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Tim LaHaye (1926–2016)

Author of Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth's Last Days

420+ Works 102,031 Members 711 Reviews 27 Favorited

About the Author

Timothy LaHaye was born in Detroit, Michigan on April 27, 1926. He began preaching while working at a summer camp. In 1944, he joined the Army Air Force and was a machine-gunner on bombers in Europe. He received a bachelor's degree from Bob Jones University in 1950, doctor of ministry degree from show more Western Theological Seminary, and a doctor of literature degree from Liberty University. He served a congregation in Minneapolis until 1956, then became the pastor of the Scott Memorial Baptist Church in El Cajon, California for 25 years. He wrote or helped write over 50 fiction and non-fiction books. He is the co-author of the Left Behind series and the Left Behind: The Kids series with Jerry B. Jenkins. His non-fiction works cover a wide variety of subjects including marriage, family life, depression, homosexuality, anger management, education, and politics. He died days after he had a stroke on July 25, 2016 at the age of 90. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:

Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins are two separate people. Do not combine their author pages, or either of their individual author pages with those that include both their names. See "Who should/shouldn't get combined" on the Author wiki page. Thank you.

Series

Works by Tim LaHaye

Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth's Last Days (1995) 8,085 copies, 131 reviews
Nicolae: The Rise of Antichrist (1998) 5,174 copies, 34 reviews
Soul Harvest: The World Takes Sides (1998) 4,802 copies, 28 reviews
Apollyon: The Destroyer is Unleashed (1999) 4,771 copies, 30 reviews
The Indwelling: The Beast Takes Possession (2000) 4,463 copies, 24 reviews
The Mark: The Beast Rules the World (2000) 4,453 copies, 27 reviews
Desecration: Antichrist Takes the Throne (2001) — Author — 4,190 copies, 26 reviews
The Remnant: On the Brink of Armageddon (2002) 3,806 copies, 17 reviews
Armageddon: The Cosmic Battle of the Ages (2003) 3,536 copies, 21 reviews
Glorious Appearing: The End of Days (2004) 3,534 copies, 22 reviews
The Rising: Antichrist Is Born (2005) 1,565 copies, 15 reviews
The Act of Marriage: The Beauty of Sexual Love (1976) 1,532 copies, 7 reviews
Kingdom Come: The Final Victory (2007) 1,189 copies, 12 reviews
Babylon Rising (2003) 1,171 copies, 20 reviews
Second Chance (1998) 1,136 copies, 4 reviews
The Regime: Evil Advances (2005) 1,118 copies, 8 reviews
Through the Flames: The Kids Risk Their Lives (1998) 1,080 copies, 2 reviews
Are We Living in the End Times? (1999) 1,066 copies, 8 reviews
Facing the Future: Preparing for Battle (1998) 961 copies, 2 reviews
John's Story: The Last Eyewitness (2006) 816 copies, 7 reviews
How to Study the Bible for Yourself (1976) 795 copies, 2 reviews
Revelation Unveiled (1999) 791 copies, 5 reviews
Busted!: The Young Trib Force Faces Pressure (2000) 744 copies, 2 reviews
Death Strike: The Young Trib Force Faces War (2000) 729 copies, 2 reviews
On the Run: The Young Trib Force Faces Danger (2000) 667 copies, 2 reviews
Spirit Controlled Temperament (1966) 667 copies, 5 reviews
The Search: The Struggle to Survive (1998) 659 copies, 3 reviews
The Secret on Ararat (2004) 606 copies, 8 reviews
Mark's Story (2007) 572 copies, 5 reviews
Into the Storm (2000) 543 copies, 1 review
Earthquake! (2000) 542 copies, 1 review
Edge of Apocalypse (2010) 504 copies, 3 reviews
The Europa Conspiracy (2005) 492 copies, 7 reviews
The Battle for the Mind : A Subtle Warfare (1980) 475 copies, 3 reviews
How to Win Over Depression (1974) 473 copies, 3 reviews
Judgment Day: Into Raging Waters (2001) 442 copies, 1 review
Spirit-Controlled Temperament [1994 Revision] (1994) 413 copies, 3 reviews
How to Be Happy Though Married (1968) 408 copies, 4 reviews
Darkening Skies: Judgment of Ice (2001) 376 copies, 1 review
Transformed Temperaments (1971) 369 copies, 5 reviews
Terror in the Stadium (2001) 361 copies, 1 review
The Edge of Darkness (2008) 352 copies, 3 reviews
Why You Act the Way You Do (1987) 349 copies
