WHY STORMWATCH?

As you follow my "pilgrim's progress" through reality - parts 1 & 2, you will note the sprinkling of significant dreams - foreshadowings both predictive and cautionary. Over the past quarter-century a handful of these "prophetic" dreams have employed the STORM metaphor. Three of these I record in reality - part 2. There I cite two passages in the book of Jeremiah that specifically tie the storm image to God's coming global judgment, known elsewhere in the Old Testament as "the Day of the Lord." Other O.T. prophets utilize parallel words - "tempest" and "whirlwind"- to characterize that time of tribulation which will out-chaos everything since the time of Noah.
We are not in that tribulation yet, but I suspect the first approaching thunderclaps of this final storm have already sounded in events such as September 11, 2001. The prophet Zechariah said that during the season prior to Messiah's return, Jerusalem would have become "a cup of trembling" and a "burdensome stone" to the nations.
Are your eyes capable of sight?
Has it not struck you as remarkable that a global crisis could have arisen over this geographically inconsequential piece of real estate? - that Muslims have even vowed the destruction of America simply because the United States dares befriend Israel?
There are unseen majesties acting behind the roiling thunderheads of current events. Discernment of these shapes - and of others more subtle still, soon to be rolled onstage - is the aspiration of STORMWATCH.

High Stakes Chess
Some of the most powerful minds in history have, wittingly and unwittingly, been caught in a chess game that for centuries has squeezed them slowly into a checkmate. Erasing God from the universe didn't suddenly, all magically happen; it has been centuries in the making, starting out as a confident spree to arrive at philosophical certainty about what the mind could know. It ended up with the players not certain that they could even know their own names. One can imagine what it would be like to play chess with an immortal being whose IQ is half a million, who has been around for millennia (like Satan). The best human players would be trapped in no time, perhaps wondering what their own names were!
- Tal Brooke, One World, End Run Publishing, Berkeley, CA, 2000, p.150.
The context of the quoted paragraph is the history of Western philosophy. The god of this world has beaten human rationality at its own game. But if "philosophy" has erased God, and the contest is moving toward its climax, how is it that the Bible predicts a final global religion in place at the end of history as we know it?
Before offering an answer to that question, we need to examine the last couple of moves on the chess board. Human minds and the culture generated by the overlay of ideas dominating those minds are the battlefields of unseen adversaries. Percolating influence down through universities, God's adversary has been allowed to succeed in discrediting the idea of a personal Father/Creator possessing "human" attributes such as love and moral justice. Among the cultural elite - while they may allow the word "God" on their lips - the God of the Bible is the One who has been "erased." At our moment in time, this erasure was the next to the last move in the chess game. The final move, a replacement global belief, "faith" in a different "One," is in process, as we'll see.
But first the slate had to be wiped clean of the Judeo-Christian "idea." A vacuum was needed to call forth the replacement god. Listen now to the sound of that next-to-the-last chess-piece hitting the board:
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Perhaps there is still time to meet the challenge of SECULAR humanism in the West. But indeed the window is closing rapidly. In fact, there are signs the window is about to be slammed shut by that latest chess move now in progress. The church, in its sudden wakefulness to the devastation already wrought by materialistic secularism, is in danger of being blindsided by the current - and I believe, final - move on the chessboard: COSMIC humanism.
Rushing into the spiritual vacuum, purposely devised, of unstable atheism and agnosticism will be the original plu-potent lie spoken in Eden: "You will not surely die...you will be like God." Reincarnation and Self-realization in ten easy words - ten delicious words! It's all there: "evolution's" manifest goal: the breathing, becoming Goddess - the Self! the One!
The old sea-level "faith" of fallen humanity: pantheism.
The seed planted by Vivekananda in the late 1800's, the seed watered by Yogananda in the mid 1900's - the seed scattered into 100 million heads by the Beatles in the latter quarter of the past century- have produced a crop of "born again pagans" who don't need to be convinced the "supernatural" is real. "My Sweet Lord - Hare Krishna!" O sweet deliverance (many sighed) from pale atheism!
