
				Then I saw in the right hand of him who 
				sat on the throne a scroll with writing on both sides and sealed 
				with seven seals. 2 And I saw a mighty angel proclaiming in a 
				loud voice, "Who is worthy to break the seals and open the 
				scroll?" I watched as the Lamb opened the first of the seven 
				seals...  2 I looked, and there before me was a white 
				horse! Its rider held a bow, and he was given a crown, and he 
				rode out as a conqueror bent on conquest. 3 When the Lamb opened 
				the second seal... another horse came out, a fiery red one. Its 
				rider was given power to take peace from the earth and to make 
				men slay each other. To him was given a large sword. 5 When the 
				Lamb opened the third seal... I looked, and there before me was 
				a black horse! Its rider was holding a pair of scales in his 
				hand. 6 Then I heard what sounded like a voice among the four 
				living creatures, saying, "A quart of wheat for a day's 
				wages, and three quarts of barley for a day's wages, and do not 
				damage the oil and the wine!" 7 When the Lamb opened the 
				fourth seal... I looked, and behold 
				a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell 
				followed with him.
				
				—The 
				Book of Revelation of Jesus Christ to Saint John the Evangelist  
				Chapters 1 & 2
				
				
             	
				Biblical prophecy is definitely not user-friendly.
You might think God would have made this language more plain, the symbolism more straightforward, if He actually intended us to understand any of this. Biblical scholars continue to debate much of what the books of Isaiah, Daniel and Revelation are actually trying to tell us. Revelation is written in a kind of code: symbols and images revealed to the author while he was imprisoned on a penal island. The John of Revelation is not John The Apostle or John The Baptist but a third, unknown John many biblical scholars refer to simply as John of Patmos (the island he was marooned upon). The strange visions John experienced and wrote about have been interpreted many ways by many people. This book is so strange, in fact, that when the Bible was being canonized at the Third Council of Carthage in 397 AD, The Apocalypse, as they referred to it, was one of seven canonical antilegomena, disputed books, literally, "spoken against." These were books of the New Testament which were not universally accepted by the early Church, but which are now included in the 27 books of the New Testament recognized by almost all Christians. In addition to Revelation, these books included Hebrews, 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, James and Jude.
The bible divides time into periods we call dispensations. Depending on your denomination (and who you talk to), there are basically three dispensations: Law, Grace and Kingdom, or there are many more; the three subdivided into smaller and more specific periods. Revelation reveals a prophecy for the end of this current dispensation, a time of catastrophe and gloom called The Great Tribulation.
				In the bible, the Old Testament took place during the 
				Dispensation of The Law. Man sinned in the Garden of Eden and 
				fell from grace. Man’s sin separated him from God, Who is Holy 
				and without sin. In order to reconcile man back to God, there 
				needed to be a sacrifice to atone for sin. Not a temporary 
				solution like the annual Jewish rituals, but a permanent 
				sacrifice that would, once and for all, satisfy the penalty and 
				reconcile the creation with The Creator. That sacrifice was 
				Jesus Christ, Who was God manifested as a human being. Jesus 
				lived a life without sin, a pure and unblemished existence, 
				which made Him eligible as a human sacrifice to atone for 
				mankind’s sin. Through the power of God, Jesus was resurrected 
				from the dead, and that resurrection—the part of the story many 
				of us overlook—marked the end of the Dispensation of the Law and 
				ushered in our current age, the Dispensation of Grace. Under 
				Grace, God is no longer the Great Galactic Accountant, keeping 
				track of an endless list of sin enumerated in painstaking detail 
				(called “The Law”). Today, we are brothers, what the bible calls 
				“Joint Heirs” with Jesus Christ [Romans 8:17]. Jesus is our 
				intercessor, sort of like a lawyer, who stands between us and 
				God and interprets the idiotic things we say to God, filtering 
				out our ignorance and mortality in such a way that shields our 
				mortal arrogance and sinful nature from God’s presence. Jesus 
				Christ’s holiness acts like a coffee filter, presenting us not 
				as we are but as who we are in Him: complete, sinless, 
				holy. We are, of course, none of those thing. We achieve those 
				things only through faith in Jesus Christ.
				
				During the Dispensation of Grace, Jesus’ arms are open wide, 
				welcoming whosoever will come. Salivation is a free gift from 
				God [Ephesians 2:9], attainable easily and freely simply by 
				renouncing sin and accepting Christ [I John 1:9]. Salvation has 
				absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with
				church 
				membership. Baptism is not, n and of itself, salvation. 
				Salvation is about making a decision to follow Jesus. Baptism is 
				an act of obedience to scripture and an outward demonstration of 
				an inner transformation. Being baptized doesn’t mean you’re in 
				the club. You need to be in the club and then be baptized as a public demonstration of that choice.
				
