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American evangelist and Christian writer (1929–2024) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harold Lee Lindsey (November 23, 1929 – November 25, 2024) was an American evangelical writer and television host. He wrote a series of popular apocalyptic books – beginning with The Late Great Planet Earth (1970) – asserting that the Apocalypse or end time (including the rapture) was imminent because current events were fulfilling Bible prophecy. He was a Christian Zionist and dispensationalist.
Hal Lindsey | |
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Born | Harold Lee Lindsey November 23, 1929 Houston, Texas, U.S. |
Died | November 25, 2024 95) Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S. | (aged
Alma mater | Dallas Theological Seminary |
Occupation(s) | Writer, evangelist |
Spouses |
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Children | 3 |
Website | hallindsey |
Lindsey was born in Houston on November 23, 1929.[1] He enrolled at the University of Houston and served in the United States Coast Guard during the Korean War.[1][2] He graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary in 1962 with a Master of Theology degree, majoring in the New Testament and early Greek literature.[2][3]
With his second wife, Jan, he worked with Campus Crusade for Christ and continued with them until 1969.[2] He then helped a mission in Southern California which continued until 1976. He was also a frequent speaker and Sunday School teacher at Melodyland Christian Center in Anaheim, California. During 1969, he wrote his first, and best-known book, The Late Great Planet Earth. Published during 1970 by Zondervan, this book became a bestseller. Coming on the heels of the Six-Day War, the book fueled the popularity of dispensationalism and its support of ethnic Jews as the "chosen people of God". Many of Lindsey's later writings are sequels or revisions and extensions of his first book. In 1994, he earned his Doctorate of Theology from the California Graduate School of Theology.[4]
Lindsey hosted International Intelligence Briefing on the Trinity Broadcasting Network and served on the executive board of Christian Voice.[5] International Intelligence Briefing was eliminated from broadcasting by TBN for the entire month of December 2005. Lindsey claimed that this was because "some at the network apparently feel that [his] message is too pro-Israel and too anti-Muslim."[6] TBN owner Paul Crouch, however, contended that "TBN has never been and is not now against Israel and the Jewish people."[7] Crouch said that Lindsey's show was pre-empted for Christmas programming.
Lindsey resigned from TBN on January 1, 2006, and indicated that he would pursue another television ministry. His next program, The Hal Lindsey Report, emphasized biblical prophecy and current events, and is broadcast by the Angel One and DayStar networks. During January 2007, Lindsey announced that he would be returning to the TBN network.[8]
Lindsey was married four times and had three children from his second marriage.[2] His second wife was Jan Houghton, and his fourth wife, to whom he was married at the time of his death, was named JoLyn.[2] He lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and died at home on November 25, 2024, two days after his 95th birthday.[1][9][10]
Lindsey's claims were based on a dispensationalist interpretation of the Old and New Testament.[11] Lindsey claimed from the Bible that Jesus Christ will return from heaven to earth someday and establish eternal peace and harmony among all people.[12]
Lindsey claimed the Bible contains numerous prophecies that foretell of certain conditions and events that will occur in the world prior to Christ's return and that as these things occur, they are to serve as signs and reminders that we are in the era that the Bible calls the end times or last days.[13] Lindsey believed a prophetic event that officially begins the end times is the regathering of the Jewish people to their ancient homeland to form an independent nation after a prolonged worldwide dispersion.[14] He claimed that the establishment of the State of Israel in May 1948 is the fulfillment of this major prophecy.[citation needed]
In The Late Great Planet Earth, Lindsey wrote that the biblical prophets identified certain nations that would ally with other countries to form "four major spheres of political power" during the same era that Israel would be reestablished as a nation.[15] Lindsey wrote that these nations and their allies can be identified as: (1) Russia with its allies, (2) China with other nations of the Orient, (3) Egypt with other Middle East countries, and (4) an alliance of Western European nations.[16]
According to Lindsey, the alliance of Western European nations is a revived form of the ancient Roman Empire, predicted in the books of Daniel and Revelation symbolically as ten horns and ten kings.[17] In The Late Great Planet Earth, Lindsey quotes from a 1969 Time magazine article that the goal of the European Economic Community, which preceded the European Union, was to establish a ten-nation economic community.[18] Lindsey concludes, based on this and other sources, that this alliance will help cause the fulfillment of this prophecy and will ultimately be ruled by the Antichrist.[17]
Lindsey noted that the prophets did not refer to the United States directly or indirectly. He concluded that this is an indication that the U.S. will no longer be a great geo-political power by the time the Tribulation of the end times arrives.[19]
In a later book, titled The 1980s: Countdown to Armageddon,[20] he indicated that he believed it was possible that the battle of Armageddon could occur in the not too distant future, stating, "the decade of the 1980s could very well be the last decade of history as we know it."[21] He noted again that there is no reference to the U.S. in Bible prophecy. He listed a few scenarios that seemed plausible to him at the time: (1) A takeover by communists, (2) destruction by a surprise Soviet nuclear attack, or (3) becoming a dependent of the 10-nation European community.[22] The book was on the New York Times bestseller list for 20 weeks.[2]
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