The Paperback Apocalypse: how the Christian Church was left behind by Robert M. Price

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Paul Taylor
Paul Taylor is our Reviews Editors. Paul is a professional musician. When he is not on the road with various jazz and Latin bands, he is developing and promoting two of his own inventions: The Blowpipes Trombone Trio, and Trombone Poetry, a solo project.

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Prometheus Books, £12.99 (pb), ISBN-10: 1591025834
The Paperback Apocalypse: how the Christian Church was left behind by
This book could probably only have been published in America, though it may not be as widely read there as it should be. The obsession of American fundamentalists with eschatology – beliefs about the end of the world – seems as tenacious as ever and Robert Price, a professor of scriptural studies, examines in detail these beliefs and their origins in mistaken interpretations of the New Testament.
Ideas such as the Rapture, Messianic Prophecy, the Antichrist, and the Second coming are central to the evangelical world view and form the basis of a corporate eschatology, in which whole groups of the saved will simultaneously vanish from the earth, leaving their clothes behind, along with the unbelievers who will have to face the last judgment. How do you ensure you are among the saved? Simple: just stop being an intellectual (i.e. stop thinking) and accept the Bible as literal historical truth, forgetting all those nit-picking interpretations of what it might all have meant in another time and context.
The Second Coming is of course the one great testable prediction of Christianity and has been falsified as often as it has been made, so why does the belief persist? Currently fashionable is the theory of preterism: the New Testament prophecies, including the Second Coming have already been fulfilled, we have just not noticed or understood them. There are after all plenty of candidates for the role of Antichrist. Just think of Napoleon, Hitler, and Stalin.

Underneath all this is a heady psychological brew of paranoia, delusions of grandeur and persecution complex: true Christians are hated simply for being Christians, only we have seen the truth, the whole world is wrong (and we look forward to seeing you suffer when the end does finally come). In the last two decades, though, there has been less emphasis on the Second coming and more on the world as it is, as fundamentalists have abandoned their indifference to electoral politics, with the predictable malign effects on American society. There is a detailed overview of the many Apocalypse and Antichrist novels from both secular and religious publishing houses in America, including the Left Behind series by LaHaye and Jenkins.

Apocalypse is fairly scholarly in tone but with a leavening of humour, and is a useful guide to the evangelical/fundamentalist scene in America. There is a lengthy scripture index for those of you who can be bothered to argue with your local Holy Rollers the next time they come knocking on your door.

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