Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Opinion|Mon, Jun. 09 2008 11:00 AM EDT

The End of History - The Moral Necessity of Eschatology

By R. Albert Mohler, Jr.|Christian Post Guest Columnist

British author Ian McEwan is quite convinced that people who believe that history will end with divine judgment are dangerous - probably very dangerous.

McEwan is among the most influential authors and literary figures of our day. His novels like Atonement and On Chesil Beach explore the moral landscape of the postmodern age. He is also an atheist who, by definition, does not believe that the Creator will bring history to an ending that will include perfect moral satisfaction. For that reason, his novels end without the hint or hope of such satisfaction.

Writing in The Guardian [London], McEwan set out his concerns about belief in an apocalypse in two essays. Rarely does eschatology receive such explicit consideration in a secular newspaper.

McEwan is concerned that, "Throughout recorded history people have mesmerized themselves with stories which predict the date and manner of our wholesale destruction, often rendered meaningful by ideas of divine punishment and ultimate redemption; the end of life on earth, the end or last days, end time, the apocalypse."

He is certainly correct in affirming that what Frank Kermode called the "sense of an ending" marks virtually all worldviews. This is necessarily so, because the questions of where history is headed and whether there will be a moral judgment are asked by every sensitive and intelligent human being.

As McEwan sees it, belief in divine judgment at the end of history is inherently dangerous. In his words:

The apocalyptic mind can be demonising - that is to say, there are other groups, other faiths, that it despises for worshipping false gods, and these believers of course will not be saved from the fires of hell. And the apocalyptic mind tends to be totalitarian - which is to say that these are intact, all-encompassing ideas founded in longing and supernatural belief, immune to evidence or its lack, and well-protected against the implications of fresh data. Consequently, moments of unintentional pathos, even comedy, arise - and perhaps something in our nature is revealed - as the future is constantly having to be rewritten, new anti-Christs, new Beasts, new Babylons, new Whores located, and the old appointments with doom and redemption quickly replaced by the next.

There can be no question that a preoccupation with eschatology as a hobby reveals an immature theology. There can also be no question that various groups and individuals have claimed a specific apocalyptic knowledge - setting dates, etc. - and it is true that some religions and ideologies have taken the route to violence.

But what Ian McEwan rejects goes beyond a lunatic fringe. He rejects the very heart of Christian eschatology. He aims directly at the book of Revelation:

The cast or contents of Revelation in its contemporary representations has all the colourful gaudiness of a children's computer fantasy game - earthquakes and fires, thundering horses and their riders, angels blasting away on trumpets, magic vials, Jezebel, a red dragon and other mythical beasts, and a scarlet woman. Another familiar aspect is the potency of numbers - seven each of seals, heads of beasts, candlesticks, stars, lamps, trumpets, angels and vials; then four riders, four beasts with seven heads, ten horns, ten crowns, four and twenty elders, twelve tribes with twelve thousand members ... and finally, most resonantly, spawning 19 centuries of dark tomfoolery, "Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast; for it is the number of a man; and his number is six hundred, three score and six." To many minds, 666 bristles with significance. The internet is stuffed with tremulous speculation about supermarket barcodes, implanted chips, numerical codes for the names of world leaders. However, the oldest known record of this famous verse, from the Oxyrhynchus site, gives the number as 616, as does the Zurich Bible. I have the impression that any number would do. One senses in the arithmetic of prophecy the yearnings of a systematising mind, bereft of the experimental scientific underpinnings that were to give such human tendencies their rich expression many centuries later. Astrology gives a similar impression of numerical obsession operating within a senseless void.

McEwan is fascinated with the fact that, especially in America, the book of Revelation is still taken seriously. While his direct attention is given to religious forms of apocalypticism, he also acknowledges the fact that many secular ideologies end with an explicit eschatology. But Marxism and radical environmentalism do not threaten his peace of mind as Christianity does. Why? Because Christian eschatological beliefs still influence politics in the West (even as Islamic apocalypticism influences the Muslim world).

He writes:

Thirty years ago, we might have been able to convince ourselves that contemporary religious apocalyptic thought was a harmless remnant of a more credulous, superstitious, pre-scientific age, now safely behind us. But today prophecy belief, particularly within the Christian and Islamic traditions, is a force in our contemporary history, a medieval engine driving our modern moral, geopolitical, and military concerns. The various jealous sky-gods - and they are certainly not one and the same god - who in the past directly addressed Abraham, Paul, or Mohammed, among others, now indirectly address us through the daily television news. These different gods have wound themselves inextricably around our politics and our political differences.

The human mind cannot help but look to the end. For this reason, eschatology will always be a central feature of any worldview or belief system. The Christian doctrine of eschatology is necessary to the biblical story and to the Gospel narrative.

Put simply, the Christian story unravels unless God brings the entire course of human history under His visible and perfect judgment, unless God's justice is perfectly displayed, unless the Christ is revealed in glory so that every knee bows and every tongue confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father [Phil. 2:11], unless Christ claims His redeemed people, unless God's triumph in Christ over death, sin, evil, and injustice is made universal. Put simply, unless every eye is dry and every tear is wiped away.

There is no Christian Gospel if history simply unwinds into a meaningless puddle, if the cosmos simply escapes into a cataclysmic black hole, or if the universe finally dies of exhausted energy. Without belief in a biblical eschatology, there is no Christian hope. Without a sense of perfect moral judgment in the end, the human heart is homeless.

Ian McEwan fears belief in eschatology. We should be far more fearful of living among those who fear no judgment to come. History cries out for judgment, and so does the human heart. Atheism offers no final hope, and no hope of moral satisfaction.

The Bible ends with just such a hope, and this confident hope frames the Christian worldview in the end as much as the belief in divine creation frames the beginning. Even so, Lord come quickly.

