Pick a Pack of Proper Preppers :: By Steve Schmutzer

I leaned back in my chair and watched as my friend carefully lifted out his new stock Remington 700 .308 from its case. He laid the rifle on his lap and fondly caressed its barrel.

“I can take out a bad guy from a quarter mile away with this sucker,” he said. “If I put a Leupold scope on it, it’s a guaranteed kill.”

I was confused. “How do you know they are a ‘bad guy’ if they’re that far away?”

“I’ll know,” he murmured.

I was unconvinced.

“Doesn’t the right to use a gun for self-defense end at the door?” I asked. I wasn’t an expert on these issues, but I’d already checked out my state’s laws on that one.

He curled his lip and looked at me with feigned disgust. “I’m not talking now. When the SHTF in the tribulation, you won’t want to wait till they’re on your doorstep firing at you. That’s too late.”

I took a sip of coffee as I thought about my next words.

“I don’t plan to be around then,” I replied matter-of-factly.

My friend said nothing. He shook his head and continued his public display of affection with his newest acquisition. He knew better than to argue with me.

My friend’s a good guy. I’ve known him a long time and he seems to be a solid Christian. He’s active in his church and he’s passionate about prayer. He also has a heart for ministry, and he’s trying to organize a street outreach team to college students. I can’t fault him there since that group needs all the help they can get these days.

Somewhere along the line however, my friend jumped on the bandwagon of the Reformed movement. I don’t know how or why that happened – but I’ve watched his journey with mounting concern.

A few years ago, he used to devour prophecy-themed books by Arthur W. Pink, J. Dwight Pentecost, and John F. Walvoord. Those were the good old days, and he and I used to have a lot of great discussions. He’s since given most of those books to me as he started reading a bunch of authors I was less familiar with.

He talks constantly about “the importance of the church,” and he’s frustrated with any discussion that holds it’s different than Israel. He throws out Romans 10:12 and Galatians 3:28 as his primary defenses for seeing “no difference between Jew and Gentile,” and he believes this settles the matter. He claims he doesn’t subscribe to replacement theology, but his newer notions seem to suggest otherwise.

I’m not sure where in his journey my friend became obsessed with The Gospel Coalition, but he’s all about it now. He’s convinced himself that every passage of Scripture somehow divulges the person and work of Jesus Christ – and I do mean every! He goes to elaborate lengths to explain the “gospel meaning” within verses that are plainly speaking to unrelated matters.

All said, my friend is not the same person he used to be. He’s made choices to believe things he once didn’t.

I still remember the day we met for lunch and he told me he’d decided he was a “post-millenialist.”  I knew what that was, but I wanted him to explain his position to me.

In short, he believes we are in the Millennial Kingdom now. He does not believe it’s a literal 1,000 years, but “a very long time” instead. He believes the church will grow in its ministry and effectiveness to eventually transform entire cultures around the world, infusing them with prosperity, goodwill, and “kingdom peace.” He’s sure the Second Coming of Jesus Christ will occur only after this all takes place.

He’s got one big problem here: the Bible doesn’t support any of that.

Actually, my friend has several big problems, and they each begin with his decision to doubt that God says what He means and means what He says. His doctrinal gaffes are the offspring of willfully mishandling the Bible.

He doesn’t believe in a literal Millennial Kingdom (Rev. 20:2-7; Luke 1:32-33; Micah 4:2-4, et al) because he sees no Biblical significance in national Israel, and he dismisses God’s unconditional and unilateral promises to the Jews. He’s convinced himself that there’s a better meaning within these Scriptures, and he feels self-righteous for discerning their “spiritual application.”

Because he feels the church will continue to have a greater and more positive impact on the world as time goes on, my friend sidesteps discussions about the rapture. Why remove from the earth the very institution that’s – obviously! – making our world a much better place to live?

He’s lumped the rapture into being one and the same with the physical Second Coming of Christ. He argues that Christ doesn’t come back to earth two more times. I agree with him. I’ve pointed out all the ways Scripture defines these two events differently, but he’s quick to spiritualize those details which call his own persuasions into question.