				Jesus said that natural and economic disasters, wars and disease 
				are signs that this dispensation is drawing to a close (Luke 
				Chapter 21]. Think of the Dispensation of Grace like an amnesty 
				period: all’s forgiven, just promise you won’t sin anymore, ask 
				for forgiveness, and your slate gets wiped clean. But the 
				amnesty period expires at a certain day and time. No one knows 
				when that day will be. Any man who says he knows—like Harold 
				Camping who predicted May 21, 2011 was “Judgment Day” –is either 
				wrong or lying to you [Matthew 24:36]. Nobody knows. Jesus 
				Christ Himself does not know the day or the hour when this 
				dispensation will draw to a close. Only God The Father knows, 
				and He’s not saying. The wild spate of catastrophic events we 
				are currently seeing are not evidence that the dispensation is 
				over, but are reasonable evidence that the dispensation is 
				drawing to a close, that we are living in what the bible calls, 
				“The Last Days.” But, as I mention
				
				here, to God, how long is a day? “The Last Days” could be 
				weeks, months, could be generations.
				
The Rapture
The end of the dispensation of grace will be marked by the Rapture of the Church of Jesus Christ. This is, perhaps, the most controversial and fantastic aspect of fundamentalist Christian faith: the belief that believers in Christ will be literally drawn up from the ground to join Jesus Christ, Who will return in bodily form and hover among the clouds. This, frankly, sounds like a fairy tale and is worth the scrutiny it invites. The Apostle Paul never claimed to be a prophet, and he does not quote a source for this contention, but is likely extrapolating oral testimony passed down through the years. The Gospel of Luke, in which Jesus echoes this claim, had not yet been written. I Thessalonians was the first epistle (letter) written by the Apostle Paul, written around A.D. 52—about 49 years after Christ’s resurrection—and is considered the oldest book in the New Testament. Luke’s Gospel, based largely on the Gospel of Mark, was not written until around thirty years later.
“Brothers, we do not want you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep, or to grieve like the rest of men, who have no hope. 14 We believe that Jesus died and rose again and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him. 15 According to the Lord's own word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left till the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. 16 For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. 17 After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. 18 Therefore encourage each other with these words.” —I Thessalonians 4
				As a child, as a new believer, it was easier, decades ago, to 
				engage this premise. I honestly didn’t think much about it. 
				These days, biblical scholars continue to claw at this 
				assertion, splintering off into two main trains of thought: the 
				premillennialists and the postmillennialists. Premillennialists 
				(and, I suspect I am one), take this passage rather literally, 
				and believe that believers in Christ will be bodily removed from 
				the planet before The Great Tribulation period begins. 
				Postmillennialists believe all Christianity will endure the 
				sifting and great shock of The Great Tribulation period, and 
				only those who endure to the end will be saved.
				
				I’m not sure if the Peter Pan aspect of the mid-air reunion is 
				the rationale for post-millennialism or not. The rest of the 
				bible is cloaked in cryptic themes and imagery, like the Four 
				Horsemen of the Apocalypse, which is open to interpretation. I 
				doubt anyone believes there will be literal horses: we translate 
				that prophecy as symbolism of events: conquest (by some: the 
				antichrist), war, famine, pestilence & death. We don’t believe 
				in literal horses. But we do believe in literal mid-air 
				hovering: Christians vanishing from their clothes—just empty 
				clothes all over. Perhaps open graves. Vanishing, in a twinkle 
				of an eye, likely under cover of a great disaster or earthquake, 
				which may provide some plausible explanation of our absence to 
				those left behind.
				