Attack of Apollyon (2002) 328 copies, 1 review
Luke's Story (2009) 318 copies, 1 review
A Dangerous Plan (2002) 303 copies, 1 review
Revelation, Illustrated and Made Plain (1975) 293 copies, 1 review
Secrets of New Babylon (2002) 272 copies, 1 review
Escape from New Babylon (2002) 270 copies, 1 review
Uplink from the Underground (2002) 249 copies
Anger Is a Choice (1982) 244 copies, 2 reviews
Horsemen of Terror (2002) 243 copies
Jesus: Who Is He? (1997) 243 copies
Thunder of Heaven (2011) 239 copies, 4 reviews
Death at the Gala (2003) 236 copies
Wildfire (2003) 230 copies, 1 review
The Beast Arises (2003) 228 copies, 1 review
The Mark of the Beast: Witness Behind Bars (2003) 218 copies, 1 review
Breakout! (2003) 212 copies, 1 review
The beginning of the end, (1972) 209 copies
Murder in the Holy Place (2003) 205 copies, 1 review
Matthew's Story (2010) 196 copies, 1 review
Escape to Masada (2003) 194 copies
The Battle for the Family (1981) 193 copies
Faith of Our Founding Fathers (1987) 193 copies, 5 reviews
War of the Dragon (2003) 189 copies
Spirit-Controlled Family Living (1978) 176 copies, 2 reviews
Attack on Petra (2004) 175 copies
Ominous Choices: The Race for Life (2004) 173 copies, 1 review
Bounty Hunters (2004) 167 copies
Brink of Chaos (The End Series) (2012) 166 copies, 1 review
Power of the Cross (1998) 161 copies, 2 reviews
The Rise of False Messiahs (2004) 160 copies, 1 review
Come Spring: A Parable of Love and Faith (2005) 158 copies, 3 reviews
Triumphant Return (2004) 155 copies, 1 review
The Perils of Love (2004) — Author — 150 copies
The Road to War (2004) 148 copies
Taken (2003) 133 copies, 2 reviews
Your Temperament: Discover Its Potential (1978) 123 copies, 3 reviews
The Left Behind Series, Books 1-12 (2014) 110 copies, 1 review
Seduction of the Heart (2002) 108 copies, 1 review
The ark on Ararat (1976) 106 copies
Mark of Evil (2014) 101 copies, 1 review
Prophecy Study Bible: King James Version (2000) — Author — 99 copies
The Left Behind Series, Books 1-5 (2003) 91 copies, 5 reviews
Pursued (4-in-1) (2003) 87 copies, 1 review
The Mind Siege Project (2001) 80 copies
A Nation Without a Conscience (1994) 79 copies, 1 review
Hidden (The Kids, Books 9-12) (2004) 72 copies, 1 review
Stung (2004) 70 copies, 1 review
Rescued (4-in-1) (2004) 67 copies, 1 review
The Battle for the Public Schools (1983) 64 copies, 1 review
Understanding the Last Days (1998) 61 copies
How to Study Bible Prophecy for Yourself (1990) 60 copies, 1 review
Protected (2005) 59 copies, 1 review
The Hidden Censors (1984) 59 copies
Unmasked (2005) 58 copies
Hunted (2005) 57 copies, 1 review
Shaken (2005) 56 copies
The Last Dance (The Soul Survivor Series) (2002) 52 copies, 2 reviews
Ten Steps to Victory over Depression (1974) 51 copies, 1 review
Black Friday (Soul Survivor Series, Bk. 4) (2003) 49 copies, 1 review
All The Rave (2002) 48 copies, 1 review
Always Grace (2008) 48 copies
Deceiver's Game: The Destroyer Is Unleashed (2010) 38 copies, 2 reviews
What Lovemaking Means to a Woman (1984) 21 copies, 1 review
The Marilyn Harris Cooking School Cookbook (2001) 21 copies, 1 review
What Lovemaking Means to a Man (1984) 20 copies, 1 review
Party of Two (2006) 17 copies
Opposites Attract (1998) 17 copies
Deixados para Trás - 1 (2014) 15 copies
The Promise of Heaven (2003) 12 copies
The Best Christmas Gift (2005) 12 copies, 1 review
Spirit Filled Family (1996) 5 copies
La Profecia de Babilonia (2006) 5 copies
You and Your Family (1973) 5 copies
God's Precious Promises (1999) 4 copies
Porque agimos como agimos? (2002) 3 copies, 1 review
Asdod 3 copies
Kend dit temperament (1984) 2 copies
Regime, Die (2006) 2 copies
Mag Teen Verdrukking, Die (2003) 2 copies
Il tesoro dell'arca (2007) 2 copies
Die Laaste Oes (2003) 2 copies
Chaos (2015) 2 copies
Die ontheiliging (2003) 2 copies
Antidoto de La IRA (1995) 1 copy
Den store h 1 copy
L'enlèvement (2004) 1 copy
Met 1 copy
A Colheita 1 copy
Latt tilbake (1999) 1 copy
The mind siege 1 copy, 1 review
Left Behind Prophecy [2007 Videorecording] (2007) — Director — 1 copy
CASADOS MAS FELIZES (2000) 1 copy, 1 review
Die sluipmoordenaars (2003) 1 copy
La derniere chance (2004) 1 copy
Wegraping (2006) 1 copy
Harmageddon (2004) 1 copy

