Deceivers and Disasters
Jesus warned of coming deceivers who will mislead many and spread false information about his return. Jesus began his final discourse with a sharp warning: Beware
of the “many deceivers” who will come and spread false information about
his return, including rumors about wars, earthquakes, and other calamities.
They will “deceive many.” Likewise, “false prophets” and “false
anointed ones” will propagate lies about the whereabouts and the “coming
of the Son of Man.”
The church has been flooded with deceivers and false prophets since its founding, just as Jesus forewarned. However, this trend has intensified in recent decades, as end-time prophecy
“experts” have pointed to wars, earthquakes, plagues, and famines as evidence
that we are living in the “last days.” We are members of the “last
generation,” which apparently began in the 1830s. That is how long this narrative has been sold to many churches, denominations, and especially, unwary believers sitting in the pews.
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| [Alaska Earthquake - Photo by NOAA (U.S.A.) on Unsplash] |
However, Jesus stated that disasters of this sort are not signs of the end. The stress in his warning is on what we will “hear” from false prophets and other charlatans:
- (Mark 13:5-8) – “And Jesus began to say to them: Beware, so that no man may deceive you. Many will come in my name, saying, I am he, and deceive many. And when you hear of wars and rumors of wars, be not troubled. These things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; there will be earthquakes in various places; there will be famines. These things are the beginning of birth pains.”
The point is not whether such disasters will occur, but that
they are not signs by which we can calculate the time of “the end.” They
are not keys for decoding prophetic timetables, yet that is precisely how they are
used by self-serving deceivers.
According to Jesus, “Many will come upon the basis of my
name.” Men will be deceived because false prophets will claim to
speak for him, and the victims of their lies will be members of Christ’s “elect.”
The followers of Jesus are the primary target of these agents of
disinformation.
Jesus added, “Moreover, you will hear of wars
and reports of wars.” The Greek conjunction ‘de’,
here translated as “moreover,” signifies the further development of the subject
matter, and the term translated as “rumors” emphasizes what we will hear from
these propagandists.
Whether reports about wars or earthquakes are accurate
is not the question. Rather, deceivers point to catastrophic events as evidence
that the “end is near.” However, such events do not prove this claim. “False
prophets” spread rumors about famines and other disasters to raise false expectations
and spread fear among God’s people.
Jesus affirms that catastrophes will occur. Earthquakes, wars,
political upheavals, famines, plagues, “terrors and great signs from heaven,”
and the like will come to pass, but his disciples must “not be alarmed since
the end is not yet.”
Chaos and violence have characterized human history. How do we distinguish one war or earthquake from another, prophetically speaking? At most, they constitute a “beginning of birth pains,” harbingers of the eventual end of this age.
Christ’s words, “these things must come to pass,” allude to Daniel 2:26-28, where the Babylonian king received a troubling dream. Only
Daniel could interpret it. The prophet prefaced his remarks to the king:
- “There is a God in heaven who reveals mysteries; he has shown the king what things must come to pass in later days.”
This verbal allusion links Christ’s description of the
“beginning of labor pains” to “the later days” predicted by
Daniel. The Death
and Resurrection of Jesus signaled the start of the “last days,” and the
final phase of History commenced. The future “arrival”
of Jesus will bring the process to its inevitable conclusion. In the
meantime, this age will be characterized by wars, earthquakes, and famines.
BIRTH PAINS
Today, false prophets claim Jesus taught that the frequency
and intensity of wars and earthquakes will increase in the “last days,”
pointing to his reference to “birth pains” as evidence of this.
However, the image of birth pains is used in
Scripture to represent the suddenness and inevitability of destruction, not the
frequency or intensity of wars and other disasters. For example:
- “Like as a woman with child that draws near the time of her delivery is in pain and cries out in her pains, so we have been before you, O Yahweh” – (Isaiah 26:17).
- “For yourselves know accurately that the day of the Lord so comes as a thief in the night. When they are saying, Peace and Security, then sudden destruction comes upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they will in no way escape” – (1 Thessalonians 5:1-3).
Nowhere did Jesus predict any increase in the frequency of the listed calamities, whether in his day, throughout the centuries since, or during history’s final years. Luke’s version adds an interesting element. “Many will come in my name, saying, I am he, and the season is at hand,” the very claim we hear unceasingly from today’s false prophets - (Luke 21:8-9).
What “season” did he mean? Jesus warned that no one “knows
of that day and hour” when the Son of Man will arrive except “the
Father alone.” Therefore, his disciples must “watch and pray always since
you do not know when the season [‘kairos’] is.” He was
referring to the season of his return - (Matthew 24:36, Mark
13:32-33).
- “But know this, that if the master of the house had known in what hour the thief was coming, he would have watched and not left his house to be broken through. Be you also ready, for in an hour that you think not, the Son of man is coming” – (Luke 12:39-40).
And so, today’s deceivers and false prophets presume to
know what even the Son of Man does not know. Christ reiterated the point to his
disciples just before his ascension to Heaven:
- “And he said to them, It is not for you to know times or seasons [‘kairos’], which the Father has set in His own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. And you will be my witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea and Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth. And when he had said these things, as they were looking, he was taken up; and a cloud received him out of their sight. And while they were looking steadfastly into heaven as he went, behold, two men stood by them in white apparel, who also said, You men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was received up from you into heaven, will come in like manner as you beheld him going into heaven” – (Acts 1:7-11).
The purpose of Christ’s warning on the Mount of Olives
is not to provide us with “signs of the times” whereby we may calculate the timing
of the end, but to warn us not to heed deceivers and false prophets who point
to natural and man-made catastrophes as signs of the rapidly approaching return
of Jesus.
Moreover, because no one except God knows the “day,”
the “hour,” or the “season” of his return, constant vigilance is vital
for every disciple of Jesus.
What matters when Jesus arrives “on the clouds” is not
our accurate knowledge of prophetic timetables or cosmic signs, but whether we have
remained faithful in our walk with him and stayed busy doing his business.
Just as the angel exhorted the disciples, rather than worry about the “when” of
Christ’s return, we must instead preach the Gospel of the Kingdom of God to all
nations, “to the uttermost parts of the Earth,” until the very moment of
his arrival in glory.
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SEE ALSO:
- The Spirit of Antichrist - (The Spirit of Antichrist is working to destroy the church through deceptions propagated by false teachers)
- Howling Impostors - (The New Testament warns repeatedly of coming deceivers and false prophets who will cause many to depart from the faith)
- Disinformation - (Rumors about the Day of the Lord caused alarm and confusion among the believers of Thessalonica – 2 Thessalonians 2:1-2)
- Trompeurs et Catastrophes - (Jésus a mis en garde contre les séducteurs à venir qui tromperont beaucoup de gens et répandront de fausses informations sur son retour)
[Note: Text printed in small capital letters represents citations of, or allusions to, passages from the Old Testament]

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