โBen-Judah reveals that his years of research mostly focused on the works of Josh McDowell.โ
I saw the movie at some point, and found the same moment laughable. I understand that most Christians who read Matthewโs Gospel donโt look up the original context of his quotation from Hosea 11:1 in Matthew 2:15. But that a rabbi didnโt seems utterly implausible. But folks like Tim LaHaye and Josh McDowell donโt know any better, since they seem not to have looked up the original context either, and so arenโt aware that they have not done research, and thus donโt know how to depict characters doing research.
Hereโs more from Fred Clark. Click through to read the whole thing.
Despite what Tim LaHaye says, John of Patmos was not writing a series of Nostradamus-like predictions to be decoded thousands of years later on a continent heโd never imagined. Johnโs Apocalypse was written for specific people in a specific place who were suffering through a horrible story under the heel of a triumphant Empire.
Johnโs contention, in spite of the way this story was going, was that the triumph of the Empire was not the real end of their story. Their story, he insisted, would ultimately have a happy ending. The Empire will fall, the horse and rider will be hurled into the sea, the first will be last and the last will be first and God will wipe away every tear.
I like Johnโs idea of a happy ending better than LaHayeโs.
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