Associated Works

Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1880) — Introduction, some editions — 6,259 copies, 95 reviews
The Showdown (2001) 436 copies
You Can Be the Wife of a Happy Husband: By Discovering the Key to Marital Success (1900) — Foreword, some editions — 306 copies, 1 review
In Search of Temple Treasures: The Lost Ark and the Last Days (1994) — Foreword — 108 copies, 1 review
Enough Is Enough (1996) — Foreword — 95 copies, 1 review
The Transparent Leader (2001) — Foreword — 71 copies
Godiva (Viking Sagas) (2004) — Foreword — 51 copies
Storming Toward Armageddon: Essays in Apocalypse (1992) — Contributor — 45 copies
Toward a New World Order: The Countdown to Armageddon (1990) — Foreword, some editions — 30 copies
Left Behind Graphic Novel: Book 1, Volume 2 (2001) — Author — 29 copies
Pleasing God (1984) — Foreword — 25 copies
Left Behind Graphic Novel: Book 1, Volume 3 (2002) — Author — 20 copies
Left Behind Graphic Novel: Book 1, Volume 4 (2002) — Author — 18 copies

Tagged

Adult Fiction (343) Antichrist (276) apocalypse (492) apocalyptic (344) Christian (2,191) Christian fiction (3,643) Christian living (454) Christianity (641) End Times (1,744) Eschatology (570) fantasy (530) fiction (6,455) Left Behind (2,665) marriage (425) non-fiction (262) novel (292) own (242) prophecy (563) Rapture (759) read (558) religion (1,177) religious (459) religious fiction (508) Revelation (445) science fiction (349) series (789) thriller (309) Tim LaHaye (279) to-read (996) Youth Fiction (292)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
LaHaye, Tim
Legal name
LaHaye, Timothy F.
Other names
黎曦庭
LaHaye, Tim F.
Birthdate
1926-04
Date of death
2016-07-25
Gender
male
Education
Liberty University (DLitt)
Western Seminary (DMin)
Bob Jones University (BA|1950)
Occupations
cleric
evangelist
Organizations
Council for National Policy
American Coalition for Traditional Values
Coalition for Religious Freedom
Institute for Creation Research
The Pre-Tribulation Research Center
Christian Coalition of America (show all 8)
Moral Majority
John Birch Society
Relationships
LaHaye, Beverly (wife)
Cause of death
complications of a stroke
Nationality
USA (birth)
Birthplace
Detroit, Michigan, USA
Places of residence
San Diego, California, USA
Los Angeles, California, USA
Place of death
San Diego, California, USA
Burial location
Miramar National Cemetery in San Diego, California, USA
Disambiguation notice
Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins are two separate people. Do not combine their author pages, or either of their individual author pages with those that include both their names. See "Who should/shouldn't get combined" on the Author wiki page. Thank you.
Associated Place (for map)
California, USA

Members

Reviews

812 reviews
Readers who have not followed the first 7 portions of the "Left Behind" series will not get much out of the abridged audio recording of episode 8. The devil incarnate has appeared in the form of a Romanian politician whose is named something like Nicholai Kardashian. Mr. Nick has a penchant for elaborate titles, and is known to his followers as His Excellency Global Community Supreme Potentate. Having been proclaimed as the new Messiah, he is in the process of taking over the world. He has show more gained a worldwide following through subterfuge, and is about to consolidate his power through use of the guillotine. Yes, Old Nick’s nefarious plans involve use of that instrument of the 18th century French Revolution to bring the unbelievers into line. For those misguided individuals who refuse to have a microchip embedded in their skin and a mark of loyalty placed on their forehead or hand, it's "off with their heads". For sophisticated readers who are tired of how otherwise nice people lose their heads over issues of religion, it may be a welcome change to see the metaphor become real.

