
I don’t know why I watch Christian end-times movies. I know what they will be. They will be
Dispensational, because the
actual historic and orthodox views of the Eschatology wouldn’t make for good movies. In those views (A-millennialism,
Post-millennialism, and Historic Pre-millennialism), things either get steadily
better until the end or worse until the end, but once that trumpet blows,
that’s it. It’s difficult to make that
into a two-hour movie, especially one that is artistically satisfying.
Dispensational Pre-millennialism is different. In that scheme, Jesus returns in a secret
rapture either at the beginning of the Tribulation or in the middle of it,
takes away his believers, and leaves the rest for the remaining part of the
seven year Tribulation. Then He returns
again and starts the millennial reign on the earth.
This view is not at all historic. No Christian ever has believed it until the
1800s. Beyond that, it is simply not
biblical. And I don’t have time here to
explain why, though I do recommend Kim Riddlebarger’s
extended lectures on this topic. I’ve listened to all of them, but
if you get through the first few of them, you’ll get the gist of what is being
said. Scroll halfway down the page and
you’ll see them on the right.
But that makes for interesting movies, because Jesus coming
back and things end is actually the very definition of a Deus ex Machina, which is something you’re not supposed to do when
telling a story. But if part of the
world disappears, leaving the rest in a terrible Tribulation with all sort of
problems and craziness, then that’s more interesting.