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Tim LaHaye

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Timothy Francis LaHaye (April 27, 1926 – July 25, 2016) was an American Baptist evangelical Christian minister and political activist who wrote more than 85 books, both non-fiction and fiction, including (with co-author Jerry B. Jenkins) the Left Behind series of novels depicting apocalypse events after a pre-tribulation rapture.[1]

Key Information

He was a founder of the Council for National Policy, a conservative Christian advocacy group. LaHaye opposed homosexuality, believing it to be immoral and unbiblical. He was a critic of Roman Catholicism, and a believer in conspiracy theories regarding the Illuminati. LaHaye has been called "one of the most influential evangelicals of the late twentieth century" and, along with his wife Beverly LaHaye, he helped shape the beliefs and organizations of the Christian right.[2]: 92–95 

Born in Detroit, Michigan, he experienced the early death of his father, which he later cited as a formative spiritual moment. LaHaye served in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II and later earned degrees from Bob Jones University and Western Seminary. He pastored congregations in South Carolina, Minnesota, and California, spending nearly 25 years at Scott Memorial Baptist Church in San Diego. He co-founded Christian Heritage College (now San Diego Christian College) and the Institute for Creation Research, and authored The Act of Marriage, a Christian guide promoting marital sexuality within a complementarian framework.

LaHaye was heavily involved in conservative political activism, founding groups such as Californians for Biblical Morality and the American Coalition for Traditional Values, and encouraging the creation of the Moral Majority. He supported several Republican presidential campaigns. His views included premillennial dispensationalism. He was recognized as one of the most influential evangelicals of his era, with numerous awards and tributes, including from Time Magazine and Liberty University.

Biography

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Early life

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Timothy Francis LaHaye was born on April 27, 1926, in Detroit, Michigan, to Frank LaHaye, a Ford auto worker who died in 1936 of a heart attack, and Margaret LaHaye (née Palmer). His father's death had a significant influence on LaHaye, who was only nine years old at the time. He had been inconsolable until the minister at the funeral said, "This is not the end of Frank LaHaye; because he accepted Jesus Christ, the day will come when the Lord will shout from heaven and descend, and the dead in Christ will rise first and then we'll be caught up together to meet him in the air."[3]

LaHaye later said that, upon hearing those remarks, "all of a sudden, there was hope in my heart I'd see my father again."[4]

LaHaye enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces in 1944, at the age of 18,[1] after he finished high school. He served in the European Theater of Operations as a machine gunner aboard a bomber.[5] Then he studied at Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina, where he met his wife, Beverly, and obtained a Bachelor of Arts in 1950. LaHaye held the Doctor of Ministry degree from Western Seminary.[6]

Ministry

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He served as a pastor in Pumpkintown, South Carolina, and after that he pastored a congregation in Minneapolis until 1956.[6][7] After that, the LaHaye family moved to San Diego, California, where he served as pastor of the Scott Memorial Baptist Church (now called Shadow Mountain Community Church)[8][9] for nearly 25 years.[6]

In 1971, he founded Christian Heritage College, now known as San Diego Christian College.[6] In 1972, LaHaye helped establish the Institute for Creation Research in El Cajon, California, along with Henry M. Morris.[10][11]

In 1976, the couple wrote The Act of Marriage, a Christian self-help sex manual. The book sought to depict enjoyment of sex within marriage as positive rather than sinful. It frames marital sex as an important part of a complementarian, divinely designed relationship – with men as aggressive, sexually voracious leaders whose submissive wives provide them with sexual satisfaction to boost their egos and thereby make them more confident leaders, as part of God's design for gender roles.[2]: 91 [12]

Political activism

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LaHaye started numerous groups to promote his views, having become involved in politics at the Christian Voice during the late 1970s and early 1980s.[2]: 93–94  In 1979, he founded Californians for Biblical Morality, which has been described as "in many ways...the genesis of the Christian right."[5] The same year, LaHaye encouraged Jerry Falwell to found the Moral Majority and was among its three directors.[5][13]

LaHaye was a member of and speaker for the John Birch Society (JBS), a conservative, anti-communist group; scholar Celestini Carmen argues that LaHaye used the JBS's culture war methods and rhetoric of "fear, apocalyptic thought and conspiracy" to forge the Moral Majority, with "fear, anger, and disgust as essential ingredients." His book Rapture Under Attack describes his time in the JBS and relationship to its leader, Robert W. Welch Jr.[14][5]

Also in 1979, LaHaye's wife, Beverly, founded Concerned Women for America, a conservative Christian women's activist group.[15]

Then in 1981, he left the pulpit to concentrate his time on politics and writing.[16] That year, he helped found the Council for National Policy (CNP), a policy making think tank[17] in which membership is only available through invitation. ABC News called it "the most powerful conservative organization in America you've never heard of".[18]

In the 1980s he was criticized by the evangelical community for accepting money from Bo Hi Pak, a longtime Sun Myung Moon operative.[19] He was additionally criticized for joining Moon's Council for Religious Freedom, which was founded to protest Moon's 1984 imprisonment.[19] In 1996, LaHaye's wife spoke at an event sponsored by Moon.[19]

In the 1980s, LaHaye founded the American Coalition for Traditional Values and the Coalition for Religious Freedom. He founded the Pre-Trib Research Center along with Thomas Ice in 1993.[20] The center is dedicated to producing material that supports a dispensationalist, pre-tribulation interpretation of the Bible.[5]

LaHaye also took more direct roles in presidential politics. He supported Ronald Reagan's elections as United States president.[7] He was a co-chairman of Jack Kemp's 1988 presidential bid but was removed from the campaign after four days when his anti-Catholic views became known.[5][6] LaHaye played a significant role in getting the Religious Right to support George W. Bush for the presidency in 2000.[5][13] In 2007, he endorsed Mike Huckabee during the primaries[21] and served as his spiritual advisor.[22]

Left Behind

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LaHaye is best known for the Left Behind series of apocalyptic fiction that depicts the Earth after the pretribulation rapture which premillennial dispensationalists believe the Bible states, multiple times, will occur. The books were LaHaye's idea, though Jerry B. Jenkins, a former sportswriter with numerous other works of fiction to his name, wrote the books from LaHaye's notes.[23]

The series, which started in 1995 with the first novel, includes 12 titles in the adult series, as well as juvenile novels, audio books, devotionals, and graphic novels. The books have been very popular, with total sales surpassing 65 million copies as of July 2016.[6] Seven titles in the adult series have reached No. 1 on the bestseller lists for The New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly.[24][non-primary source needed] Jerry Falwell said about the first book in the series: "In terms of its impact on Christianity, it's probably greater than that of any other book in modern times, outside the Bible."[25] The best-selling series has been compared to the equally popular works of Tom Clancy and Stephen King: "the plotting is brisk and the characterizations Manichean. People disappear and things blow up."[13]