In the audio tape, there’s lots of Sturm and Drang, with spooky music to get the listener in the mood for an Armageddon. And then there’s the brave words of the leader of the anti-Kardashian opposition, ex-airline pilot Rayford Steele. (Steele was "left behind" when his more-devout wife was whisked "up" to heaven during the Rapture, and soon thereafter converted to fundamentalism). The episode ends with Nicholai preparing to enter Jerusalem, and Steele and his fellow Tribulationists marshaling a vast army to stop them. Apparently "turn the other cheek" is not a policy when serious issues are at stake.

This episode, like the other one I’ve listened to (Episode 1) raises plenty of theological difficulties. First, one is forced to wonder why an all-powerful deity needs a group of puny humans in order to defeat his chief rival for human fealty. Why not simply dispatch Nicholai with a thunderbolt or a coronary, and get back to judging the quick and the (not-so-quick) dead? Second, is the fact that the entire series is based on a misrepresentation of the Book of Revelations – that bizarre addendum that even Martin Luther thought had no business being placed in the Christian bible. In that benighted work, non-believers at the time of the Rapture missed their last chance at being “saved”. However, in the “Left Behind” series, the individuals left behind have plenty of extra chances at heaven and represent the only earthly forces fighting against evil. Third is a serious epistemological issue. Why should believers NOT believe that Nicolai is the Messiah? After all, he is widely- reputed to perform miracles; he rose from the dead after three days; he has millions of followers around the world; and he claims divinity and demands worship. To an ideology that privileges “faith” and derides “evidence”, how is one to know where to place one’s faith and trust? At least in the old days, such decisions were made before birth; one’s religion was almost always inherited from one’s parents, and theirs from their parents, and so on. In the face of competing superstitions, little wonder that millions are going with the choice that lets their cephalic appendage remain attached.

The saddest part of this "book" isn't the time wasted on it, but rather, the large number of people who have swallowed the silly propaganda -- making author Tim LaHaye a multi-millionaire many times over. Some of the reviewers at Amazon speak of how much this book series has taught them about the Bible. For a little self- reflection, I would recommend to such people Ecclesiastes 1:15 (Douay-Rheims translation): "The perverse are hard to be corrected, and the number of fools is infinite."
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First sentence: Rayford Steele's mind was on a woman he had never touched.

When I was in my late teen years, there were two book series that were being talked about--Left Behind and Harry Potter. I was slow to read them both, though I did read the first books in both series around the same time--when I was in college. Both books I considered slow, slow, slow, super slow. I recently read the Harry Potter series and appreciated it for the most part (though it's not for everyone). I decided I'd show more give this series a go. Or at least attempt to do so.

The premise is simple: The rapture occurs in the first chapter of the book and everyone else has been....drumroll please....left behind. The story follows three or four main characters as they try to piece together what happened and why. Rayford Steele and Buck Williams are the two male leads of the story. (Chloe, Rayford's daughter, and Hattie, Rayford's flight attendant, round out the cast.) Rayford is almost certain right from the get go that it is the rapture, that this was a supernatural occurrence, that Christ has returned for the saints, that these are the last days. Everyone else takes more convincing---for the most part.

I am a Christian.
I am a Christian who genuinely believes in the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.
I believe the Bible to be the Word of God, inerrant, infallible, God-breathed--the whole works.

I mention all of the above so that you know where I am coming from in my review. I am not mocking the Bible. I am not mocking the second coming. I am not questioning the existence of God. I am not doubting God's promises.

But this book suffers from two or three issues.
1) The writing is bad especially in terms of characterization and dialogue. Nails on a chalkboard bad.
2) The writing comes across as cocky and condescending. I think this has to do with being a little too confident in their particular interpretation of the end times than perhaps anyone should be.
3) The book has an obvious point and becomes repetitive in trying to reiterate the point. Now the point itself--believe in Jesus Christ, repent of your sins, turn to him, have faith, all of it--none of these are bad points. But they don't make for the absolute best fiction. That is when you are crafting a novel, crafting characters and dialogue, it might be a good idea to go a little deeper and broader.

