Saturday, August 15, 2009

Tim LaHaye Does Most Silly Anti Catholic Charge Ever.

EVER!!! That is a big accomplishment. See Shedding Some Light via Seventh-day Adventist to Roman Catholic .

It is truly frightening that so many Christians have taken their end of the world theology from this "scripture" scholar and his books.

3 comments:

  1. The fact that pseudo-scholar Tim LaHaye knows how to deviously make LaHay while LaSun is shining is a sad commentary on the current state of duped Funnymentalists who keep supporting him - and it's past time for scholars of all persuasions to widely air the long covered up facts about him that have lately emerged. Web articles that expose multi-millionaire LaHaye's (and fellow traffickers') exploitation of the fringe-British invented, 179-year-old "pre-tribulation rapture" fantasy include "Pretrib Rapture Diehards" (under "1992" note his hypocrisy), "Famous Rapture Watchers," "X-Raying Margaret," "Pretrib Hypocrisy," "Pretrib Rapture - Hidden Facts," and (last but not least) "Pretrib Rapture Dishonesty." LaHaye's main nemesis seems to be journalist/historian Dave MacPherson who has focused for 40 years on the exact beginnings of the same escapist theory. Indeed, in his book "No Fear of the Storm" (which has had two title changes to make it deviously appear as two more "new" works!)he has an entire chapter titled "MacPherson's Vendetta" (which sloppily copies only secondhand sources with their vicious lies) and carefully avoids listing any of MacPherson's books in footnotes or even bibliography so that readers can find out what his chief critic has actually said! And when LaHaye reproduced the short original "rapture" statement given in 1830 by Margaret Macdonald (the pretrib rapture originator) he somehow left out 48 words - the same 48 words that his partner Thomas Ice had left out three years earlier when he reproduced it! Since pretribulation rapture promoters are more often than not extremely anti-Catholic (no, Bellarmine, Ribera, and Lacunza did not teach pretrib rapturism but only helped to revive "futurism"), it's past time for Catholic scholars to put to rest once and for all time the fund-raising-for-various-agendas pretribulation rapture hoax. A good start would be MacPherson's massively documented and highly endorsed 300-page work "The Rapture Plot" which is carried by online stores such as Armageddon Books.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am trying to be nice when I say, I couldn't stand him or his wife when I was at LU. It was always about money and getting their names on things.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yeah I think he is a really a nut :)

    Buit a rich one. He is often on all these sort of groups that ask money all the place politics wise and then when you research them you realize it is a scam. 80 percent does not go the cause but to staff, them and other friends that own assorted like groups

    ReplyDelete