LaHaye indicates that the idea for the series came to him one day circa 1994, while he was sitting on an airplane and observed a married pilot flirting with a flight attendant. He wondered what would befall the pilot if the Rapture happened at that moment.[5] The first book in the series opens with a similar scene. He sold the movie rights for the Left Behind series and later stated he regretted that decision, because the films turned out to be "church-basement videos", rather than "a big-budget blockbuster" that he had hoped for.[7]

Later activities

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In 2001, LaHaye co-hosted with Dave Breese the prophecy television program The King Is Coming. In 2001, LaHaye gave $4.5 million to Liberty University to build a new student center,[26] which opened in January 2002 and was named after LaHaye. He, alongside his wife, served as a member of Liberty's board of trustees.[27]

He provided funds for the LaHaye Ice Center on the campus of Liberty University, which opened in January 2006.[28]

LaHaye's book The Rapture was released on June 6, 2006, in order to capitalize on a 6-6-6 connection.[29][30]

Personal life and death

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Tim LaHaye married activist and fellow author Beverly Ratcliffe in 1947[31][32] while attending Bob Jones University.[6]

In July 2016, the LaHayes celebrated their 69th wedding anniversary.[9][7] They had four children and nine grandchildren, and lived in the Los Angeles area.[6] The LaHayes owned a condo in Rancho Mirage, California.[33]

LaHaye died on July 25, 2016, in a hospital in San Diego, California, after suffering from a stroke, aged 90.[6][22] In addition to his wife, Beverly, he was survived by four children, nine grandchildren, 16 great grandchildren, a brother (Richard LaHaye), and a sister.[9][7] His funeral service took place at Shadow Mountain Community Church on August 12, 2016, with David Jeremiah, who succeeded LaHaye as pastor at what was then Scott Memorial Baptist Church, led the service.[34] LaHaye is interred at Miramar National Cemetery in San Diego, California.

Views

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Homosexuality

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In 1978 LaHaye published The Unhappy Gays, which was later retitled What Everyone Should Know About Homosexuality. The book called homosexuals "militant, organized" and "vile."[35] The Unhappy Gays also argues that homosexuals share 16 pernicious traits, including "incredible promiscuity", "deceit", "selfishness", "vulnerability to sadism-masochism", and "poor health and an early death."[36] He believed that homosexuality can be cured.[37][38] However, he said that such conversions are rare.[39]

Global conspiracies

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LaHaye believed that the Illuminati is secretly engineering world affairs.[40] In Rapture Under Attack he wrote:

I myself have been a forty-five year student of the satanically-inspired, centuries-old conspiracy to use government, education, and media to destroy every vestige of Christianity within our society and establish a new world order. Having read at least fifty books on the Illuminati, I am convinced that it exists and can be blamed for many of man's inhumane actions against his fellow man during the past two hundred years.[41]

The Illuminati is just one of many groups that he believed are working to "turn America into an amoral, humanist country, ripe for merger into a one-world socialist state." Other secret societies and liberal groups working to destroy "every vestige of Christianity", according to LaHaye, include: the Trilateral Commission, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Organization for Women, Planned Parenthood, "the major TV networks, high-profile newspapers and newsmagazines," the State Department, major foundations (Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford), the United Nations, "the left wing of the Democratic Party", Harvard, Yale "and 2,000 other colleges and universities."[5]

LaHaye believed that political mobilization of the Christian right in voting for Ronald Reagan thwarted the Illuminati, who had been attempting to create a New World Order.[42]

Eschatology

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While himself a premillennialist who asserted the end times were near and that the nation will be judged, LaHaye also adopted aspects of R. J. Rushdoony's postmillennialist movement, Christian reconstructionism. Despite varying beliefs on how the end times will occur, both groups share a "desire to reclaim the culture for Christ by reasserting patriarchal authority and waging battle against encroaching secular humanism, in all its guises."[2]: 94 

The eschatological views of LaHaye have been described as "view[ing] the U.N. and Islam as literally satanic; oppos[ing] any compromise in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict; and foresee[ing] an imminent eschatological crisis in which millions of human beings will perish in agony".[20]

Other believers in dispensational premillennialism, who believe that the return of Jesus is imminent, criticize various aspects of his theology.[citation needed]

Many mainstream Christians and certain other evangelicals had broader disagreements with the Left Behind series as a whole, pointing out that "most biblical scholars largely reject the eschatological assumptions of this kind of pop end-times literature."[43] In The Rapture Exposed by Barbara Rossing, a number of criticisms are raised regarding the series, particularly its focus on violence.[43][44]

Anti-Catholic sentiments

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LaHaye was a harsh critic of Roman Catholicism, which he called "a false religion".[6] In his 1973 book Revelation Illustrated and Made Plain, he stated that the Catholic Church "is more dangerous than no religion because she substitutes religion for truth" and "is also dangerous because some of her doctrines are pseudo-Christian." Elsewhere the same book compared Catholic ceremonies to pagan rituals.[6] It was these statements that were largely responsible for LaHaye's dismissal from Jack Kemp's 1988 presidential campaign.[45] It was later revealed that Scott Memorial Baptist Church, the San Diego church that LaHaye had pastored throughout the 1970s, had sponsored an anti-Catholic group called Mission to Catholics; one of their pamphlets asserted that Pope Paul VI was the "archpriest of Satan, a deceiver, and an antichrist, who has, like Judas, gone to his own place."[46]

The issue of anti-Catholicism also comes up in regard to the Left Behind series. While the fictional Pope John XXIV was raptured, he is described as having "stirred up controversy in the church with a new doctrine that seemed to coincide more with the 'heresy' of Martin Luther than with the historic orthodoxy they were used to," and this is implied as the reason he was raptured. His successor, Pope Peter II, becomes Pontifex Maximus of Enigma Babylon One World Faith, an amalgamation of all remaining world faiths and religions.[47]

Other Catholic writers have said that while the books aren't "anti-Catholic per se", they reflect LaHaye's other writings on the subject.[48]

Despite his anti-Catholic views, he praised traditionalist Catholic director Mel Gibson's 2004 film The Passion of the Christ, saying that "Everyone should see this movie. It could be Hollywood's finest achievement to date."[49] He also endorsed Catholic convert Newt Gingrich for president in 2012.[50]

Tributes

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Time Magazine named LaHaye one of the 25 most influential evangelicals in America, and in the summer of 2001, the Evangelical Studies Bulletin named him the most influential Christian leader of the preceding quarter century.[25][43]

Awards

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He received an Honorary Doctorate in Literature from Liberty University.[51][52]

Works

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LaHaye authored over 85 books in his lifetime.[7]

Novels

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Left Behind series (with Jerry B. Jenkins)

Left Behind series:

