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- THE DANGERS OF DATING
-
- False prophets dot the landscape. History is replete with abort-
- ed attempts to date the coming of Christ or to hasten it with
- claims of fulfilled prophecy. In 1884, William Hechler, A Chris-
- tian acquaintance of Theodore Herzl, thought that Zionism was the
- beginning of the end of days. (See Michael Progai, Faith and
- Fillment, Christians and the Return to the Promised Land, pp. 58-
- 62.) Hechler died depressed and discouraged in London in 1931.
- (See Claude Duvernoy, The Prince and the Prophet.) At the turn
- of the century, John Alexander Dowie of Zion, Ill., was convinced
- he was Elijah and was to usher in Christ's Second Coming. Howev-
- er, he left many disappointed. (See Gordon Lindsey, John Alexan-
- der Dowie, pp. 190-191.) More recently, John Todd, Constance
- Cumbey and Edgar Whisenant, all said that the signs pointed to an
- imminent end, but they were dead wrong. (See further, Miami
- Christian College, Clarion, Vol. 1, No. 3, pg. 4, "A Balanced
- View of the Lord's Return.")
-
- Some people seem determined to smash themselves against the
- brick wall of Jesus' statement in Matthew 24:36: "But of that
- exact day and hour no one knows."
-
- In his book, Predators in Our Pulpits, Phillip Keller calls
- Christians to discernment, and publishing houses, printers and
- broadcasters to responsibility. He writes:
-
- Of course many common people really have no way of knowing. In
- their trusting simplicity they are being led astray by the very
- teachers whom they assume are instructing them in truth. The
- laity look to them for life while being led to the slaughter, or
- at least to impotence.
-
- The stark truth is that multitudes are being deluded to believe
- a lie. They are being deceived by the very ones they thought had
- only their best interests in mind. There has been an insidious
- infiltration of the church by men and women whose work and words
- spell its destruction. (pg. 4)
-
- In recent years all kinds of sensational and fictional stories
- have circulated purporting to prove the fulfillment of Bible
- prophecies. A popular fantasy on in the 1970s was the story of
- the "Belgium Beast." Popular Christian speakers and writers told
- of a three-stories-high computer in Brussels that contained in
- its memory the name of every living person. By implication, it
- could spit out an identification number for each one. It was seen
- to be a fulfillment of Revelation 13 as part of the Antichrist's
- plot to give each person his mark. In August 1976, Christian Life
- magazine published the following news item:
-
- "Dr. Hendrick Elderman, chief analyst for the Common Market Con-
- federacy, announced recently that a computerized restoration plan
- is already underway in Brussels, according to the Altoona (Pa.)
- Mirror. 'The Beast' is a gigantic computer that takes up three
- floors at the Administration Building of Market headquarters.
- This self-programming unit has over 100 sensing input sources.
- Computer experts have been working on a plan to computerize all
- world trade. This master plan involves a digital numbering system
- for every human on earth for all buying and selling. The number
- would be invisibly 'laser-tatooed' on the forehead or the back of
- the hand, and would show up under an infra-red scanner to be
- placed at all check-out counters and places of business."
-
- Dr. Eldeman suggested that by using three sets of six-digital
- units, the entire world could be assigned a working credit card
- number. Credit notes would be exchanged through a World Bank
- Clearing Center. (pg. 14)
-
- With its publication in Christian Life, the Belgium Beast took
- on the status of fact and became grist for radio and TV sermons.
-
- In reality, the Belgium Beast was the product of the imagination
- of Joe Musser, who wrote the novel, Behold a Pale Horse. In
- November 1976, Musser wrote to Christian Life:
-
- "'Beast' Is Yet To Come -- The item referring to a computer
- 'Beast,' a confederacy of Common Market nations, and laser tat-
- tooing for a world-wide numbering system (People and Events,
- August) is based on fictional portrayals of end time events,
- drawing from my novel, Behold a Pale Horse (Zondervan), and a
- screenplay I wrote for the David Wilkerson film, The Rapture. For
- more than three years I have heard my story ideas circulated as
- fact. Perhaps, in light of what's happening in the world today,
- items such as the one printed seem quite plausible. However, for
- the moment, they are fiction. Joe Musser, Rockford, Ill."
-
- The publication and promotion of fantasies can never spread the
- truth. The practice destroys Christians' credibility and encour-
- ages skepticism about the Gospel. Questionable, curious, undocu-
- mented, unverified information should never be printed. The truth
- of God cannot be promoted by a lie. There are dangers to the
- dating game.
-
- GRF
-
- (c) 1989, PFO - All rights reserved by Personal Freedom Out-
- reach. Reproduction is prohibited except for portions intended
- for personal use and noncommercial purposes. For reproduction
- permission, please contact: Personal Freedom Outreach, P.O. Box
- 26026, Saint Louis, Missouri 63136, (314) 388-2648.