- Introduction to Prophecy
Over a century ago, the teachings of the psychotherapist Émile Coué gave rise to the popular saying, "Every day and in every way the world is getting better and better." People then were giddy with optimism that modern technology and government would soon erase the ills of mankind. They believed that progress was the normal flow of human history. But as people today look about them, they see that the world is not getting better and better. It is getting worse and worse.
Human society is floundering in troubled seas. Poverty is swallowing up new millions every year even as economic insecurity is creeping into the middle classes. Just feeding everyone is becoming more difficult. Population continues to increase while arable land is decreasing, and the fossil fuels supporting modern agriculture are now half gone. And violence fills the earth. Every day brings news of more bloodshed from war, terrorism, social unrest, or sick crime.
Besides the disasters that man is inflicting upon himself, every kind of natural disaster besets the world. Hurricanes and other storms are becoming more frequent and severe. Earthquakes are causing more death and destruction. New scourges like AIDS are emerging from nowhere, and scourges long suppressed, like tuberculosis, are reemerging in more virulent forms. Everyone waits apprehensively for the next flu pandemic.
Even the world of nature is deteriorating. The globe is getting warmer and ice sheets are melting. Many other species, some performing critical roles in local ecosystems, are becoming extinct.
No wonder that people today are anxious about the future. To what bleak end are all these troubles leading us? What is the outlook for the human race? Can anyone tell us what is going to happen? No scholar or soothsayer can give us satisfying answers. In all the world we find only one reliable source of information about things to come. That source is the Bible, the book which the Creator Himself gave to mankind so that they might understand His workings in history. Fully one fourth of the Bible is prophecy. In fact, the Bible gives a detailed account of the events at the end of the age in which we live. So, to find out what lies ahead, we need only consult the Bible.
- lesson 1: The Darkening Sky Ahead
- Mankind's predicament
- Decline in economic security
- Violence
- Diseases
- Natural disasters
- Global perils
- God's book of answers
- The man who was God
- The second coming of Christ
- Mankind's predicament
- lesson 2: The Urgent Need to Study Prophecy
- The importance of escaping what lies ahead for mankind
- Modern trends in the study of end-time prophecy
- Why we must know that we are living in the Last Days
- One text clearly teaching that we stand near the end of the Church Age
- lesson 3: Basic Doctrine on Christ's Return
- Eight principles
- The return of Christ is now imminent, just as it has been imminent ever since Christ ascended into heaven.
- The right attitude is to remain watchful.
- Signs have appeared throughout Church history, and especially recently, that encourage us to hope that the Lord’s return is drawing near.
- We now live in the Last Days.
- All the developments that Jesus set before the Tribulation have come to pass.
- Although we know generally that we live near the end of the Church Age, we cannot set a date for Christ’s return.
- At Christ’s return, all saints on the earth will suddenly disappear.
- The Rapture will occur when the world feels confident that it can overcome the problems threatening mankind.
- Eight principles
- lesson 1: The Darkening Sky Ahead
- Signs of the Times
The claim that there are only general signs of Christ's coming has come onto the scene fairly recently. It is a new twist in Bible interpretation. My father's generation firmly believed both in the imminence of Christ's return and in the anticipation of His return by a series of specific signs, and they saw no contradiction between these two beliefs. Which view is correct—the older or the newer? For four reasons I side with my father's generation.
- lesson 4: Harmonizing Imminence with Signs
- The Biblical doctrine of imminence
- How the doctrine of imminence has become distorted
- The purpose of signs
- What is not the purpose of signs
- lesson 5: Signs during the Apostolic Era
- lesson 6: Other Signs at the Beginning of the Church Age
- lesson 4: Harmonizing Imminence with Signs
- History of Prophetic Study
For more than a thousand years before the French Revolution, all nations of the Western world had professed allegiance to the Christian religion, acknowledging its supreme authority in all questions moral and metaphysical. But the rebels against the Ancien Regime in France set up tyrannies which, for the first time in many long centuries, married civil power to an anti-Christian world view. The new leaders tried to remake society along lines congenial to rationalistic philosophy and dared even "to change times and laws" (Dan. 7:25). But their political experiments bred cruelty and terror. To many believers, the vicious regimes created by the Revolution seemed like a foretaste of the bestial world government that would immediately precede the coming of Christ. In Napoleon, many believers saw a type of the Antichrist himself.