The Greek word translated antichrist in the New Testament can mean "in place of Christ" as well as "against Christ." The religion of the counterfeit who will declare himself to be God is already being practiced, and not exactly in a corner. Before God's Messiah and His "New Age" appear, the superhuman chessplayer seeks to activate and validate decoys of both. The new gloss on the original lie is that any path pursued fervently enough will lead to the same mountaintop - even the path where "truth" and "lie" alike dissolve in an ocean of subjective experience:
Postmodernism and You: Religion Jim Leffel and Dennis McCallum, contributors Religion has sustained over a century of attack from modernists. Yet, people today are as interested in spiritual things as ever. Recently, sociologists have shown that 95% of adults believe in God or a Universal Spirit. Books on angels, near death experiences, New Age, Christianity and the occult top the best seller lists. While people are still interested in spiritual things today, the kind of spirituality commanding interest has changed vastly in recent years. Today spirituality means mystical experience, not truth. We can seek and savor any experience we please, as long as we remain inclusive and tolerant.
The Two Cardinal Sins of Postmodern Religious CultureSin #1. IntoleranceNot too long ago, intolerance meant rejecting or even persecuting practitioners of other religions. Not any more. Now, intolerance means questioning the validity of any aspect of another's religion. To the majority of Americans below fifty today, questioning the truthfulness of another's religious views is intolerant and morally offensive. This prohibition against differing with other's viewpoints is postmodern. One ExceptionStrangely, it turns out that one exception is allowed to this universal prohibition against intolerance. For some reason, it's okay to question and even denounce religious views when dealing with what is pejoratively labeled "fundamentalism." Today, when people refer to "fundamentalists" they no longer mean just religious extremists like the Shiites waging holy war against the West. Today, fundamentalism may refer to anyone who claims to know truth or who charges another religion with falsehood. Fundamentalists are in the wrong because they subscribe to universal truth claims (metanarratives), and are therefore "totalistic," or "logocentric," in their thinking. Sin #2. ObjectivityPostmodernists argue that modernists use reason to exclude people. When people apply reason to religion, before long, someone's reality is being branded "false." This is not inclusive, and it is also harsh and naive, because:
Thus, under the banner of inclusiveness postmodern thinkers actually include all but one group -- those of us who are committed to biblical authority. According to postmodernists, fundamentalists are those who believe religious teachings are true or false, not just within their own paradigm, but over all paradigms. "Fundamentalists" view religious truth as objectively true, and therefore subject to rational scrutiny. Evangelicals certainly fall within this circle because we believe that if something is true, its opposite cannot be true at the same time, regardless of what paradigm a person holds.
Postmodernism and Eastern Mysticism
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Subjectivity vs. Authority
"Tolerance" vs. Truth
Following the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center, Larry King Live invited a spectrum of spiritual/religious guests to focus on "The Tragedy and God." This show, broadcast September 29, 2001, could serve as a case study of the radical divergence in world-views outlined in the above article on postmodernism. The following is a condensed transcript from the call-in portion of the interview. The five guests were:
Deepak Chopra (new age author of How to Know God), Harold Kushner (liberal "Rabbi" and author of Living a Life That Matters), Maher Hathout ("moderate" Muslim cleric), Bruce Wilkinson (Christian author of The Prayer of Jabez), and John MacArthur (evangelical pastor and author of numerous books, including The Gospel According to Jesus).
The gist of the first call-in question was: "Are the hijackers in heaven or hell?"
Hathout: "Well, we never second-guess God… What we can say is that God told us in the Koran that those who kill innocent people will be punished…absolutely.
[Larry asks John to respond to that.]
MacArthur: ""Well, I believe there's only one way to go to heaven and that's through faith in Jesus Christ, and obviously their faith was not in Christ. That's evident -- not because I know their religious background -- but because if you know Christ, your life is transformed and you don't do things like that."
[Larry calls on Rabbi Kushner.]