It’s not hard to see that my friend generally discounts the prophetic Scriptures. Though he once had an appetite to study them, he now claims they are the “nonessential” parts of God’s Word. He’s condescending to folks like me that would challenge him on that, and he feels “we should be focused on the gospel” instead.

I’ve pondered my friend’s belief that the person and work of Jesus Christ is somehow revealed in every verse of the Bible – and the way he disregards the importance and intent of the prophetic Scriptures. Is there a connection?

Besides the fact that certain prominent Christian leaders appear to align with my friend’s errant views – and it’s always easier to tout one’s position if “so and so” supports them too – I’ve come to an unsettling conclusion. There is absolutely a strong connection!

If one believes something is there within a particular portion of God’s Word when it’s really not, then it’s no big deal to claim something is not there when it really is! It’s the same reckless mishandling of the Bible either way. Neither decision submits one’s will to God since both choices engage in an intentional remodeling of His divine truth.

And both choices are guilty of dismissing the greater body of God’s Word in favor of an “easy-believe-ism” which justifies one’s right to rank the importance of Scripture. It all tends to lead to mindless chant-like slogans like “It’s all about Jesus” that sound true on the surface but which overlook the proper regard and handling of the entire Word of God (2 Tim. 2:15; 3:16).

Let me make one thing clear about the gospel message. While I believe the greater picture of the Scriptures point to Jesus and His redemptive plan, the granular approach may not tell that same story every time. The gospel message is not always inherent in each verse or even in some passages of Scripture.

One is therefore required to take in the complete counsel of God’s Word, and that includes all of the prophetic Scriptures. In Rev. 19:10 it says, “For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.” The bottom line is: prophecy is designed to reveal the full person and divinity of our Lord Jesus, and as such, we should not discount it.  We miss something important if we do.

My friend’s decision to approach God’s Word on his own terms precipitates a conundrum for him: his rationale is not required to follow a consistent logic. He can say in one moment that the church is making everything better in this world, while claiming in the next breath that he can “take out bad guys in the tribulation” with his new, bolt-action boom stick.

Are things going to get better, or are they going to get worse? He’s saying two different things.

It’s convenient for him to have it both ways – and in that, he’s not alone. Plenty of Christians pick and choose their way through the Scriptures like they’re at a buffet. This permits them to hold to whatever beliefs best serve their preferred positions, but it’s not right, responsible, or even remotely reverent.

And that brings up my earlier conversation with my friend. There are some issues I want to address for those believers like him who are prepping now to go through the tribulation.

There are various passages in the Bible that speak to the matter of “saints” during the tribulation. The larger counsel of the Scriptures makes it clear this is a group which comes to saving faith after the rapture and not before it. The reality check that emerges for these people is not a pretty one, and several points are made evident:

They are not protected from the impact of God’s judgments.

In Revelation 7:9-17, John sees a vast multitude in heaven, and the text says they are martyred believers from all parts of the globe. The scene is explained to John, and he learns this crowd came “out of the great tribulation.”

This underscores a plain fact: people will come to genuine saving faith during this terrible time. The convicting ministry of the Holy Spirit (John 16:8-10) will continue then as it does now.

But John learns something else about this group – these saints will not suffer “any more.” Specifically, they will not face any more extreme hunger or thirst, nor will they need to further endure the scorching sun and heat. Their severe physical, emotional, and mental strain on earth has come to an end.

It’s clear that the closing years of these martyrs’ lives on earth will be desperate times. It will be hard for them to acquire their basic needs of food, water, and shelter. They will live their lives on the run, looking over their shoulders, and doing whatever they can do to survive.

The larger Biblical narrative of the tribulation describes God’s judgments as far-reaching. Specific texts like Revelation 7:9-17 clarify that it will be a very difficult time for believers too.

They are not victorious over the ambitions of the world religion.

My friend believes Christians will eventually overcome the corruption of this world and lead it into a glorious spiritual age. He believes the institution of the church is playing this role even now.