Such events prompted many Christians to take a new interest in Bible prophecy. When they saw that current history was shaping up like the end times pictured in the Bible, they realized that the return of Christ could not be far off. A general expectation that Christ was coming soon swept through the church in the latter half of the nineteenth century and remained strong for over a hundred years.
But in the last twenty years, the expectation has waned. Believers have been losing confidence that Christ will return soon. Now, the sentiment they often hear from pulpits and lecterns is that we cannot know whether Christ will come tomorrow or a thousand years from tomorrow. It is true, of course, that no one should try to predict the date of Christ's return. Yet, as we will show, there are many signs that His return is drawing near, very near.
- lesson 7: What Our Godly Forefathers Believed about the Last Days
- The renewal of prophetic study
- Expectations rising to a peak
- Waning expectations
- lesson 8: The Recent Shift Away from Expectancy
- Legitimate concerns about prophetic study
- Insincere opposition
- New, pragmatic twists to prophetic doctrine
- lesson 7: What Our Godly Forefathers Believed about the Last Days
- Evidence That We Live on the Verge of Christ's Return
- Signs Already Fulfilled in the Modern Era
Besides the many signs that appeared to the church in antiquity, many more have emerged in the last two centuries, especially in the last fifty years. God has furnished these signs of the times to alert us that the Lord is at hand. He stands at the door, waiting to enter this world again. His return cannot be far off.
- lesson 9: Seven Easy Signs
- 1. Christianity becoming the world's largest religion
- 2. The gospel reaching to the uttermost part of the earth
- 3. Reemergence of Israel
- 4. Jewish reoccupation of Jerusalem
- 5. World government
- 6. Apostasy in the church
- 7. Global telecommunications
- lesson 10: A List of Thirty-five Signs Altogether
- Prosperity of the church
- Rebirth of Israel and other ancient nations
- Globalization
- Apostasy in the church
- Corruption in society
- Two historical periods
- lesson 9: Seven Easy Signs
- Signs Furnished by the Church Prospering
In James 5:7-9, the writer is clearly saying that the Church Age would continue until there is a final period of growth to balance the growth at the beginning. Then he tells us what will happen after the latter rain. The waiting will be over and the husbandman will come. Where do we stand in history? In the worldwide evangelism of the last two centuries, we have seen the latter rain. The rain has fallen for generations, but now it is subsiding. Missionary work is being scaled back. The churches in many countries are at some stage of drift into apostasy.
- lesson 11: Jesus' Predictions of Future Success
- Sign/ Christianity becoming the leading world religion
- Sign/ Christianity becoming worldwide
- lesson 11: Jesus' Predictions of Future Success
- Signs Furnished by Israel
The founding of the state of Israel in 1948 greatly strengthened the conviction of Bible-believing Christians that these are the Last Days. But has the church correctly understood prophecy? Has prophecy been fulfilled through the return of Jews to Palestine and the rebirth of a Jewish nation? Has God planted these events in history to serve as signs that the Church Age is winding down? To see whether the modern history of the Jews has prophetic significance, we must start with what Jesus Himself taught about the future of His people.
- lesson 12: Prophecies of Jewish Restoration to Palestine during the End Times
- Sign/ the second return to the land
- Sign/ rebirth of the Jewish state
- lesson 12: Prophecies of Jewish Restoration to Palestine during the End Times
- Signs Furnished by Globalization
One of the most important signs that we have entered the Last Days is the emergence of world government. The first halting steps in that direction followed World War I, when the nations weary of defending democracy banded together to form the League of Nations, intended to prevent another world war. Although the first experiment in world government failed, the second—the body known as the United Nations, founded after World War II—has established itself as a major force in world politics.
