Jesus
Foretells Twentieth-Century Problems
Very
few people ever think of Jesus Christ as a prophet. Yet He
was. He made many predictions about the future, all of which
have either come true already, or are beginning to come true
now.
Some
of His predictions must have sounded utterly improbable at
the time He made them. Yet they came true. Take this one,
for instance:
"And
this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world
for a witness unto all nations."1
When
Jesus spoke those words, He had only a handful of followers,
and those were mostly uneducated working-class men. He had
completely failed to convert His own small nation. The ordinary
people were mostly unmoved by His message, and the leaders
hated Him like poison. Within a few weeks they would have
Him hanging on a cross.
By
all the laws of human probability, that should have been the
end of it. Those who watched Him die must have thought, "Well,
we shant hear any more of Him and His confounded gospel!"
But
they were wrong. Within their own lifetime, His gospel was
being preached over most of the Roman Empire. Since then it
really has been preached to every nation on earth - the only
religion that has. The words of Jesus have been translated
into more than a thousand different languages.
Bibles
by the million are spread abroad each year. They go by ship
to the tropics, by air to the arctic, by rail and road and
forest trail to the farthest corners of the earth. Brave men
and women risk life and liberty smuggling Bibles into the
communist countries of Eastern Europe.
Facts
and Fashions
Yes,
Jesus was a prophet whose words came true. This is a good
reason for listening carefully to what He has to say about
our own day.
But
first, a word of warning. Fashions come and fashions go. Yet
facts are stubborn things. Facts remain the same while fashions
change and change.
And
fashions are not restricted to the way people dress. There
are changing fashions in the way people behave and think.
There are even fashions in scientific thought and in religious
outlook.
So
beware of thinking that todays fashion is necessarily right.
Remember that tomorrows fashion will probably be quite different.
"Everybodys doing it" may be a good excuse for going
along with the crowd, but it is a very poor reason.
A
hundred years ago it was quite fashionable to believe in the
Second Coming of Christ. Today it is fashionable to ridicule
the idea of the Second Coming.
But
what of it? Dont let the fashion-mongers beguile you. It is
only the fashion that has changed. The basic facts are the
same as they always were. And such new facts as have come
to light in recent years make it easier to believe in the
Second Coming, not harder.
The
first great fact is that Jesus promised, very plainly and
emphatically, that He would come again.
The
second great fact is that He described what would be happening
in the world at the time of His return.
And
the third great fact is that the events He foretold are developing
in our world today.
So
dont be put off by the force of public opinion. Remember how
often in the past public opinion has been proved wrong. The
facts are so important that they deserve to be looked at squarely,
to see what lies behind them.
Do
not be put off, either, because in the past a number of cranks
have believed in the Second Coming, and have persuaded some
people to do some very foolish things. There have always been
plenty of unbalanced people in the world, but their foolish
actions are best forgotten.
Quite
a lot of lunatics killed themselves trying to fly before aircraft
were invented-but that is no reason to dispute the fact of
modern aviation. Similarly, quite a number of poor deluded
people have been known to dispose of all their possessions
and climb a mountain "to wait for Jesus"-but that
is no reason to dispute the actual facts about the Second
Coming.
World
in a Mess
We
had better face it: the world is in a terrible predicament.
While life in our affluent society goes gaily on, the most
appalling forces are building up behind the scenes. The world
is heading, helter-skelter, for a crisis too horrible to contemplate.
But
we must contemplate it for a few moments, however
horrible it may be, because there is no other way to get at
the facts. Here, then, is a summary of the six great problems
facing the world today.
