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The Late Great United States: What Bible Prophecy Reveals about America's Last Days
 
 
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The Late Great United States: What Bible Prophecy Reveals about America's Last Days [Hardcover]

Mark Hitchcock (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 6, 2009
Is it possible the United States, a superpower without peer in history, might not be a key player as the world makes its way down the road to the Battle of Armageddon?

This is the central question explored by prophecy expert Mark Hitchcock in The Late Great United States, a fascinating behind-the-headlines look at numerous current events and how they relate to what the Bible says about the last days.

Americans are accustomed to seeing their country center stage as a world power, but as Hitchcock carefully details, this may not be the case in the final scene. Based on extensive research of the Bible and other sources, The Late Great United States provides compelling and often surprising answers to questions like these:
•Does the Bible say anything about America in the last days?
•How could the U.S. fit into God’s prophetic plan?
•Will America survive?
•Might the anti-Christ come from America?
•Could America’s addiction to oil be her undoing?
•Will America be destroyed by a nuclear attack?
•Could America fall from within as a result of moral corruption?
•Is America still a “blessed” nation?
•How should individual Christians respond to a world in chaos?

Regardless of America's final fate and the outcome of dire events at the end of the age, Hitchcock urges us to find our hope in a God who will not forsake us–no matter what cataclysms we experience on earth.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Mark Hitchcock, Ph.D., an authority on Bible prophecy, has written fifteen books on the topic, including Iran: The Coming Crisis. A law school graduate, Mark was called to the ministry in the 1980s. After graduation from seminary, he became pastor of Faith Bible church in Edmond, Oklahoma, where he still serves. Mark lectures frequently on prophecy themes and has appeared on MSNBC, Fox News, and CNN. Mark and his wife, Cheryl, have two sons, Justin and Samuel.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

I turn back to your prophets in the Old Testament and the signs foretelling Armageddon, and I find myself wondering if we are the generation that is going to see that come about. I don’t know if you have noted any of those prophecies lately, but, believe me, they describe the times we are going through.
—President Ronald Reagan, 1983

Suppose someone wrote and published the ultimate compendium of music history…but left out any mention of Beethoven, the Beatles, or Garth Brooks.

Or the French produced a video tour of Paris…with nary a glimpse of Notre Dame, the Louvre, or the Eiffel Tower.

Imagine a math textbook containing an entire year’s curriculum…never once using or discussing the number one.

When an authoritative resource claims expertise in a particular field of knowledge, we usually expect it to touch on the most prominent subjects within its purview.That’s why somany Christians read their Bibles—and biblical prophetic passages in particular—fully confident that it must somehow reveal something about the role of America in the end times. After all, God, who exists in all times, who sees the end of history from the beginning, who indeed sovereignly governs every moment of history—God, who reveals key end-time events in the prophecies of Scripture, can’t possibly have omitted from His opus the most powerful, most influential, and by many counts most God-blessed of all nations that have ever risen.

Can He?

By any standard of measurement, America occupies center stage in the world arena. No one disputes the fact that America has a distinctive history, during which it has risen to dominate global affairs. In a quarter of a millennium it has become a nation unlike any other in the history of the world. It has superseded nations with much longer histories. No nation in the history of civilization has exercised greater influence than the United States of America— politically, militarily, economically, culturally, linguistically, and possibly even religiously. As the old saying goes, “When America sneezes, the world catches a cold.”

Most of America’s ascent has happened in less than one hundred years. America’s awe-inspiring rise to superpower status in the twentieth century accelerated to maximum upward velocity in the aftermath of WWII. In an ironic twist, the war’s tragic losses delivered America from the poverty of the Great Depression. The United States emerged fromWWII better off militarily, politically, and economically than any other nation. Even during the dark days of the cold war, America had the upper hand on the Soviet Union, as was finally proven in the early 1990s when the Soviet Empire unraveled at the seams and America found herself alone at the top.

The Last Superpower

Today, America prevails as the world’s lone superpower. The last contender standing. But the “champ’s” reign hasn’t been the smooth ride that many optimistically envisioned. From the 1950s through the 1980s, many believed that the demise of the Soviet Union would ensure greater global security.
Americans envisioned a brave new world free from the tyranny of Soviet communism. Like many dreams, top-dog status hasn’t been what most people expected.

We inaugurated the single-superpower era with the first Gulf War in theearly 1990s. Operation Desert Storm was a glowing success. The future looked bright. But then the real trouble started. The under- ground garage bombing of the World Trade Center on February 26, 1993, was the first assault of Islamic terror on American soil—a dark omen of things to come. Gathering stormclouds loomed closer with the suicide bombing attack on the USS Cole in 2000.

