Pastor of Muppets ([info]syndicalist) wrote in [info]atheism,

The Rapture Index is at level red!!!

Published on Friday, February 11, 2005 by San Francisco Chronicle

Fasten Your Seatbelts
The Rapture Index

by Jon Carroll

Let us consider the Rapture Index. This is a real thing prepared by
serious people. If it makes you laugh, you have not gotten the memo. You
probably have not read any of the 12 volumes of the "Left Behind" series,
the best-selling books in America today.

Those Left Behind are those who did not experience the Rapture, which is
an instant in time when all the truly holy people are taken directly to
heaven, leaving their clothes in small neat piles behind them. The rest of
the ungodly losers are left to deal with natural disasters and wars and
the armies of the Antichrist, after which they die in various colorful
ways while the ranks of the saved watch with compassion tempered with an
understandable sense of satisfaction.

The Rapture Index, as of this writing, stands at 153. Anything over 145 is
labeled by the Rapture Actuaries as "Fasten your seat belts." In other
words: Repent for the End Is Near. You may see all this for yourself at
www.raptureready.com/rap2.html, should you think I'm making it up.



The Rapture Index is based on 45 prophetic categories, things like
drought, plague, floods, liberalism, beast government and mark of the
beast. "Beast government" is apparently the European Union; the news that
the EU is looking for a new president is seen as a sign that the end time
is drawing nearer. The latest "mark of the beast" is a plan by the
Antichrist that will result in said mark being implanted in the right hand
or forehead of unbelievers. The relatively high number of this indicator
is explained thusly: "Wal-Mart is falling behind in its plan to bar code
all products with radio tags." There are some parts of this belief system
I have not yet grasped.

The Rapture is a good thing, and therefore floods, famine, drought and all
that are also good things because they portend the coming of end times.
Even liberalism is a good thing, because there need to be a lot of Christ-
deniers for the end times to come. (Among the prophesied Christ-deniers:
the pope. That part is pretty much played down in the pamphlets.)

The end times begin when Russia (also known as the ancient nation of Gog)
and Iran join forces to attack Israel. Before this can happen, however,
the old temple must be rebuilt. Peace between Israel and the Palestinians
is necessary for that to happen, so the Rapture Index sees the peace talks
as a good sign. Not as a good as the tsunami, but definitely positive.

I am not the first one to notice this. The environmental Web site
www.grist.org has been covering it; Bill Moyers also wrote a column about
it. Alas, the quote attributed to James Watt, the secretary of the
interior under Ronald Reagan ("after the last tree is felled, Christ will
come back"), is not verifiable, although it's been reported many times.
Probably the liberal media again, taking time out from promoting the
homosexual agenda.

So read the Rapture Index. Consider its implications: One of George Bush's
core constituencies is actively praying for environmental degradation. Its
members are in fact praying for the end of the world, because the end of
the world is the beginning of the fun pa rtofsalvation.

Let's look at the new budget through this lens, which is (I emphasize)
neither fanciful nor satirical. Money for clean water: down. Money for the
cleanup of old nuclear sites, including the massive job at the Hanford
(Wash.) Nuclear Reservation: way down. Number of Forest Service and Bureau
of Land Management acres open for logging: up. Amount of territory in
Alaska declared OK for oil drilling: way up.

You might even consider the impact of the Rapture on deficit financing.
Who cares how much debt we accrue? Christ will come and forgive it all.
Why not borrow against the future to pay for the present? The future is
gonna be a whole different deal. We're just placeholders for God's own
totalitarian state.

For us secular humanists, us gay-marrying, porn-reading, prayer-mocking
harbingers of doom, all this seems incredible. We are still in the
reality- based paradigm; we have not yet crossed over into the faith-based
paradigm. In the faith-based world, the apparent inconsistencies within
the Bush administration fade into nothingness.

Millennial Christians have somehow convinced themselves that the founding
fathers would have approved of all this because they were all old-time
Christians following that old-time religion. Because Rapture theology was
mostly cobbled together in the 19th century based on very selective
readings from parts of the New Testament, it is unlikely that the founding
fathers believed anything of the sort. Not important: Once again, I'm
indulging in reality-based thinking.

Like the prophet said: Fasten your seat belts.

The thing about the Rapture Index is this: If you're part of the problem,
you're part of the solution, because it's no good smiting sinners if there
are no sinners to smite.



###
AntiChrist candidates list: http://www.raptureready.us/antichrist.htm


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  • 29 comments

[info]lavajin

February 24 2005, 00:32:15 UTC 7 years ago

My theory is that the rapture's already happened, and the 2 or 3 folks that were actually "righteous" enough to get beamed up are sitting up there laughing their asses off at these yahoos...