In fact, quite the opposite is true. The world ahead of us is going to descend into depths of chaos, barbarism, and depravity the likes of which history has never seen (Matt. 24:21; Rev. 11:9-10). There’s no sound, Biblical indication that Christians will deter these developments, and that’s a much different scenario than my friend anticipates.

Organized religion will indeed play a role, but it’ll be part of the problem and not part of the solution.  Christians will be viciously targeted by a corrupt world religion during the tribulation (Rev. 17:6), and they are not likely to survive this pogrom as the fifth seal judgment of Revelation 6:9-11 makes very clear.

The tribulation Scriptures repeatedly emphasize the theme of persecuted Christians during the tribulation. They are murdered “….because of the word of God and the testimony they had maintained” (Rev. 6:9). The post-rapture saints are not “victors” by relevant earthly definitions – “victims” is much closer to the truth.

They are not insulated against the effect of the global economy.

I know a few preppers well – and they’re obsessed with being “ready for anything.” They are stocking up now so they can sail through the challenges of refusing the mark of the beast.

Beans, band aids, bullets, and batteries may be their cliché staples, but are they really ready for what’s coming? It’s easy to read Revelation 13:16-17 and oversimplify the situation.

This passage says those who refuse the mark cannot “buy or sell,” but the implications of this are far greater than one’s inability to score a Big Mac or sell a bike.

The real picture is one of complete economic control. It’s an entirely different system one cannot easily avoid and it will own those who are part of it. It will affect everything: taxes, mortgage and car payments, utilities, medical services, school loans, credit cards, and myriad other basic transactional elements we take for granted today. It will be a radical and invasive concept through which a comprehensive new economic structure will flow.

Hunkering down with a basement full of goodies might work for a couple weeks, but when bills aren’t being paid, mail isn’t getting picked up, or other folks get desperate and put “two and two together,” it’ll be nearly impossible to go unnoticed. And trust me – when the first bullet flies in either direction, the gig is up!

And that leads to my last – and most sobering – point about believers in the tribulation.

They are not successful against the campaign of the antichrist.

Read that again and let it sink in. It’s not my conclusion; it’s the Bible’s.

According to the Scriptures, God gives the antichrist “authority” (Rev. 13:5-7). This apocalyptic despot is entitled to his role because God will arrange it. This enables the antichrist to “wear down” the saints and “overcome” them according to Daniel 7:25. Revelation 13:5-7 adds the antichrist is given power to “….wage war with the saints and conquer them.” He’ll be extremely effective!

Satan gets in on the deal too. While God grants authority and power to the antichrist to fulfill His divine sovereign plan, Satan actually gives the antichrist HIS power and “HIS great authority” (Revelation 13:2). Satan’s role is a subset of God’s intentions. Satan’s personally invested – but ironically, he’s assisting God’s plan!

The result is the antichrist is unstoppable. Nothing – and nobody – on earth will be able to stand against him. Everyone will know it and everybody will be talking about it (Rev. 13:4).

That’s why masses of Christian martyrs in the Great Tribulation are killed for their faith and for their refusal to bow to the antichrist’s terms (Rev. 20:4). These believers do not gain the right to reign with Christ because they set up a perimeter and fought off intruders while living on rice and pond water. They will reign because they chose a right relationship with their Lord and Savior over everything else.

So let’s just cut to the chase here. The antichrist is a tool in God’s hands, and Satan – duped by his own pride and ambition – plays right into God’s plan. While nothing is out of God’s control, the net effect is the tribulation saints will die in innumerable numbers (Revelation 7:9). Their desperate conditions will be the result of facing unparalleled injustices on earth (Rev. 6:10-11).

Prepping to go through the tribulation may sound appealing to the mercenary types (“Oh man – I can’t wait to waste all the zombies!”), but that’s a passion which finds its inspiration more in The Walking Dead than in The Living Word. It’s not based in sobriety, and it’s certainly not based in a proper interpretation of the Bible.

