outdeep
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« on: July 10, 2007, 05:49:15 pm » |
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I personally caught the end of the "Jesus Movement". I came to Christ in 1972 and read Hal Lindsay's book in high school. I would have serious discussions with my friends of how things would be when the rapture happened and the world was left in chaos. Unlike today's Left Behind craze, back then, we really believed it. A few even made career decisions on the premise that we would only be here a few more years.
This carried over a little into the Assembly. Though I never figured out what George was getting at with all of his split raptures and what not, he did play upon the notion that Jesus was coming in the 1980's and thus we should give ourselves wholly to the Lord. Jesus is coming back and he is really going to be ticked if you are not faithful was a message I do remember.
How did the last day's craze affect you? Has your thinking changed from the "Jesus can come at any moment" mindset we had back then?
Planet earth: late but still great by John Fischer
The Lord is coming back. Christ's return is imminent. Every generation believes theirs will be the one to see it. I certainly did, having been a young adult during the Jesus movement in the early 1970s. We were sure the return of Christ was right around the corner. We wrote songs about it. Hal Lindsay wrote a book about it. (Late Great Planet Earth) Larry Norman wrote a song to leave behind after we were gone! ("I Wish We'd All Been Ready")
And here we are, thirty years later, aging Jesus people, going to work and trying to provide a future for our children and grandchildren. Believe me, the Lord has heard from me a few times about this. There was something very glamorous about being part of a revival that would usher in the last days and the return of Christ, especially when you were twenty-four years old and single. We were going to just be one big love-in, living off the land and taking care of each other until Christ returned, which wasn't supposed to be more than two or three years, max.
I reflect back on those days sometimes and see how selfish we were. Had we gotten our wish, many of you who are reading this right now would not have existed. Others of you would never have come to know Christ. I think in some ways, every generation wants to be the last, especially when we face the dark side of our existence and long for heaven where there will be no more pain or sorrow.
But it's not about us. It's about all those who haven't joined the fold—haven't yet come into the family. "The Lord isn't really being slow about His promise to return, as some people think. No, He is being patient for your sake. He does not want anyone to perish, so He is giving more time for everyone to repent" (2 Peter 3:9 NLT).
Shame on us for thinking only of ourselves. We're so quick to scramble on the ark and then close the door and let the rains come. God is more concerned about those who might be left behind than we are, or else He would have returned years ago. We can get so wrapped up in this. We can spend an inordinate amount of time poring over scripture trying to figure out exactly when this will happen, and then get into arguments with each other over exactly how we think it will happen, when the only reason it hasn't happened yet is standing outside our door, waiting to be loved.
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