1. Bainespal says:

    4. “God loves you” and “wants to get your attention” — so He sent this huge comet to smash you.
    I can’t help but be somewhat amused by the cruise-liner altar call, when the Christian on board the ship’s PA is pleading with people to repent and believe Christ. “I can tell you that there’s a God in Heaven, and God loves you,” he says, with genuine compassion, just before the meteor whomps the ocean and generates hundred-foot-high waves that wipe them out.

    Careful.  That remark sounds uncomfortably like what a “your-god-is-evil” atheist might say.

    • Possibly. Yet in this case I think the Left Behind authors incidentally left themselves open to the charge, by (sometimes) insinuating that this Gospel works mainly in a pre-cleaned world with pre-cleaned characters — such as two post-Rapture virgin adults who fall chastely in love. If God saves such people but judges others, the critic could reasonably say, isn’t God evil for condemning someone who was “basically good,” only without Jesus? That’s what happens when Christians squirm about any concept of “total depravity,” or rather, our deadness in sin apart from Christ.

      Overall, though, after those first few volumes, the Left Behind series portrayed some nonbeliever characters’ views in a fairly accurate light — going so far as to take years of story time before someone would “get saved,” while in the meantime that same character displays non-stereotypical, common-grace goodness to our heroes.

      • Kirsty says:

        I thought the whole virgin thing was really, really silly. Maybe just possible for Chloe, as she’s only 21 (though a non-Christian away from home? Unlikely). But buck – come on, he’s 31, it ‘wasn’t out of a huge sense of morality’ and he ‘ran in some fast circles’ (so it’s not like he was socially awkward or anything.) Is it therefore remotely plausible?
         
        It’s really unhelpful, as it implies the gospel is for good clean people. (I know you’ve just said all this, but it was irritating me).
         
        Although, saying that, I do remember later on a group of people who live in an underground church or something, who came from all kinds of alternative lifestyles and take 1 Cor 6:9-11 as their motto. So it’s not all bad.

What say you?