I think it goes without saying that one must choose to have this errant view. If one mocks the prophetic Scriptures (2 Peter 3:3-4), shuns solid teaching in favor of right-sounding pabulum (2 Tim. 4:3), extracts meanings from the Bible that are not there, or refuses to act on the divine truth that is there, then one naturally puts themselves at risk for doctrinal drift.

Believers today are reminded that they “….are not destined for wrath” (1 Thessalonians 1:10; 5:9; Revelation 3:10), and the Scriptures teach that the Tribulation timeframe is not about the church. God has different intentions for those seven years, and they do not involve His Bride.

Those of us that are part of the church right now are misled if we are prepping to “take out the bad guys from a quarter mile away.” Instead, we should be “prepping” our hearts to hear the voice of the archangel and “….to meet the Lord in the air” (1 Thess. 4:15-17).

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The Last Hope :: By Steve Schmutzer

The Last Hope 

I suppose you could call me a news junkie. Every day, it’s my habit to scan through a few websites to see what’s going on in the world.

While I have no desire to support the deceptive agenda of the left, I check out their media staples just to know what they’re pushing now and plotting next. As Jack Ryan said in The Hunt for Red October, “It is wise to study the ways of one’s adversary. Don’t you think?”

That means I routinely glance through The Washington Compost, the Huffing & Puffington Post, PMSNBC, Clinton News Network (CNN), The New York Slimes, and The Associated Depress (my nods to Rush Limbaugh and Mark Levin) just to get their angle on things.

Then I peruse through The Drudge Report, Breitbart News, Infowars, The Powdered Wig Society, The Jihad Watch Daily Digest, and Fox News just to balance things out a bit. I’ve learned that somewhere in between the two groups – and leaning more towards the second one – lies the truth.  The right isn’t perfect, but the left is shamefully wrong.

A link on The Drudge Report a few days ago caught my eye, “Hungarian Leader Calls Christianity ‘Europe’s Last Hope.’” The article reviewed the State of Hungary speech by the Prime Minister of – you got it, “Hungary” – Viktor Orbán.

According to Viktor Orbán, things are bad in the world and Europe’s got the worst of the situation. His concern is current policies have “opened the way to the decline of Christian culture and the advance of Islam.” By his assessments, central Europe is being systematically conquered beneath a tsunami of Muslim immigration.

He’s right.

He’s not politically correct for calling it like it is, but boiling critical issues down to their lowest common denominator is hardly the remedy for a crisis. Instead, we need more people who state the facts, who “call a spade a spade,” and who don’t cower from the reactions of those who wish to destroy the things that preserve a culture. Political correctness has never been an ally of truth.

But it’s how Viktor Orbán said what he said that gives me pause. He didn’t say, “A change in immigration policy is Europe’s best plan.” He didn’t try to advance new laws to encourage tolerance and assimilation. He didn’t propose the notion that a blended faith will save Europe, he didn’t require any church to report the topics of its sermons, and he didn’t scold his countrymen for “bitterly clinging” to the things they cherish.

Rather than stand in front of his nation and smugly gloat that, “Whatever we once were, we are no longer a Christian nation….” he reminded them of the value of what they had discarded. He said simply that Christianity is “Europe’s last hope.”

Those are remarkable words from a national leader within a continent that has all-but-abandoned its Christian heritage. All over Europe, hundreds of stately cathedrals stand empty of worshippers. More pigeons poop in their belfries than parishioners pray in their pews. Many European “Christians” care more about their stained glass than their stained hearts.

Americans are frequently naïve. They thump their chests over their nation’s “Christian heritage,” but it was to continental Europe where the early apostles embarked on their missionary journeys and preached the Gospel with passion. That history is noted in the Scriptures.

Europe gave us Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation.  It also gave us John Wycliffe, John Calvin, William Tyndale, John Wesley, William Wilberforce, and C.S. Lewis among many other giants of the faith.  In short, the Gospel has been advanced around the world in large part due to the leaders and leadership of “Christian Europe.”

