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Glorious Appearing: The End of Days (Left Behind #12)

Glorious Appearing: The End of Days (Left Behind #12)

List Price: $24.99
Your Price: $16.49
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Get the real interpretation
Review: If you want to find out the real interpretation of Revelations then go to a Catholic Church and ask a priest. Don't be misled by prophecies of private interpretation (2 Peter 1:20). Let the one true Church instituted by Jesus Christ himself guide you. God bless.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Some books are better left unwritten
Review: I read the first of the Left Behind books based on the recommendation of a friend. It was an interesting take on what the idea of "The Rapture" might be like if it were to happen. As the subsequent books have been written, Lahaye and Jenkins have shown their increasing quest for profit and book sales is in opposing proportion to their writing abilities. Is it my imagination, or have the margins been getting larger along with the font size and the space between lines. I always used this trick when writing a paper to meet the page requirements when I was weak on the subject matter. Suffice it to say that, their idea of what "The Glorious Appearing" might be like is very disturbing. I would like to picture Jesus as someone who does not cause people to explode with "Stephen King-like" graphic description with His sacred word. I am a life-long Catholic and view this book as very prejudiced. The entire series seems to indicate that if you are not a born again Christian, you will not be saved. I would, again, like to believe that the Jesus that we honor is more loving and non-discriminatory. It is my experience that, those who have been "saved", truly needed saving from addiction, divorce and crime. Something that many "born again" Christians seem to share in their backgrounds. I salute Jenkins and Lahaye for making enough money on this series of sophomoric books to last until the end-times.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: good book, but . . .
Review: I've read all of the books in this series, and enjoyed them all greatly. I had a couple of problems with this one, though. First, the ending of the previous book and the beginning of this one contradict each other. Could the authors not remember how they ended the last book? That's what it felt like. Also, the first third of the book moved along pretty well, then got very slow, to the point that I got impatient with it, and skipped ahead to around the final third where Jesus appears and faces off with the antichrist. The one thing I can't fault any of these books with is that they've helped me take a look at what I believe in and where my life is with all of that.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good ending to the series...
Review: I got on the library hold list pretty early for the book Glorious Appearing by LaHaye and Jenkins. This is the 12th and final book in the Left Behind series, a Christian historical novel based on end-time biblical prophecies. If you've read the entire series up to now, you should enjoy the conclusion as laid out in this book. Well done, and a vivid portrayal of how events could play out during that time.

Overall, I enjoyed the series a lot. I did think that the series could have been cut down to eight or nine volumes without losing much in the story. The middle volumes tended to just mark time with not a lot of story advancement. Still, one of the best novel treatments of pre-tribulation rapture theology.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Boring
Review: I read all the series books from the beginning and enjoyed them as fiction. They were not the best written books by any stretch of the imagination. But they were a fun read. This last book was dull, drawn out, and did not have nearly the pay-off it could have had. The visual images were nicely done. Other than that, it was a disappointment. I will recommend it as closure to those who have read the other books, but will preface that with a warning that it is dull and does not have the pay off that one would expect in a fictional series of 12 books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Biblical perspective - gotta read this!!!!!
Review: These books have done much to peak the interest of eschatology (the study of end times.) If you want a straight forward Biblical explanation to the model these authors use, you must simply see "The History of the Future - A Commentary on Revelation and Matthew 24" ISBN 1592440681 - the authors take you verse by verse to build the Pre-Mil/Pre-Trib model in a way you will understand. And, its straight from the Bible.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Thought provoking, disturbing, i.e. worth reading
Review: I have read all of the books, and definitely find myself caught up in the characters and the thought-provoking nature of the subject matter. I did feel the author drew interesting conclusions - some literal and others less so - about what Jesus will do after He returns. I think it's fine to explore it by writing a novel like this; I do hope people will keep in mind this is one man's opinion - or two. My own convictions didn't sit well with how violent Jesus Himself was portrayed. I believe the real hell (fire, brimstone and all) will be the realization that you've forever fallen short of His presence and His love. I really think some of the portrayals are inaccurate as well, in particular, when Samson of the Old Testament is rewarded alongside men such as Abraham and Moses. Samson was actually a bully who rejected the Lord and used his gift of strength for personal revenge and to get gain.

All in all, I felt it was good reading, and if it promotes pondering and discussion, that may be a worthy result.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Mixed Bag, But Overall, Enjoyed the Read.
Review: I was thinking before I read this book that it would be difficult to write about Jesus. Especially when it came to prophesy. These writers took a momumental task at writing this book because it is not only based on the prophesy of the Bible, but on their own opinions and research. In my opinion, they took a major risk at writing this novel because everyone has opinions and thoughts of what they think Jesus is really like and what will happen when the world's time has come. Anyone could easily be offended by what they wrote, and as I have read in other reviews here, it is evident Tim Lahaye and Jerry Jenkins have touched the nerve of some reviewers.