  1. Oct. 1995, Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth's Last Days (ISBN 0-8423-2912-9)
  2. Oct. 1996, Tribulation Force: The Continuing Drama of Those Left Behind (ISBN 0-8423-2921-8)
  3. Oct. 1997, Nicolae: The Rise of Antichrist (ISBN 0-8423-2924-2)
  4. Aug. 1998, Soul Harvest: The World Takes Sides (ISBN 0-8423-2925-0)
  5. Feb. 1999, Apollyon: The Destroyer Is Unleashed (ISBN 0-8423-2926-9)
  6. Aug. 1999, Assassins: Assignment: Jerusalem, Target: Antichrist (ISBN 0-8423-2927-7)
  7. May. 2000, The Indwelling: The Beast Takes Possession (ISBN 0-8423-2929-3)
  8. Nov. 2000, The Mark: The Beast Rules the World (ISBN 0-8423-3228-6)
  9. Oct. 2001, Desecration: Antichrist Takes the Throne (ISBN 0-8423-3229-4)
  10. Jul. 2002, The Remnant: On the Brink of Armageddon (ISBN 0-8423-3230-8)
  11. Apr. 2003, Armageddon: The Cosmic Battle of the Ages (ISBN 0-8423-3236-7)
  12. Mar. 2004, Glorious Appearing: The End of Days (ISBN 0-8423-3237-5)
  13. Apr. 2007, Kingdom Come: The Final Victory (ISBN 0-8423-6061-1)

Before They Were Left Behind series (prequel):

  1. March 2005, The Rising: Before They Were Left Behind (ISBN 0-8423-6056-5)
  2. November 2005, The Regime: Before They Were Left Behind (ISBN 1-4143-0576-1)
  3. June 6, 2006, The Rapture (ISBN 1-4143-0580-X)

Left Behind: The Kids series (spin off):

  1. The Vanishings: Four Kids Face Earth's Last Days Together (1998)
  2. Second Chance: The Search For Truth (1998)
  3. Through the Flames: The Kids Risk Their Lives (1998)
  4. Facing the Future: Preparing for Battle (1998)
  5. Nicolae High: The Young Trib Force Goes Back to School (1999)
  6. The Underground: The Young Trib Force Fights Back (1999, with Chris Fabry)
  7. Busted!: The Young Trib Force Faces Pressure (2000, with Chris Fabry)
  8. Death Strike: The Young Trib Force Faces War (2000, with Chris Fabry)
  9. The Search: The Struggle to Survive (2000, with Chris Fabry)
  10. On the Run: The Young Trib Force Faces Danger (2000)
  11. Into the Storm: The Search for Secret Documents (2000, with Chris Fabry)
  12. Earthquake!: The Young Trib Force Faces Disaster (2000, with Chris Fabry)
  13. The Showdown: Behind Enemy Lines (2001, with Chris Fabry)
  14. Judgment Day: Into Raging Waters (2001, with Chris Fabry)
  15. Battling the Commander: The Hidden Cave (2001, with Chris Fabry)
  16. Fire from Heaven (2001, with Chris Fabry)
  17. Terror in the Stadium: Witnesses Under Fire (2001, with Chris Fabry)
  18. Darkening Skies: Judgment of Ice (2001, with Chris Fabry)
  19. Attack of Apollyon: Revenge of the Locusts (2002)
  20. A Dangerous Plan: Race Against Time (2002, with Chris Fabry)
  21. Secrets of New Babylon: The Search for an Imposter (2002)
  22. Escape from New Babylon: Discovering New Believers (2002, with Chris Fabry)
  23. Horsemen of Terror: The Unseen Judgment (2002, with Chris Fabry)
  24. Uplink from the Underground: Showtime for Vicki (2002, with Chris Fabry)
  25. Death at the Gala: History in the Making (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  26. The Beast Arises: Unveiling the Plan (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  27. Wildfire: Into the Great Tribulation (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  28. The Mark of the Beast: Dilemma in New Bablyon (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  29. Breakout!: Believers in Danger (2003)
  30. Murder in the Holy Place: Carpathia's Deadly Deception (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  31. Escape to Masada: Joining Operation Eagle (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  32. War of the Dragon: Miracles in the Air (2003, with Chris Fabry)
  33. Attack on Petra: Through the Inferno (2004, with Chris Fabry)
  34. Bounty Hunters: Believers in the Crosshairs (2004, with Chris Fabry)
  35. The Rise of False Messiahs: Carpathia's Evil Tricks (2004)
  36. Ominous Choices: The Race for Life (2004, with Chris Fabry)
  37. Heat Wave: Surviving the Fourth Bowl Judgment (2004, with Chris Fabry)
  38. The Perils of Love: Breaking Through the Darkness (2004, with Chris Fabry)
  39. The Road to War: Facing the Guillotine (2004, with Chris Fabry)
  40. Triumphant Return: The New Jerusalem (2004, with Chris Fabry)
Babylon Rising series
  1. October 2003, Babylon Rising, with Greg Dinallo (ISBN 0-553-80322-0)
  2. August 2004, The Secret on Ararat, with Dr. Bob Phillips, Ph.D (ISBN 0-553-80323-9)
  3. September 2005, The Europa Conspiracy, with Dr. Bob Phillips, Ph.D (ISBN 0-553-80324-7)
  4. August 29, 2006, The Edge of Darkness, with Dr. Bob Phillips, Ph.D (ISBN 0-553-80325-5)
The Jesus Chronicles series (with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  1. John's Story: The Last Eyewitness (2006) (ISBN 0-399-15389-6)
  2. Mark's Story: The Gospel According to Peter (2007)
  3. Luke's Story: By Faith Alone (2009)
  4. Matthew's Story: From Sinner To Saint (2010)
The End series (with Craig Parshall)
  1. Edge of Apocalypse (2010)
  2. Thunder of Heaven (2011)
  3. Brink of Chaos (2012)
  4. Mark of Evil (2014)
Standalone novels
  • Come Spring (2005, with Gregory S. Dinallo)
  • Always Grace (2008, with Greg Dinallo, Gregory S. Dinallo)

Comics

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Left Behind Graphic Novel series (with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  1. Left Behind: A Graphic Novel of Earth's Last Days (2001, with Aaron Lopresti, Jeffrey Moy)
  2. Tribulation Force: The Continuing Drama of Those Left Behind (2002, with Brian Augustyn)

