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The
End of the World
Horror Story - or Bible Hope?
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AS
the sun began to rise, the truth became frighteningly clear: nothing
was left. There was no-one to be seen; every living thing had been destroyed,
wiped off the face of the earth.
Yet,
incredibly, there were a few survivors; just one family sealed up in
their home-made shelter, with enough provisions to last for over a year.
They had listened to the warnings and had prepared, so that when the
time came, in they went with their livestock and their survival kit.
Their
minds were still full of the experience they had gone through. To begin
with there had been horror; sounds outside of terror and despair, upheaval
and chaos, but the family had sat tight, holding hands, safely enclosed.
Later came silence and that was even worse. What now? Was it safe to
open the window? What would they find? They knew with certainty that
the earth outside, would be strange; a very different place from the
familiar world they had left behind. Their home had gone for sure and
all the landmarks. There would be emptiness and devastation. Would they
be able to survive?
Perhaps,
you are thinking, this is just science fiction. The chances are it will
never happen. The fact is, it actually did happen to real people. It's
a true account of a family who survived when their world came to an
end.
They
knew nothing about nuclear war or radiation: the danger which surrounded
them was caused by billions of tons of water - tidal waves and torrents
which submerged the earth. Nevertheless they are of especial interest
to us, for we too are faced with the possibility of world-wide disaster,
a fiery holocaust instead of a flood and the fear that our world like
theirs could come to an end.
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Noah's
Time - Just like ours!
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You
can read a full account of Noah and the flood in the Bible - in Genesis
(chapters 6-8). Although Noah and his family lived 5,000 years ago,
their world was not all that different from ours. The history books
may tell us that back in those days men were primitive and just emerging
from the stone-age, but don't you believe it! The Bible tells us that
in fact they were very civilised, living in cities, enjoying themselves,
getting rich, eating and drinking well, permissive in their behaviour,
totally lacking in morals. There was violence and crime, cruelty and
oppression and, just like nowadays, the earth had become a dangerous
place.
Noah
and his family were sickened with the misery and violence they saw:
they wanted a better world where there would be kindness and peace.
The main difference between them and the rest of the population was
that they believed in God the Creator and they knew He cared about the
earth and mankind.
God
spoke to Noah and told him He was also grieved and angry because His
earth was being spoiled and He intended to clean it up. In fact, God
said He would literally wash it and wipe off all traces of the people
who had filled the earth with wickedness.
God
gave Noah clear instructions how he and his family could survive and
when Noah, his wife, his sons and their wives went into the ark they
had built, it was God Himself who sealed them in. The family lived in
the ark for over a year until the flood water had drained away and God,
who had brought them through that terrible ordeal, encouraged them to
go out into the earth and start a new life.
The
old world had certainly come to an end; there was no sign of any civilisation
or of any of the things men had made, but the earth itself was safe
and habitable, ready and waiting for Noah to plant seed and produce
crops. God still had a purpose with planet earth. In fact God immediately
gave Noah a solemn promise:
"Never
again will I curse the ground because of man, even though every inclination
of his heart is evil from childhood. And never again will I destroy
all living creatures as I have done. As long as the earth endures, seedtime
and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never
cease" (Genesis 8:21,22).
As
a guarantee God gave a sign - the rainbow which appears in the sky after
rain (Genesis 9:14-16).
This
promise was given even though God knew Noah's descendants (from whom
sprang all the races and nations on earth) would be no better than the
people who lived before the flood, because, to quote God's words again:
"Every inclination of the human heart is evil from childhood". This
means every single one of us has inherited from the first human parents
(Adam and Eve) a selfish core which makes it easier to hate than to
love and which leads to destruction and death. Left to ourselves we
are powerless to change this sinful nature and have no hope of saving
the world.
God
had proved to Noah he was able to save him but Noah and his family eventually
died. Suffering and death still continued on the earth. so what was
the point of being saved? What comfort was it to Noah to be promised
that the earth would endure if he wasn't alive to enjoy it?
