
Home > Today's Christian
> 1999
> November/December
The Revelation of LaHaye and Jenkins
Why 7.4 million fans watch and wait for the next Left Behind.
by Jay Grelen
 2 of 5

The sales and impact of the books have been so notable that even People magazine and a front-page story in The New York Times gave them positive ink last year.
Not only have they stayed on Christian bestseller charts, they have climbed to the top of the lists kept byamong othersThe New York Times, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, and Amazon.com. The No. 2 ranking on the Times's list is all the more significant because the Times doesn't monitor sales in Christian bookstores.
For LaHaye and Jenkins, the seven-plus years of writing about the end times have been anything but a tribulation. A lot of work, certainly, but labor rewarded with stories of lives changed.
"We have received tens of thousands of letters from people who say they've been challenged to live more aggressively evangelistic lives," Jenkins says. "We've heard two thousand stories from people who have received Christ. We heard about an old man who read the books through a magnifying glass and was saved. He said it was not from what he read through the glass but what he read through his heart.
"Some have said the books are the longest, most expensive gospel tracts they've ever seen."
No argument on impact
Though successful at the bookstores, the series has drawn its share of criticism. In World magazine, Fred Baue called Apollyon "TV for readers" and wrote that "the characters are so comic-book-like and the novel itself so poorly written
that serious theological concerns are trivialized."
But the series has received critical praise as well. Matthew Scully, a contributing editor for National Review, wrote a glowing essay that reviewed the first four books of the series. "It's a highly imaginative piece of work," he wrote in December 1998, "with much Christian wisdom and a message of readiness relevant enough to all regardless of which comes firstone's own last days or the world's."
Roy Fish, Distinguished Professor of Evangelism at Southwestern Baptist Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, is an unabashed fan of the books, although he doesn't buy the authors' scenarios. "I've read them all," he says. "I have a little bit of a problem with the eschatology [the study of last things] that's set forth. I'm not sure everything they say is going to happen will happen. It's extra-biblical, not anti-biblical. But I know there are multitudes of people who go along with this." Fish notes that plenty of well-educated Bible scholars have contended for this pre-tribulation interpretation of Revelation.
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