I wasn't planning on writing again this soon this week, but there are some things I want to talk about. As I am writing this, fortunately I have a good and open CWSP day today - this is the day the kids I specifically teach go to their work-study assignments for the day, and it provides a good break for the teachers to focus on lesson plans (provided administration doesn't choke us with covering other classes and endless meetings - those are the bane of teachers' existences here). I am doing that, as I do have some grading to catch up on as well as a departmental meeting to plan for next week given I am essentially the acting department chair now here. I am still praying for a new chapter though - getting out of this particular school now is a goal, as I am missing the area I used to live and I also just need a lot less stress in my life. In God's timing, that will come though. However, in the interim, I wanted to just talk about a few things that are coming up soon, as some important developments have happened for me personally.
I mentioned a good friend of mine, Stephen Missick, who has sort of given me a much-needed boot in the jaxie to revisit an old passion I had and in doing so I am formulating a project I want to work on. Stephen and I both have worked with and advocated for the same people - indigenous Middle Eastern Christian communities - for the better of 40 years now, and in doing so I have gained a sort of unique perspective on things regarding them, how I relate to these communities, and also how to integrate them into other aspects of my own life. The discovery in my own family tree a few years back of Armenian ancestors has also given me more of a connection with them too, and when I discovered that I was ecstatic. Unfortunately, in the past 20 or so years life happened, and I had moved away from my earlier enthusiasm of this topic and it got a bit stale for me - not because of the people mind you, but simply because everything else seemed to take priority over it. I still advocated where I could, and I also have never wavered in my convictions, but it was just not something that was front-and-center in my life for a long time. I think the defining moment of that was in 1996, when after a trip to California where I had some speaking engagements and a radio interview on KBES, the Assyrian station in Ceres, CA, that is operated by my good friend Dr. Sargon Dadesho, I was hit with what was perhaps the biggest crisis and shift in my life I had experienced up to that point. During that year, we were the victims of a scam artist who really inflicted some damage on us and almost cost me my marriage then, and I was also on the cusp of finishing college and earning my Bachelor's (which I did in April of that year), and it really sent my life into a talespin at the time - in the years following, I settled into a rather routine life that had very little change until COVID hit in 2020, and then I had to more or less start my life from scratch at that point too. However, unlike the 1996 crisis, the challenges I faced in 2024-25 forced me to reflect somewhat on my past and I began to slowly awaken to some old convictions I had left dormant for many years, and one of those was thanks to my friend Stephen Missick. Stephen is a guy I have talked about previously, as we seemed to share parallel paths in our work with Assyrians and others over the years. Unlike my dormancy though, Stephen has been very busy and productive, authoring several books on the topic as well as taking advantage of the opportunities social media opened up, such as a YouTube podcast. In recent months, he has been particularly active, and this is what challenged me - that was the proverbial "boot in the jaxie" I was talking about. As I watched Stephen's podcast and also acquired a couple of his newest books, I began to think more about my own sentiments in this regard: what am I doing? A part of me was envious that Stephen was doing everything I always wanted to do, but in a good way - he has done some amazing work, and he has been busy despite a lot of personal things he too is facing. And, over the past week, that got me thinking - how do I share my own perspectives on this topic? And, that is where it hit me - maybe I should write a book on my own unique perspective with these communities, and perhaps in doing so I can also make some sort of impact. And, that began a plan.
I am no stranger to writing books - I have four of them I have written and published now, as well as my dissertation for my Ph.D., and therefore I have the procedure down to writing a book well. However, writing a book, especially one as detailed as this topic, is not an overnight thing - a lot of research goes into an endeavor like that, as well as organizing thoughts into something coherent that flows. Additionally, I don't want to necessarily travel a well-worn trail - Stephen, as well as people like Ron Susek and my dear friend John Booko, have already tackled some aspects of that topic and I want to make something unique that doesn't essentially piggyback or cosign on them. In other words, it has to be something unique to my own experience too, while still maintaining a level of academic clarity. Additionally, I want to do something other authors who addressed this have not done - I am coming at it from a more traditional Catholic anagogical perspective, given the aforementioned authors are Evangelical Protestants for the most part and thus I would agree with them on much of it, but I also see a couple of interesting details which would set what I would be doing apart too. I am going to address those particulars briefly now, as they intersect with other areas of study I have done.