Then dawned the darkest day in American history—the devastating attack of 9/11—plunging America headlong into the age of radical Islamic jihad. Radical Islam declared open war on the United States. The stunning attack gripped the nation, a portent of many more to come. America and its allies invaded Afghanistan in 2001 and launched the Iraq War in 2003—a war that has cost trillions of dollars and thousands of lives. And most recently? Economic meltdown. Skyrocketing oil prices. The subprime mortgage crisis. The dollar’s devaluation to all-time lows. Foreign nations, awash in oil money, buying major U.S. financial institutions. Runaway deficits and an out-of-control federal budget. Smothering debt.The looming threat of radical Islam.

And the worst fear of all—weapons of mass destruction on American soil.

Many are openly saying that anything less than victory in the currently festering conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan will weaken America’s resolve, embolden the jihadists, and force the United States to abdicate its role as world leader and to retreat into isolation.

America’s past is glorious and inspiring. Its present is unstable, yet studded with glimmers of cautious optimism.

But what of the future? Is there any sure word?

Americans, the Future, and the Bible

The increasingly frantic tempo of change in modern life fosters a global sense of impending crisis. People everywhere fear that the world is moving rapidly toward some calamity—possibly even a finale. I’m sure you’ve sometimes wondered what’s going to come of all the danger, uncertainty, and instability.
How long can the tensions be held in check? How long until the lid blows off? Terrorism—that Bad Thing that used to happen in other places—has rudely intruded into the life of every American. U.S. troops are still in Iraq, still in Afghanistan. Some predict that we might realistically be there for ten years, or longer. The epochal conflict with jihadist terror is still in its infancy. What happens when it grows up?

The danger and uncertainty of modern civilization has caused people from all walks of life to ask forward-peering questions as never before. Solemn questions. Searching questions. Questions about the Middle East. Terrorism. Radical Islam. Israel. Global pandemics. Drastic weather change. Questions about the future.

But the real issue that seems to lurk, thinly veiled, behind all these questions is: Could we be nearing closing time? The Bible is the only authority for addressing this question, and Americans seem to be discussing biblical prophecy more than ever before. Many believe that the Bible contains the answers about earth’s final days.

Here’s a brief sample of what Americans believe about the book of Revelation and the end times:

• 59 percent believe that the prophecies in Revelation are going to
come true.

• Nearly 25 percent believe that the Bible predicted the September 11
attack.

• 35 percent are paying more attention to how news events might
relate to the end of the world.

• 17 percent believe the end of the world will happen in their lifetime.

It’s clear that most Americans look to the Bible as an accurate guide for the future. It’s also evident that the collective American angst about our world’s destiny is building. The fuse is lit. There’s fire in the hole. Now we’re just wondering how long till it’s all gonna blow.

As we look into the pages of the Bible, we quickly discover that, as alarming as current events might be, they don’t surprise God. The geopolitical situation we see today in the headlines bears a remarkable correspondence to the trend of world events that Bible prophecies foretold millennia ago. As we probe God’s Word for clues, we discover the You Are Here arrow marking our current position in God’s unfolding program, and we notice that some predicted events may occur in our lifetime. Prophecies, which in the past were sometimes carelessly brushed aside as unbelievable, are sparking renewed
interest. But perhaps no issue has created more interest than the possible role of America in the end times. This is the question that people everywhere are asking. It’s the question that this book will seek to answer.

Inquiring Minds Want to Know

On January 29, 2008, I had the privilege of appearing on a national television program in Texas. After the program, one of the station employees gave me a ride tomy next appointment.We talked as we drove, and I learned that he pastors a new church in the area.We discussed various aspects of pastoral ministry and church life, and before long the topic turned to Bible prophecy. As we neared our destination, he said, “There’s one question that I have wondered about more than any other issue related to Bible prophecy.”

I knew what he was going to ask. “Where do you think America fits into biblical prophecy?”

I’m asked this question more—much more—than any other. People ask me this question at churches, at conferences, on radio and television programs. And as I have talked with my friends and colleagues who teach around the United States and around the world, they confirm that the most-asked question in all of Bible prophecy is: What is America’s role in the end times? Something inside us wants to know what will ultimately happen to this great land we call the United States of America.

