Monstrous

Apocalypse Soon => The End => Topic started by: Devious Viper on July 13, 2006, 01:22:53 PM

Title: A world of perpetual crisis
Post by: Devious Viper on July 13, 2006, 01:22:53 PM
"The remarkable characteristic of the crises of today is their continuity" (David Burnett King)

British author Anthony Sampson has written three "anatomies of Britain" in recent decades. His latest conveys a sense of urgency. Even the title tells us his focus has shifted into a higher gear: a crisis mode. "The Essential Anatomy of Britain: Democracy in Crisis" includes a chapter with an obvious warning to the British government to get its house in order. No such chapter appeared in the first two editions. It was Britain’s chief rabbi, Jonathan Sacks, who wrote: "Today’s prophets, I realized with some sadness, are often not religious leaders but a small group of academics, who breaking free of disciplinary specialisation, have surveyed our age from the broadest of perspectives and brought back a report of imminent danger" (Faith in the Future, 1995, p. 65).

Prophetic voices have sounded warnings for some time, pointing to the ominous signs on the world scene. Some foretell a crisis that will signal a massive change in our world. This is clearly reflected in the titles of several recent books. American author James Dale Davidson and his British counterpart, William Rees-Mogg, titled their book The Great Reckoning. Historian Eric Hobsbawm used the title The Age of Extremes. American author and educator David Burnett King notes in The Crisis of Our Time that "there exists a profound feeling of unease . . . We are passing through some sort of crisis, riding out a sea change that will somehow make the future very different from our past" (1988, p. 17).

The plain truth is that we may be fast approaching a transition between two distinct ages, the age of man and the age to come of which Jesus Christ spoke (Matthew 12:32). Eric Hobsbawm shows in another book, The Age of Revolution, that the earth cannot continue indefinitely to bear the unwanted fruits of the darker aspects of modern technology. He wrote: "We have reached a point of historic crisis. The forces generated by the techno-scientific economy are now great enough to destroy the environment, that is to say the material foundations of human life." As David King reminds us: "The nature of crisis has changed. The remarkable characteristic of the crises of today is their continuity—they have moved in, it seems, to stay" (The Crisis of Our Time).

Are we headed for what theologian James Moffatt called "the Crisis at the Close" - the greatgranddaddy of all crises culminating in the second coming of Jesus Christ ? (Daniel 12:9, Moffatt Translation)
Title: Re: A world of perpetual crisis
Post by: Devious Viper on July 15, 2006, 07:19:50 AM
It is important to remember that the Middle East is not the only region of the world spiraling out of control. Other areas of unrest—India’s recent terrorist bombings—North Korea’s persistence on developing nuclear weapons, causing Japan to consider preemptive strikes—clashes between rival factions in Sudan—Iran’s nuclear ambitions—political upheaval in Somalia—instability in Iraq and Afghanistan—are simmering to a boil.