I can't say that the book is theologically awesome. Because while I am sure that Jesus Christ *is* returning, the way everything is laid out in the novel makes a lot of assumptions, presumptions, goes way above and beyond what can be clearly supported by Scripture. I am reminded of old cartoons where a character is running and happens to run off a cliff. The character keeps on running--on air itself--until that moment when they look down and there is nothing below.

I think it is easy to mock the writing--just read some reviews on GoodReads and the like--and somehow turn it into a mockery of the end times itself. Or to turn it into a mockery of those who do believe. But the two shouldn't have to be linked together. You can believe in God and also not enjoy a book.

I will say this in the book's defense. IF THE PACING OF THE LAST HUNDRED PAGES had been the pacing from the start, then the book might not be so bad. The book is just so incredibly dull until it isn't.
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I decided to read this because the premise was intriguing and it was somewhat internet famous for being awful. I went into it with fairly low expectations, but not quite low enough.
I managed to get through the first 20 or so pages as I enjoyed arguing with every flawed plot point, and then was only able to slog through the rest of the book by imagining how I would have rewrite the novel if given the chance.
The writing is abysmal. The writers have evidently never heard the catchphrase of show more every writing teacher: "show not tell!" None of the main characters are physically described (aside from Rayford having grey hair) so are difficult to picture. Hattie is apparently physically attractive, but we are never given any further detail or evidence of this fact. Nor are the characters given any real conflict with God (with the possible exception of the pastor Brian, who does have an interesting story). For the main part, they just didn't believe enough for no good reason, missing a brilliant opportunity to show an interesting and moving reconciliation with faith. The supposedly incredible inspirational speeches by Nicolae Carpathia read like a bad high school essay copied from Wikipedia.
Then there's the sexism. For the most part, women appear only to scold or argue with the primary male characters and are then berated into submission (an actual approving quote from the book showed Chloe being "really put in her place" by the pastor Brian). I'm not surprised that both Rayford and Buck are portrayed as being bad with women, since the authors have apparently never met a real one. But they like trying to talk to you pointlessly, going to beauty parlours (result never described) and crying! And don't forget women react positively to being lectured and stalked.
Numerous logical flaws pepper the plot as well. In one particularly galling instance (which made me want to throw the book in the garbage) Hattie complains that her sister has been put out of a job due to abortions no longer being required. Putting aside the ridiculous notion of family planning clinics as businesses, the clinic she works for explicitly also provides pregnancy related counselling, and with every unborn fetus in the world having been raptured, I can only imagine how overrun their crisis counselling services would be!
In all, I am baffled at the book's popularity, and astonished that there was even one sequel, let alone a whole series. Oh well, they couldn't possibly go 12 books without eventually learning to write...right?
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Out of curiosity – and as a sort of cultural anthropological experience -- I listened to the abridged audio version of this work to see what all the fuss was about. I chose the abridged version because I suspected (correctly as it turned out) that more than 3 hrs of the stuff would not be easy to tolerate.

Author Tim LaHaye (1926-2016) was a fundamentalist Christian of the most extreme, apocalyptic sort. He was convinced of a massive Satanic conspiracy (involving the "Illuminati", Planned show more Parenthood, the NAACP, Harvard University, and the "Trilateral Commission") that was subverting the US in order to merge it into a one-world socialist state. With the Left Behind Series he hit the jackpot of fame and fortune. It led to 16 best-selling books that sold more than 65 million copies and a spin-off series for teens of more than 40 more books, plus movies, graphic novels, music albums, radio dramatizations, online blogs, websites, and video games. We have good reason to believe that Mr. LaHaye died a very wealthy man, and “left behind” a very wealthy family, who no doubt thought their riches well- deserved.

The “Left Behind” concept is based on a peculiar interpretation of an obscure line in a letter purportedly written nearly 2100 years ago by the man we know (in English) as "Paul" (*note 1 below). He was the founder of the new religion that decades later came to be called Christianity. The idea behind the “left behind” idea is that at the end of the world, true believers in protestant fundamentalism (LaHayes’ personal religion) will rise “up” into the “sky” to meet their “god”. Given that “the sky” is a pre-scientific concept and “up” lies in opposite directions for people in (say) Australia vs North America, one is forced to envision these floating people encircling the earth at high altitude. But since the writer (like his contemporaries) surely believed that the earth is flat and didn’t know that continents, oceans, and kangaroos existed, the charitable course would be to overlook such details. (Or rather, it would be were it not for the uncompromising insistence of LaHayes and his ilk that everything in their Bible is to be taken literally, as written in English). Also unstated is whether these people were to be permitted to take their clothes, jewelry, back braces, and dentures with them. In LaHayes book, the clothes are in fact “left behind” (see below). If LaHayes is correct, then, the hovering faithful must be entirely naked, leaving many a “behind” (both left and right components) exposed to frigid temperatures of the upper atmosphere.