Kushner: "Well, I feel a little bit excluded by that last statement. But, you know, I've got problems with hell. I have trouble believing in a God who would send people to eternal damnation. I might be prepared to do it; I rather think God is beyond that. I think they're not in heaven; I think heaven is reserved for people who've lived a good life. I think they have simply disappeared. They had dreams of an afterlife; they had dreams of pleasure and praise and being welcomed and all that, and I don't think they are anywhere -- they are non-existent and that's the best thing that could have happened to them."
[Larry invites Bruce's response.]
Wilkinson: "They stand before the Lord, God Himself… [The issue is] how they had planned on handling the problem of their sin… [Their disobedience to God's laws merits the death penalty.] "Jesus Christ came up to bat…" [Their destiny depends on their response to Christ.]
[Larry asks Deepak where he thinks they are.]
Chopra: "Larry, I don't know where they are. Only God knows where they are. But I have a problem with some of your panelists. Because I don't think Christ was a Christian, I don't think Buddha was a Buddhist, and I don't think Mohammed was a Mohammedan. I think it's just that kind of thing that says only the way of Jesus is right, then the others say only the way of Mohammed is right, only the way of Buddha is right, only the way of Krishna is right. We have sacrificed a Universal Being and created a tribal chief with our gods, and that's the problem."
Larry: "Would you like to counter that, John?"
MacArthur: "Yeah, I just don't think -- all due respect -- that Deepak is the authority on that. I don't think Rabbi Kushner is the authority either. I don't think I'm the authority. Where are you gonna go? You have to go to an authoritative book -- "
Larry: "And that is?"
MacArthur: "The Bible."
Larry: "Which Bible? The Koran?"
MacArthur: "The holy Bible."
Larry: "Well the Koran is a Bible. He believes in the Koran."
MacArthur: "Yes, I know he does, I know he believes in the Koran. I don't believe in the Koran. I don't believe that is the holy book written by God."
Larry: "But why is your belief better than his belief? It's different, but why is it better?"
MacArthur: "It's not a question of comparing people's beliefs. It's a question of what is the authority. And the Word of God, the Bible, has stood the test of time and been affirmed, ever since Moses, as a divine word from God."
Larry: "But then any person who doesn't believe in Christ is doomed to hell, whether he has lived a wonderful life?"
MacArthur: [Nodding] "This is what the Bible teaches."
[Next Larry takes a call-in question about whether we should forgive the hijackers, to which there are various responses. Kushner says that because he was not personally injured, it's not his job to forgive; he says that, without excusing what the hijackers did, he can contemplate "letting go" all thoughts about the hijackers because they don't deserve a place in his mind. Mr. Hathout agrees, but adds, "Justice has to be rectified -- there must be a just retribution," though not necessarily revenge. Wilkinson says God commands us to forgive, that forgiveness is a gift made possible by Christ's atonement. MacArthur says that the essence of Christianity is forgiveness, and that he does forgive, but God's holiness is on another level and will demand a holy justice. Deepak's comment follows:]
Chopra: "I think I agree with the Rabbi. I think also that justice and forgiveness are ultimately God's prerogative. And I keep listening to everybody referring to God as a 'he' -- which gives him a male sexist orientation. I think God is the absolute power of the universe and is neither a he or a she. The best we can do in this situation is to make sure that every thought of ours, every word of ours, every act of ours, has a nurturing effect on our loved ones and then we extend that love to our extended family and ultimately all of humanity."
Larry [to John]: "You don't agree with that"
MacArthur: "The bigger question is, why do people die?" [John goes on to say that we are more comfortable with the fact of death when people around us die singly, but in truth thousands die every day -- just not usually in bunches of hundreds or thousands. He then recalls Jesus' words concerning those "eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell," when the Lord asserted that they were by no means greater sinners than his listeners and that unless they repent they will likewise perish. The World Trade Center attack should be a wake-up call to repentance, an instance of God's "severe mercy." Kushner and Hathout react negatively to this view, the latter calling it a "trivialization of human life." Deepak counters that Americans have been "caught up in the melodrama of triviality" and the attack underscores the importance of "raising our consciousness" to include awareness of the needs and inequities within humanity as a whole.]
[The next question comes from a caller exasperated that these "men of God" can't seem to agree on anything. He asks, "Why can't we just agree in a broader sense that God is God?"]