We
have to turn to the New Testament to discover what motivated Noah. We
are told he had faith that God would reward him in the future even though
he died, and he would be the "heir of righteousness" (Hebrews 11:7).
Noah died in faith, knowing he would again live on the earth when it
was made wholly clean, when he and all those like him would no longer
be sinful, dying creatures, but would be changed to righteous, immortal
beings; when the world men had made would end and the world God had
designed would begin.
Although
after the flood the earth seemed to continue in lust the same way as
it had from the beginning, God had already begun to create His world.
He had no intention of allowing the earth to be filled with suffering
and death for ever. Here are some of God's intentions in His own words
in the Bible:
"This
is what the Lord says: He who created the heavens, He is God; He who
fashioned and made the earth, He founded it; He did not create it to
be empty, but formed it to be inhabited . . . There is no God apart
from me, a righteous God and a Saviour . . . Turn to me and be saved,
all you ends of the earth . . . Before me every knee will bow; by me
every tongue will swear. They will say of me, 'In the Lord alone are
righteousness and strength' " (Isaiah 45:18-24).
"For
the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord,
as the waters cover the sea" (Habakkuk 2:14).
God
first revealed His plan to a man called Abraham, who was born in the
Middle East about 1,000 years after Noah. Abraham believed in God and
he was told that through his descendants, al the nations of the earth
would be blessed. Like Noah, Abraham also knew the promise was an everlasting
one, reaching into the future when God's world came into its own on
the earth; he knew he would be "heir of the world" (Romans 4:13).
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Abraham
- Ancestor of Jesus Christ
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God
promised to give Abraham and his descendants a country, and from Abraham
came a nation of people, the Jews. When the Jews settled in the land
of Israel they became a Kingdom - in fact God's Kingdom on earth - to
be an example of righteousness and peace for all nations. Their capital
city, chosen by God, was Jerusalem, where the temple, God's House, was
built to His honour and glory. But the Jews as a nation were unable
to save the world, even though they were shown signs and wonders and
given help and instruction from God. Some of the Jews believed and obeyed
but the majority preferred to go their own evil way.
The
Jewish world was far from being the Kingdom of God until God sent His
only Son, Jesus Christ, born a Jew rind a descendant of Abraham through
Mary his mother, to save His people from sin and death and to rule over
the Kingdom.
The
birth of Jesus was a miracle and his life was in every way unique. He
showed people how they should live; how they should learn to care for
others instead of only themselves and replace the hate in their hearts
with love. Jesus made it clear the Jewish world of that time would have
to end. The Jewish leaders were hypocrites, outwardly pretending to
be godly and righteous but inwardly full of wickedness. The temple had
become "a den of thieves" instead of a "house of prayer" (Matthew 21:13)
and it would be destroyed, together with the city of Jerusalem, and
the Jewish people would be enslaved and scattered throughout the earth.
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"Thy
will be done on earth"
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To
those who believed and followed, Jesus gave a message of hope and good
news about the Kingdom of God. He taught them to pray for the Kingdom
to come and God's will to be done "on earth as in heaven" (Matthew 6:10).
Jesus assured his followers that God so loved the world that He had
sent His only Son as the Saviour, that "whoever believes in him shall
not perish but have everlasting life" (John 3:16); that he was "the
resurrection and the life" and would raise the dead (John 5:25-29).
Jesus
told his disciples he would come "in the clouds with power and great
glory" (Matthew 24:30); his throne would be in Jerusalem; he would rule
over the nations and his faithful followers would inherit that Kingdom,
ruling with him over the whole earth (Matthew 25:31-34).
The
Jewish leaders refused to believe Jesus Christ was the Son of God, their
Saviour and King, and they plotted to destroy him. So Jesus was crucified
and died (Matthew 27). This was the price God paid to save His world!
His only Son, whom He loved, who showed people what God was like, the
Saviour, the One born to be the King, was put to death by wicked men.