[info]arensb

February 24 2005, 14:52:08 UTC 7 years ago

I remember someone making the same comment some years ago, adding that no one noticed that the raptured people were missing, because they were generally considered to be righteous assholes.

[info]lavajin

February 24 2005, 17:45:41 UTC 7 years ago

HEgheghEGE Thing is, I would hope teh GOD would have been a bit more selective, unless he's as much of an asshole...

Deleted comment

[info]omnihilo

February 26 2005, 11:09:59 UTC 7 years ago

how often have you thought it?

http://www.livejournal.com/community/atheism/446619.html?thread=7977627#t7977627

[info]axbesm_starr

February 24 2005, 00:59:29 UTC 7 years ago

I love it how they yell at the Pope on the antichrist page.

And by the way, if the rapture was to happen, it would be a party down here. :)

[info]arensb

February 24 2005, 14:55:20 UTC 7 years ago

I love how some people say that Christianity is the One True Religion because it has the most adherents, then turn around and say that Catholics aren't true ScotsmenChristians, thereby cutting their numbers down drastically.

[info]animate

February 24 2005, 01:20:47 UTC 7 years ago

THE POPE! I KNEW IT!

[info]puf_almighty

February 24 2005, 03:08:11 UTC 7 years ago

Right how do I sign up for the Army of the Antichrist? Cuz it sounds like God isn't gonna take me, so I'll join the other guy.

[info]vodgut

February 24 2005, 03:14:14 UTC 7 years ago

Those Left Behind are those who did not experience the Rapture, which is an instant in time when all the truly holy people are taken directly to heaven, leaving their clothes in small neat piles behind them.

Huh, huh. Naked chicks, Beavis. Let's have a Rapture. Huh, huh.

[info]bukva

February 24 2005, 06:17:50 UTC 7 years ago

Yeah, yeah, we're gonna score! It's really gonna happen, Butthead! Naked holy chicks and BIG HOLY BOOBS! Yeah, and BUTTS too! Boinnnnnggggg!!! Ehehehehe.

[info]digital_space

February 24 2005, 03:21:31 UTC 7 years ago

This is heresy, but rumour has it that during an interview W. was asked about the possible dangers of sending nuclear waste into outer space. I can only assume that nuclear power was the topic of conversion.

His answer, as it was relatedto me, was "Don't worry, when Christ returns, He will cleans the Earth and any fallout will be removed in favour of the new paradise."

God bless Canada. :)

[info]thenewanarch

February 24 2005, 06:12:14 UTC 7 years ago

Alright

I know I'm suppoesd to be tolerant of everyone's diverse beliefs, but I'm going to say it. I really have to:

These cretins need to fucking kill themselves. Every last one of them—dead. How's that for a fucking rapture?

There. I said it. I feel so much better now. A boy can dream, can't he?

[info]bukva

February 24 2005, 06:20:48 UTC 7 years ago

Re: Alright

Damn Xianity for not promoting one of those mass suicides.

[info]j_brisby

February 24 2005, 07:44:45 UTC 7 years ago

I can't wait for the Rapture, so the Democrats will finally be able to win back the House.

OK, I stole that joke from Jon Stewart.

[info]steelcaver

February 24 2005, 11:03:58 UTC 7 years ago

Hm. I find this list funny because of its inconsistencies and inaccuracies.

Osama: "How could anyone gloat after murder like he did...?"
- Right. Because the Americans at Abu Ghirab didn't strike "trophy hunter" poses over the Iraqis they were beating, or celebrate as stray bombs killed innocent civilians there.

Germany: "Wouldn't be surprised to see Germany play a major role in the end times because of the Holocaust. Anti-Semitism seems to flourish there."
- Germany is no longer Anti-Semitic by nature. In fact, it is a Socialist country.

Arafat: "He is deceived about the "Israeli Occupation." There is no such thing."
- Tell that to the people living there.

Vladimir Putin: "...rules atheistic, communist Russia."
- Russia hasn't been Communist for over a decade... and haven't American Bible-thumpers heard of Russian Orthodox Christians?

Vicente Fox is active in the antiabortion movement, as are both of his daughters, and is seen as a strong bush ally on "family values" issues.

The page was obviously written by either Baptists, Pentacostals, or some other such faction on the fringe of Christianity. In attacking the Pope, the author asks... "How could a spirit-filled Christian molest a child, especially repeatedly over years?"