Poems

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Nonfiction

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Self-help
  • Spirit-Controlled Temperament (1966)
  • How to Be Happy Though Married (1968)
  • Transforming Your Temperament (1971)
  • The Beginning of the End (1972)
  • How To Win Over Depression (1974)
  • Ten Steps to Victory Over Depression (1974)
  • The Act of Marriage: The Beauty of Sexual Love (1976, with Beverly LaHaye)
  • Opposites Attract (1977)
  • Understand Your Man: Secrets of the Male Temperament (1977)
  • Understanding the Male Temperament (1977)
  • Six Keys to a Happy Marriage (1978)
  • Spirit-Controlled Family Living (1978)
  • The Unhappy Gays: What Everyone Should Know About Homosexuality (1978)[53]
  • Your Temperament Can Be Changed (1978)
  • Anger Is a Choice (1982, with Dr. Bob Phillips, Ph.D)
  • How to Manage Pressure Before Pressure Manages You (1983)
  • Increase Your Personality Power (1984)
  • Practical Answers to Common Questions about Sex in Marriage (1984)
  • The Coming Peace in the Middle East (1984)
  • Your Temperament: Discover Its Potential (1984)
  • What Lovemaking Means to a... series:
    1. What Lovemaking Means to a Woman: Practical Advice to Married Women about Sex (1984)
    2. What Lovemaking Means to a Man: Practical Advice to Married Men about Sex (1984)
  • Sex Education is for the Family (1985)
  • Why You Act the Way You Do (1987)
  • Finding the Will of God in a Crazy, Mixed-Up World (1989)
  • If Ministers Fall, Can They Be Restored? (1990)
  • Our Life Together (1990, with Richard Exley)
  • I Love You, But Why Are We So Different?: Making the Most of Personality Differences in Your Marriage (1991)
  • Raising Sexually Pure Kids: How to Prepare Your Children for The Act of Marriage (1993)
  • Smart Money (1994, with Jerry Tuma)
  • The Spirit-Filled Family: Expanded for the Challenges of Today (1995, with Beverly LaHaye)
  • Gathering Lilies from Among the Thorns: Finding the Mate God Has for You (1998, with Beverly LaHaye)
  • The Power of the Cross (1998)
  • The Act of Marriage After 40 (2000, with Beverly LaHaye, Mike Yorkey)
  • Soul Survivor series:
    1. Mind Siege: The Battle for the Truth (2000, with David A. Noebel)
    2. All the Rave (2002, with Bob DeMoss)
    3. The Last Dance (2002, with Bob DeMoss)
    4. Black Friday (2003, with Bob DeMoss)
  • Perhaps Today: Living Everyday in the Light of Christ's Return (2001, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • The Transparent Leader: Spiritual Secrets of Nineteen Successful Men (2001, with Dwight L. Johnson, Dean Nelson)
  • Heart Attacked: How to Keep and Guard Your Heart for God (2002, with Ed Hindson)
  • Seduction of the Heart (2002, with Ed Hindson)
  • Embracing Eternity: Living Each Day with a Heart Toward Heaven (2004, with Jerry B. Jenkins, Frank M. Martin)
  • Jesus and the Hope of His Coming (2004, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • Turn Your Life Around: Break Free from Your Past to a New and Better You (2006, with Tim Clinton)
  • The Essential Guide to Bible Prophecy: 13 Keys to Understanding the End Times (2012, with Ed Hindson)
  • A Quick Look at the Rapture and the Second Coming (2013)
History:
  • Faith of Our Founding Fathers (1987)
  • Hitler, God & the Bible (2012, with Ray Comfort)
Politics
  • The Hidden Censors (1984)
Religion
  • Revelation Unveiled (1973)
  • Revelation: Illustrated and Made Plain (1973)
  • How to Study the Bible for Yourself (1976)
  • The Ark on Ararat (1976, with John D. Morris)
  • Life in the Afterlife: What Really Happens After Death? (1980)

  • The Battle for the Mind/Family series:
    1. The Battle for the Mind (1980)
    2. The Battle for the Family (1981)
  • The Battle for the Public Schools (1982)
  • The Race for the 21st Century (1986)
  • No Fear of the Storm: Why Christians Will Escape All the Tribulation, AKA Rapture Under Attack: Will Christians Escape the Tribulation?, AKA The Rapture: Who Will Face the Tribulation? (1992)
  • Understanding Bible Prophecy for Yourself (1992)
  • Jesus: Who Is He? (1996)
  • Understanding the Last Days (1998)
  • Bible Prophecy: What You Need to Know (1999)
  • Are We Living in the End Times? (1999, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • Tim LaHaye Prophecy Study Bible (2000)
  • The Complete Bible Prophecy Chart (2001, with Thomas Ice)
  • The Merciful God of Prophecy: His Loving Plan for You in the End Times (2002)
  • End Times Controversy: The Second Coming Under Attack (2003)
  • God Always Keeps His Promises (2003, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • The Promise of Heaven (2003, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • These Will Not Be Left Behind: Incredible Stories of Lives Transformed After Reading the Left Behind Novels (2003, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • A Kid's Guide to Understanding the End Times (2004, with Jerry B. Jenkins, Chris Fabry)
  • Jesus Is Coming Soon!: A Kid's Guide to Bible Prophecy and the End Times (2004, with Jerry B. Jenkins)
  • Why Believe in Jesus? (2004)
  • The Authorized Left Behind Handbook (2005, with Jerry B. Jenkins, Sandi L. Swanson)
  • The Best Christmas Gift (2005, with Greg Dinallo, Gregory S. Dinallo)
  • A Party of Two: The Dating, Marriage, and Family Guide, AKA Party of Two: Lessons for Staying in Step in Dating, Marriage, and Family Life (2006, with Beverly LaHaye)
  • The Popular Bible Prophecy Workbook: An Interactive Guide to Understanding the End Times (2006, with Ed Hindson)
  • Global Warning: Are We on the Brink of World War III? (2007, with Ed Hindson)
  • The Popular Bible Prophecy Commentary: Understanding the Meaning of Every Prophetic Passage (2007, with Ed Hindson)
  • Jesus: Why the World Is Still Fascinated by Him (2009)
  • The Book of Revelation Made Clear: A Down-to-Earth Guide to Understanding the Most Mysterious Book of the Bible (2014, with Timothy E. Parker)
  • Target Israel: Caught in the Crosshairs of the End Times (2015, with Ed Hindson)
  • Bible Prophecy for Everyone: What You Need to Know About the End Times (2016)
  • Who Will Face the Tribulation?: How to Prepare for the Rapture and Christ's Return (2016)

See also

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Timothy Francis LaHaye (April 27, 1926 – July 25, 2016) was an American evangelical Protestant minister, author, and conservative political advocate who co-authored the Left Behind series of novels with Jerry B. Jenkins, achieving sales exceeding 80 million copies worldwide and significantly shaping popular understandings of biblical prophecy and end-times events among evangelical Christians.[1][2] LaHaye's career encompassed pastoring churches in California, founding organizations such as the Institute for Creation Research's precursor efforts and the Family Life Seminars to promote biblical family principles, and engaging in political activism through groups like the Moral Majority to counter perceived secular and humanistic influences in American society.[1][3] His writings and advocacy emphasized dispensational premillennialism, literal interpretation of prophecy, and the integration of Christian theology into public policy, drawing both widespread acclaim for mobilizing conservative Christians and criticism for promoting apocalyptic fears and partisan alignments.[1]

