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Piety and Polemic in Evangelical Prophecy Fiction, 1995–2000

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Crawford Gribben*
Affiliation:
Trinity College Dublin

Extract

No one studying the impact of Evangelicalism’s most successful cultural products could doubt their mass-market appeal both within and beyond the ‘conservative revolution’ of contemporary America. With concerns to fashion the spirituality of their readers, the Left Behind novels (1995–2007) represent the ‘first outlines of a fully commercialised, fully mediatised Christian blockbuster culture’. The series dramatizes the end-time expectations of a popular evangelical system of eschatological thinking, known as dispensational pre-millennialism. This system maintains that Christ could return imminently to ‘rapture’ true believers to heaven; that this rapture will be followed by a catastrophic seven-year period known as the ‘Great Tribulation’, in which the Antichrist will rise to power to persecute those who, despite being ‘left behind’, have converted to evangelical faith; and that the tribulation will end with the ‘glorious appearing’ of Christ, the last judgement and the inauguration of a thousand-year reign of peace known as the millennium. Despite the complexity of its theology, the series has sold over sixty-five million copies since the publication of their eponymous debut novel in 1995, and has been identified as the best-selling fiction series in American literary history. After 1998, successive instalments in the series topped the New York Times best-seller lists. The seventh novel in the series, The Indwelling (2000), topped the best-seller lists of the New York Times, Publishers Weekly, Wall Street Journal and USA Today.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2012

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References

1 Milich, Klaus J., ‘Fundamentalism Hot and Cold: George W. Bush and the “return of the sacred’”, Cultural Critique 62 (2006), 92125 Google Scholar, at 92.

2 Thorne, Christian, ‘The Revolutionary Energy of the Outmoded’, October 104 (2003), 97114 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 99. On the history of this particular evangelical prophecy genre, see Gribben, Crawford, Writing the Rapture: Prophecy Fiction in Evangelical America (Oxford, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 For a description of Dispensationalism, see Sweetnam, Mark, ‘Defining Dispensationalism: A Cultural Studies Perspective’, JRH 34 (2010), 191212.Google Scholar

4 Sturm, Tristan, ‘Prophetic Eyes: The Theatricality of Mark Hitchcock’s Premillennial Geopolitics’, Geopolitics 11 (2006), 23155 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 250 n. 14.

5 Gribben, Writing the Rapture, 129–30.

6 Hodder & Stoughton began as Christian publishers, and in fact published two volumes of autobiography by the author of the first series of novels in the rapture fiction genre, Sydney Watson: Life’s Look-out: An Autobiography of Sydney Watson (London, 1897) and Brighter Years: The Second Part of the Autobiography of Sydney Watson (London, 1898). Watson’s rapture novels were published as Scarlet and Purple (London, 1913), The Mark of the Beast (London, 1915) and In the Twinkling of an Eye (London, 1916). For a survey of Watson’s importance in the genre, see Gribben, Crawford, ‘Rapture Fictions and the Changing Evangelical Condition’, Literature and Theology 18 (2004), 7794 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On trends in publishing, see Bartholomew, Richard, ‘Religious Mission and Business Reality: Trends in the Contemporary British Christian Book Industry’, Journal of Contemporary Religion 20 (2005), 412 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gutjahr, Paul C., ‘No Longer Left Behind: Amazon.com, Reader-Response, and the Changing Fortunes of the Christian Novel in America’, Book History 5 (2002), 20936.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 Recent literature on the Left Behind novels includes Gribben, ‘Rapture Fictions’; Forbes, Bruce David and Kilde, Jeanne Halgren, eds, Rapture, Revelation and the End Times: Exploring the Left Behind Series (New York, 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Frykholm, Amy Johnson, Rapture Culture: Left Behind in Evangelical America (Oxford, 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mleynek, Sherryll, ‘The Rhetoric of the “Jewish Problem” in the Left Behind Novels’, Literature and Theology 19 (2005), 36783 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Shuck, Glenn W., Marks of the Beast: The Left Behind Novels and the Struggle for Evangelical Identity (New York, 2005)Google Scholar; Milich, ‘Fundamentalism Hot and Cold’, 108–13. The wider genre context is surveyed in Gribben, Writing the Rapture.