________________________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. For more articles and resources by Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to www.albertmohler.com. For information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu. Send feedback to mail@albertmohler.com. Original Source: www.albertmohler.com.


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  • DRJ »
    Fri Jun 13, 2008 6:07 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 3

    The people who are the most adamant in their rejection of the return, thousand-year reign, and new heaven-new earth promises in Scripture are those who are lost and therefore will never be prepared for such senarios. OF COURSE lost people reject the coming judgment! They would be insane to look forward to a time when they will be excluded from eternal life in heaven for their vitriolic attacks on the messengers of light and truth. They believe that all prophecy has already been fulfilled. They believe that we ARE NOW living in the glorious new "Church Age" that will only continue to get better! DUH! THey also believe that the CHURCH is now ruling the world as a sort of Christ-in-proxy. The one who said that Jesus and His disciples all said that He would return during their lifetimes is ignorant of the fact that Jesus hasn't returned 2000 years later. In fact, that person has limited the Lord Jesus by not believing that Jesus is God and does not have to conform to human understanding of times and epochs! DOUBLE-DUH! Jesus will reappear to rapture His church out of the world as soon as His Gospel has reached every people group on earth. The times of the Gentiles will then end. After the rapture, a time of world rule by the Antichrist will go on for 42 months. At that point the Antichrist will announce that he is God! The Jews will revolt and gain the persecution of the whole world. The antichrist will hound the Jews for another 42 months ending with an all-out assault on the nation of Israel by a multi-national coalittion. Jesus will return with His church in time to rescue Israel, defeat the antichrist and Satan, and begin a thousand year reign on earth.

  • Thu Jun 12, 2008 5:51 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 1

    Is eschatology merely the boy who cried wolf. The wolf is here, it runs everything. Pretty much everybody I know belongs to it and nobody believes me - or at least they say they don't. So when do we women get to kill ourselves a serpent. Love ya all, Pete

  • Thu Jun 12, 2008 10:13 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    http://www.historicist.com/

  • Wed Jun 11, 2008 8:05 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Who is Ian, that he thinks his opinion will somehow bring the wheels of Christianity to a screeching halt? Does he not realize that for 2000 years people have tried the same thing as he? Doesn't he realize that greater men then he...kings and kingdoms, warriors and armies, psychologists and philosophers have all tried to debunk Christianity. If entire kingdoms did absolutely nothing to stem the flood of Christianity, his one, small, insignificant voice will merely fall quietly, unheard. He will die, and soon be forgotten...but God's Word will continue to prosper and spread.

  • Wed Jun 11, 2008 2:22 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 4

    This entire article is meaningless because Jesus promised to return within the lifetimes of his apostles. All the apostles understood his teachings this way and taught the same thing. Furthermore, they recorded it in Holy Scripture.

    If we place the return of Christ in the future, we contradict Jesus, his "holy apostles" and Scripture.

    http://www.preterism.info

  • Tue Jun 10, 2008 8:18 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Now here is some good eschatology from a "very dangerous" website!
    http://polemos.net/Eschatology.html

  • Tue Jun 10, 2008 12:17 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 1

    Wow. I can't believe how many anti-eschatology people are rearing their head. Even the secular world acknowledges that the Bible is the best piece of recorded history we have to go on. Over 25% of the Bible deals with prophecy aka predicting the future. Of those that have already occured, the Bible has predicted them exactly. When you compare what the Bible predicts about the end of times versus what is going on in the world today, it's pretty plain to see that the end is near. As yourselves, are gas prices ever going to go down? Are wars ever going to stop? Are natural disasters increasing or decreasing as the years go by? This world is gaining momentum, just as the Bible predicted it would.

    Jesus spoke way too much about the end times and hell for them not to be true. It all goes back to the one fact. Either Jesus was a liar, a lunatic, or the Messiah. There is no in between. Which do you believe? I believe he was the Messiah and is coming back soon and I have the Bible, the most accurate piece of recorded history, on my side.

  • artm »
    Tue Jun 10, 2008 8:10 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 1

    I am always interested in this type of article because I am always amazed at the Ignorance that attempts to come forth as wisdom and Intelligence.

    And indeed it is the wisdom of the World, It is the wisdom of fallen and depraved man.

    It is the wisdom of those who have beed deceived by an enemy. I have no bitterness toward this fellow, I can only hope and pray that God in His grace will allow this poor poor man to know the truth.

    And one day soon I believe, Jesus willl come, And Judgement will also come to a world that thought it knew better than God.

  • Tue Jun 10, 2008 12:26 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 4

    How interesting! Is the author of this article actually advocating "end of times"? The point of the story should have focused on the fact that those "believers" in end of days are in fact dangerous to society, as they fail to plan for the future. Afterall, God will destroy the earth soon enough, so why should his people take responsibility to be her caretakers? Sounds to me like those who advocate literal interpretation of end of days are in fact dangerous, and this may contribute to the lack of urgency to address such issues as global warming, soaring budget deficits, and healthcare systems like Medicare teetering on the verg of extinction. Why should we bother to care about these problems? They are along we off. Lets hope God ends the world soon, so we don;t have to take responsibility to fix our own problems.

  • Mon Jun 09, 2008 10:30 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 2

    Is it any wonder that McEwan finds Christians dangerous? I've never met an honest atheist, I'm sure there is one out there somewhere but I can honestly say that all the atheists I've met are kidding. If you're an anti-christ, and you know, as the devil does, that yer not long for this world. Then yer gonna find religion (in general) to be dangerous - even if you go to church. Like there Nietzche said, "What doesn't kill me makes me stronger." Well, we're gonna kill ya. Love ya all, Pete.

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