I'm surprised I did not hear about this earlier, because this sort of documentary is so totally up my alley. Nevertheless, this looks amazing. I’m going to request a screener so I can review it on DM. This looks unmissable. From the filmmakers’ website:America’s 50-million strong Evangelical community is convinced that the world’s future is foretold in Biblical prophecy - from the Rapture to the Battle of Armageddon. This astonishing documentary explores their world - in their homes, at conferences, and on a wide-ranging tour of Israel. By interweaving Christian, Zionist, Jewish and critical perspectives along with telling archival materials, the filmmakers probe the politically powerful - and potentially explosive - alliance between Evangelical Christians and Israel…an alliance that may set the stage for what one prominent Evangelical leader calls “World War III.”
The film opens with portraits of three Evangelical families –James and Laura Bagg, a Connecticut couple who work as military jet-propulsion engineers, Tony and Devonna Edwards in McAlester, Oklahoma, and Dr. H. Wayne House in Salem, Oregon—all certain that upon Christ’s Second Coming they will be “raptured” or lifted into the skies to join Christ while the rest of humanity suffers for seven years during “The Tribulation.” The Edwards’ daughters, in particular, struggle with their own future. If they are raptured soon, how will they ever marry, or have children of their own? [RM note: How sick and twisted is it to inflict this kind of “thinking” on children? Horrifying to contemplate what emotionally destructive superstition like this can do to people’s lives. But, of course, the invisible man in the kingdom in the sky said it in the magic book, so therefore it must be true.]
Despite their very different lives and locations, all three families find the modern world laden with symbolism that suggests the End Times are at hand, and they proclaim the immense importance of Israel, where the battle of Armageddon will leave the earth ravaged, before Christ creates a new and perfect world.
The film then follows Wayne House and fellow minister Robert Dean as they lead a Christian Study Tour group to Israel—among the tens of thousands of Evangelicals who pour into the Holy Land each year. As Wayne and Robert baptize their entourage in the River Jordon, sing the US national anthem on the Sea of Galilee, proclaim love for Israel, and describe how the Dome of the Rock, one of the holiest sites in Islam, must be destroyed in order for Jesus to return, a revealing and controversial relationship between Christian Evangelicals, Jews, and Muslims emerges.
Finally, we follow Wayne House and Robert Dean to a massive gathering in Dallas, Texas, where Evangelicals debate, in highly sophisticated terms, the need to spread Biblical literalism to counter the dangerous effects of post-modernism. The climax of the conference comes as Pastor John Hagee, the enormously influential Texas Minister of an 18,000-member megachurch, declares, “World War III has started.”
Waiting for Armageddon
It's in my eyes, and it doesn't look that way to me, In my eyes. - Minor Threat
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Waiting for Armageddon
from our friend Richard Metzger at DangerousMinds
This is just scary. How can a minority (in world population terms) of fat, rich, brainwashed lunatics think that war, death and destruction will save them while the rest of us (nearly 7 billion) will perish in fire and brimstone? Nutters
ReplyDelete1. The book of Revelation has had a long questionable history in Christianity, early on it was considered apocryphal, Martin Luther had issues with it, and both the Catholic and the Eastern Orthodox church mostly ignore it.
ReplyDelete2. If these people are so enamored of the coming apocalypse, why don't they vote for those they think are the most like the Antichrist (i.e. Democrats), in order to usher in their wonderful rapture?
3. How Christian is it really, to want all that destruction and suffering in order for you yourself to get into heaven?
4. These guys keep saying it is a Muslim's religious duty to hate Christians. . . all the time they are hating on Muslims, apparently as part of their own religious duty.
5. In a world teeming with nuclear weapons, isn't it quaint to think of an actual battle on a battlefield?
6. I really don't think there is much these people can actually do; even if they succeed in making the world a worse place, eventually people (including many of their own followers) can take only so much and will see them for who they really are. "Ye shall know them by their acts."