8 Milich, ‘Fundamentalism Hot and Cold’, 108.

9 See, respectively, McAlister, Melani, ‘Prophecy, Politics, and the Popular: The Left Behind Series and Christian Fundamentalism’s New World Order’, South Atlantic Quarterly 102 (2003), 77398 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jones, Darryl, ‘The Liberal Antichrist: Left Behind in America’, in Newport, Kenneth G. C. and Gribben, Crawford, eds, Expecting the End: Millennialism in Social and Historical Context (Baylor, TX, 2006), 97112 Google Scholar; Markham, Ian S., ‘Engaging with the Theology that Really Sells’, Conversations in Religion and Theology 1 (2003), 11518 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Gribben, Crawford, Rapture Fiction and the Evangelical Crisis (Webster, NY, 2006)Google Scholar; idem, ‘After Left Behind: The Paradox of Evangelical Pessimism’, in Newport and Gribben, eds, Expecting the End, 113–30; Althouse, Peter, ‘“Left Behind” - Fact or Fiction: Ecumenical Dilemmas of the Fundamentalist Millenarian Tensions within Pentecostalism ’, Journal of Pentecostal Theology 13 (2005), 18891.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

10 Gutjahr subsumes rapture and prophecy fiction within the category of ‘spiritual warfare novels’, a genre he believes emerged within evangelical publishing during the 1980s: ‘No Longer Left Behind’, 215. Most critics who comment on the phenomenon argue that rapture fiction emerged as a genre in the 1990s: e.g. Thorne, ‘Revolutionary Energy’, 98. Rapture fictions developed a genre consciousness shortly after their first appearance in the 1870s: Crawford Gribben, ‘Rethinking the Rise of Prophecy Fiction: H. R. K.’s Life in the Future (?1879)’, Brethren Historical Review 7(2011), 68–80.

11 Bartholomew, ‘Religious Mission and Business Reality’, 50.

12 Walker, Ken, ‘Left Behind: Stronger than Fiction’, Today’s Christian 40/6 (November/December 2002), 14.Google Scholar

13 Gutjahr, ‘No Longer Left Behind’, 226.

14 LaHaye, Tim et al., The Authorized Left Behind Handbook (Wheaton, IL, 2005), 4.Google Scholar

15 Ibid. 4.

16 Ibid. 20.

17 LaHaye, Tim, ‘Introduction’, in Hitchcock, Mark and Ice, Thomas, The Truth Behind Left Behind: A Biblical View of the End Times (Sisters, OR, 2004), 6.Google Scholar

18 See, for example, comments by Stephen Spencer, a dispensationalist theologian and former Dallas Theological Seminary professor, quoted in Mark Reasoner, ‘What does the Bible say about the End Times?’, in Forbes and Kilde, eds, Rapture, Revelation and the End Times, 71–98, at 90; Gribben, Rapture Fiction and the Evangelical Crisis.

19 Lindsey, Hal, Blood Moon (Palos Verdes, CA, 1996), 67.Google Scholar

20 Ibid. 252.

21 Ibid. 5.

22 Ibid. 7.

23 Ibid. 6–7.

24 LaHaye, Tim and Philips, Bob, The Secret on Ararat (New York, 2004), 202.Google Scholar

25 Bebbington, David, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s (London, 1989), 78.Google Scholar

26 Bruce Hindmarsh, D., The Evangelical Conversion Narrative: Spiritual Autobiography in Early Modern England (Oxford, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

27 This position changes in the original novels’ spin-off series, Mel Odom’s Apocalypse Dawn and Neesa Hart’s End of State. There are no sacraments in Left Behind; believer’s baptism is introduced in Apocalypse Dawn; and communion is introduced alongside baptism in End of State. Dispensational theologians have repeatedly rejected the idea that tribulation saints have a right to the sacraments. But the wider Left Behind project, which increasingly fails to control the theological coherence of its various elements, appears to offer no consensus about the relationship between spirituality and the sacraments.