But it’s nothing like that now; the present situation instead is a shocking plummet. In the UK, 62 percent of young people 18 to 24 years old claim to have “no religion.” In Scotland, church attendance has fallen by more than half in the past 30 years. France and Sweden rank among the highest percentage of people who openly deny the existence of God at 40 percent and 34 percent respectively. These are just a few of the sobering trends which underscore Europe’s dramatic decline from its reformation roots to today’s secular society.

Because America is slow to appreciate the lessons which Europe has learned the hard way, our nation is running a close second in a race that nobody is wise to win.

Like Europe, we’ve largely abandoned our moorings of faith – and as a direct result, we’ve also abandoned our sound judgment (Romans 1:21-22). Whether we’re discussing immigration, free speech, gun control, or any other matter that pivots around sensible talking points, we’re showing we’ve lost our grasp of the obvious.

Now we hear our nation’s lemming politicians and copycat companies spouting, “People don’t want thoughts and prayers!” in response to national tragedies.  They’d rather impulsively push for changes to laws and to the constitution than soberly reflect on the need for a change in our moral culture.

And that gets us right back to the timely words of Viktor Orbán. They are profound – and it turns out, they are also unwelcome. According to Gatestone Institute, “Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is the Eastern nemesis of the European elite. No one else in Europe except him speaks about defending “Christianity.”

Hungary’s Prime Minister is the proverbial canary in a coal mine, and he could hardly care what his critics think. It was Hungary and her eastern European neighbors who defeated the Ottomans in 1699. He is justified in feeling threatened by their descendants who love death more than most people love life.

Orbán’s objective is to turn his country’s dilemma around by exercising some common sense, to reinforce his culture with faith-based amendments, and to save his nation from Europe’s epidemic of foolishness. It’s not exactly a call for national repentance, but saying “Christianity is Europe’s last hope” is a positive step in the right direction.

The closing portions of the prophetic Scriptures emphasize a clear “last hope” message, but it goes well beyond any rhetoric that seeks to return a nation to cultural stability. It is instead an urgent and divinely-mandated appeal to get one’s heart right with God before the little time that’s left runs out.

When the angel in Revelation 14:6-7 issues the “eternal gospel” to the whole world, it is in every sense of the concept “the last hope” for anyone that hears it. Pressures will be fierce to give in to the antichrist’s agenda, and critics will be many against the few who see the light and resist his articulate deceptions.

This angel’s “last hope” dispatch shames the easy-to-swallow, seeker-sensitive, and story-based delivery of the salvation message we typically toss around with questionable intentions today. There is no goal in the angel’s approach to be attractive to the lost or to “have a conversation.” He has no ambition to identify with one group or avoid offending another. The angel’s words hold no regard for errant doctrines nor do they give any respect to any religious practices which are removed from the literal truth of God’s Word.

Instead, the angel’s mission is a last-ditch effort to arrest the attention of those people in the world that are still redeemable. Plenty won’t be since they will have made choices that seal them for eternal judgment (Rev. 14:9-12), and so the message is also a warning against abandoning reason.

We don’t think about it much, but “the last hope” Gospel message from the angel is based in common sense. Conditions in the world at that time will plainly support everything he says. The result is the angel’s words are in-your-face, confrontational, brief, – and by every one of today’s lukewarm standards, “politically incorrect.”  They are also very effective!

While “the last hope” for a culture under siege may be a return to Christian roots wherein justice, common sense, and order are once again restored – and while “the last hope” for a lost soul in the clutches of destruction is the frank declaration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, Paul reminds true believers of their own “blessed hope” in Titus 2:13.  This is the rapture, and it has encouraged the saints and given them real hope since the church began.

The wonderful truth for those who are already secure in Christ is they can focus on “the present hope” rather than “the last hope.”  Jesus promises to come for us at any moment – unannounced – to take His bride away to be with Him forever (1 Thess. 4:17).

We cannot possibly imagine the glory of this imminent event which rescues us from the wrath to come (1 Thess. 1:10), but we are sustained and encouraged by the veracity of that hope each and every day.

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