For me, this book was inspirational and well written. I like the fact they used a lot of scripture. I was most amazed that the writers did show Jesus as disappointed at all that were set against Him. That was really good they wrote how Jesus felt. Some things I was not very happy with, though. I was kind of uneased by the description of the bloodshed and war. I did not like the fact that the writers made the characters (The Believers) so arrogant, like they looked down at the undecided and unbelievers. And what about all the other characters throughout the series? Only a small mention of them, no real reunions other than Rayford and his close family.

Overall, this book was a great way to end the series (if it is indeed the ending). It was exciting to read, but at times a little too much.

Another note I wanted to add is that it is categorized as fiction, and we all must keep in mind, it is by no means the Holy Bible.

Joy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I would give it 10 stars if I could!!
Review: First of all, let me just congratulate Mr.'s LaHaye and Jenkins. I thouroughly ejoyed this book as well as the previous 11. This book truly had a huge impact on my life, and my walk with the Lord. I learned so much, and my Jesus spoke to me through it. I accord with the Passion of the Christ, I felt as if I was really seeing Jesus for the first time, though I've been a Christian for 10 years, and have been in church all of my life. Although separated by thousands of years, the Lord became real to me through both of these venues. I finished the book in a little less than 10 hours, and I think my hair stood on end the entire time.
Taking communion in our packed, little, country church Easter morning, my mind was drawn to a scene from the book. Rayford was in awe of finally understanding that not only should we talk to the Lord, but that we should listen to him intently. And although, I found it disturbingly hard to let my mind rest and my soul listen, I did feel the Lord tugging on my heart-strings, and I know that the potential for an awesome relationship with Him lies just ahead.
I have gone through and copied the verses mentioned throughout the "Glorious Appearing" and have re-read them along with Revelations, and I see how, fictional as it is, there is great truth there. I mean, true, we have no idea how the Remnant will truly be transported from Petra to the various locations mentioned. We don't even know that they will take refuge at Petra, though the evidence does point there. The point is, they will take refuge somewhere and they will be transported somehow. The semantics do not matter.
I grieve for those who do not believe the Lord our Saviour will have a firm hand when the time comes. He died on the cross to banish our sins, to allow us to commune with himself and God our Father. Were He to let the non believers live after repeated chances, He would not only be weak, but His death and life would have all been in vain. The God of the Bible, my God, is a loving God, but what the author of both the Bible and this book are trying to convey is that at this point, every person on the face of the earth had been shown signs and wonders beyond the imagination of any living creature, and they still refused to accept the Love of the One and Only God. They turned their backs and allied themselve with pure evil. My God is a jealous God, in that He wants the love of all that He made, and to keep those who were filled with hate, evil, lust, and greed around to intermingle with His followers would make the His Sacrifice and the Sacrifice of His Son in vain. The Bible clearly states this.
My hope is that everyone will be able to share in the joy of reading this book, and experiencing our loving Saviour and God who's glory will shine down on you if you will only ask Him!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: who would Jesus bomb?
Review: get real. I tolerated reading this because I fear that millions of gullible people will actually believe Tim LaHaye's view of the world. I felt a need to try to understand what they are expecting out of life.

I learned that this view is self-righteous, arrogant, and horribly violent. It portrays Jesus as brutally unforgiving, and incapable of even tolerating anybody who disagrees with him. In the end, he humiliates his enemy.

All of these actions are in opposition to my belief that Jesus was a man of TOTAL and ABSOLUTE peace and NON-VIOLENCE. Jesus not only turned away from violence, but healed his enemy in the Garden of Gethsemene on the even of his death.

Only violence can come from a group of people who refuse to tolerate anybody unlike themselves, pass judgment on them, feel the need to change them, and condemn them to some kind of hell. If they believe in God, I can't picture what kind of god it is. If they believe that ALL people are children of God, they have no business passing such judgments.

People have been praying for and expecting Armageddon since 50 A.D. IF this is actually going to happen, no human can possibly determine when. In the meantime, I don't understand why the followers of Jesus do not follow Jesus' teachings. In the meantime, we need to show our love for our fellow human beings by working to improve their lives, NOT by attempting to impose our will on them.

Does this kind of book explain why the group of people with the strongest support for the war in Iraq are the evangelical Christians? (last I heard, 87 percent support this massacre)

I have posed the question, "Who would Jesus bomb?" to several of these "christians." Not suprisingly, none of them has been willing (or able!) to answer. I think it forces them to consider the hypocrisy of their belief, and they are not willing to face this challenge.

As a piece of pure fiction, this book was lively. But it should not be given the slightest credit for having any hint of truth in it. Which Bible are these people reading, anyway?

I do not accept the hateful, violent god that is portrayed in this book.


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