Early Life and Formation

Childhood and Family Influences

Timothy F. LaHaye was born on April 27, 1926, in Detroit, Michigan, into a modest working-class family tied to the city's dominant auto industry.[4] His father, Frank LaHaye, worked as a Ford autoworker, while his mother, Margaret Palmer LaHaye, managed family affairs in a household of three children amid the economic fluctuations of the era.[5] [1] This environment, centered in the industrial heartland, exposed young LaHaye to values of diligence and self-reliance inherent in blue-collar life.[4] LaHaye's adolescence was markedly shaped by his father's sudden death from a heart attack in 1936, when Tim was nine years old.[1] [4] The loss thrust the family into financial distress, prompting Margaret to take a job at Ford and the household to depend on welfare assistance, which necessitated early maturity and responsibility from LaHaye as the family navigated survival without a primary breadwinner.[1] [4] This hardship fostered resilience, as LaHaye later reflected on the event's role in compelling him toward independence amid grief and economic pressure.[1] The family's regular attendance at a Baptist church provided LaHaye's initial exposure to evangelical faith, where his mother served as fellowship director and an uncle pastored, immersing him in conservative preaching that prioritized biblical literalism.[1] This fundamentalist-oriented home and church setting cultivated an early wariness of liberal theological shifts, emphasizing scriptural inerrancy over modernist accommodations and laying foundational influences for his enduring conservative perspectives.[1] [6]

Military Service and Spiritual Conversion

LaHaye enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces in 1944, shortly after completing night school and graduating early from high school in Pontiac, Michigan.[1] [7] At age 18, he attained the rank of sergeant and served for two years in the European Theater of Operations during the final phases of World War II.[1] [8] Assigned as a machine gunner aboard a bomber, LaHaye participated in combat operations that exposed him to the war's brutal realities, including the ethical complexities of destruction and survival amid widespread devastation.[7] [4] These experiences contributed to a post-war disillusionment with secular ideologies, such as humanism, which he later viewed as inadequate for addressing human moral failings observed in global conflict.[1] This period marked a turning point, fostering a renewed commitment to evangelical Christianity rooted in biblical literalism and personal accountability. Following his discharge, LaHaye underwent a profound spiritual awakening, solidifying his born-again faith and directing him toward full-time ministry.[1] In 1946, he enrolled at Bob Jones University to pursue theological training, reflecting a deliberate shift from nominal religiosity—stemming from his Baptist upbringing—to active fundamentalist conviction.[1] [9] This transformation, influenced by wartime reflections on human depravity and the limits of non-theistic worldviews, laid the groundwork for his lifelong advocacy of scriptural inerrancy and cultural engagement against perceived moral decay.[8]

Education and Initial Calling

LaHaye enrolled at Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina, in 1946 following his military service, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1950 from the conservative institution known for its emphasis on fundamentalist theology and biblical inerrancy.[1] This choice reflected a deliberate avoidance of more liberal mainstream seminaries, favoring environments that upheld strict literal interpretations of Scripture over progressive hermeneutics. Later, he completed a Doctor of Ministry at Western Conservative Baptist Seminary in Portland, Oregon, in 1977, further solidifying his academic foundation in evangelical scholarship.[1] He also received an honorary Doctor of Literature from Liberty University.[1] During his studies and early career, LaHaye drew significant influence from dispensational premillennialist theologians, including John F. Walvoord, whose works reinforced a commitment to prophetic literalism and distinguished LaHaye's views from allegorical or amillennial traditions dominant in some denominational seminaries.[10] This theological framework shaped his rejection of diluted interpretations, prioritizing causal connections between biblical texts and historical fulfillment over symbolic readings. LaHaye's initial vocational steps stemmed from a post-World War II sense of calling to address spiritual erosion in American society, particularly among youth facing moral and cultural upheavals.[1] This manifested in early preaching engagements starting in 1948 and subsequent youth-oriented initiatives, such as family life programming in the 1950s, aimed at countering secular influences through evangelistic outreach.[1]

Ministerial Career

Early Pastoral Roles

LaHaye commenced his pastoral career shortly after completing his education at Bob Jones University in 1950, initially serving Baptist churches in Pickens, South Carolina, from 1948 to 1950, followed by a congregation in Minneapolis, Minnesota, from 1950 to 1956.[11] These early roles involved leading modest-sized assemblies in the fundamentalist tradition, where he prioritized evangelistic outreach and congregational growth through personal discipleship amid the post-World War II cultural transitions, including rising secular influences and the pervasive anticommunist sentiment of the era.[12] [1] In these positions, LaHaye stressed biblical exposition on family structures and societal threats, delivering sermons that underscored traditional marital roles and vigilance against ideological encroachments like communism, which he and fellow evangelicals viewed as antithetical to Christian principles.[1] He also introduced structured Bible study approaches, teaching lay members systematic methods for personal Scripture engagement—techniques that later formed the basis of his instructional materials and drew adherents frustrated by the perceived theological dilutions in mainline Protestant circles.[13] These efforts fostered grassroots communities centered on literalist interpretation and moral fortitude, countering the liberalizing trends in broader American Christianity during the 1950s. By 1956, LaHaye accepted the senior pastorate at Scott Memorial Baptist Church in El Cajon, California, relocating his family westward to extend his ministry into a region experiencing accelerated urbanization and ethical shifts.[1] [11] This move marked the transition from his initial Midwestern and Southern postings, positioning him to build a congregation responsive to the moral challenges of coastal society while maintaining his commitment to independent Baptist autonomy, including eventual separation from denominational affiliations amid doctrinal disputes.[14]

Leadership at Shadow Mountain Community Church

In 1956, Tim LaHaye assumed the role of senior pastor at Scott Memorial Baptist Church in El Cajon, California, succeeding previous leadership and serving in that capacity for 25 years until 1981.[1][11] During his tenure, the church underwent substantial expansion, growing into a multi-campus ministry that included new facilities such as a gymnasium and sanctuary, while establishing additional congregations to accommodate increasing attendance.[15][16] LaHaye's approach centered on verse-by-verse biblical exposition, emphasizing premillennial dispensational theology and practical application of Scripture to daily life, which fostered community engagement through programs like family-oriented events and lay-led Bible studies. LaHaye directed church teachings to uphold scriptural inerrancy, explicitly rejecting evolutionary theory in favor of young-earth creationism as the foundational explanation of origins, arguing that empirical evidence supported biblical accounts over naturalistic paradigms.[17] He similarly critiqued secular psychology as humanistic and incompatible with Christian doctrine, advocating instead for nouthetic counseling models that addressed behavioral issues through direct confrontation with biblical truths rather than therapeutic techniques divorced from divine authority.[18] Central to LaHaye's pastoral counseling was his adaptation of the ancient four-temperament framework—sanguine, choleric, melancholic, and phlegmatic—presented as biblically rooted in descriptions from the New Testament and Hippocratic traditions, to diagnose personality predispositions and prescribe Spirit-led transformation for overcoming innate weaknesses like anger or fear.[19] This method, detailed in his writings, informed one-on-one sessions and group discipleship, aiming to align natural dispositions with Holy Spirit control for effective Christian living, distinct from empirical personality inventories like Myers-Briggs by prioritizing theological etiology over environmental or genetic determinism alone.[20]

