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laststeamtrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-17-07 09:24 PM
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America’s Armageddonites
America’s Armageddonites

Jon Basil Utley

Utopian fantasies have long transfixed the human race. Yet today a much rarer fantasy has become popular in the United States. Millions of Americans, the richest people in history, have a death wish. They are the new “Armageddonites,” fundamentalist evangelicals who have moved from forecasting Armageddon to actually trying to bring it about.

Most journalists find it difficult to take seriously that tens of millions of Americans, filled with fantasies of revenge and empowerment, long to leave a world they despise. These Armageddonites believe that they alone will get a quick, free pass when they are “raptured” to paradise, no good deeds necessary, not even a day of judgment. Ironically, they share this utopian fantasy with a group that they often castigate, namely fundamentalist Muslims who believe that dying in battle also means direct access to Heaven. For the Armageddonites, however, there are no waiting virgins, but they do agree with Muslims that there will be “no booze, no bars,” in the words of a popular Gaither Singers song.

These end-timers have great influence over the U.S. government’s foreign policy. They are thick with the Republican leadership. At a recent conference in Washington, congressional leader Roy Blunt, for example, has said that their work is "part of God's plan." At the same meeting, where speakers promoted attacking Iran, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay glorified “end times.” Indeed the Bush administration often consults with them on Mideast policies. The organizer of the conference, Rev. John Hagee, is often welcomed at the White House, although his ratings are among the lowest on integrity and transparency by Ministry Watch, which rates religious broadcasters. He raises millions of dollars from his campaign supporting Israeli settlements on the West Bank, including much for himself. Erstwhile presidential candidate Gary Bauer is on his Board of Directors. Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson also both expressed strong end-times beliefs.

<snip>

The Beginning of End Times

The evangelical movement originally was not so “end times” focused. Rather, it was concerned with the “moral” decline inside America. The Armageddon theory started with the writings of a Scottish preacher, John Nelson Darby (1800-1882). His ideas then spread to America with publication in 1917 of the Scofield Reference Bible, foretelling that the return of the Jews to Palestine would bring about the end times. The best-selling book of the 1970s, The Late, Great Planet Earth, further spread this message. The movement did not make a conscious effort to affect foreign policy until Jerry Falwell went to Jerusalem and the Left Behind books became best sellers.

Conservative Christian writer Gary North estimates the number of Armageddonites at about 20 million. Many of them have an ecstatic belief in the cleansing power of apocalyptic violence. They are among the more than 30% of Americans who believe that the world is soon coming to an end. Armageddonites may be a minority of the evangelicals, but they have vocal leaders and control 2,000 mostly fundamentalist religious radio stations.

Although little focused on in America, Armageddonites attract the attention of Muslims abroad. In 2004, for instance, I attended Qatar’s Fifth Conference on Democracy with Muslim leaders from all over the Arabian Gulf. There, the uncle of Jordan’s king devoted his whole speech to warning of the Armageddonites’ power over American foreign policy.

<more>

http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4630
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TlalocW Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-17-07 09:57 PM
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1. One of the most interesting historical Armageddonite
Was William Miller, a Baptist who started the Adventist movement in the 1840s. After reading the scriptures and assign numbers to various symbols, he convinced himself that the world was going to end in 1843, and he convinced a sizable amount of people as well. As the day approached, fields were left unworked, businesses unattended, etc. The more competitive of the congregation climbed trees so they would have a head start when they were swept into Heaven, the more well-to-do members stood apart from the poorer members so they wouldn't ascend so close to the riff-raff. Ladies belted themselves to large trunks filled with their most prized possessions and opened parasols to help with their ascent.

Nothing happened.

Miller went back and looked over his calculations and realized he made a mistake. Doomsday was actually going to happen in 1844. That day approached, and the scene played out again. This time Miller had no explanation for what didn't happen, but it didn't stop him from continuing his work, and his particular religious sect eventually became the 7th Day Adventists, whose most famous minister ever was David Koresh.

TlalocW
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laststeamtrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-17-07 10:44 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Q: Know what get when you cross a 7th Day Adventist & an atheist?
A: Someone who comes to your door for no reason.
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I lived near Angwin at one point. The drive-ins in the area served vegi-burgers as well as the usual fare.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angwin,_California
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