The Countdown to Armageddon


Book Description

Argues that current events fit the pattern of Biblical prophesy concerning the end of the world and the second coming of Christ




Toward a New World Order


Book Description







Countdown to Armageddon


Book Description

It's been just shy of seven years since the first wave of electromagnetic pulses bombarded the earth and began the turmoil. Most people couldn't cope, for they no longer had the skills their ancestors had. No one grew their own crops anymore. Few knew how to hunt and fish and trap small game. They lived off boxed food and canned goods. And they died in great numbers. Some, though, survived. They weren't tougher than the others, necessarily. They were better planners. They were the ones who were willing to learn new things. By the time the canned goods and boxed pasta were gone, the planners already had their grow spaces established and thriving. They were raising livestock instead of butchering it on the spot. And they were working hard to protect what they had from others who'd take it from them. The group of people in Scott Harter's south Texas compound was such a group. They suffered like everyone else. But they also persevered. This is the final chapter in their story. It takes place five years after we last saw them, and tells the tail of a recovering world. And a group of friends and family who've defied the odds and thrived.







1948


Book Description

Although a work of fiction, 1948 reveals how the countdown to the Biblically predicted end times battle of Armageddon can be traced back to 1948. The book takes the reader through much known evidence to make the case. He does this primarily through the interactions and travels of his five main characters who know each from Boston, yet spend time exploring Israel together. These characters represent varying perspectives of skeptic and believer, Jew and Christian. 1948 is interesting and entertaining, because it offers a plethora of ideas, questions and information for consideration. In 1948, the believer will find a general guide for following present and future world events, while the skeptic will find 1948 a source to help with clarification and understanding of the issues involved.




Countdown to the Tribulation


Book Description




Counting the Days to Armageddon


Book Description

Counting the Days to Armageddon is work is of vital importance for all concerned with the Jehovah's Witness movement. It provides a thorough examination of their eschatological development, treating Watch Tower theology objectively but sympathetically. Crompton also speculates about the future direction of Jehovah's Witness teaching. The book begins with a brief consideration of the biblical foundations of doctrines of the last days, particularly the books of Daniel and Revelation. There follows an outline summary of some of the main aspects of the history of this doctrine within the Protestant mainstream during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and an outline of the Adventist teaching of William Miller (1782-1849) in the U.S.A. During the time following the failure of Miller's expectations of the end of the world, his ideas were developed by Charles Taze Russell (1852-1916), prime mover of the Watch Tower movement. Counting the Days to Armageddon explores the way in which Russell amended Miller's ideas, and also the distinctive way in which he handled the Dispensational categorisation of history of John Nelson Darby (1800-1882) to create an extension of historicist speculation on the application of prophecy to the modern world. The response of the Watch Tower movement to the failure of Russell's expectations in 1914 is explored, and the new body of doctrine which has replaced Russell's is examined. The ways in which these doctrines have been modified in the past suggest ways in which future doctrine may develop, especially in response to the protracted delay of Armageddon. What is envisaged, in the light of the history of Watch Tower doctrine, is no dramatic collapse of the movement but rather an increasing emphasis upon other, less vulnerable areas of doctrine together with a greater turnover of membership which may, in due course, undermine the movement's stability.




Countdown to Armageddon


Book Description




Countdown to Armageddon


Book Description

Scott Harter discovered what the Mayans really meant about the world ending on December 21, 2012 -- the day marked the beginning of a period that would see the end of civilization as we know it. Scott understood that big changes were coming, but he didn't know if he had two days to prepare, or two years. To protect his family, he threw every resource he had, plus some resources he didn't have, into preparing for the end.