Founding of Educational and Outreach Institutions

In 1965, Tim LaHaye co-founded Christian Unified Schools of San Diego with his wife Beverly, creating a K-12 educational system as an alternative to the secular humanist influences infiltrating public school curricula, with a focus on integrating biblical truth and moral instruction into core subjects.[21] The initiative stemmed from LaHaye's observations of declining academic and ethical standards in state education, prompting the development of Christian-centered pedagogy that prioritized factual historical and scientific interpretations aligned with scriptural accounts.[21] LaHaye extended this educational vision to higher learning by co-founding Christian Heritage College in 1970 alongside creation scientist Henry M. Morris, establishing the institution adjacent to his Scott Memorial Chapel in San Diego to train students in liberal arts infused with young-earth creationism and opposition to Darwinian evolution.[22][1] The college, later renamed San Diego Christian College, emphasized empirical challenges to uniformitarian geology and biological gradualism, drawing on geological formations and fossil records reinterpreted as evidence for catastrophic biblical events like Noah's Flood.[23] LaHaye's role involved recruiting faculty committed to these principles and integrating creation research into the curriculum to equip future leaders against materialist indoctrination in mainstream academia.[22] Complementing formal education, LaHaye and Beverly launched Family Life Seminars in the mid-1960s, evolving into a national outreach by 1971 that delivered workshops on marital harmony and parental guidance, reaching thousands through presentations on temperament theory derived from observable behavioral consistencies across cultures.[1][24] These seminars trained church leaders and couples using LaHaye's framework of four temperaments—sanguine (extroverted and responsive), choleric (driven and commanding), melancholic (analytical and perfectionist), and phlegmatic (calm and diplomatic)—patterns he documented from pastoral counseling experiences and historical precedents, advocating their alignment with spiritual disciplines for relational stability.[25] Works such as Spirit-Controlled Temperament (1966) provided resources grounded in these classifications, citing repeated interpersonal dynamics as causal factors in family discord resolvable through faith-based self-awareness rather than secular therapies.[26] LaHaye furthered creationist education by co-founding the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) in 1972 with Morris, initially housed under Christian Heritage College, to conduct systematic investigations into scientific data supporting a literal six-day creation and approximate 6,000-year earth history.[22][27] ICR's outreach materials, disseminated through seminars and publications, highlighted empirical anomalies like soft tissue in dinosaur fossils and rapid sedimentation layers as indicators of recent origins, countering neo-Darwinist timelines with field-based evidence and mathematical modeling of decay rates.[28] LaHaye contributed as a board member, leveraging ICR resources in his institutions to foster a generation of educators and apologists equipped to defend biblical historicity against evolutionary presuppositions dominant in public and academic spheres.[27]

Political and Cultural Activism

Organization Building and Moral Majority Involvement

In the late 1970s, LaHaye organized conservative Christian networks in California through the formation of Californians for Biblical Morality, a coalition of right-wing pastors aimed at opposing the expansion of homosexual rights in public institutions. This group mobilized against Proposition 6, the 1978 Briggs Initiative, which proposed barring gays and supporters of homosexuality from teaching in California public schools; while the measure failed at the polls with 41% support, the campaign compiled extensive mailing lists and contact databases of evangelical activists that later fueled broader political efforts.[3][29] LaHaye's organizational acumen culminated in 1979 when he co-founded the Moral Majority alongside Jerry Falwell, establishing a national platform to register and activate previously apolitical evangelicals. The group focused on voter turnout drives, enlisting millions of conservative Christians—many first-time voters—through church-based recruitment and direct-mail campaigns, which demonstrably shifted turnout patterns and aided Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential victory by aligning evangelical support with Republican platforms opposing abortion and secularist policies.[30][31] Complementing these initiatives, LaHaye supported his wife Beverly's founding of Concerned Women for America in 1979, an advocacy group that empowered conservative women to lobby on traditional family values, amassing over 500,000 members by the mid-1980s through targeted outreach and countering feminist-driven agendas like the Equal Rights Amendment without adopting gender-role distortions. These efforts exemplified data-driven mobilization, leveraging voter registries and issue-based coalitions to defeat or stall left-leaning propositions on social issues in multiple states.[32][33]

Advocacy Against Secularism and Communism

In his 1980 book The Battle for the Mind, LaHaye identified secular humanism as a man-centered philosophy promoting atheism, evolutionism, and moral relativism, which he argued had infiltrated American education, entertainment media, and judicial systems, fostering societal decay incompatible with biblical principles.[34][35] He contended that this ideology undergirded totalitarian systems like communism, whose atheistic materialism denied divine authority and led to empirical failures in regimes suppressing religious freedom.[18] LaHaye urged Christians to combat this "subtle warfare" by rejecting humanist tenets in public policy, asserting no adherent qualified for governmental office due to inherent conflicts with Judeo-Christian ethics.[36] LaHaye championed American exceptionalism rooted in the nation's covenantal heritage under God, viewing it as a bulwark against encroachments of globalist structures that eroded national sovereignty.[37] He criticized efforts toward one-world governance, including through the United Nations, as advancing disarmament and supranational authority that weakened U.S. military resolve, citing historical losses in Korea and Vietnam as consequences of humanist-influenced restraint.[18][38] This stance framed resistance to such agendas as essential for preserving a biblically informed republic against relativistic erosion. LaHaye aligned with Ronald Reagan's administration in linking evangelical faith to anti-communist resolve, contributing to Reagan's 1984 reelection campaign amid praise for the president's denunciations of Soviet aggression as an "evil empire."[39] He connected moral relativism—epitomized by secular humanism—to threats against national survival, advocating policies that integrated Christian worldview into governance to counter communist expansionism and domestic cultural decline.[40] This advocacy positioned faith-driven conservatism as a causal antidote to atheistic ideologies' historical track record of oppression and failure.[37]

