What a job, A4C but someone has got to do it. Leading Pastor Warns Believers of 'Doomsday Distraction'
Ted Haggard says some have 'false hopes of a premature Second Coming'
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A leading pastor has warned Christians against spending too much time debating how close the end of the world is, rather than helping bring it about through what they do.
Some believers have been "distracted with false hopes of a premature Second Coming," says Ted Haggard, pastor of 9,000-member New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., in an article in the June issue of "Charisma" magazine, out this week.
But getting actively involved in church life might do more for Jesus' return than "attending a prophecy seminar," suggests the recently appointed president of the National Association of Evangelicals.
"Making long-term lifestyle choices that place strong believers in positions of influence might be more helpful than short-term fixes," he writes. "Constant, steady integrity might be more important than stocking your basement with dried food and canned goods."
Haggard, a founder of the World Prayer Center in Colorado Springs, and the Internet-based World Prayer Team, suggests that a "fixation" on Israel's place in the end times has meant Christians have overlooked Bible passages "that indicate the Second Coming is predicated on our spreading the gospel throughout the world.
"The expansion of the kingdom of God might be our best predictor of when the end will come," he adds, "and right now there are several billion people on the planet who still have not heard the gospel."
Haggard recalls how emphasis on Christ's imminent return in the past led to people making choices "that altered the course of their lives based on a misunderstanding of where they [were] on the timeline of human history."
Some rushed into marriages, or avoided college and career opportunities because they thought they only had a short time in which to share the gospel, while others bought remote properties in an anticipation of a major economic collapse, "all because they misunderstood the times."
Haggard says: "... it's time to accept the possibility that perhaps the most obvious and clearly articulated messages of Scripture are indeed or primary importance, and the secret formulas pointing to our being the 'last generation' are hidden for a reason: They do not reveal the truth and are a distraction for many in the Body of Christ."
While some say the rise of cults and secularism points to the "falling away" the Bible teaches will precede Jesus' return, Haggard contends that churches are growing more rapidly now "than in any other time in Christian history... The world is not becoming more secular... It is becoming more Christian."
He urges Christians to pour their time and energies into helping fulfil the Great Commission. "Live as if He were coming back today, but plan as if we were going to live a long, full life," he advises.
"... if we will use our resources and not become distracted with false hopes of a premature Second Coming, we will realize God's calling for us. We will expand His kingdom so that when He does come, the celebration can be bigger and greater than we had ever dreamed."
Read Ted Haggard's article, "Doomsday Distraction," in the June issue of "Charisma" magazine, out this week.