Quite so and I wouldn't ask you to. I did some digging and found a pdf of the book. I've posted just reasons 4-6 to give you a flavor of how the book goes....
REASON #4 AND #5
God uses the Seven Feasts of Israel to tie together the 69th and 70th week of Daniel. The 69th and 70th weeks of
Daniel are 1,958 years apart (covering the Church Age).
The 69th week of Daniel ended 6 April 30 A.D. at the closing of Jesus' tomb. The 70th week of Daniel start with
the Day of Atonement 1988 when Antichrist signs the Seven-Year Peace Pact with Israel on 21 Sept. 1988, and
the 70th week of Daniel ends 7 Jewish years later on the Day of Atonement 1995, at the battle of Armageddon, 4
Oct. 1995, thus lasting seven Jewish years. (Note: The next paragraph is extremely important.)
Lunar dates of the last three Feasts of Israel for the years 1988 through 1995 provide the beginning and ending
dates for the count of days given by God in Ezekiel, Daniel, and Revelation and verify beyond any reasonable
doubt that from the Day of Atonement 1988 through the Day of Atonement 1995 is the 70th week of Daniel.
(This single fact is the unchallengeable proof that this book is correct and true.)
Since the faithful Christian is never appointed to wrath, then the Rapture of the Church must be before the Day
of Atonement 1988, 21 Sept. 1988. The faithful Christian might have to endure Satan's wrath as Job did, or
endure the wrath of man every day, but the faithful Christians never have to endure the wrath of Lamb, Jesus
(see Rev. 6:16-17)
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Because the 70th week of Daniel starts 21 Sept. 1988 (the Day of Atonement 1988), the Rapture of the Church
must preced the Peace Pact signing between Antichrist and Israel. Thus we look at Rosh-Hash-Ana 1988 which
is ten days earlier than Peace Pact signing date, 21 Sept.1988.
REASON #6
One of the Seven Feast of Israel given in Lev. 23, it looks as if God gave the first three Feast of Israel to Jesus,
the next two Feasts of Israel to the Church, and the last two Feasts of Israel to the Jew.
The first feasts-Passover, Jesus died; Unleavened Bread, Jesus lay buried; and on Firstfruits, Jesus arose from
the dead in the first resurrection of permanence.
Then the Church was given the next two Feasts of Israel – the Christian was born on Pentecost or Shavout, the
fourth Feast of Israel, when the Holy Spirit arrived to indwell the living believer; Acts 2:2-4 and the Church
departs earth at the Rapture on the Fifth Feast of Israel, the Feast of Trumpets (called Rosh-Hash-Ana) in 1988,
Rev. 4:1 thus the Church arrives on earth on the fourth Feast of Israel when he who restraineth is taken out of the
way (II Thess. 2:7).
Then the last two Feast of Israel were given to Israel and the Jew – in 1988 on the Day of Atonement (the sixth
Feast of Israel, called Yom Kippur), Antichrist signs the Seven-Year Peace Pact with Israel starting the 70th week
of Daniel for seven Jewish years, at which time God again deals with Israel as the promised people of God, and,
on the Feast of Tabernacles, 9 Oct. 1995, (five days after Armageddon), Israel recognizes Jesus as their Messiah
whom they crucified 2,000 years ago (see Zech. 12:10-14).
Thus the Church Age began on the Fourth Feast of Israel (Pentecost), 28 May 30 AD and ends on the fifth
Feast of Israel (Trumphets or Rosh-Hash-Ana), Sept. 1988.
That is all quoted verbatim with spelling errors left intact. I picked those three because they're brief enough that people are likely to actually read them on this forum.
As a sort of precursor to the 88 Reasons book, Mr. Whisenant wrote another book called "On Borrowed Time" which he asks his readers to read first before reading the 88 Reasons. In "On Borrowed Time", he wrote the following....
THE BIBLE'S MYSTERY UNRAVELLED
The major prophecies of all the Old and New Testaments prophets have now been put together. Each prophecy
verifies all other prophecies. All the verse in the book of Revelation now have the dates of occurrence assigned
by Scripture. We now know which seven years will be the Tribulation. Every major event of the Tribulation is
known, as well as the dates on which these events will occur. We know the exact day that the Millennium begins
and ends, as well as the dates of the events in between. These events were never restricted from our knowledge,
but only the day and hour of our Lord's return for the Church, and that event was limited only to the day and
hour, and not the week, month or year.