As for this work, the first book in the Left Behind series, it has received more than 4100 reviews at Amazon, 80% of which gave it 4 or 5 stars. Yet to date, it’s received only 91 reviews at Library Thing. What does that say about LT readers? Are they smart, or just plain bad? Inquiring Minds want to know.

But on to the story!! Millions of people suddenly vanish from the planet, leaving their clothes “behind” (including boxer shorts, bras, socks, and pantyhose), exactly where they’d been standing, sitting, and lying. Thus, husbands find they’ve been "left behind" by their wives (though not for the usual reasons), and wives by their (presumably now-naked) husbands. Naughty children are left behind as homeless orphans by their ultra-good parents. And fetuses are spirited out of uteri, leaving behind their not-so nice, no-longer-pregnant mothers (I’m not making this up). Commercial airplanes piloted by good church-going pilots are left pilotless and crash to the ground – collateral damage to the less devout, but that’s how it goes when you choose the wrong religion. Presumably the same happens worldwide in trains, gondolas, rickshaws, and Ferris wheels, although the reader is spared the details.

The people who disappear are chiefly fundamentalist Protestants. Catholics and Jews don’t make the cut. The long-standing question about the main criterion for being chosen is thereby answered, and the fundamentalists turn out to be right: you don’t get saved by being moral and upright or doing good works, but by believing in (and being born into) the right set of beliefs. As a result, those who practice Islam, Buddhism, Confucianism, and animism, as well as agnostics, atheists, and most of the world’s scientists (*note 2 below) presumably aren’t in the running to do the naked- sky trip; however, the point is only implicit, and is never stated outright. Also left unexplained are the fates of Mormons, Scientologists, Anglicans (are they sufficiently protestant?), and liberal Democrats. Do they stay or do they go? Unfortunately, we don’t get to know, and that’s too bad, because the fates of each of these groups raise interesting theological questions.

The focus in Left Behind is entirely on the people who are (you guessed it) “left behind.” These individuals are disturbed, frightened, and perplexed, but oddly, life otherwise seems to go on pretty much as usual. Granted, the protagonist Rayford Steele, the handsome pilot of the 747 airline from which people disappear at the story’s outset, eventually changes his life. Now that his annoyingly ultra-religious wife is gone, Rayford stops lusting after the beautiful flight attendant (Hattie Durham) with whom he’s been trying to have an affair. He begins to attend church more regularly, the way his wife used to nag him to do. Then there’s a news reporter who was also left behind on the 747 -- Cameron "Buck" Williams (note that most of the males in this book have names like gay porn stars). “Buck” decides to investigate the disappearances. Later in the series, Wikipedia informs us, he winds up marrying Rayford’s Steele’s daughter Chloe Steele. Chloe also is "beautiful," like Hattie and the other women mentioned. (*See note 3 below).

Readers may well puzzle as to why there isn’t worldwide panic among those who remain, with massive resources poured into figuring out what happened and why. With most of the world’s scientists left behind (*note 2 again), one would expect an enormous outpouring of effort to characterize the missing by age, gender, political party, country of origin, religious affiliation, moral nature, physical attractiveness, and sexual orientation – a virtual census of the missing that might help explain why those who were left behind were and those who weren't weren’t.

But instead, it turns out, the world is fascinated by a newcomer on the international scene, the new President of Romania. He is the handsome, blonde, Nicolae Carpathia, who despite his name ("Carpathia" sounds like a type of STD) looks like Robert Redford and has been named by People magazine as the "Sexiest Man Alive." In a climax of the story, Carpathia amazes the world during an address to the UN, by managing to name each of the world’s nations, one after another, in alphabetical order! Through the list he goes – Algeria… Ghana… Mozambique … Trinidad... the whole way to Zanzibar! He pronounces each one correctly! And he doesn’t miss a single one!! Presumably Palestine is not named, since the deity of the fundamentalists has a particular political favorite in that part of the world.