God's
plan had reached a crisis. Here were the two worlds in conflict, brought
face to face. On the one hand, God's world, represented by His Son,
the righteous King who demonstrated understanding and forgiveness and
was caring and kind - even though, having done nothing wrong, he experienced
the full force of human wickedness. On the other hand, the world made
by men, motivated by hatred, whose power was based on oppression, greed,
violence and destruction.
In
Jesus Christ, God offered the solution to the curse of sin and death.
He showed that death was no problem to Him, for He could bring back
the dead to life. His Son who had never sinned rose from the dead on
the third day after he had died on the cross, now to be alive for evermore.
He appeared to his followers and turned their bewilderment into excitement,
their grief into joy (John 20; Luke 24:36-48). Jesus told them the time
had not yet come for God's Kingdom to be set up on earth. He had to
go to heaven to His Father, but all power had been given to him in heaven
and in earth. They were to go to all nations, preaching the Gospel (God's
good news), teaching them to keep his commands and baptizing them in
his name for the forgiveness of their sins. And Jesus promised, "Surely
I will be with you always, even unto the end of the world" (Matthew
28:18-20).
Jesus'
disciples knew that "the end of the world" would come when Jesus returned
to set up the Kingdom of God; at that time he would raise the dead who
had been faithful to his Father and to him; they would he given eternal
life and would rule with him over the earth.
When
Jesus had spoken about his return he made it clear that it would coincide
with a time of great trouble on the earth - and he particularly mentioned
Noah. He said:
"In
the days before the flood, people were eating and drinking, marrying
and giving in marriage, up to the day Noah entered the ark; and they
knew nothing about what would happen until the flood came and took them
all away. That is how it will be at the coming of the Son of Man" (Matthew
24:38,39).
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Just
like the Days of Noah!
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From
heaven Jesus sent messages to his apostles. He said that as time passed
many people would scoff and say, 'What about that promised coming kingdom?
Everything goes on just as it always has since the beginning.' But such
people deliberately forget that long ago the world was deluged in water
and destroyed. The Lord is not slow in keeping His promises: He is patient,
wanting everyone to repent, not to perish. A thousand years are nothing
to God - they seem like a day.
But,
just as the earth was once destroyed by water, the present heavens and
earth are reserved for fire. Bible language suggests that the heavens
will disappear with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire and
the earth and everything in it will be burned (2 Peter 3:3-10; see also
Acts 17:31 and 2 Thessalonians 1:6-10).
So,
when Jesus returns to set up the Kingdom of God, will our world be destroyed
by fire? When Peter and Paul wrote those words the possibility of men
being able to destroy the earth by fire would be way beyond their imagination.
In our days it is a very real fear. It is no secret that there are enough
nuclear weapons stockpiled literally to incinerate every living thing
on the face of the earth and to leave it empty and waste.
Is
this what the Bible foretells? Will there be a nuclear war?
Let's
look at the other evidence in the Bible, remembering Jesus endorsed
all that was said by the Old Testament prophets, who foretold that the
centre of events at the time of the end would he Israel and especially
the city of Jerusalem.
The
prophecies made centuries ago are startling in their relevance to our
present world. They speak about Israel and the Jewish people as a power
to be reckoned with among the nations; of Jerusalem being a major cause
of trouble and concern; nations such as Persia (Iran), Libya, Ethiopia
and a great northern power, with massive armaments, becoming a threat
to world peace and invading Israel.
For
instance: the prophet Ezekiel (chapters 38-39) foretells a terrible
disaster in Israel in the "latter years" after the people of Israel
have returned to their land from a long exile. A vast army will invade
Israel from the north, but God will intervene:
"At
that time there shall be a great earthquake in the land of Israel .
. . all the people on the face of the earth will tremble at my presence
. . . Every man's sword will be against his brother" (38:19-21).
God
will pour down torrents of rain, hailstones and burning sulphur on them
and they will fall on the mountains of Israel. The war will have a far-reaching
effect because fire will also fall on those who are far-off and think
they are safe (39:6).