“Surely the sovereign Lord does nothing without revealing His plan to His servants the prophets.” (Amos 3:7)
The complete story was told to the prophets, but it took 14 years for a man to put it together. God used the dates
of the last three Feasts of Israel in the years 1988 through 1995 to begin and end
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the counts of days given in the Old and New Testament books of Ezekiel, Daniel and Revelation. The lunar dates
of the last three Feasts of Israel, will only fit 1988 through 1995. At no other time in history or the future will
these Bible counts fit. This is unfakeable and undeniable proof that the 70th week of Daniel, called the Seven-
Year Tribulation, starts in 1988. (Emphasis in the original!)
Now, why am I posting all of this? Well, because I haven't ever encountered anyone who firmly believed that we were definitely in the end times who did not think in almost identical terms as what Mr. Whisenant presents in his writings. Not verbatim, certainly, but of a kind, where the details (dates and such) are debated or dismissed outright but the overall kind of thinking is accepted and endorsed and used. I hear similar kinds of things to this day. Dr. David Jeremiah and Jonathan Cahn are two modern evangelists that you hear similar things from, and what I'm asking you to do is to examine the thought process behind why you're so convinced that prophecy is being fulfilled in modern times and if those thoughts are even a little bit in resonance with what I've posted above, well, let's just say, please don't sell your house or start giving away your retirement money just yet, as so many did in 1988 (not that I think you're about to do that!).
Here’s a very brief and rather incomplete list of major historical periods when people believed the end times were imminent:
- Early Christianity (1st Century): Many early Christians believed Jesus would return within their lifetimes, based on interpretations of His teachings (e.g., Matthew 24:34). The destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD heightened these expectations.
- Medieval Period (1000 AD): The approach of the year 1000 saw widespread apocalyptic fears in Europe, fueled by biblical numerology and a sense that the millennium marked a turning point in God's plan.
- The Black Death (1347–1351): The bubonic plague, which killed millions, led many to interpret the pandemic as a sign of divine judgment and the end of the world.
- The Reformation (16th Century): Apocalyptic rhetoric was common among Protestant Reformers like Martin Luther, who identified the Papacy with the Antichrist and saw the upheaval of the church as a prelude to Christ’s return.
- The Great Disappointment (1844): Followers of William Miller (Millerites) believed Christ would return on October 22, 1844. When this failed, it became known as the Great Disappointment, though it led to the development of Adventist movements.
- World Wars (20th Century): Both World War I and World War II were seen by many as fulfilling apocalyptic prophecies due to unprecedented global destruction and the rise of totalitarian regimes.
- The Late Great Planet Earth by Hal Lindsey, sold millions of copies and was highly influential, especially among evangelical Christians. It contributed to the rise of the "Christian Right" in the United States and helped establish a popular culture of end-times speculation and caused many to believe that that the 1980s could be the time when many of the prophesied events (such as the return of Christ) would occur, based on a specific reading of Bible passages like the book of Revelation and Daniel. Lindsey argued that the establishment of Israel in 1948 was a key sign of the approaching fulfillment of end-time prophecies.
- 88 Reason the Rapture Will Be in 1988 by by Edgar C. Whisenant, playing to some significant degree off of Hal Lindsey's books, caused lots of believing Christians to liquidated their assets, sell their homes, and leave their jobs in preparation for the rapture, only to be sorely disappointed at sunset on the 13th of September, 1988, the end of the 36 hour period of time known as Rosh Ha Shana when Whisenant predicted the rapture would occure.
- Y2K (1999–2000): The turn of the millennium, coupled with fears of technological collapse, led some to predict catastrophic events and the potential for apocalyptic fulfillment.
- Modern Times (21st Century): Events like 9/11, climate change, and pandemics (e.g., COVID-19) have revived apocalyptic anxieties, often framed within biblical prophecy or cultural fears about global collapse.
Each of which reflects the tendency of people to interpret major societal or natural upheavals through an eschatological lens, often drawing from biblical prophecies or cultural expectations of doom. People really do see what they're looking for!