In response, I ask... "How could a spirit-filled Christian forget the foundations of Jesus' teaching? Specifically the bits about casting the first stone, removing the log from one's own eye first, judge not, and that little gem known as self-sacrifice?"
And... "After the Salem witch trials, does Dominionist Christianity really have the right to say anything about Catholicism?"

That said, if these people really want to be raptured, they can.

If they really want "an instant in time when all the truly holy people are taken directly to heaven, leaving their clothes in small neat piles behind them" all they have to do is walk to ground zero of Pakistan's nuclear testing grounds. At an instant predetermined by someone, they will leave their bodies and ascend without leaving a trace of themselves behind - just like every man, woman and child in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

[info]theswede

February 24 2005, 13:35:12 UTC 7 years ago

Ironically, after pointing out the many faults, you end with rather a blooper. Little Boy and Fat Man were about 20kT's of yield. That is a low yield tactical weapon, and wasn't even enough to knock down all buildings at ground zero. It didn't vaporize anyone, even though it caused some rather nasty (and often lethal) blisters.

[info]steelcaver

February 25 2005, 23:32:53 UTC 7 years ago

Damn. And I can't edit the commen, either. Oh well. I never claim to have my facts perfect.

That said, I'm pretty sure that modern nuclear weapons would be powerful enough to "rapture" thousands of Christians in one go.

(Suddenly notices nukes pointed at every city on the globe.)

Damn it. That was their plan all along...

[info]bustiq

February 24 2005, 12:53:07 UTC 7 years ago

Unfortunately messianic thinking seems to be a human constant. Almost all succesful religions feature an element of "don't worry because x will come and then all will be better". I would possibly posit this as the criterion for a non-theistic religion; the classic case in point being Marxism. "don't worry because The Revolution will come and then all will be better". Topical to Britian at the moment "don't worry because the housing market bubble will pop and then all will be better".

Be wary people! This kind of thinking can easily slip in to your mind too!

[info]arensb

February 24 2005, 15:02:11 UTC 7 years ago

Do Taoism or Buddhism follow this pattern as well? Taoism's central message seems to be "Stop struggling against the Tao and go with the flow", and Buddhism's is "If you work at getting rid of desire and want, eventually you won't have to be reincarnated and suffer anymore."

[info]bustiq

February 24 2005, 16:32:51 UTC 7 years ago

Buddhism - "don't worry (essetial tenet of Buddhsim) and then you'll be enlightened" It is still saying that all the badness of the world is something that will be gotten rid of by basically ignoring it. Also the great popularity of Buddhism is mostly down to Mahayana (or 'greater vehicle') Buddhism which is a clever reworking of the initial idea which says that those who are already enlightened can (and will) stick around to cause third party enlightenment in others. This is a way of making Buddhism pleasing to the layman because prior to this you could only become elightened by spending several lifetimes as a monk. These dallying Buddhas are external saviours.

I am not really familiar enough with Taosim to say whether or not it adheres to this or not, however...

I still stick by this as a criterion because there are strains of Buddhism (elements of Zen for example) that make no theistic or spiritual claims and (though they never really directly define it) don't call enlightenment something magical. They are more life philosophies than religions. Taoism may well come under this heading?

[info]arensb

February 24 2005, 17:09:36 UTC 7 years ago

They are more life philosophies than religions.

I agree that it's fuzzy. But I choose to categorize them as religions because unlike, say, existentialism or stoicism, they involve reverence or worship or other trappings of religion.

And AIUI the Tao is not an intelligent being like God, or even Fate in Greek mythology, but rather a force of nature, like gravity. Or perhaps even more abstract than that.

[info]bustiq

February 24 2005, 23:12:36 UTC 7 years ago

Perhaps a third category is needed: something not involving theistic or animistic claims that has gone beyond 'life philosophy' (an embarrasingly clunky term) to something that people use as a crutch, excuse and justification. For example I think quite a lot of people are moving away from using the term 'straight edge' because it has been appropriated by some that use it to exclude others, narrow others (and their own) options and glorify stupid behaviour. Meh, maybe I'm moving too far away from philosophy of religion into sociology. I guess when your an atheist though the study of religion (when not metaphysics and epistemology) is pretty much just sociology though. I'm wandering now! =)

[info]bustiq

February 24 2005, 23:14:08 UTC 7 years ago

on the other hand I still think we as atheists need to be very careful that we don't consider ourselves immune to the thought traps that theists are prone (but not confined) to. Messianic thinking being one of them.

[info]arensb

7 years ago

[info]bustiq

7 years ago

[info]bustiq

7 years ago

[info]omnihilo

February 26 2005, 11:07:51 UTC 7 years ago

Well-written. Check out this too: http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2004/04/20/apocalypse-please/
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