Last Days Prophesied!

Scoffers in the Last Days

Two thousand years ago, Jesus told His disciples to watch for specific signs that would indicate His return was near—widespread religious deception, increasing violence, spreading ethnic strife and wars, famines, disease epidemics and increasingly severe natural disasters—events that are making headlines today (Matthew 24; Mark 13; Luke 21). However, the Apostle Peter mentions another major sign that will mark the approaching end of the age, “knowing this first, that scoffers will come in the last days, walking according to their own lusts… saying ‘Where is the promise of His coming?” (2 Peter 3:1–4). Peter foresaw a future time at the end of the age when skeptics and critics would mock the plain statements of Scripture. Jude, the brother of Jesus, mentions this same sign, “remember the words which were spoken before by the apostles… how they told you that there would be mockers in the last time who would walk according to their own ungodly lusts” (Jude 17–20). A major sign of the end of the age will be the emergence of scoffers and critics who will attack the Bible and the teachings of Jesus just before His return. We are witnessing this growing phenomenon and its consequences today!

Prophecies Come Alive

For nearly two thousand years, the Bible and the words of Jesus and the apostles were regarded as divinely inspired writings. Biblical teachings provided a unique foundation that set Western Civilization apart from the rest of the world. However, beginning in the 1850s with the speculative theories of Charles Darwin (creation without a Creator), Karl Marx (religion is the opiate of people) and the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (God is dead), critics and skeptics saw an opportunity to attack the veracity of the Bible and reject the God of the Bible and His teachings. In the late 1800s, Robert Ingersoll, a self-educated American attorney and professed atheist, attracted thousands who came to hear his outrageous attacks on God, religion and Christianity (see Challenging the Bible by Dean Tipton).

Since the 1960s, liberal scholars and theologians, progressive politicians and the secular media have adopted this same approach and mounted a sustained attack on all the elements of biblical religion. In recent years, in once-professing-Christian nations, we have witnessed atheists openly attack, theologians openly doubt, and political leaders openly defy the teachings of the Bible and deliberately scoff at the idea of an all-powerful God who intervenes in human affairs. British professor Richard Dawkins claims in his book The God Delusion that “there almost certainly is no God,” that the Bible is “just plain weird” and filled with “obnoxious doctrines,” that the God of the Old Testament is a “vindictive… bloodthirsty… monster” and “the most unpleasant character in all fiction,” pp. 2, 4, 31, 237, 252). Author Christopher Hitchens writes in his book god is not Great that religion is grounded on wishful thinking, and he lampoons the “mythical morality tales of the holy books” (pp. 4–6). American atheist and neuroscientist Sam Harris writes in The End of Faith that faith-based religion, like alchemy, is headed for “the graveyard of bad ideas,” and he claims there is no more evidence for God or Satan than there is for Zeus and that religious faith is based on a lack of evidence (pp. 13, 25, 232).

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