28 LaHaye, Tim and Jenkins, Jerry B., Desecration (Wheaton, IL, 2001), 100.Google Scholar

29 Manker, Dayton A., They that Remain (Cincinnati, OH, 1941), 28.Google Scholar

30 Lindsey, Blood Moon, 73.

31 LaHaye, Tim and Jenkins, Jerry B., Tribulation Force (Wheaton, IL, 1996), 67.Google Scholar

32 Forster, A. Diana, ‘The Paradox of Paradise Regained in the Left Behind Series’, Chrestomathy: Annual Review of Undergraduate Research, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, College of Charleston 4 (2005), 6579 Google Scholar, at 76.

33 Manker, They that Remain, 25.

34 LaHaye, Tim and Jenkins, Jerry B., The Remnant (Wheaton, IL, 2002), 210.Google Scholar

35 See, for example, LaHaye, Tim, How to Study the Bible for Yourself (Eugene, OR, 1998).Google Scholar One reviewer on Amazon.com criticized the lack of emphasis on prayer in this text: ‘towards the end of the book LaHaye says, “Personally I think it is more important to read, memorize, and study the Bible than to pray, for it is more important for God to talk to us than for us to talk to Him. We certainly are not going to tell Him anything He does not know, but he has much in His Word that He wants us to learn.” The book then goes into a page explantation [sic] citing that it is important to pray and gives an example of how to pray. Out of all the other criticisms of the book - the condescending tone and the shameless selfpromotion [sic] - the lack of emphasis of prayer is the most disturbing. Prayer and study of the Bible go hand in hand; you really cannot have one without the other; they are like the two feet we stand upon, cut one away and we loose [sic] our balance and fall. One of the biggest differences that separates Christianity from all other religions is that Christianity isn’t about a set of rules to follow, it’s about relationship; our relationship to God and in turn how that relationship affects our relationships with all other people. Prayer is one of the most vital parts of that relationship (“Pray without ceasing”) and to barely mention it in a book on studying the Bible is a major mistake’: <http://www.amazon.com/How-Study-Bible-Yourself-LaHaye/dp/1565076311>, accessed 7 March 2007.

36 LaHaye, Tim and Jenkins, Jerry B., Indwelling (Wheaton, IL, 2000), 77.Google Scholar

37 Ibid. 76–79, 87, 232.

38 Lindsey, Blood Moon, 73.

39 Ibid. 76, 250–1.

40 See Graham Tomlin, The Power of the Cross: Theology end the Death of Christ in Paul, Luther and Pascal, Paternoster Biblical and Theological Monographs (Carlisle, 1999), 111–95.

41 Schreiner, Thomas R., Paul: Apostle of God’s Glory in Christ (Leicester, 2001), 87102.Google Scholar

42 See Gary L. Nebeker, ‘“The ecstasy of perfected love”: The Eschatological Mysticism of J. N. Darby,’ in Crawford Gribben and Timothy C. F. Stunt, eds, Prisoners of Hope? Aspects of Evangelical Millennialism in Britain and Ireland, 1800–1880, Studies in Evangelical History and Thought (Milton Keynes, 2004), 69–94.

43 ‘Interview with James BeauSeigneur’, <http://www.christian-fandom.com/oli-jbs.html>, accessed 13 March 2011.

44 BeauSeigneur, James, Acts of God, The Christ Clone Trilogy (1997; reissued New York, 2003), 505.Google Scholar

45 See, for example, BeauSeigneur, James, Birth of an Age, The Christ Clone Trilogy (1997; reissued New York, 2003), 5164, 83113.Google Scholar

46 ‘Interview with James BeauSeigneur’.

