
About a week ago, I posted a quotation from George D. Ritchie, M.D., regarding the near-death experience that he purported to have had in 1943, when he was twenty years old and serving in the military.
One critical reader, responding, took me to task for giving any credence to Dr. Ritchie, a Virginia physician and psychiatrist who died in 2007 at the age of 84. Dr. Ritchie, he said, claimed to have been told by Jesus during his NDE that Armageddon would occur in 1988. Plainly, it hasn’t. So Dr. Ritchie stands discredited.
I responded that, while my copy of Dr. Ritchie’s book Return from Tomorrow wasn’t (and still isn’t) ready to hand, I recalled no such claim. And I think that it would have stood out in my mind, because I read the book after 1988.
So, in support of his claim, the critic offered this: “Ritchie’s NDE occurred in 1943 when he was shown visions of Earth’s future. Jesus informed him he had 45 years to accomplish his mission in life. That would be 1988: ‘It is left to humanity which direction they shall choose. I came to this planet to show you, through the life I led, how to love. Without our Father you can do nothing, neither could I. I showed you this. You have 45 years.’ – Jesus’ words to George Ritchie.”
Now, I still haven’t looked at Dr. Ritchie’s book. My copy is inaccessible. And it doest seem that the critic has actually looked at the book, either, since he always cites secondary sources. Moreover, I notice that the quotation above doesn’t actually say that “Armageddon” would occur within forty-five years. It talks about Dr. Ritchie’s “mission in life.”
The critic also cited this summary, from a website that’s obviously sympathetic to Dr. Ritchie’s claim:
“Ritchie saw increasing natural disasters on Earth (hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, volcanoes); families splitting and governments are breaking apart because of people thinking only of themselves; and armies marching on the U.S. from the south. He also saw explosions occurring all over the world of a magnitude beyond our capacity to imagine. He was told that if they continued, human life as we have known it will not exist.”
But the website, which I presume was launched after 1988 — are there any websites that predate 1988? — seems to make no connection between the quoted 45-year deadline and those natural disasters.
Still, puzzled by the critic’s assertion, I contacted my friend Martin Tanner, who is the host of KSL Radio’s program Religion Today and a past president of the Utah chapter of the International Association for Near-Death Studies.
It turns out that Martin was a good friend of Dr. Ritchie, and he went out of his way to tell me by telephone that he regarded Dr. Ritchie as completely honest, sincere, and credible. And he sent me the following email:
Dan,