ABSTRACT

Islam, Judaism, and Christianity are engaged not in a 'clash of civilizations' but in a sectarian conflict among branches of a single civilization traditionally steeped in apocalyptic imagery and beliefs. Apocalypticism is a religious luxury that modern civilizations can no longer afford. Many would agree that the propagandists of the Christian Right have raised apocalyptic tensions to a dangerous level since 9/11, but in this book Richard Fenn takes on the mainline church leaders for their role in promoting an apocalyptic view of history. Those who keep apocalyptic beliefs in a respectable place in religious faith and practice must bear their share of responsibility for global terror. It is not only tragic but ironic that the churches have given apocalyptic literature such a respectable place in their sacred texts, because the apocalyptic imagination itself has its sources in non-Biblical literature: the Hellenistic prophesies that gave comfort and courage to the victims of war in the near and middle east from the time of Alexander the Great and Darius. Fenn goes on to hold apocalyptic enthusiasts in the mainline churches, as well as on the Right, responsible for keeping old grievances alive in their demands for a day of final reckoning, and he demonstrates that totalitarian and imperial regimes have made effective use of apocalyptic literature to justify their own violence and to terrify their subjects and enemies.

chapter Chapter 1|15 pages

The Apocalyptic Vision as Bad Seed

chapter Chapter 2|17 pages

Radical Preachers and Mullahs

chapter Chapter 3|22 pages

Terror and the Apocalyptic Imagination

chapter Chapter 4|14 pages

Apocalyptic Visions as Reaction to Disaster

chapter Chapter 5|12 pages

The Apocalyptic Attack on the Self

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

Apocalyptic Visions as Ideology

chapter Chapter 7|14 pages

The Test of Time

chapter Chapter 8|12 pages

The Theater and the Courtroom

chapter Chapter 9|17 pages

Free Association