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END TIMES WARFARE


The Eschatological Beliefs
of the Great Religions

end_times_warfare_cover.jpg



Here's the latest blockbuster book
from
 hard-hitting author . . .

Hervé Ryssen!


Eschatology is the study of “End Times” doctrines. All three of the great monotheistic religions, i.e., Judaism, Christianity and Islam, contain a belief that the world as we know it was created by God, and that this same world must sooner or later come to an end. This theme of the end times and the coming of the Messiah are also found in Judaism—the “Mother Religion”—as well as Islam, which also draws its inspiration from the Old Testament.

And yet, these three religions are completely incompatible with each other.

Why?

For the pure and simple reason that their vision of the future diverges on this fundamental point: At the end of time, one—and only one—religion is to triumph.

In the end, the religion whose goals are the clearest and whose faith the most ardent will bear away the victory.

Which will it be?

Softcover, 189 pages, #855, $25.


 
   Table of Contents: 
Chapter 1.
Jewish Messianism

Chapter 2.
Christian Eschatology The Modernist Interpretation

Chapter 3.
The Cyclical Concept of History

Chapter 4.
Islamic Eschatology

Chapter 5.
The Great Project of Judaism 

Chapter 6.
Christians Rendered Defenseless

Chapter 7.
Men Who Go Around in a Circle

Chapter 8.
Doom & Gloom

Additional topics covered:

• Peace on Earth
• The “Open Society”• The Failure of Christian Universalism• Allowing the Enemy to Triumph • Judeo-Christianity• The Evangelical Christians• Christian Anti-Racism • Decadence as a Natural Phenomenon• The Hatred of the Church• A Frenzied Philo-Semitism• Defeat in the Mind Chapter• Intellectual Terrorism• The Terrorized Extreme-Right• The Liberation of Speech• Anti-Judaic Considerations• Victory as Religion
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Check out this important message from Hervé Ryssen!

Throughout the ages, men have sought to understand the meaning of history. In Europe, before the establishment of Christianity, time was considered to be “cyclical” in nature: ceremonies were repeated, day after day, season after season, year after year. There were also biological cycles, astral cycles etc. Ritual repetition was believed to form part of the circular return of time.

In Greco-Latin antiquity, this representation of time is linked to the myth of a bygone “Golden Age,” an age of harmony, justice and perfection. Hesiod [Greek poet and shepherd who lived between 750 and 650 B.C., around the same time as Homer.] described this period in his poem Works and Days:

First of all, the deathless gods who dwell on Olympus made a golden race of mortal men who lived in the time of Cronos when he was reigning in heaven. And they lived like gods without sorrow of heart, remote and free from toil and grief: miserable age rested not on them; but with legs and arms never failing, they made merry with feasting beyond the reach of all evils. When they died, it was as though they were overcome with sleep, and they had all good things; for the fruitful earth unforced bare them fruit abundantly and without stint.

They dwelt in ease and peace upon their lands with many good things, rich in flocks and loved by the blessed gods. Men, joyous and radiant, abandoned themselves to death as unto a sweet slumber.

The revolutions of the celestial bodies led to a succession of “ages,” in a downfall accelerated by the increasing remoteness of primordial tradition.
With Christianity, the Europeans adopted a linear concept of history, first through the Book of Genesis, i.e., the origins of humanity, followed by God’s revelations to Moses, the birth of Christ and the Resurrection. This was to be followed by the “End Times,” described in the Apocalypse of Saint John. The end of the world was to be preceded by great cataclysms and terrible upheavals, to be followed by the reign of the Antichrist, who was to be vanquished in the end by Christ, who was to return to Earth to judge the living and the dead.This theme of the “end times” and the coming of the Messiah are also found in the Mother-Religion which is Judaism, as well as Islam, which also draws its inspiration from the Old Testament. And yet, these three religions are incompatible with each other. Why? For the pure and simple reason that their vision of the future diverges on this fundamental point: at the end of time, one—and only one—religion is to triumph. In the end, the religion whose project is the clearest and whose faith the most ardent will bear away the victory.

—Hervé Ryssen

 


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