- lesson 13: Sign/ World Government
- Nebuchadnezzar's nightmare
- The fifth kingdom
- An unusual kingdom
- Events giving rise to the period of the feet and toes
- lesson 14: Sign/ Regional Governments
- End of an era
- Among the toes
- Fulfillment of the number ten
- A perfect fit
- The revived Roman Empire
- lesson 15: A Global Society
- Sign/ mixed marriages
- Sign/ global culture
- Sign/ ethnic conflict
- lesson 13: Sign/ World Government
- Signs Furnished by Apostasy in the Church
Unfortunately, on many questions concerning the future, students of Bible prophecy do not agree. They differ, for example, on what the state of the church will be when Christ comes to gather His saints. Some say that He will find a victorious church; others, that He will find the church defeated. In an effort to resolve this question, we will look closely at what the Bible says about the last stages of church history, and we will show that our own age precisely matches the description.
- lesson 16: The Third and Fourth Kingdom Parables
- Misguided optimism
- Parable of the Mustard Seed
- Parable of the Leaven
- The leaven
- The lump
- The woman
- Patterns in church history
- lesson 17: The Church on the Eve of Christ's Return
- Sign/ the disappearance of faith from the earth (discussion of Luke 18:8)
- Sign/ the great falling away (discussion of 2 Thess. 2:1-8)
- Sign/ only a few who are looking for Christ (discussion of Matt. 24:44)
- lesson 18: The Last Days
- Paul's description of the last days
- Peter's description of the last days
- Jude's description of the last time
- Jesus' description of the end time
- lesson 19: The Days of Noah
- The apostasy before the Flood
- Ultradispensationalism
- Rebuttal
- Conclusion
- lesson 20: Sign/ Modern Apostasy
- Apostasy in the church
- Secularization of society
- lesson 21: Other Features of Modern Apostasy
- Sign/ blindness to the future
- Sign/ disbelief in the Second Coming
- Sign/ moral corruption in the church
- lesson 16: The Third and Fourth Kingdom Parables
- Signs Furnished by Corruption in Society
Jesus in the Olivet Discourse draws a comparison between the days before His return and the days before the Flood. A study of the antediluvian world finds four characteristics replicated in our own time: 1) eating and drinking; 2) marriage and giving in marriage; 3) growing power of evil forces; and 4) violence. Jesus also highlights wars and rumors of war as features of the end time.
- lesson 22: Days of Noah Revisited
- Characteristics of Noah's age
- Eating and drinking
- Marrying and giving in marriage
- Ignorance of impending judgment
- Violence
- Great wickedness
- Apostasy
- lesson 22: Days of Noah Revisited
- Signs Already Fulfilled in the Modern Era
- Things to Come
- The Rapture
The number found worthy to escape the Flood was exceedingly small—only eight out of the millions then alive on the earth. But some were found worthy. Faith had not vanished altogether from the race of men. So it will be in the years just before Christ's return. After a long period of spiritual zeal and missionary enterprise, the church will go into a steep decline, continuing until the possessors of true faith become alarmingly few. It is this near extinction of true faith that Christ foresees when He asks, "When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?" (Luke 18:8). The question expresses the Bridegroom's tender concern for His Bride. But, as in Noah's day, a few will resist the pull of an evil world and stand firm in their commitment to righteousness. When many others are deserting the ranks of true Christianity, a few will remain loyal. How large will the remnant be? We do not know. We need not suppose that the remnant will be exactly eight persons, as in the Old Testament type. Perhaps the number who still espouse true faith will be thousands or millions. But even millions would be a negligible portion of the world's population today. Unless you belong to the few still faithful, you will be left behind when Christ returns and lifts His people out of this world before judgment strikes.
Now we come to the most important question you will ever face. This is it. Are you ready for Christ to come? Are you watching for Him always? Are you praying always that He will find you worthy to take? Or have you turned your eyes downward to see only the things of this world? Are you living for the sake of the next good meal, the next good time, the next good video? Is your mind constantly agitated by problems in the family? Or is the theme of your thoughts the hope of soon meeting the precious person of Christ?
