The Financial
Crisis / Credit Crunch
In Bible Prophecy
There's
a lot of talk about the present financial / liquidity crisis
fulfilling Bible prophecy and heralding the soon return of
the Lord Jesus Christ. But searching website after website,
I couldn't find anyone quoting any actual Bible prophecies
that indicate any kind of financial crisis before the Lord's
return. Of course the Lord Jesus predicted that one sign of
His return would be that people would "hear" all
sorts of things that will make their "hearts fail them
for fear in apprehension of those things which are coming
on the earth" (Lk. 21:9,26). Now that we do see fulfilled,
thanks to the unprecedented media explosion and updates on
things like global warming, financial problems etc. being
beamed onto our screens 24/7. If one only heard the news once
a week or even once a month, our hearts would 'fail us' far
less. But those days are gone; for even if I don't look at
the media, someone else does and in our global village, their
reaction ends up affecting me.
So
I turned to the Bible, to see whether the financial crisis is
predicted; and what the Bible says about wealth in the last
days. I found the very opposite to what's being peddled around
by the doomsday boys and prophecy hacks. Passage after Bible
passage makes it clear that there'll be a time of unprecedented
wealth and prosperity just before the Lord's return. I may stand
with my back to the world about this, but so what. If that's
what Scripture says, let's hear it out and give God's words
their true weight:
-
Mt. 24:37: "As the days of Noah were, so shall also the
coming of the son of man be". And as Jesus points out,
the period before the flood was characterized by prosperity
and materialism. There was a sharp increase in population,
in arts and technology (Gen. 4:21,22) and urbanization (Gen.
4:17). Job 22:15-18 comments on the people living just before
the flood that they cast off all commitment to God and yet
God "filled their houses with good things" -exactly
the scene today. Note how Jesus observes that Noah's world
were totally self-obsessed with their hedonism right up "until
the day that Noah entered the ark, and the flood came and
destroyed them all" (Lk. 17:27). The picture is of the
Lord's coming abruptly interrupting a pleasure-drunk world.
-
The situation in Sodom just before its overthrow was likewise
quoted by the Lord as a foretaste of how things would be before
His return. "They (as well as our present world)
did eat, they drank, they bought, they
sold, they planted, they builded" (Lk.17:28).
Their materialism had the same abrupt interruption as in Noah's
time- "But the same day that Lot went out of Sodom it
rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all.
Even thus shall it be in the day when the son of man is revealed"
(Lk. 17:29,30). The suggestion seems to be that the people
of Sodom were mindlessly doing their thing right up to the
point of Divine intervention. Their obsession with daily activities
without an awareness of God was as bad as their other sins;
a point we would do well to be aware of. However, their eating
and drinking must have been to gross excess- Ez.16:49 defines
" the iniquity of Sodom" as being " fullness
of bread" among other things. "They bought, they
sold" suggests that Sodom was a major trading centre,
rapidly increasing in wealth; " they planted, they builded"
(Lk.17:28) implies a real boom town. Such success resulted
in the people being proud, arrogant and of course sexually
perverted (Ez.16:49,50). It is these aspects of Sodom which
are so precisely matched by our self-centred, money mad world.
- The descriptions of 'Babylon' in Revelation 18 are replete
with reference to Sodom (1). This latter day world system
is likewise characterized by fantastic wealth and opulence.
Rev. 18:11-19 prophesies a heartfelt lament from the unbelievers
at how such great prosperity and industry had been brought
to nothing in a moment by Christ's return. Some Bible prophecies
(e.g. Ez. 38:12) speak of how the wealth of the latter day
world will be given over to God's people at Christ's return-
the wealth is there in the world at the time of His coming!
- James 5:3 warns the last generation of believers against
the absurdity of heaping together treasure in "the last
days". If Christ is about to return, why give your life
to getting rich just before He comes? The suggestion seems
to be that there will be the opportunity for believers to
amass wealth immediately prior to the Lord's return.
- Laodicea, the last church addressed by the Lord Jesus in
His letters, has been seen as symbolic of the latter day church.
And they were characterized by being "rich and increased
with goods" (Rev. 3:17). "Increased" suggests
an increase in wealth for them in the last days.
- There are at least four predictions that in the final "day
of the Lord", ultimately revealed when Christ returns,
people will finally realize that their wealth has not been
able to save them (Is. 2:20; 31:7; Ez. 7:19; Zeph. 1:18).
They are pictured as throwing their silver and gold to the
animals in the face of the awesome revelation of God's glory
upon this earth. They obviously have that wealth prior to
His coming to be able to do that with.