Influence on Conservative Politics and Policy

LaHaye exerted influence on Republican electoral politics through strategic mobilization of evangelical voters. In the 2000 presidential election, he actively worked to secure Religious Right support for George W. Bush, leveraging his networks from organizations like the Moral Majority to boost turnout among conservative Christians, which contributed to Bush's narrow victory in key states.[4] This effort helped solidify evangelical alignment with the GOP, with exit polls showing white evangelicals comprising about 40% of the Republican primary electorate and delivering over 80% support for Bush. LaHaye extended this impact to subsequent cycles by endorsing Mike Huckabee's 2008 Republican presidential bid on December 5, 2007, as part of Huckabee's Iowa Pastors Coalition.[41] His backing, alongside other evangelical leaders, amplified Huckabee's surge in Iowa, where the former Arkansas governor won the January 3, 2008, caucus with 41% of the vote, driven by over 60% support from born-again voters.[42] This outcome underscored LaHaye's role in channeling faith-based constituencies toward candidates prioritizing traditional values, influencing GOP nomination dynamics. On policy fronts, LaHaye critiqued federal expansions into areas like education and welfare as encroachments on individual and familial responsibilities, arguing for government's restriction to biblically delineated functions such as punishing wrongdoing, in line with interpretations of Romans 13 emphasizing order without overreach.[43] Following the September 11, 2001, attacks, his analyses connected Islamist terrorism to persistent geopolitical instabilities in the Middle East, bolstering evangelical endorsement of Bush administration measures like the USA PATRIOT Act and military interventions, framed as defensive necessities against radical threats rather than expansive ideological crusades.[44]

Theological Framework

Premillennial Dispensational Eschatology

Tim LaHaye's eschatological framework centered on premillennial dispensationalism, which interprets biblical prophecy as outlining distinct dispensations in God's dealings with humanity, culminating in Christ's premillennial return to establish a literal 1,000-year earthly kingdom following a seven-year tribulation.[45] He maintained a strict distinction between Israel and the Church, viewing the former as the recipient of unfulfilled Old Testament promises regarding national restoration, while the Church represents a parenthetical grace period in God's prophetic timeline.[46] This separation, drawn from a literal exegesis of texts like Daniel 9 and Revelation 20, underpins the pre-tribulational rapture doctrine LaHaye championed, wherein believers are translated to heaven before the tribulation's judgments unfold, as articulated in his 2006 book The Rapture: Who Will Face the Tribulation?.[47] LaHaye insisted on interpreting prophecy literally unless context demands otherwise, rejecting allegorical approaches that blur these dispensational boundaries and delay Israel's prophetic role.[48] LaHaye critiqued alternative eschatologies like postmillennialism for promoting an unbiblical optimism that anticipates gradual societal improvement through Christian influence, culminating in a golden age before Christ's return, which he saw as incompatible with scriptural depictions of escalating global tribulation and apostasy in the end times.[49] He argued that historical patterns—evidenced by repeated cycles of moral decay, empire collapses, and rejection of divine revelation from ancient civilizations to modern secularism—contradict any notion of progressive human betterment absent divine intervention.[46] Instead, premillennial dispensationalism aligns with empirical observations of intensifying evil and unfulfilled prophecies, positioning the tribulation as a necessary precursor to Christ's victorious intervention rather than a post-conversion era of peace.[47] A hallmark of LaHaye's system was the doctrine of imminency, positing that the rapture could occur at any moment without preceding signs, fostering an "at-any-moment expectancy" that motivates vigilant holiness, fervent evangelism, and missionary outreach over reliance on social or political transformations to usher in the kingdom.[47] This urgency, rooted in passages like 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18 and Titus 2:13, distinguishes pre-tribulational premillennialism from views requiring observable precursors, such as antichrist revelation or widespread gospel success, and underscores LaHaye's emphasis on personal purity and readiness as direct outcomes of eschatological hope.[46] Through institutions like the Pre-Trib Research Center, founded in 1994, he sought to equip believers with this framework, defending its scriptural fidelity against dilutions that prioritize earthly dominion.[46]

Biblical Foundations for End-Times Prophecy

LaHaye grounded his end-times timeline in a literal interpretation of Daniel 9:24-27, positing that the "seventy weeks" decreed for Israel and Jerusalem consist of 490 years, with the first 69 weeks (483 years) culminating in the Messiah's arrival and rejection, followed by a prophetic gap during the church age, and the final week manifesting as a future seven-year tribulation period.[50] This 70th week, he argued, begins with the Antichrist confirming a covenant with Israel, only to break it after three and a half years, unleashing unprecedented global judgments described in Revelation 6–19 as corresponding to the "time of Jacob's trouble" in Jeremiah 30:7.[51] Unlike historicist views that retrospectively apply the Antichrist label to figures such as popes or emperors, LaHaye insisted on a future, singular Antichrist as a charismatic world leader empowered by Satan, emerging post-rapture to deceive nations during this unfulfilled interval, thereby preserving the prophecy's specificity against allegorical dilutions.[52] In harmonizing the Olivet Discourse with Old Testament prophecies, LaHaye emphasized Jesus' warnings in Matthew 24:4–31, Mark 13, and Luke 21 as outlining sequential signs of the end times, including false christs, wars, earthquakes, and the abomination of desolation, which he linked directly to Daniel's timeline rather than spiritualizing them as ongoing church-age realities. He particularly highlighted the parable of the fig tree in Matthew 24:32–34, interpreting Israel's national restoration—marked by its reestablishment as a sovereign state on May 14, 1948—as the "budding" signifying that the generation witnessing these events would not pass until all prophecies culminate in Christ's return.[53] This restoration, foretold in Ezekiel 37 and Amos 9:14–15, served as empirical validation of prophetic literalism, countering amillennial tendencies to view such texts as symbolic of the church's spiritual ingathering without regard for Israel's distinct future role. LaHaye defended the pretribulational rapture as essential to maintaining scriptural imminence, wherein Christ's descent for the church (1 Thessalonians 4:16–17) could occur at any moment without prerequisite signs, fostering vigilant expectancy as urged in Titus 2:13 and Revelation 3:10's promise to keep believers from the hour of trial.[54] This view, he contended, avoids the predictive failures of historicism, which maps prophecies onto historical events like the Reformation, thereby eroding urgency by implying fulfilled prerequisites; instead, it upholds the rapture's signlessness, distinguishing it from the subsequent tribulation signs visible only to those left behind, and aligns with John's removal in Revelation 4:1 prior to the seals' opening.[55]