- lesson 23:
The Worthiness Test
- Importance of watchfulness
- Pretribulational rapture
- The marks of a true Christian
- Worthiness test
- Laodiceans
- Three miseries of the self-deceived
- Meager harvest
- lesson 24: The Church of Philadelphia
- Seven churches of Asia
- Proof that the promise to Philadelphia speaks of a rapture
- The true identity of Philadelphia
- Is your church Philadelphia?
- Brotherly love within the church
- Brotherly love reaching outward
- Persecution
- lesson 23:
The Worthiness Test
- The Antichrist
The idea that the Antichrist will come from Iraq is not a fanciful concoction influenced by recent events in the Middle East, but a sound deduction from Scripture. The many modern expositors who have named Syro-Iraq as his place of origin include S. P. Tregelles, George W. Davis, Arthur W. Pink, William L. Pettingill, Arthur Petrie, and Philip R. Newell. Most expositors during the early centuries of the church held the same view.
- lesson 25: The Last Horn in Daniel 8
- The time when the Antichrist will appear
- Vision described in Daniel 8
- The ram
- The goat
- The last horn
- Proof that the last horn is not Antiochus
- Proof that the last horn is the Antichrist
- The dispensational break
- lesson 26: His Place of Origin
- The Antichrist as a ruler of former Seleucid territory
- Antiochus as a type of the Antichrist
- The king of the north
- The seat of the Beast
- The Assyrian
- The dominant historic interpretation
- lesson 27: His Religion and Name
- First feature of his religion
- Second feature of his religion
- Third feature of his religion
- Fourth feature of his religion
- Fifth feature of his religion
- His name
- lesson 25: The Last Horn in Daniel 8
- Other Developments during the Tribulation
- lesson 28: Parable of the Fig Tree
- The Olivet Discourse
- The fig tree
- lesson 29: Rebudding of the Fig Tree
- Wrong interpretations
- Correct interpretation
- lesson 30: Rebuilding of the Temple
- Current preparations
- True placement of this event in history
- Where the Temple will be rebuilt
- lesson 31: Length of the Tribulation
- Rebudding of the Fig Tree
- Fallacies in limiting the Tribulation to seven years
- Events described in Revelation 6-10
- The Antichrist's term as world ruler
- An hour of temptation
- A transitional dispensation
- Scriptural precedents of the Tribulation
- The significance in heaven's half hour of silence
- lesson 28: Parable of the Fig Tree
- The Rapture
- Commentary on the Book of Daniel: Chapter One
The prophecies in the Book of Daniel are the most specific and comprehensive to be found anywhere in the Bible outside the Book of Revelation.- They tell exactly what will happen to the Jewish nation for the next 370 years after Daniel's time—in other words, from about 535 B.C. to 165 B.C.
- They tell exactly when the Messiah will come.
- They give God's program for the rise and fall of nations from Daniel's time until the end of the age in which we live.
- They give an overview of the key events during the Tribulation, the period at the end of the present age.
The following lessons present the commentary on chapter one. The entire commentary is also available.
- lesson 32: The Assault on Jerusalem
- Aftermath of Carchemish
- Spoils and captives
- Disposal of the spoils
- Fate of the captives
- lesson 33: Exile of the Four Hebrew Children
- Babylonian education
- Usefulness of the captives
- An old prophecy fulfilled
- Four heroes introduced
- lesson 34: Refusing the King's Food
- Daniel's moral dilemma
- What Daniel tolerated
- What Daniel refused to tolerate
- Three tests to distinguish right from wrong
- Why neither the name nor the education was unscriptural
- Scriptural objections to the diet
- Why Daniel could not accept the diet with a pure motive
- Defiling effects of the diet
- Daniel's decision
- Daniel's moral dilemma
- lesson 35: Daniel's Wise Conduct
- Excuses for sin
- Two objectives of Daniel's protest
- Conduct Daniel avoided
- Steps Daniel took
- lesson 36: Daniel's Vindication
- Outcome of the test
- Purpose of the test
- Limits to diplomacy
- How Daniel and his friends distinguished themselves
- How God rewarded Daniel
- How God rewards every believer
© 2007-2020 Stanley Edgar Rickard (Ed Rickard, the author). All rights reserved.