- Terrible
Weapons. On August 6th 1945 the Japanese city of Hiroshima
was wiped out by an atomic bomb. The same day Sir Winston
Churchill made a statement about it, which was published
a few days later in a British Government white paper. His
statement ended like this:
"
We must indeed pray that these awful agencies will be
made to conduce to peace among the nations, and that instead
of wreaking measureless havoc upon the entire globe, they
may become a perennial fountain of world prosperity."2
But
the bomb that filled Churchill with awe and dread seems like
a mere firework compared with the bombs of today. In 1968
Lord Ritchie-Calder did a few sums, and estimated the explosive
power of all the atomic weapons existing then. It worked out
at the equivalent of 100 tons of old-fashioned explosive (TNT)
for every man, woman and child on earth.3
To
put it another way, if we assume, that the average street
has 200 people living in it, then there was already enough
atomic explosive in 1968 to provide one Hiroshima-sized bomb
for every street in the world.
But
bombs are not all. Nobody knows what horrors are being prepared
in the secret germ-warfare laboratories of the great powers.
A few years ago a British scientist in one of these labs died
from a new germ he had helped to cultivate. "Good job
he didnt sneeze before he died," a colleague is reported
to have said. "He might have started an epidemic that
would have wiped out the human race."
One
thing is quite certain. World war would mean world catastrophe.
The vital question is: can man preserve world peace?
- Political
Tension. The goal of all communists has always been
clear. They are determined to turn the whole world communist.
America and the Western Powers are equally determined to
stop them. Unless one side gives way, sooner or later a
head-on collision must occur. And so far neither side shows
any sign of giving in.
The
danger of all-out war between Russia and China is also much
greater than most people realise. In a book with the grim
title, The Coming War Between Russia and China,4
a foreign affairs expert reveals the frightening facts. Communists
always have quarrelled among themselves, and the two great
communist countries are already fully prepared to fight each
other with atomic weapons.
- Exploding
Populations. More than half the population of the world
is underfed now. Every year there are fifty million more
mouths to feed. In thirty-five years time the worlds population
is expected to be double what it is today.
It
is the poor nations whose populations are growing the fastest.
Every
year they grow poorer, while the rich nations grow richer.
Sooner or later the cry is bound to come, "Shall we starve-or
fight?"
- Plundered
Resources. Man has already cut down more than half
the worlds forests, and turned vast areas of fertile land
into desert. He is exterminating much of the earths wildlife,
and using up mineral deposits at an alarming rate. As the
worlds remaining resources dwindle, nations will become
more and more tempted to fight for what is left.
- Pollution.
Man has turned many of the worlds rivers into sewers, and
one of its greatest lakes into a cesspool where few fish
can survive. By filling the air with fumes he has impaired
the health of millions, and is in danger of changing the
climate of the whole planet. If he goes on like this for
another century, man could easily make the earth uninhabitable.
- Loss
of Moral Sense. A little while ago I met a Chinese
scientist from Formosa. "Whats the religious situation
in the more prosperous parts of Asia today?" I asked
him over lunch.
"
Just the same as it is in Europe," he replied. "Many
people still claim to hold the old Eastern religions, just
as England still calls itself a Christian country. But as
with you, so with us: the old religions no longer mean anything
to most people. We have our permissive society just like
yours."
When
faith goes, morals are bound to slip. So all the advanced
nations have a crime wave, rapidly growing problems of alcoholism,
drug addiction and juvenile violence.
One
day in 1969 the police in Montreal went on strike for just
twelve hours. Yet that was long enough for the city to be
terrorised, when thousands of normally law-abiding citizens
went berserk. The "civilised" world today is only
one step away from a return to the jungle.
Jesus
Answers a Question
"Well,
so what?" said my friend Norman one day, when I was telling
him about these things. "The worlds in a mess, right
enough. But then its often been in a mess. Jesus didnt need
to be a prophet to foretell that the world would have a load
of trouble. Anybody could have foreseen that. And, anyway,
what makes you think it was our particular, twentieth-century,
mess that Jesus spoke about?"
There
is a very satisfactory answer to Normans question. To appreciate
it we must take a close look at what Jesus said, and how He
came to say it.
One
day, not long before He was crucified, His disciples referred
to the magnificent Temple that was Jerusalems pride and joy.
Jesus startled them by commenting that it was going to be
utterly destroyed.