				I’ve never actually given this much thought. I certainly wish to 
				be caught up, taken away, before all hell breaks lose here on 
				Earth, so I’m down for whatever. But most every other part of 
				this Christian experience exists within the realm of the 
				plausible, while the Rapture (a word not found in the bible) 
				exists within the realm of the fantastic and demands a 
				repression of disbelief and an almost childlike faith. 
				Truthfully, the way I see it, I don’t need to believe in the 
				rapture. I need to believe in Jesus Christ. Doubts about 
				this fantastic idea of flying through the air should not, 
				biblically, bar me from Heaven. The way I see it, my 
				relationship with Jesus Christ buys me a ticket for the 
				ride—whenever that occurs and in whatever form it takes. In 
				other words, don’t worry about it. Just follow Christ and see 
				what happens.
The antichrist
				Don’t worry about him. Seriously, don’t give this guy a second 
				thought. Christian conspiracists have gotten rich off scaring 
				people about who the antichrist might be, that the antichrist is 
				likely alive somewhere in the world today, that the antichrist 
				is Barack Obama (see sidebar). The antichrist (note small “a” as 
				per the King James) may or may not be what the White Horse—the 
				Conqueror—represents. Most biblical scholars interpret the 
				antichrist as being a kind of counterfeit Christ, a charismatic 
				and popular world leader who will accomplish great things, 
				winning the hearts and minds of great masses of people. The 
				antichrist will solve complex global political and economic 
				problems, bringing peace and prosperity to the world. He will 
				seem, at face value, heroic, a good guy, and he will be adored 
				by most of the planet. And by peace shall destroy many, 
				the bible says [Daniel 8:25]
				
				White Christian conservatives have floated this idea that the 
				antichrist is President Barack Obama (see sidebar) based on some 
				warped interpretation of Hebrew scripture and, I suppose, the 
				president’s winning smile. Far from being the beloved 
				antichrist, President Obama is openly and publicly despised, 
				mostly by white conservative Americans. While he is demonstrably 
				more respected globally than at home, Obama has, thus far, not 
				demonstrated any supernatural abilities or achieved a lasting 
				peace or economic prosperity. There is no sane or credible 
				reason to suspect he is the antichrist beyond the simpler truth 
				that Barack Hussein Obama Is a Black 
				Man and They Hate Him.
				
				Daniel referred to the antichrist as, “the leader who will come, 
				the little horn, the beast and the stern faced king.” Ezekiel 
				refers to the antichrist as Gog, the chief prince, from the land 
				of Magog. The ancient land of Magog included some of the 
				territory represented by present day Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran, 
				Georgia, Armenia, Azerbajan, and Russia near the Black Sea. This 
				suggests the antichrist will likely come from the east. Daniel 
				received a prophecy from God revealing that the antichrist will 
				confirm a treaty guaranteeing Israel’s security. Then, after 
				three and a half years years, the antichrist will set himself up 
				in the Jewish Temple and proclaim that he is God. This 
				abomination will initiate the Great Tribulation which will last 
				three and a half years.
				
				Regardless, you should not spend even a minute worrying about 
				who the antichrist is. First of all, consult all the Ouija boards you want, you’ll likely be wrong. Second, ferreting out 
				the mystery of the antichrist is not a Christian duty or 
				responsibility. Jesus told us to go and make disciples of all 
				nations, not to huddle in basements wringing our hands over 
				this guy. If we are truly followers of Christ, we won’t even be 
				here when he gets the gig.
				
The Great Tribulation
				Between the Rapture and Armageddon are seven years of hell: three and a 
				half years of the world presumably coming together around this 
				new, charismatic political leader, followed by three and a half 
				years of things going completely to hell as this leader claims 
				more and more power and ultimately claims to be Jesus Christ 
				and/or God Himself. The bible speaks cryptically of a 
				totalitarian one-world government where complete obedience to 
				this leader—the antichrist, Gog, The Beast—is required if you 
				want to have or keep a job, buy or sell anything. The 
				antichrist’s megalomania will manifest itself in a manner of 
				branding, a barcode or QR stamp which, in some manner, spells 
				out “the number of his name,” which the bible identifies as six 
				hundred threescore and six” [Rev. 13:18].
				
				Despite the scary movies you’ve seen, I personally think it’s 
				unlikely people will literally be walking around with “666” 
				written on their foreheads or in their hands. What’s actually in 
				our hands these days are our cell phones, which are increasingly 
				becoming the center of our lives. As global markets continue to 
				fail, cash becomes increasingly less reliable and digital 
				banking—digital paycheck to your bank and spent using electronic 
				transfers from a PC or smartphone—become the safer and more 
				reliable choice. It is also the preferred choice of government 
				policy like the recently-renewed Patriot Act which gives the 
				government sweeping powers to track your communications and 
				financial transactions, both of which occur increasingly on that 
				device in your hand.
				
				The mark of the beast, therefore, is much more likely to be the 
				SIMM card that stores your identity, makes your smartphone work, 
				and thus  follows you from device to device. That, or some 
				future generation of these Quick Response or QR codes, which smartphones read and then spit out enormous data and info about 
				a product or service. It seems inevitable that, as terrorism 
				grows and security concerns increase, we will see, in our 
				lifetime, an increased push for some sort of digital identity 
				mechanism. Looking at the current QR code design (above), I’d have absolutely 
				no way of knowing what they mean or what information is encoded 
				on them. It would be a simple matter to include encryption that 
				includes a product or service branding (which is what “666” is), 
				and we might never know it.
				
