day of Prayer
and Remembrance at the National Cathedral in Washington seemed to act as if he
had found himself within a fantastic cosmic scheme, declaring that the nation’s
responsibility to history was already clear: “to answer these attacks and rid
the world of evil” (1).
By taking up the language of “good vs. evil,”
Woodward said, the president was “casting his vision and that of the country in
the grand vision of God’s master plan” (2).
According to Woodward, the prophetic context for war in the very land
associated with future Armageddon (and against Saddam Hussein, no less, the man
who claimed to be the reincarnated Nebuchadnezzar) held for Bush the Manichean
language necessary to play out a “divine mission” while earning him admiration
from certain supporters who saw the reconstruction efforts of Babylon under
Saddam Hussein — followed by the War on Terror — as signs pointing to the
Apocalypse.
Biblical scholar Bruce Lincoln’s examination of a
speech delivered by Bush to the nation on October 7, 2001, announcing the U.S.
attack on Afghanistan (3) produced redundant references from Apocalyptic books
of the Bible concerning the End Times. Lincoln’s research seemed to support
Woodward’s claims, that the president’s word craft was a strategy “of double
coding” to secretly appeal to people who saw Bush as a devout Christian standing
up to the enemies of God in an unfolding event in the Middle East, which they
believed was foretold in the books of Revelation, Isaiah, et al.
Of course George W. was not the first American
president to use language associated with end times prophecy. Who can forget
Ronald Reagan’s view of the Soviet Union as the “Evil Empire” and his feeling
that war in the Middle East might draw “Gog” into nuclear war and fulfill
biblical prophecy. In his 1984 debate with Walter Mondale, Reagan admitted, “No
one knows whether those prophecies mean that Armageddon is a thousand years away
or the day after tomorrow.”
Democrats too have been known to employ language that
could be seen as “coded” to appeal to the beliefs of devout persons or patriots.
When Rep. Nancy Pelosi on January 4, 2007 assumed her roll as speaker of the
House at the opening of the 110th Congress, she stated that the founding fathers
were so confident in “the America they were advancing, they put on the seal, the
great seal of the United States, ‘novus ordo seclorum’—a new order for the
centuries.”
The new speaker did not go into detail as to why the phrase “Novus Ordo
Seclorum” was important dialectic during the momentous changeover of the control
of congress. Nor did she explain why “Novus Ordo Seclorum” exists beneath the
unfinished pyramid and the All Seeing Eye in the Great Seal of the United
States. Her reference may have been a simple coincidence, but the origins of the
motto “Novus Ordo Seclorum” and the use of it in this historic speech was
interesting in light of possible prophetic events happening around the
world.
The term “Novus Ordo Seclorum” (A New Order of the Ages) was adapted by
Charles Thomson in 1782 when he was designing the Great Seal of the United
States. According to the official record, Thomson created the phrase from
inspiration he found in a line in Virgil’s Eclogue IV: “Magnus ab integro
seclorum nascitur ordo” [Virgil’s Eclogue IV (line 5)], the interpretation of
the original Latin being, “and the majestic roll of circling centuries begins
anew.”
Ironically, Christians since the middle ages have held that the Cumaean Sibyl
of Virgil’s Ecologue IV prophesied the birth of Jesus Christ and that it was
this arrival of the Savior that gave rise to “the majestic roll of circling
centuries begins anew,” or New Order of the Ages. Virgil himself was believed to
be a prophet in this regard, and that is why Dante Alighieri selected him as his
guide through the underworld in The Divine Comedy. The Cumaean Sibyl is also
prominently featured alongside the Old Testament prophets in Michelangelo’s
paintings in the Sistine Chapel. Some say this fact played a role in Thomson’s
“inspiration” for “Novus Ordo Seclorum” taken from Virgil’s Ecologue
IV.