From this and other schoolboy tricks, Carpathia charms the world into giving up their sovereignty and weaponry to a world government, of which he gets to be the head. He also gets to marry the afore-mentioned beautiful flight attendant, Hattie Durham -- for what prospective world dictator doesn't secretly lust after beautiful flight attendants? Neither Hattie nor anyone else thinks to ask why, if Nicolai is as good as everyone believes, he was also “left behind”.

However, readers who are apocalypse aficionados will be unsurprised to find that Nicolae Carpathia is none other than the Antichrist. Yes; he is the evil, evil figure foretold in Revelations. (This book was very nearly "left behind" from those chosen for the Christian Bible; in fact, such Protestant notables as Martin Luther seriously doubted its status). And as the Antichrist, Carpathia will figure importantly in the coming apocalypse and the Left Behind series’ other 55 books, plus the graphic novels, radio dramas, napkin holders, and video games. Evil sells, as both Dante Alighieri and John Milton knew well.

The Left Behind series has been criticized on numerous grounds, including its antithetical stance towards the diverse religions of the world. Oddly, one of the strongest criticisms has been that it is anti-Catholic (*note 4) -- as if being anti-Islamic/ anti-Buddhist/ anti-animist/ etc. isn’t even more problematic, given the billions of people involved. But aside from this arguable flaw, the series appears to be theologically illiterate – being incompatible with the religion that it purports to promote. In the series, and contrary to conventional Biblical interpretation, those who have been "left behind" get a second chance, even though "the rapture" has already happened. If they reform their lives and start believing in the right beliefs, they too may get to take the naked journey into the troposphere. Clearly, without this escape hatch, the Left Behind series would have nothing to preach about and nothing with which to motivate the unfaithful. So... what's a little apostasy in a good cause with excellent financial potential?

Unfortunately, after three hours of abridged audiotape, I found myself a bit let down. It’s one thing to have a wacky ideology that takes smug satisfaction in the eternal torment of most of the world’s people and sees worldwide destruction as a foreordained, outcome that we are helpless to prevent. But that’s no excuse for stereotyped characters, a paper-thin plot, and writing that hovers at a 5th-grade level.

But I would have to admit that the storyline was frightening – not because of its content, but because it presents a viewpoint held by countless millions. As one commentator noted several years ago, the ideology espoused in the Left Behind series ”provides a narrative and a theological rationale for a whole host of perplexing conservative policies, from the White House's craven decision to cut off aid to the United Nations Family Planning Fund to America's surreally casual mobilization for an invasion of Baghdad -- a city that is, in the Left Behind books, Satan's headquarters. “ (*note 5).

I will give the penultimate word to that same commentator: “Political attitudes and actions that make no practical or moral sense to secularists become comprehensible when viewed through Christian pop culture's eschatological looking glass. At a time when America is flagrantly flouting international law, spurning the U.N. and tacitly supporting the land grabs of Israeli maximalists, surely it's significant that the most popular fiction in the country creates a gripping narrative that pits American Christians against a conspiracy of Satan-worshipping, abortion-promoting, gun-controlling globalists…”.

Clearly, there's serious stuff here, folks. Scorn it you may. But given the nature of self-fulfilling prophecy, and the delight that millions reportedly take in the prospects of a nuclear Armageddon that destroys the planet, we may (sooner rather than later) face an End Times scenario -- from which no one's "behind" is "left".
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* Note 1: A letter thought by scholars to have been written by Paul contains a line that can be translated into English as ”Next, all of us who are still alive will be taken up into the clouds together with them to meet the Lord in the sky. This obscure sentence is the basis for the “rapture” that so many millions await.

* Note 2: 94% of the members of the US National Academy of Sciences are atheists/ agnostics. This body contains the nation’s most eminent and accomplished scientists.

* Note 3: A possible explanation is that the less attractive people were more likely to be taken away during the rapture -- as a divinely- directed form of natural selection. And maybe that reason is that being both good AND beautiful is especially difficult. Unfortunately, the point is never addressed.

* Note 4: Tim LaHaye was a harsh critic of Roman Catholicism. He characterized it as a “false religion” that engages in “pagan rituals”.

* Note 5: Goldberg, Michelle (2002). Fundamentally Unsound. Salon. https://web.archive.org/web/20071214062956/http://dir.salon.com:80/story/books/f...
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