Dr. David Jeremiah. People Are Asking…Is This the End: Signs of God’s Providence in a Disturbing New World. W Publishing Group, 2016. See here to buy the book.
Dr. David Jeremiah pastors the Shadow Mountain Community Church in
San Diego, California. This book is about America’s moral decline (in
Jeremiah’s estimation), the possibility of revival, and the end times,
specifically Gog’s attack of Israel (Ezekiel 38-39), the
pretribulational rapture of the saints, and the Great Tribulation.
Here are some thoughts:
A. Jeremiah criticizes real problems, such as the epidemics of
pornography and sex trafficking. At the same time, Jeremiah seems to
criticize the Left as a source of the moral relativism that afflicts the
U.S. Maybe he is correct that there have been prominent left-wingers
who have embraced and promoted moral relativism. Has he ever
considered, however, that the Left has also stood up for moral
absolutism? It has challenged greed and war when they hurt innocent,
powerless people. It also has stood up against racism and
discrimination. Perhaps elements of the right-wing are the ones who are
accommodationist, on certain moral issues.
B. Some chapters were more balanced in their depiction of issues
than others. The chapter on immigration was all right. Jeremiah
accepts the right-wing narrative that illegal immigrants are a drain on
the American system, but he also favorably quotes people who support
compassion for them. His chapter on Islam said that there are Muslims
who seek to create sharia law in the U.S. through infiltration, yet he
still encouraged love towards Muslims and acknowledged that most Muslims
are peaceful. His chapter on intolerance towards Christians in the
U.S. raised important issues, and it at least was aware of the legal
rule that the state cannot promote religion, but individuals can (some
right-wingers do not understand this). The chapter would have been
better, however, had Jeremiah acknowledged that homosexuals in the U.S.
themselves have felt persecuted. The chapter on Israel was very
one-sided, in favor of Israel.
C. The book was informative on the history of revivals in the U.S.
(and elsewhere, such as Wales), the history of Isis, and the political
career of Putin.
D. Jeremiah argues that Gog’s invasion of Israel will occur during
the Great Tribulation, between the Antichrist’s peace treaty between
Israel and the Arab world, and the Second Coming of Christ. He appears
to treat the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 as the
prophesied return of the Jews to the Promised Land. There are problems
with this view, in my opinion. The chapters about Gog’s attempted
invasion of Israel are Ezekiel 38-39. They come after Ezekiel 37, which
concerns God’s restoration of Israel to her land. What happens when
Israel returns to her land, according to Ezekiel 37? For one, not only
the Jews return there, but the Northern tribes do, as well. Also, the
Davidic monarchy is restored. God spiritually renews Israel. And God
makes God’s home in her midst. Has any of this happened since 1948?
Jeremiah himself complains that most of Israel is secular, which, in his
mind, is probably the opposite of being spiritually renewed. Does
Jeremiah believe that Ezekiel 38 describes what will happen after the
events of Ezekiel 37? If so, then he should place Gog’s invasion of
Israel after Christ’s second coming (when Christ will rule Israel as
Davidic king), not before. Jeremiah wrote a study Bible, so he may
address this issue somewhere. But perhaps he should have discussed it
in this book, at least in a note. He adeptly addressed other questions
about prophecy: How should we understand Ezekiel’s description of an
end-time war in terms of the weapons of his own time? Why does the Old
Testament not predict the rapture?
E. This book provides a lucid and informative explanation and
defense of the pretribulational rapture. Some of Jeremiah’s arguments
were more effective than others. One argument that I did not find very
convincing was his argument that Christ will rapture the saints before
the Great Tribulation because the saints are not supposed to experience
God’s wrath, which is the point of the Tribulation. After all, Christ
suffered the wrath of God in believers’ place. How would Jeremiah
account for the Tribulational saints, the people who convert during the
Great Tribulation? Will they experience the perils that God will pour
out on the earth, or will they be exempt from them—-protected from them
when they are on earth?
F. The book had some moving and compelling anecdotes. People who watch Jeremiah’s TV program will not be surprised by this.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher through BookLook Bloggers. My review is honest.