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Israel
at the Centre of it all
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Then,
we are told, the people who live in the towns of Israel will go out
and collect the weapons, which will be used for fuel for seven years
(39:9,10). There will also have to be special burial parties, equipped
to deal with the dead; every single bone will be gathered and carefully
disposed of. The details are horrifyingly familiar to us in this nuclear
age, who know the potential of nuclear power and the effects of radiation.
The
prophet Joel also spoke about the Day of the Lord:
"I
will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, said God. Blood and
fire and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness and
the moon into blood before the great and terrible day of the Lord comes"
(2:30,31).
Through
Malachi, the last prophet in the Old Testament, God said:
"Surely
the day is coming; it will burn like a furnace. All the arrogant and
every evildoer will be stubble and that day that is coming will set
them on fire" (4:1).
But
though these are human wars God is using them to work out His purpose.
"The
Lord will go out and fight against those nations. His feet will stand
on the Mount of Olives on the eastern side of the city and there will
be a great earthquake" (Zechariah 14:1-4).
The
superpowers are already positioned around the trouble-spots of the Middle
East. It is not difficult to imagine them being drawn together to a
final battle in the land of Israel. That tiny state will be the centre
of a violent Third World War.
There
is no doubt that all these prophecies will come to pass in the very
near future. But we, like Noah, can have confidence in God as long as
we obey the clear instructions He has given in the Bible, knowing He
will bring us through the turmoil and chaos and will preserve the earth
according to His promise.
So
will the earth be reduced to cinders? Will this lovely planet be destroyed?
It is not the earth which is to be destroyed, but this civilisation;
this materialistic society has to be purged with fire.
The
gloom and doom are not for ever. All the prophecies end with reassurance
and hope. Ezekiel declares that the result of the fiery destruction
in Israel will be the beginning of the Kingdom of God on earth, for,
says God,
"I
will show my greatness and my holiness and I will make myself known
in the sight of many nations. Then they will know that I am the Lord"
(Ezekiel 38:23).
Joel
says:
"Every
one who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved, for on Mount Zion
and in Jerusalem there will be deliverance, as the Lord has said" (2:32).
Malachi
ends with comforting words from God:
"For
you who revere my Name, the Sun of righteousness will arise with healing
in his wings" (4:2).
And
Zechariah assures us that,
"The
Lord will be king over the whole earth; on that day there will be one
Lord and his name the only name" (14:9).
Our
world will not welcome Jesus as King. Many who have achieved wealth
and status in the world of men will oppose him, but we are told that
all their kingdoms and "empires" will be utterly destroyed, burned by
fire, ironically by their own hands! Those who lose their riches will
mourn, when their space projects, their mines and oil-rigs, their factories
for armaments and chemicals, their status symbols and luxuries, their
transport and banking systems - all go up in smoke! (See Revelation
17; 18; 19).
The
Bible is God's guidebook for life. It gives clear advice - and dire
warnings. Those who follow God's advice, as Noah did, will be saved
from the terrible judgements God is bringing on the earth.
Those
who believe and gladly accept Jesus, together with all the faithful
men and women down the ages, raised from the dead, will say,
"The
kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ,
and he will reign for ever and ever . . . We give thanks to you, Lord
God Almighty, who is and who was, because you have taken your great
power and have begun to reign. The nations were angry; and your wrath
has come. The time has come for judging the dead, and for rewarding
your servants the prophets and your saints and those who reverence your
name, both small and great - and for destroying those who destroy the
earth" (Revelation 11:15-18).
So
the ending is really the beginning . . . a new beginning in which all
of us can share.
As
the sun began to rise it became apparent that nothing was left . . .
Everything had been made new! The earth basked in glory, and sounds
of joy and gladness rose to heaven (Isaiah 65:17-25; Revelation 21:1-5).
"God
shalt wipe away all tears . . . there shall be no more death . . . neither
shall there be any more pain, for the former things are passed away"
(Revelation 21:5).
SHEILA
WILSON