The one area of unique perspective I wanted to utilize in my own work on this topic is the field of eschatology. This can be one of those hot-potato areas of discussion, as there are perhaps as many views on the last things as there are species of insects in the world, and to tackle this aspect is not only integral, but it takes the navigation of a seasoned sailor at times to chart those turbulent waters. Being I am a former Pentecostal myself, I am also a former premillennialist who had some dispensationalist inclinations - it was a long and painful process to move past all that in all honesty, and it took me several years even into my Catholic faith to sort stuff out. However, I could never be a preterist or a cessationist either, and while I am now nominally what is called an Augustinian amillennialist, I am still very futurist in the way I see prophecy and eschatology. Fortunately, a valuable resource came across my path some years ago that was authored by a capable Catholic theologian (and also now a friend) named Desmond Birch, and it is a lengthy but very resource-rich book entitled Trial, Tribulation, and Triumph, which I think he published in the late 1990s. When reading Desmond's book, a lot of things started to make more sense than they used to, as it turns out that much of traditional Catholic eschatology was also futurist in scope - there are things he directly references in there about what is called the Great Catholic Monarch, the eventual dissolution of Islam and mass conversions of Muslims to Christ, the foretold conversion of the majority of Jews to Christ, and a new "Era of Peace" that would be instituted for a season where one last epoch of grace would be extended before the eventual rise of the Antichrist and the Second Coming happened. While technically being both from an Augustinian amillennial position as well as futurist, the sources noted in Desmond's book struck me with my own personal revelation - it wasn't that millennialism is necessarily wrong, but perhaps the dispensationalists and premillennialists had it inverted from its actual order. If you read the scenario Desmond documents, what many Evangelicals call the Millennium is in reality the same thing as the "Age of Peace," the only real difference is that the latter both precedes the Second Coming, and also it may or may not be an actual one thousand years - it could only be one generation for all we know. When I started putting that together with some other long-held convictions I had - the "Three Nations" prophecy of Isaiah 19:23-25, for instance, as well as the role of nations such as Ethiopia - they began to make more sense in lieu of the Catholic model than they ever did in a dispensationalist context. When I actually embark on the book project, I want to delve into that more, because I believe it will cause the pieces of a very complex puzzle to fall into place better. Having discussed some of this personally with Desmond himself via email, he found my conclusions somewhat intriguing, although he may not agree with my total conclusive views on some of my observations, and that is OK as well. I will not, nor can I, be completely dogmatic on all this - it is the best scenario I see playing out, but maybe I could be wrong as well. However, whether it is in relation to specifics of eschatology or not, there is one important fact about this I want to briefly discuss now.
In order to have an orthodox, sound faith as a Christian, it is important to understand things in perspective. For our faith to make sense, there are three components we must get right on a basic level that is universally accepted by all orthodox Christians of different traditions. The first is the beginning - while God has no source, it is understood that he is the source of all that is in the universe, and thus our faith must start with the presupposition that God is Creator, and as confessed every Sunday Mass in the Creed, "I believe in God the Father, creator of heaven and earth, and all that is visible and invisible." The second is the ending, and this means that God's plan is restorative for both humanity and the universe in general - "He shall come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his kingdom shall have no end," as well as one of the last parts of the Creed which states "I believe the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come." These two bookends of our faith must be affirmed in order for the middle to make sense, and what is the middle? The middle is not an event, but a person, Jesus Christ - his redemptive act for our sins is what makes the beginning and the end make sense, and we have to get all three truths right in order for it to be orthodox. This means that Jesus Christ came as God the Son in the form of a man, that he suffered, died, was buried, and on the third day resurrected and then ascended to the Father. This aspect is what is known as Christocentricity, and it is integral to Christian faith. If we get the beginning wrong then, it means that special creation didn't happen, and thus no point in belief. If we get the ending wrong, then it means no hope for transformation. And, if we diminish the middle, then the whole scaffold of faith collapses. So, on a fundamental level our faith should look like this - God is the source of all things, and because of sin, the universe was corrupted. Christ though came to restore, and the ultimate act of that restoration is his return. What prologues that return are four things though, called the "Four Last Things" in classic Catholic eschatology - death, judgment, heaven, and hell. There are more things that could be said too, as soteriology also plays a big part in classic eschatology, and again it all points back to Christ. However, what I want to do in the book I want to write is somehow attach this to the restoration of the Assyrian and Coptic nations, as well as the conversion of the majority of Israel to the truth of Christ's redemption. And, that leads me to a couple of affirmative observations I wanted to note.