Yet upon reading Virgil’s text, the divine son that
comes of the Sibyl’s prophecy is a savior unknown to Biblical theology. “He” is
to be spawned of “a new breed of men sent down from heaven” who receive “the
life of gods, and see Heroes with gods commingling.” According to the Sibyl’s
prediction, this “messiah” would be the son of Jupiter and come when the Roman
god Saturn returned to reign over the earth in a new golden age (the Novus Ordo
Seclorum), when Apollo rises again through mystical “life” power given to him
from the gods.
From the beginning of the poem we read (4):
“Now the last age by Cumae’s Sibyl sung Has
come and gone, and the majestic roll Of circling centuries begins anew:
Justice returns, returns old Saturn’s reign, With a new breed of men sent down
from heaven. Only do thou, at the boy’s birth in whom The iron shall cease,
the golden race arise, Befriend him, chaste Lucina; ’tis thine own Apollo
reigns. …
“He shall receive the life of gods, and see Heroes with gods commingling,
and himself Be seen of them, and with his father’s worth Reign o’er a
world…
“Assume thy greatness, for the time draws nigh, Dear child of gods, great
progeny of Jove! See how it totters- the world’s orbed might, Earth, and wide
ocean, and the vault profound, All, see, enraptured of the coming time! Ah!
might such length of days to me be given, And breath suffice me to rehearse
thy deeds, Nor Thracian Orpheus should out-sing me then, Nor Linus, though his
mother this, and that His sire should aid- Orpheus Calliope, And Linus fair
Apollo. Nay, though Pan, With Arcady for judge, my claim contest, With Arcady
for judge great Pan himself Should own him foiled, and from the field retire.
Begin to greet thy mother with a smile, O baby-boy! ten months of weariness
For thee she bore: O baby-boy, begin! For him, on whom his parents have not
smiled, Gods deem not worthy of their board or
bed.”
Therefore according to the Sibyl, the New Order of
the Ages occurs when a special “son” is born on earth, a new messiah who comes
of “a new breed of men sent down from heaven” when “heroes” and “gods” are
blended together. This sounds eerily similar to what the Watchers did during the
creation of Nephilim; to what scientists are doing this century through the
creation of transgenic human-animal chimeras, and to what the Bible actually
describes as the Antichrist being the “son” of perdition” (2 Th 2:3,
Apoleia, from which we make Apollyon, the demon destroyer).
Note the similarity of the names Apollo and Apollyon.
Patrick Heron believes the pagan Sibyl may actually
have pointed to a false Christ who appears during the end times Apocalypse, and
that the Novus Ordo Seclorum prophecy of a coming special “son” who leads
mankind to a New World Order could be fulfilled anytime. According to scripture,
Heron says, the near future will produce a man of superior intelligence, wit,
charm, and diplomacy who will emerge on the world scene as a savior. He will
seemingly possess transcendent wisdom that enables him to solve problems and to
offer solutions to many of today’s most perplexing issues. One of his most
important accomplishments at the very outset will be to broker a peace treaty
between the Jews and Palestinians. He will also lead the charge in rebuilding
the long awaited Jewish Temple. This is especially interesting given that, just
this month, an Israeli archaeologist and Hebrew professor claims to have
pinpointed the exact location of the original Jewish Temple, a potentially
important step toward the fulfillment of the Temple reconstruction prophecy.
According to some, this Antichrist will appear at first to be a man of
distinguished character, but will ultimately become “a king of fierce
countenance” (Dan. 8:23). With imperious decree he will facilitate a one-world
government, a universal religion, and global socialism. Those who refuse his New
World Order will inevitably be imprisoned or destroyed, until at last he exalts
himself “above all that is called God, or that is worshiped, so that he, as God,
sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God” (2 Thess.
2:4).
When asked why he believes prophetic signs at this
point in history could be pointing to the Antichrist and the end of times,
Patrick Heron says, “I believe God is warning people, giving them one last
chance to believe before the judgments of God, as revealed in the Book of
Revelation, begin to fall on earth.”
