[Note: The following is an excerpt from my chapter in the book, Deceivers: Exposing Evil Seducers & Their Last Days Deception, edited by Terry James. Order your copy on Amazon (Paperback and Kindle)].

False Messiah’s in End of the Age

We just looked at the “Near” view of Jesus’ answer concerning the fall of the Temple. Now let’s look at His “Far” response concerning the sign of false messiahs in answering the Apostles’ second question—”What will be the sign of the end of the age?” This entails the period we live in now called the Church Age, which one day will end with the Rapture of the Church.

According to Watchman Fellowship, a cult watching ministry, there are some 1,200 religious organizations and beliefs in the United States and 500 registered cults.1 Such an astounding number proves we truly are living during a time of prolific false teachings. Satan plots to dilute the truthful teachings of Jesus Christ by drowning His message under the false teachings and half-truths promoted by his demonically charged messengers.

Because such a staggering amount of unbiblical religions practice out there, we couldn’t possibly cover them all here. So, we’ll just take a quick survey through some of the most notorious cults and their foreteller-fabricating false messiahs. The term cult being, as Watchman defines, “as any religious group viewed as strange or dangerous; employing abusive, manipulative, or illegal control over their followers’ lives, and exists as a counterfeit or serious deviation from the doctrines of classical Christianity.”2

Joseph Smith

In 1830, the charismatic Joseph Smith founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, better known as the Mormons. He added a whole other book to the Bible, calling it the Book of Mormon. He may have acknowledged that Jesus came in the flesh, but claimed that Jesus was the spirit brother of Satan! He continued Satan’s Garden of Eden lie that one day we are all going to become gods.

Smith even made a number of dated prophetic predictions about men going on mission trips that never happened, churches to be built that never were, described historical battles which never took place, and even claimed the Native Americans were Jews, which was genetically debunked. Tragically, Mormonism exploded throughout the world, and now as the largest cult, boasts over five million members.

Charles Taze Russell

Next, there’s Charles Taze Russell, the founder of the Jehovah’s Witnesses. He claimed Jesus is really the Archangel Michael, and so denied the Trinity. Russell and his Watchtower Society prophesied that the world would end in 1914, 1918, 1925, 1975 and 1989. Clearly, the world did not end, proving Russell a false teacher.

Jim Jones

Jim Jones claimed to be God, Buddha, and Lenin all rolled up in one. In 1978, Jones took all of his People’s Temple Christian Church devotees down to Guyana to form a town, which he named after himself—Jonestown. At this false messiah’s command, 914 people, including Jones himself, drank poisoned Kool-Aid and so committed suicide. They followed Jones believing he was God, but in their last breath, realized he was of the Devil.

José Luis de Jesús Miranda

Miranda made no qualms claiming in 1973 that he had transformed into “the Man Jesus-Christ” incarnate. His Growing in Grace International boasted two million followers across 30 nations. Miranda championed the spirit of the Antichrist as actually a good thing, encouraging his adherents to tattoo their bodies with the Antichrist’s number 666. He formed a countdown to June 30, 2012, when he proclaimed the world’s governments would usher in his “Government of the 666.” Miranda may have died of cirrhosis of the liver on November 17, 2013, but his desperate followers claimed he had instead transformed into the immortal Melchizedek.

Jeane Dixon

Jeane Dixon was a false prophetess who practiced Astrology and prognostication, yet claimed her information derived from the Christian God. She uttered many false prophecies, including prophesying a woman would become the United States president in the 1980s.

David Koresh

David Koresh left the Seventh Day Adventist Church in 1984 to proclaim his divinity and form the Branch Davidians. He taught that knowing the Seven Seals of the Book of Revelation brought salvation. Though his Waco, Texas compound was burnt to the ground during a government raid back in 1993, his remaining followers continue to believe Koresh’s messianic claims and expect him to be resurrected one day soon.

Sun Myung Moon

Sun Myung Moon taught at his massive South Korean Unification Church that Jesus brought only spiritual salvation, so another savior was necessary to fulfill Jesus’ mission, and that man was him. Moon called himself the “Lord of the Second Advent” and believed himself to be the parent of all humanity. Moon’s self-proclaimed deity wasn’t powerful enough to stop pneumonia, and after a lavishly lived life, on September 3, 2012, he died at 92 years old.

Sergey the Vissarion Christ

Sergey Anatolyevitch Torop, or as his followers call him, the Vissarion, is yet another foreteller-fabricator claiming to be the reincarnated Christ and “He who gives new life.” His Community of Unified Faith in Russia boasts membership up towards 50,000 adherents spread across 83 communities. In these communities they learn about the importance of vegetarianism, reincarnation, and the coming apocalypse.

Benjamin Crème

Benjamin Crème was the esoteric false prophet for the New Age messiah, Lord Maitreya. He proclaimed in his The Emergence newsletter and Share International magazine and taught at his North Hollywood Tara Center that Jesus the Christ-consciousness had returned as Maitreya the World Teacher. Universalistic in his doctrine, Maitreya embodies the Imam Mahdi, Krishna, and the Messiah. Crème proclaimed Maitreya as the “Avatar for the Aquarian Age,” that is until his death in 2016.

We could go on and on through the 1,200 plus modern-day false messiahs and prophets, but instead, please visit Watchman Fellowship’s wonderful website at watchman.org. Watchman proves without a shadow of a doubt that today’s world has been truly inundated with false messiahs and false teachers. And this is exactly what Jesus said would happen leading up His rapturing His Church up to Heaven.

Resource

Indoctrination disguised as education. The religion of climate change enshrined. Witchcraft and the occult made mainstream. Fake news. We live in a world where deception is rampant and true agendas are rarely revealed. Jesus foretold of this time as He answered His disciples’ question: What will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age? Bible prophecy experts present analysis of today’s issues and events in Deceivers, revealing that Christ’s prophecy is literally unfolding before us today.

Deceivers

Order the book, Deceivers: Exposing Evil Seducers & Their Last Days Deception, edited by Terry James, on Amazon (Paperback and Kindle)]!

References

1. Staff of Watchman Fellowship, Inc., “Index of Cults and Religions,” (accessed August 2017), http://www.watchman.org/index-of-cults-and-religions/.

2. Ibid.