None of the prophecies of the Bible are "secret knowledge" at all, and we don't have to resort to esoteric means of understanding these things. Rather, sometimes the answer is so plain that it would bite us if it was a snake, and perhaps we choose not to see it due to its actual simplicity. Many "mystery cults" claim "special revelation" about things, and to be honest some of what they teach is so outlandish that it makes a person wonder how on earth people could be so dumb as to follow it. This was true from the earliest days of the Church even, when perhaps the earliest heresy of them all, gnosticism, was a problem. Gnostics have this supposed "secret knowledge," but they also decry matter as evil while saying all "good" is spiritual. This is nothing new, and the same garbage is being recycled even today in both religious and secular settings. As an example of the latter, look at the concept of transgenderism - it is gnostic at its root because it denies physical reality in order to foster the illusion of a "hidden true self" that is different from the outward, and thus it is delusional. In religious circles, you see this as well in some hyper-charismatic circles, where that annoying phrase "in the natural" is applied to anything they disagree with (despite the fact that many of their preachers are so greedy that they don't have a problem with real money - they try to "confess" it into existence all the time). This is why with the more legalistic Evangelical, Fundamentalist, and Pentecostal groups, this false legalism of "modest dress" is enforced because it is a way of trying to slap God in the face for the beauty of his actual creation - imperfect it may be, but God still created the physical world around us, and when we call "evil" what he proclaimed as good, it is frankly insulting to God. I will say that I believe a lot of people who do this are doing so in ignorance, but still, it not only sounds stupid but it also could be inherently dangerous if it is taken to its full extreme. This is why it's integral we are careful with what we say.
This is a fundamental concept that at the outset may seem a bit odd regarding a book about the modern Assyrians and Copts, but I went down that rabbit trail to say this - much of the information I would be sharing is not a huge secret, and you don't have to gain "special knowledge" to understand it either - all it takes is some diligent study to read what is already there, and then use the brain God gave you to come to your own conclusions. That is essentially what I did - no mystery to it, and it also was not the easiest thing to do either as I had to revise a lot of my own long-held beliefs on things and that can be painful to do. But, sometimes the things that make the most sense are not hidden, but rather are right in front of our face if we care to pay attention to them. This is true of passages like Isaiah 19:23-25, but it is also true of more systematic theological concepts such as eschatology. Perhaps what is needed is actually less mysticism and more common sense, and then you would see it fall into place. And, we also cannot be completely dogmatic about the minors either, as they are subject to revision too as we learn more. Keeping that in mind is what I want to do if I tackle a book project like that.
Doing this book means also a radical re-thinking of passages in Scripture like Ezekiel 38-39 as well, given that many dispensationalists wrongly believe this is in reference to Russia - I came to see many years ago that Russia just does not fit the narrative there, and when you see what conclusions I come to, it makes more sense. I think instead of constantly vilifying Russia, maybe we need to see the enemy in plain sight in the region, and in all honesty Turkey fits this more than Russia ever did. I plan on devoting a whole chapter just to that. Also, what about the role of radical Islamic extremism? There are things I have seen over the years that suggest that radical Islamism will be a factor in future events, but also a diminishing one. I know that back during the Iraq wars for instance it was very popular to associate a future Antichrist with an enigmatic figure in Islamic literature called the Mahdi - the Mahdi is seen by extremists as the ultimate Islamic ruler and warlord, and apparently to them he is so powerful that even Jesus will acknowledge him (which is nonsense, but you see where this can go, right?). My distant cousin Perry Stone as a matter of fact wrote a whole book on that topic, and while the information is compelling, there is no indication that a future Antichrist will be a radical Muslim caliph. On the contrary, in reading the Catholic visionaries on the topic, Islam will go into decline and many of them will convert en masse to the Church. With the recent events that happened in Iran, many are starting to examine this topic closer. That too may require a chapter of its own as well.
Any rate, those are just some ideas I am floating around, and I actually have a phone call with Stephen tonight and we are going to bounce ideas off each other. Thanks for joining me today, and will see you next time.