So
they asked Him the obvious question-when? And then they added
a second question. They said:
"Tell
us, when shall these things be? And what shall be the sign
of Thy coming, and of the end of the world?"5
In
reply Jesus talked at great length. He described how there
would be a period of trouble for the nation, and of persecution
for His disciples. Then, He said, an enemy army would besiege
Jerusalem, and terrible events would follow.6
He continued:
"For
these be the days of vengeance, that all things which
are written may be fulfilled."7
The
words in italics are very important. When Jesus spoke of things
"written", as He did many times, He always meant
"written in the Old Testament". Many Old Testament
prophecies about the Jews were quoted in Chapter
2 of this book. Jesus was evidently referring to them,
and others like them. He said that all of those things
must be fulfilled.
If
you refer back to Chapter 2 you will see that those prophecies
about the Jews were in three groups: (1) Expulsion, (2) A
long period of exile, (3) Return to their homeland. In the
next verse but one, Jesus summarised all those Scriptures
which "must be fulfilled":
"And
they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led
away captive into all nations [that is (1), Expulsion] and
Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles [that is
(2), A period of exile] until the times of the
Gentiles be fulfilled."8
The
key word "until" implies that the Gentiles
would not always occupy Jerusalem. This was Christs way of
referring to the third group of Old Testament prophecies,
which spoke of the Jews eventually returning to their homeland.
He spoke another two verses describing the state of the world
at that future day, and then made a momentous promise:
"And
then shall they see the Son of Man [Himself] coming
in a cloud, with power and great glory."9
In
other words, Jesus taught that when the Jews went back to
their homeland (and Jerusalem in particular) His Second Coming
would soon follow.
This
is how we know that Jesus was speaking of our day. For about
1800 years the Jews lived in exile. About seventy years ago
they began to go home. In 1948 the State of Israel was set
up. In 1967 Israel captured the Old City of Jerusalem (they
already owned the New City). At last Jerusalem was no longer
"trodden down of the Gentiles".
Whether
we agree with Israels policy of occupying Arab lands is beside
the point. What matters is that Christs words unmistakably
give us one vital piece of information. Recent events in the
Holy Land have provided a sure sign that Christs return is
near.
Do
not be surprised if some other great changes have taken place
in the land of Israel by the time you read these words. These
are to be expected. For example, Ezekiel said that after Gods
unworthy people had returned to their land, something miraculous
would happen to convert them:
"I
will gather you out of all countries and will bring you
into your own land. Then will I sprinkle clean water
upon you and ye shall be clean; from all your filthiness
and from all your idols will I cleanse you. A new heart
also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within
you."10
How
was the ungodly nation of Israel going to be changed so suddenly?
Another prophet explains:
"I
will save my people from the east country and from the west
country, and I will bring them and they shall dwell in the
midst of Jerusalem . . . And I will pour upon the house
of David and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem the spirit
of grace and of supplication; and they shall look upon
me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn for
him... And one shall say unto him, What are these wounds
in thine hands? Then he shall answer, Those with which I
was wounded in the house of my friends."11
So
that is how the unbelieving Israelis are to be converted so
suddenly. Their Messiah will come to them. If you read the
whole of Zechariah 12 you will see that he is to come to save
them from a national disaster, which might even involve them
in military defeat and a temporary captivity.
This
will be the most poignant moment in Israels 4,000-year history.
They look at this Messiah who has just delivered them from
their misery. They see he bears the marks of crucifixion.
At long last the truth dawns upon them. and the Jews finally
accept Jesus as their Messiah.
Meanwhile,
in the World Outside...
But
this has been looking ahead. The return of Jesus is near,
but it is still future. Our task at the moment is to see what
Jesus says about our day, the time after the Jewish return
to Jerusalem (reference 8, above) and before the Second Coming
(reference 9). I left out the two verses separating those
two passages. They said:
"
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; mens hearts failing
them for fear, and for looking after those things which
are coming on the earth. For the powers of heaven shall
he shaken."12
Each
phrase here is full of meaning. But it is no use looking at
them with twentieth-century European eyes, and guessing at
the meaning that seems likely to us. These words were spoken
to first-century Jews, men steeped in Old Testament knowledge.