Larry [to John]: "Couldn't you agree with that?"
MacArthur: "Yes, back to the question about God. Again, I hear all these responses, but we have to go back to some authority outside of ourselves. I mean, I can't define "God" for the universe starting with me. God in the Scripture is the Creator and Sustainer of the universe. He's the Sovereign over everything, who was incarnated in Jesus Christ, came down to die on a cross to provide atonement so that the sins of those who repent were paid for in full and therefore heaven was open to them. That is the God revealed in Scripture."
Larry: "A two-year-old baby down at the bottom of the Trade Center wasn't a sinner."
MacArthur [snapping fingers]: "Instant heaven. Instant heaven."
[Larry turns to Hathout for response. The Muslim says he agrees with "everything John said except the incarnation part -- because we don't believe in that." Hathout says God is too transcendent to ever be imprisoned in matter: "To [John], Christ is God. To me, Christ is a messenger."]
Larry: "Deepak, you began the program by saying that God is everything."
Chopra: "God is love."
Larry: "Mathematically, everything is nothing."
Chopra: "God is love. God is the source of all that was, all that is, all that will be. Let's not give God a brand name."
[As a final wrap-up, Larry asks where was God in this tragedy? MacArthur asserts that God, being omnipresent, was there as well, and the attack should be viewed as His wake-up call. With programming time running out, Kushner takes his final seconds to laud the encouraging overlap he has just observed between his and Hathout's views. The show ends with images from Ground Zero and a stirring female rendition of "God Bless America."]
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Despite the fact that Deepak had adapted his rhetoric to make inroads with a mass audience, it is rare for the media to allow such a stark display of mutually exclusive world-views dancing this close to root issues. Those issues involve both the nature of and proper touchstone of "truth." The opposing champions, like jousting knights, were clearly Chopra and MacArthur. One champion rearing from the east rides under the banner of relative "truth" derived from subjective experience (higher consciousness). In the opposing lists, from his tattered western tent, the outnumbered upstart from a history thought already buried gallops beneath the flag of absolute truth derived, incredibly, from one specific "verbal deposit" originated by a Creator who is objectively there!
Recall the words from the Successful Quest for Understanding article above: "Fundamentalists are in the wrong because they subscribe to universal truth claims... Questioning another's beliefs implies that we can refer to an external objective reality... Fundamentalists are those who believe religious teachings are true or false, not just within their own paradigm, but over all paradigms." Horrors alive!
MacArthur is so shockingly embarrassing (and disturbing) to some of the other panelists because in our postmodern environment he seems a throwback to a discarded concept of truth that is simply laughable to the intelligentsia. The very suggestion that God has spoken to our race through one particular book threatens to reopen that Pandora's Box of saved and lost, God and the devil, Israel and non-Israel, heaven and hell! This is the one thing the omni-tolerant must not tolerate! Perhaps the man has learned to speak somewhere, but he must be a lowbrow! Who let him in here? Trip his horse, Larry!
One final note concerning the interview. When Deepak says, "The best thing we can do in this situation is to make sure that every thought of ours, every word of ours, every act of ours, has a nurturing effect on our loved ones and then we extend that love to our extended family and ultimately all of humanity," his platitudes come loaded with prior, but concealed, assumptions. Again quoting from the article above: "In New Age religion, mental imaging can create new realities." If there is no external objective reality (so that even our loved ones are part of the illusion of the Impersonal forgetting itself!) this tactic of monitoring our thoughts, words and actions is what, of itself, produces the restructuring of our surroundings. In Deepak's worldview, human beings can create their reality from within. So please visualize re-socialized suicide bombers!
Visualize whirled peas.
Coming soon: the storm's climax foretold:


After the storm, there is indeed a New Age coming , and, however incredibly, it will open with a literal 1000 year "Reich" - one long Sabbath's rest - in dusty old Jerusalem! See Revelation 20:3, Daniel 2:44, Isaiah 9:6-7, Zechariah 14:9, Hosea 3:5, Ezekiel 43:7, Isaiah 66:23, Habakkuk 2:14, Luke 1:32-33 for starters.