Bible prophecy experts Thomas Ice and Timothy Demy address this nagging question:

“God bless America!” Is it a prayer, a promise, or a prophecy? We can see and hear the slogan in music, on bumper stickers, in casual conversations, in campaign rhetoric, at historic moments in our nation’s life (both joyful and sorrowful), from podiums, in parades, and in a host of other public and religious forums.Will God bless the United States in the future? Is there any sure word of our nation’s future in the Bible generally, and the prophetic passages specifically? It’s amazing! One of the most frequently asked q...

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Multnomah Books (January 6, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1601421400
  • ISBN-13: 978-1601421401
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #746,330 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Attorney Mark Hitchcock thought his career was set after graduating from law school in 1984 and getting a job working with a judge at the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals. But after what Mark calls a "clear call to full-time ministry," he changed course and went to Dallas Theological Seminary, completing a masters degree in 1991 and a doctoral degree in 2006. Since 1991 Mark has served as senior pastor of Faith Bible Church in Edmond, Oklahoma. He has authored 15 books related to end-time Bible prophecy and was the contributing editor for the Internet-based Left Behind Prophecy Club for four years. Mark and his wife, Cheryl, live in Edmond with their two sons, Justin and Samuel.

 

Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Destiny of America?, January 20, 2009
By 
Dr. Bradley W. England (Springfield, Missouri) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Late Great United States: What Bible Prophecy Reveals about America's Last Days (Hardcover)
Dr. Mark Hitchcock has penned a much needed and asked for volume
in the field of eschatology. This author is not a virtual new
comer to prophetic themes, for he has authored fifteen books in
this arena. He is rapidly ascending to the upper tiers of prophetic
scholars.

In this latest offering by Hitchcock, he presents us with a well
written, easy to read, Biblically centered approach to a very
difficult question. It would be relatively easy to take a subject
such as this and to sensationalize it. Dr. Hitchcock avoids this
temptation by assessing the facts in a careful, sober and balanced
examination.

Hitchcock begins by asking the "question that everyone is asking",
namely: What is the role of the United States in end times prophecy?
He then traverses into an examination and exegesis of the four
prominent views concerning America's destiny. Is America Babylon
the Great? Is America the unnamed nation in Isaiah 18, or is the
United States really the lost tribes of Israel? Finally, is America
one of the "young lions of Tarshish" mentioned in Ezekiel 38?

Hitchcock believes that the USA will not play a prominent role in
the end times. He bolsters his view with a chapter on America's
dependence on foreign oil. He then discusses this nations growing
economic nightmare, and takes up the real possibility of a domestic
terrorist threat on American soil with a nuclear nightmare intended
upon bringing this country to her knees.

This author believes that we may be on the verge of God abandoning
America because of her continued and willful sinfulness. He cites
the sexual revolution, homosexual problem, and the fostering and
applauding of open evil as examples of God's disfavor with this
nation. He builds a strong case for the demise of the United States
as a global superpower and its diminished role in foreign affairs.

He concludes in appendix A with a series of questions and answers
that many people are pondering: Will United States troops participate
in the Battle of Armegeddon? Could America give birth to the
antichrist, and will the United States be able to be a key role
in a middle east peace accord? These are a few of the questions.

This is a very thoughtful book for anyone who has wondered the
place of America in Bible prophecy.



































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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Informative and eye-opening, June 29, 2009
This review is from: The Late Great United States: What Bible Prophecy Reveals about America's Last Days (Hardcover)
This was my second book of Mark's to read, and I thought it was a good book. It was very detailed in a lot of things, and was very informative.

Unfortunately, as with any book of this type that deals with current events, much of the information is dated even though the book is relatively new. It was written before the Obama administration took office, so his chapters on America being blessed because of their support for Israel is a little out of date since we are no longer the staunch allies of Israel we've always been since their inception. Since we are now trying to "reach out" to the "extremists" and told Israel they WILL be dividing Jerusalem, it will be interesting to see how America turns out from here.

I took one star off because some of this seems a lot like filler. It's almost as if this was a booklet that was turned into a book. Don't get me wrong, the information is good, it just seems the book drifts a few times here and there. Still, this is a great book and I recommend it for anyone interested in the possibilities of America's future.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting Book, January 18, 2009
This review is from: The Late Great United States: What Bible Prophecy Reveals about America's Last Days (Hardcover)
This was an interesting take on the Last Days. I always found it interesting that the United States isn't mentioned in Bible prophecy. Hitchcock takes a look at world events and ties them to the possible future of our nation. While it is a bit scary, the author reminds us our hope is in God. It was a good read.
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