We need to ask ourselves, "How would they have
understood Christs words?" The answer undoubtedly is,
"In the light of the Old Testament passages that Jesus
was referring to."
It
is therefore necessary to examine each phrase in that light.
First,
"Signs in the sun, moon and stars". This language
was a familiar Old Testament figure of speech for national
disaster. Isaiah used it of the military conquest of Babylon13
and Ezekiel of the military defeat of Egypt.14
But it is the prophet Joel to whose words Jesus is most probably
referring. Joel uses similar expressions twice: once of the
disaster coming upon Israel15
and again of the disaster coming upon the whole world.16
But in both chapters Joel is speaking of "the day of
the Lord", when Israel shall return to their land17
and Messiah shall appear to establish Gods kingdom.18
Evidently
by this expression Jesus was saying, "The great world
disaster foretold by the Prophets will burst upon the world."
His
next phrase: "Upon the earth, distress of nations, with
perplexity." Again He refers to the Old Testament prophecies
about His Second Coming, such as one in Daniel that says it
would be accompanied by:
"
A time of trouble such as never was, since there was a nation
to that same time."19
A
standard authority on the Greek language20
says that Christs word "perplexity" means, in the
Greek New Testament, "a state of not knowing which way
to turn". This describes exactly the position of the
worlds governments today. They know the problems threatening
the human race with extinction. But they do not know which
way to turn to solve them.
H.
G. Wells spoke for many of his fellow unbelievers, when he
wrote in his last book:
"This
world is at the end of its tether. The end of everything
we call life is close at hand and cannot be evaded - . -
there is no way out, or round, or through the impasse. It
is the end."21
If
he had not been an unbeliever, you might almost think that
Wells was deliberately echoing Jesus - "not knowing which
way to turn".
The
next words of Jesus are puzzling to many Western minds: "The
sea and the waves roaring". To the careful Bible reader
they present no difficulty. Behind them lies the figurative
language of Isaiah, who likened the behaviour of masses of
wicked people to the raging of a restless sea.22
If world catastrophe occurs, and law and order breaks down,
it is not difficult to visualise the "roaring waves"
of mob violence that will follow.
No
wonder that Jesus continues, "Mens hearts failing them
for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming
on the earth." It only needs one newspaper headline,
such as, "American Ultimatum to Russia Expires at Midnight!"
for those words to start coming true.
The
verses quoted conclude, "for the powers of the heavens
shall be shaken". This also is well-established Old Testament
language, used to describe governments crashing under the
impact of war.23
What
does all this add up to? That Jesus foretold, in language
that was perfectly clear to the Jews who first heard Him,
and that can be equally clear to us if we trouble to get acquainted
with the figures of speech used in the Old Testament, a world
just like ours.
He
said, in effect, that in the days when the Jews went back
to the Land of Israel, the world would be facing frightful
problems. World catastrophe would be looming up, but men would
not know how to prevent it. When disaster came, governments
would fall, law and order would go, mob violence would take
its place. And then - thank God - He would return "to
destroy them which destroy the earth" (to quote a phrase
used in another New Testament book).24
How
did Jesus manage to foretell so clearly the problem facing
our world?
This
is the explanation He gave Himself:
"The
word which ye hear is not Mine, but the Fathers which sent
me."25
Can
you think of another explanation that fits the facts so well?
Peter
Continues
The
right hand man of Jesus was His apostle, Peter. After Jesus
left the scene, Peter became a leader of the Christian church.
He wrote two books of the New Testament, and in one of them
he enlarged on the Masters prophecy about our age. He said:
"In
the last days mockers shall come with mockery walking
after their own lusts and saying, Where is the promise of
His coming, for from the day that the fathers fell asleep
all things continue as they were from the beginning
of the creation. For this they wilfully forget,
that by the Word of God the heavens were of old, and the
earth standing out of the water and in the water, whereby
the world that then was, being overflowed with water,
perished. But the heavens and the earth which are now,
by the same Word, are kept in store reserved unto fire
against the Day of Judgment - . The day of the Lord will
come as a thief in the night, in the which the heavens shall
pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall
melt with fervent heat".26
The
words printed in italics show that Peter foresaw four distinct
features about our age.
