This is not the time to be Rapture-obsessed

Friday, May 16th, 2008 @ 7:05 pm | God-worshipper

It isn't funny that we have China's quake happening days after the disaster in Myanmar. It isn't funny that I already have end-times literature trickling into my mailbox, like it always does after major disasters. It happened right after the Tsunami, and yes it's happening again. And it, as usual, disgusts me what some Christians can be like.

Let me show you an example. Please visit this site: Rapture Ready News.

Read it? Fun right? I personally found it intriguing that the administrators of the site were so meticulous in listing out 'signs' of happenings in the world that point out that the end is nigh, Christ is coming. Then I felt disgusted lah. The title of the site gives me enough reasons to not like it. Pre-Trib rapturists, before you're quick to accuse me of denying the second coming of Christ, cool down, have a thought. I'm not anti-Rapture. I just don't like obsession in the rapture, because it takes us too far away from the whole point of choosing to believe in Jesus Christ.

The site reminds me once of a service I attended somewhere, a few months after the tsunami, where the minister went up on stage, showed the congregation a video tape of the disaster as it struck and the devastation it left behind, and then following the video, went on to talk about how we are so blessed because we were safe and far from disaster and how that proved that God is still in our midst. The minister continued to stressed on the point that it was important that we realized that the tsunami was merely another sign that the end times was near, and then he quoted from the famous Acts passage, 'But Peter, standing with the eleven, lifted up his voice and addressed them, And I will show wonders in the heaven above and signs on the earth beneath, blood, and fire, and vapor of smoke; the sun shall be turned into darkness and the moon into blood, before the day of the Lord comes, the great and manifest day. And it shall be that whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.'

Of course the minister also reminded us that we had to further commit ourselves to the ways of Christ, and call upon the power of the Holy Spirit, for when our Lord comes like a thief in the night and we are not prepared, we will be left behind. 'And let me tell you, NO GOOD CHRISTIAN WILL WANT TO BE LEFT BEHIND!'

Many years ago I was of the opinion that Christianity was that kind of gila faith that was extremely mad and vague. First, there are too many flaws in the argument for disasters being a punishment of God, and us being safe in Malaysia, i.e. we are still blessed by God. It also implies that if disaster strikes a person, God is punishing him, does that mean that God randomly punishes the innocent? This is obviously something that no good man should subscribe to. The other thing is there's too many vague words in this kind of discussion, 'commit ourselves to the ways of Christ', 'call upon power of the holy spirit'… do what?

I don't know about you, but I have a feeling that come Sunday when many of us attend Church, some of us will be faced with this kind of message from the minister. I know I've heard it many times before, and I'm certain that there will be churches with ministers who will take the opportunity to fish for more believers during altar call by preaching the end-times message. If you are going to Church this Sunday, let me do my little part here by telling you to please think before you suddenly decide to accept Christ — you shouldn't believe in Jesus Christ if you're only interested in achieving heavenly citizenship - that is not the point.

In this disaster-prone season (thanks to the work of man, global warming is ridiculously dangerous these days, and also to the tectonic plate movement, a natural phenomenon), it is easy for the frail human to fall back upon the easier choice. Sites like Rapture Ready scare the shit out of me, because turns Christ-loving people into freaked out zombies waiting for the world to end when we're actually called to do so much more. I hope that my pastor is not the type (hahah I know he's not the type but I wanna pressure him anyway). For me, when disasters strike, its a call to all of us, whether we're Christian or not, to walk out into the world and do our part to make a difference. Gandhi, a great Hindu and one of the leaders I admire most, said the 'Be the change you want in the world' part. That's basically what Christ wants us to be too.

I mean, imagine lah if Jesus Christ were here today, and then He sees you sitting comfortably in your homes praying and thanking God for how He has blessed you, and then continuing to watch TV and talk about how blessed you are that you're not struck by lightning yet. I would roll my eyes and wonder why you're not already out there making a difference by being Christ to the people who now need us the most.

To China and Myanmar.

8 Responses to “This is not the time to be Rapture-obsessed”

  1. Kelvin Says:

    Hi Claire,

    Yes I agree with you. Doesn’t the Bible also says when the second coming, none knows? that only God the Father and Jesus knows of the time of the second coming, not even the angels of heaven know, that we will hear rumours and stuff like that.

    I think people who receive salvation out of a fear of hell will not enter Heaven…people who receive salvation because they believe..that’s what matters, that there was a person who was a Son of God, who gave the ultimate sacrifice for us. and i think people who believe should always live by His example of what He will do, say, think and act. hard as it is, that’s the benchmark that we as followers of Christ have to follow.

  2. Sivin Says:

    You know me well … :-) I am not the type. But I can do some impersonations!

    Our response to the disasters is more important than our rationalizations of it!

    hahahah I also can impersonate, brother, be fearful not to judge your brethren….b>

  3. Chris C Says:

    now we know we’re saved and been blessed. let’s walk the talk.if i were not wrong, God did bring disaster to punish humankind but that’s before Christ died for us. After Christ died on the cross, God will not punish us through disaster. pls correct me if i were wrong.

  4. Peter Says:

    [quote]now we know we’re saved and been blessed. let’s walk the talk.if i were not wrong, God did bring disaster to punish humankind but that’s before Christ died for us. After Christ died on the cross, God will not punish us through disaster. pls correct me if i were wrong. [/quote]

    You’re right Chris C! God in its ever omnipotent ways, needed to use Christ, his own son to get us to believe in it which is to say it needed to create someone to fix its own flawed creation.

  5. Kittykins Says:

    God bless them

  6. ahden Says:

    God doesnt create His son, the son exists as he is.

    i agree with the fact that christian nowadays taking too much notice on theological theory and neglect the practical part, which is not good, but thats the fact. all men are selfish, thats a fact too.

  7. Peter Says:

    Yes, God did create its own son, his physical manifestation in the flesh. I admit my sentence does sound confusing at first.

  8. minishorts Says:

    Peter - God didn’t create his son lah, why do you make Jesus sound like a ‘creation’? He’s eternally begotten of the Father.

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