How Will It All Work Out?
If the Bible predicts a scenario of hedonism and general wealth
before the Lord's return, that's it. Crystal ball gazing isn't
necessary in terms of trying to work out how concretely it
will come about. But there are a number of trends which encourage
us that the Biblical scenario is developing fast. The amount
of wealth in the world has soared upwards. Look back to your
youth- the amount of ridiculous luxury goods available and
evidently widely purchased today is far greater than what
it was back then. Specifications of goods have increased by
trillions of percent; every taste bud in the mouth can now
be tickled. Whilst "the poor you will always [for whatever
reason] have with you", the bird's eye historical picture
is clear over the last half century. Wealth has increased.
The woman who loses her savings and the man whose apartment
is repossessed may take hard comfort from this, but... that
wealth they have lost doesn't go into thin air. The funds
are moved off elsewhere, but the wealth remains in the broader
economy- it's "just" a question of it being redistributed
over time. The basic wealth is 'there' and is growing. Now
that wealth is no longer measured in gold or banknotes but
rather in how many zeroes you have to your account number
on a computer screen, wealth is becoming rather like matter-
it can't easily be destroyed, it can just change form. If
you lose it, someone else gets it; but wealth, unlike matter,
can be created. The burgeoning middle classes of India and
China are a huge phenomena on the global scale, although the
West may yet have to perceive the true significance of it.
And remember that the decisions on the highest levels of the
financial system are made by remarkably few people. Hank Paulson,
George W and the rest all have their personal self-interest;
self-preservation is written into our genetic code from the
first struggling breaths of babyhood. They don't want to see
their personal wealth diminished. There's therefore a high
level of motivation to 'get it right'.
Of
course, any system progresses through a series of backward
steps which are overtaken by larger forward steps. And individuals,
of course, may not benefit from the overall growth in wealth.
It could be through bad luck (humanly speaking), poor personal
decision making, or (for believers) God's hand in giving them
poverty as something they must work with to prepare them for
His Kingdom. But there's a growing sense of Government control
over society on every level- security cameras at every corner,
no internet privacy on one hand, and on the other a (much
needed) tighter control of individual capitalism so that stock
market crashes don't happen and major banks don't fold. A
few years ago my spam email was full of guys trying to sell
me money (now it's only Viagra and Cialis). That sort of irresponsible
lending is being curbed, Big Brother is getting more controlling;
and as so often happens in history, a triumphant power (Capitalism)
ends up reincarnating the essence of all it fought against-
in this case, the state control of cold war Communism. I'm
no fan of capitalism, don't get me wrong for a moment. But
the simple reality is that personal wealth creation is humanly
appealing, overpoweringly so, and in the bigger picture is
rolling ahead successfully- to the extent that all creeds
and ideologies and nice ideas crumple beneath it, be they
the Judeo-Christian ethic or radical Islam or Stalin-style
Communism.
But
of course, the old Marxist criticisms of the Capitalist utopia
still stand timelessly true. It can't go on for ever, the
bubble in some form must burst, the need to find ever new
markets and cheaper labour eventually meets its crisis when
the global system has been fully exploited.. and perhaps unconsciously
more than consciously, we all have that very human 'fear of
endings' when it comes to this. About everyone with even a
tiny amount of interest in financial matters senses- probably
at levels well beneath the conscious and articulated- that
we're living in a flimsy house of cards that must fall. And
remember the accurate predictions of the Lord, that at this
time of prosperity, men's hearts will also be failing for
fear about the future. Which all makes for a "spend it
while you've got it", "enjoy yourself while you
can" mentality. So I don't see the bubble ultimately
bursting until the return of Christ to earth. That's the pricking
of the bubble- not Lehman Brothers collapsing. Jesus Christ
personally on earth again is the pin that will pop the balloon-
and only then (recall what we earlier observed about the prosperous
times of Noah and Sodom continuing right up to the moment
of Divine intervention). Christ's return and the day of His
judgment is the ultimate crunch- not any temporary "credit
crunch" on today's markets. Those sorts of things may
be two steps backwards, but the three steps forward will come
too, leading to a spirit of spending, hedonism and personal
indulgence which are precisely the things the Lord so solemnly,
earnestly warned us against. The secret fears of every unbeliever
are death (Heb. 2:15) and loss of wealth. For those secured
in Christ, our immediate concern should be quite the opposite-
what if I get rich, or richer than I currently am.... given
all the Bible says about how this will distract my focus from
serving and waiting for the Lord from Heaven?
Note
(1) More detail at www.aletheiacollege.net/ld/3.htm
Duncan
Heaster
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