- Men
would mock at the idea of Christs return, They do mock,
dont they? So much so that I had to appeal to you at the
beginning of this chapter not to follow the fashion, but
to give the facts a fair hearing.
- Their
excuse would be, "All things continue as they were."
In other words, "Natural laws carry on without changing;
why should we believe that a Creator ever has intervened
in the worlds affairs, or will do so again?"
Only
a scientist could be expected to recognise this as a remarkable
prophecy. But it is. As Col. Merson Davies, a scientist of
some distinction (he was awarded two doctorates for research
in geology) has pointed Out, Peters words exactly describe
the modern scientific principle of "uniformitarianism"
(or "uniformity", if you prefer short words to long
ones).27
"
Uniformity" is the foundation upon which the science
of geology, and much else besides, is built. It leads directly
to the popular philosophy, "Evolution has explained
everything-therefore we neednt believe in God any more.
Hooray!"
"
Uniformity" is very much a modern invention. It was totally
opposed to the thinking of the world in which Peter lived.
Yet Peter foresaw its uprise, many centuries beforehand.
- Men
would deny that the Flood ever occurred. This also
was a most unlikely prophecy when it was written. Until
a couple of hundred years ago the reality of Noahs Flood
was never questioned. Yet today it is fashionable to regard
it as a myth. Peter foresaw this complete change of thought,
more than a thousand years before it began.
- The
final world catastrophe would be associated with fire.
This also is a surprising prophecy. The Old Testament which
Peter knew so well generally associated the future world-wide
catastrophe with war.28 In
Peters day war was a matter of iron blades and flowing blood.
How did he know that in our day the whole image of war would
be different?
First,
firearms; then incendiary bombs; then napalm; finally, The
Bomb. These have entirely changed the image of war. Now, more
than anything else, we associate war with fire. How did Peter
know that modern weapons would make "the elements melt
with fervent heat"?
Once
again the decision is up to you. This book can only put the
facts before you. You are the one who must weigh them in your
mind, and try to reach a decision.
Is
there some other explanation for these facts?
Or
did Jesus, and Peter, and the prophets of the Old Testament,
really foresee the frightful predicament of our generation?
And if so, cant we trust them as true prophets, and believe
that God who foresaw our problems will solve them for us as
He promised-by sending Jesus back to put the world right?
| 1
Matt. 24:14 |
2
White Paper, Statements Relating to the Atomic Bomb.
H.M.S.O., London, 1945 |
3
Presidential Address to the Conservation Society, London,
1968 |
| 4
H. E. Salisbury, Pan Books, London, 1969 |
5
Matt. 24:3 |
6
Luke2l:20,21 |
| 7
Luke 21:22 |
8
Luke2l:24 |
9
Luke 21:27 |
| 10
Ezek. 36:24-26 |
11
Zech. 8:7, 8; 12:10, 11; 13:6 |
12
Luke2l:25,26 |
| 13
Isa. 13:10 |
14
Ezek. 32:7 |
15
Joel 2:10 |
| 16
Joel 3:15 |
17
Joel 3:1 |
18
Joel 3:15 |
| 19
Dan. 12:1 |
20Grimm
and Thayer, Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament |
21
H. G. Wells, Mind at the End of its Tether. Heinemann,
London, 1945 |
| 22Isa.
57:20, 21 |
23
For example, Isa. 34:1-5 |
24
Rev. 11:18 |
| 25
John 14:24 |
26
2 Pet. 3:3-7, 10 |
27
L. M. Davies, The Bible and Modern Science. Constable,
Edinburgh, 4th edn. 1953 |
| 28
For example, Ezek. 36-39; Joel 2, 3; Zech. 14 |
|
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