				As the Tribulation period goes on, the bible prophesies that we 
				will inevitably be faced with a choice: to accept this branding 
				or to die. This feels very much like the pressure I am under to 
				buy a smartphone. I don’t want a smartphone. I don’t need a 
				smartphone. My dumbphone is just fine. But, as I look around, 
				virtually every carrier is phasing out simple devices in favor 
				for these sophisticated next-generation devices most people have 
				benignly if not enthusiastically accepted. Smartphones are 
				devices which can effectively and effortlessly spy on you, but 
				nobody seems at all concerned about that as they blithely go 
				about entering an unfathomable amount of personal information 
				into these devices, and entering in the personal info of their 
				friends as well. Without giving it a second thought, that data 
				is routinely uploaded to servers you have no control over and no 
				access to. That data is processed, analyzed and redistributed 
				any way the company (or government—the Patriot Act gives wide 
				latitude to the government to look inside your smartphone) 
				pleases.
				
				This prophetic people-management system sounds like a refined 
				and perhaps improved version of our current credit rating 
				system, which is imperfect to say the least. Your credit rating 
				does not distinguish between people who don’t pay their bills 
				and people who can’t pay their bills. It annoys me for anyone to 
				assume poor people don’t pay their bills. For some people who 
				live check-to-check, all they do is pay bills. Their credit 
				rating is whatever it is not because they are irresponsible but 
				because they are poor. I would imagine the new and improved 
				antichrist system will know so much more about you, that the 
				whole credit system will be revamped to provide a much more 
				accurate profile of your credit worthiness, one which 
				distinguishes between people who are irresponsible and people 
				who are laid off, disabled or broke.
				
				Presuming a pre-tribulation rapture of the Christian Church, we 
				should assume that believers in Christ will not endure this 
				tribulation period. It will be possible to accept Christ, to 
				become a Christian, during this time period, but the bible 
				teaches us that, during The Great Tribulation, Christians will 
				be harshly persecuted. Not buying that smartphone, not accepting 
				that QR code, will identify you as a Christian because only 
				Christians will be hesitant to not embrace this new, benevolent 
				system. Christians will be people who reject the antichrist as 
				Jesus Christ, and they’ll likely be branded as anarchists or 
				even terrorists, with some Patriot Act-style law giving law 
				enforcement sweeping powers to round up anyone discovered 
				without a smartphone. Persecution, torture and death will be 
				common for Tribulation-era Christians, the bible says, with only 
				those who endure to the end being saved [Matthew 24]. 
				
				
The Kingdom
				Jesus Christ returns—sort of—in the Rapture event, but He does 
				not set foot on the Earth again until the Day of Armageddon. 
				This is exactly what it sounds like: a big Hollywood ending to 
				the conflict between God and His creation in rebellion against 
				Him. Despite what you may think or may have heard, this will not 
				be a struggle. Satan is in no way, shape or form God’s equal. 
				The power of Satan belonged to God and is a counterfeit of the 
				power of God. This won’t be some great contest where the good 
				guys struggle to eke out a win. God could put a stop to every 
				bit of this with a snap of His fingers (assuming He has 
				fingers). But he allows this to play out because God can never 
				renege on His promise, and He is giving mankind every possible 
				opportunity to get it right: to turn from our evil and embrace 
				Him.
				The Day of Armageddon is succeeded by The Day of Judgment, where 
				Satan and his followers get theirs, where unbelievers who have 
				rejected Christ are judged and where we who believe in Christ 
				are shamed to tears for being so trifling and for having misses 
				so many opportunities to serve Him. But Jesus will wipe those 
				tears away, will forgive our sin. The Dispensation of Grace will 
				come to a close, and the Dispensation of The Kingdom will begin.
				
				The Dispensation of the Kingdom will have no end. That’s it for 
				us. A new Heaven and new Earth. Revelation 20:4-6 says that, at 
				the close of the millennium, Satan will be loosed again “for a 
				little while,” but then will face the final judgment or “second 
				death” in the Lake of Fire. And we will go on in an Eternal 
				State, existing in eternal, glorified bodies as the perfect 
				creation God intended us to be in the first place.
				Christopher J. Priest
				19 June 2011
				editor@praisenet.org
 
				
				TOP OF PAGE