Grizzly Adams Productions, a well known producer of
family-friendly television shows who has created original programming for
Discovery, PAX, NBC, CBS, the Learning Channel and other
networks, found the insights presented in Heron’s new book, Apocalypse
Soon: The Beginning of the End engaging enough that in 2006 they acquired
the worldwide television and DVD rights to the work. Their first documentary
based on the book was titled, “End
Times: How Close Are We” and was broadcast nationwide during sweeps weeks in
2006. The show connected with viewers, and the DVD has become the all-time
bestseller at such places as WorldNetDaily.com. A second documentary based
on the book — “Apocalypse
and the End Times” — aired in October and has done equally well.
“Throughout human history, cultures from the Hopi
Indians to biblical prophets have shared stories about the end of the world,”
notes David W. Balsiger, a producer on the “Apocalypse and the End Times”
special. “We sought to examine these legends and look to modern scientific
findings to get to the truth behind current events and these ancient
stories.”
| Even the mainstream
press picked up the “Apocalypse” theme in 2006. CNN, MSNBC, The Washington
Times, BBC and others ran feature stories on the US presence in the Middle
East, focusing on the possibility that it signaled the End Times
Armageddon spoken of in scripture. CNN devoted several entire news
segments with Paula Zahn concerning the possibility that the biblical
Apocalypse might actually be here (Watch Media
Matters Video). |
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Paula Zahn
asks, “Is it the end?” (Video) |
More recently, however, language of the Apocalypse
was raised again when the Doomsday Clock was pushed forward at The Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists by two minutes, marking 11:55 before midnight, five
minutes before the figurative end of civilization.
Like Judaism and Christianity, Shiite Islam also
gives credence to an end times event involving the reappearance of the Twelfth
Imam. Devout believers in Iran assume the reappearance of the Twelfth Imam will
occur when he emerges from a well at the Jamkaran mosque. Iran’s president,
Ahmadinejad gave $17 million of government funds to support the shrine and has
said that the mission of the Islamic Revolution is to pave the way for the
coming of the Twelfth Imam. Some believe Iran is on the verge of obtaining
nuclear weapons and that Ahmadinejad has little inhibition about using them to
start Armageddon. President Bush has reaffirmed his commitment to keeping Iran
from possessing nuclear weapons, and he has not ruled out using force to
accomplish this goal. Students of prophecy see this as potentially more than
saber rattling between the two countries. They believe it could trigger the
final Apocalypse.
As for Dr. Heron, he begins in Apocalypse
Soon by focusing on scientific evidence showing a sharp increase in
bizarre weather patterns including a 500 percent increase in tornadoes last
year, record-setting earthquake activity, the threat of a worldwide bird flu
pandemic, growing famine, disease, and the exponentially higher risk of all-out
nuclear war involving lands identified in the Bible as central to End Times
prophecies.
In the middle of his book, he analyzes this data and
determines that it aligns perfectly with the ancient prophecies, which he
believes points to the imminent appearing of the great man of sin, the
Antichrist.
Finally, Heron concludes with America and Europe in
prophecy. He looks at the famous dream of the ancient king of Babylon,
Nebuchadnezzar, who saw what many believe to be the final global kingdom — a
revived Roman Empire. But “a careful examination of the prophecies relating to
this future government specifically state that it will be a global confederacy,”
Heron says. “It is not confined to one geographic area. It will be a club of ten
members ruled by ten kings who will serve the interests of the Antichrist. I
have no doubt that Europe and the USA will play prominent roles in these future
alignments.”
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(1) President’s Remarks at National Day of Prayer
and Remembrance, Office of the Press Secretary, September 14, 2001
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010914-2.html
(2) Bob Woodward, Bush at War (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2002), p.
67
3. Bruce Lincoln, Holy Terrors (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2003), pp 30-32
4. Translation by John Dryden, as published by
Georgetown University, http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/irvinem/gendersextexts/texts/eclog4.html
Original article: Wingswatchman.org
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