47 James BeauSeigneur, In His Image, The Christ Clone Trilogy (1997; reissued New York, 2003), ‘Important note from the author’, n.p.

48 Ibid. 217 n. 31, 462 n. 64; BeauSeigneur, Birth of an Age, 246.

49 BeauSeigneur, Acts of God, 140.

50 Ibid. 76–7.

51 BeauSeigneur, In His Image, 308.

52 BeauSeigneur, Acts of God, 149–83.

53 Irene Martin, Emerald Thorn (Oklahoma City, OK, 1991), 59.

54 Ibid. 175.

55 BeauSeigneur, Birth of an Age, 271.

56 BeauSeigneur, Acts of God, 46.

57 Ibid. 268.

58 BeauSeigneur, Birth of an Age, 309–10.

59 Ibid. 311.

60 Ibid. 246–75.

61 Ibid. 245–6.

62 Ibid. 260.

63 BeauSeigneur, In His Image, 483.

64 BeauSeigneur, Acts of God, 99–100.

65 Ibid. 102.

66 Ibid. 103, 105.

67 Ibid. 209.

68 Ibid. 372.

69 Ibid. 209. Compare this statement with the words of Wendell Bell, Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Yale University, who asserts that Evangelicals and other Fundamentalists ‘disturb me. They arrogandy assume an attitude of religious superiority, including beliefs that their religion is the only true religion and that their God is the only true God … They are a threat to the kind of future I’m talking about. They are extremist and intolerant. In the United States, for example, some evangelical Christians have religious beliefs that include “fanaticism, superstition and obscurantism.” Many such people believe “in personal (and self-serving) miracles,” are ignorant “of basic science and history,” demonize popular culture, try to censor textbooks, and display their separatist leanings by home-schooling their children’: Bell, Wendell, ‘On Becoming and Being a Futurist: An Interview with Wendell Bell’, Journal of Futures Studies 10 (2005), 11324 Google Scholar, at 119–20.

70 BeauSeigneur, Acts of God, 195.

71 Ibid. 199.

72 Burroughs, Joseph Birkbeck, Titan, Son of Satan (Oberlin, OH, 1905), 79. Google Scholar

73 BeauSeigneur, Acts of God, 158.

74 Ibid. 158–60.

75 Ibid. 163.

76 Ibid. 282.

77 Ibid. 428, 438.

78 ‘My Biography’, <http://www.michaelhyatt.com/about.htm>, accessed 13 March 2011.

79 Surveys of evangelical responses to the Y2K phenomenon can be found in Lisa McMinn, ‘Y2K, the Apocalypse, and Evangelical Christianity: The Role of Eschatological Belief in Church Responses’, Sociology of Religion 62 (2001), 205–20; Andrea Hoplight Tapia, ‘Techno-Armageddon: The Millennial Christian Response to Y2K’, Review of Religious Research 43 (2002), 266–86; Nancy A. Schaefer, ‘Y2K as an Endtime Sign: Apocalypticism in America at the fin-de-millennium’, Journal of Popular Culture 38 (2004), 82–105.

80 Hyatt, Mike and Grant, George, Y2K: The Day the World Shut Down (Nashville, TN, 1998), 84.Google Scholar

81 The prophetic culture that provided several of these myths has been described in Boyer, Paul, When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief in Modern American Culture (Cambridge, MA, 1992).Google Scholar

82 Hyatt and Grant, Y2K, 264.

83 Ibid. 1.

84 Ibid. 151.

85 Ibid. 140.

86 Ibid. 191.

87 Ibid. 227–32.

88 Ibid. 267.

89 Schaefer, ‘Y2K as an Endtime Sign’, 88.

90 Hyatt and Grant, Y2K, 3.