Critiques of Alternative Christian Doctrines

LaHaye maintained that deviations from premillennial dispensationalism, particularly those involving allegorical interpretations or extra-biblical traditions, inevitably eroded scriptural authority and paved the way for theological liberalism by prioritizing human reason or cultural accommodation over literal exegesis. He argued that such alternatives obscured God's distinct dealings with Israel and the Church, fostering supersessionist errors and reducing prophecy to symbolic moral lessons, which in turn diminished urgency for evangelism and personal repentance in favor of institutional or social emphases. This causal chain, per LaHaye, explained the drift of many denominations toward doctrinal compromise, as non-literal hermeneutics invited modernist revisions akin to higher criticism's assaults on biblical inerrancy.[56] In The Gospel According to Rome: Comparing Catholic Tradition and the Word of God (1995), LaHaye systematically critiqued core Catholic doctrines, asserting that Mariology—elevating Mary to co-redemptrix status—and the papacy's claims to infallibility and primacy represented idolatrous innovations absent from New Testament teachings. He traced these developments to historical syncretism, empirically evidenced by early church adoptions of pagan titles and rituals, such as imperial veneration practices under Constantine that paralleled goddess worship, thereby diluting monotheistic purity and introducing hierarchical authoritarianism incompatible with sola scriptura. LaHaye opposed covenant theology's framework, which he saw as allegorizing unconditional promises to Abraham's physical descendants (e.g., land covenants in Genesis 15 and Deuteronomy 30), leading to replacement theology where the Church inherits Israel's role and nullifies future national restoration prophecies. This interpretive method, in his view, causally contributed to amillennial or postmillennial optimism that downplayed imminent tribulation and Christ's literal reign, fostering complacency and vulnerability to liberal theologies that further spiritualized eschatology into vague ethical ideals rather than verifiable historical fulfillments.[57] Regarding mainline Protestant denominations, LaHaye decried their shift toward social justice priorities as a Marxist infiltration that subordinated gospel proclamation—focused on individual sin and salvation—to collective economic redistribution and activism, evidenced by 20th-century endorsements of welfare statism over missions. In Mind Siege: The Battle for Truth in the New Millennium (2001, co-authored with David Noebel), he linked this to broader humanistic ideologies drawing from Marx and Darwin, arguing that abandoning dispensational literalism allowed such churches to recast Scripture as a tool for societal engineering, empirically correlating with declining orthodoxy and membership as tracked in denominational statistics from the mid-1900s onward.[56][43]

Key Social Positions

Defense of Traditional Marriage and Family

LaHaye advocated a complementarian framework for marriage rooted in Ephesians 5:22–33, positing the husband as loving head of the household and the wife as submissive helper, roles he viewed as divinely ordained for mutual fulfillment and childrearing efficacy rather than interchangeable egalitarianism.[58] In The Battle for the Family (1981), he contended that feminist-driven role reversals eroded these structures, correlating with empirical trends like the U.S. divorce rate tripling from 2.2 per 1,000 population in 1960 to 5.2 by 1980, which he attributed causally to diminished commitment and authority clarity in homes. Such deviations, per LaHaye, fostered instability, as evidenced by higher familial discord in non-traditional setups compared to biblically aligned ones exhibiting lower dissolution risks when male breadwinning predominated.[59] Complementing this, LaHaye's Family Life Seminars, launched in 1971 and conducted over 900 times across North America, instructed couples in temperament-based conflict resolution—drawing from the four classical types (sanguine, choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic) outlined in his Why You Act the Way You Do (1984)—to align spousal interactions with scriptural ideals.[1][60] Participants reportedly experienced marital restorations and enhanced unity, with seminars emphasizing proactive harmony over reactive dissolution, yielding anecdotal successes in preventing breakdowns amid cultural pressures.[61] LaHaye further critiqued no-fault divorce statutes, proliferating from California's 1969 law onward, as eroding marriage's covenantal permanence by prioritizing individual exit over redemptive perseverance, a stance he reinforced in How to Be Happy Though Married (1968, revised 1981) by demonstrating harmony's attainability through biblical principles absent easy severance. He linked these reforms to accelerated cultural decay, including fatherless homes and youth delinquency spikes, urging legislative and personal recommitment to lifelong vows for societal repair.[58]

Opposition to Homosexuality from Scriptural Perspective

LaHaye grounded his opposition to homosexuality in biblical texts that unequivocally classify homosexual acts as sinful, including Leviticus 18:22, which states, "You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination," and Romans 1:26-27, which describes such relations as "contrary to nature" and a consequence of exchanging natural relations for unnatural ones. In his writings, he interpreted these passages as timeless divine prohibitions against same-sex behavior, rejecting modern reinterpretations that contextualize them solely to ancient idolatry or hygiene, and instead affirmed their applicability to contemporary conduct as part of God's created order for human sexuality.[62] In The Unhappy Gays (1978), LaHaye contended that homosexual orientation arises from a combination of faulty upbringing, seduction, and volitional choices rather than immutable genetics or biology, drawing on psychological analyses that emphasized learned behaviors over innate traits.[63] He highlighted personal testimonies from self-identified former homosexuals who reported successful transformation through Christian conversion and therapy, asserting that faith in Christ enables repentance and redirection toward heterosexual norms, in contrast to secular affirmations that normalize the condition without offering deliverance.[64] These accounts, he argued, demonstrated the malleability of sexual preferences under spiritual intervention, challenging the era's emerging narrative of fixed identity. LaHaye linked the rise in homosexual advocacy to the shortcomings of secular psychology, particularly Freudian theories that pathologized normal development while later depathologizing homosexuality amid cultural pressures, leading to what he saw as misguided normalization.[65] He cited elevated rates of emotional distress, including depression and suicide, among homosexuals—documented in contemporaneous studies—as evidence of the inherent unhappiness stemming from defiance of biblical design, rather than external stigma alone.[66] This perspective framed acceptance of homosexuality as moral relativism that erodes absolute truth, with LaHaye warning in the book that widespread promotion would precipitate broader societal decay, such as weakened family units through redefined marriage and increased relational instability.[67] Subsequent demographic trends, including rising divorce rates and non-traditional household formations post-1970s cultural shifts, aligned with his forecasted consequences of prioritizing individual desires over scriptural family ideals.[68]

Resistance to Globalist Agendas and Secular Humanism

LaHaye critiqued supranational bodies like the United Nations, established on October 24, 1945, as mechanisms advancing centralized authority that supplanted national self-determination with collective mandates. He argued that the UN's promotion of disarmament treaties and population control measures, such as those outlined in its 1974 World Population Plan of Action, prioritized global resource allocation over individual liberties and biblical views on family proliferation.[69] In a 2003 discussion, LaHaye linked Christian wariness of globalism to its trajectory toward unified governance, citing the UN's structure as an early institutional embodiment of such ambitions.[70] He extended similar scrutiny to the European Economic Community, formed in 1957 and evolving into the European Union by 1993, portraying its economic integration and supranational decision-making as precedents for broader power consolidation that diminished sovereign accountability.[71] Central to LaHaye's analysis was secular humanism, which he characterized in his 1980 book The Battle for the Mind as an ideology positing human intellect as supreme, independent of divine oversight, thereby enabling self-exaltation akin to historical idolatries. He traced its infiltration into American institutions via post-1945 educational reforms, including the 1954 Humanist Manifesto II, which endorsed situational ethics and rejected theistic absolutes, correlating these shifts with quantifiable societal deteriorations such as a 20% rise in U.S. suicide rates from 1950 to 1980 amid declining religious adherence.[72] LaHaye contended that humanism's causal displacement of God-centered purpose engendered nihilistic outcomes, evidenced by empirical data from the era showing elevated despair in secularized demographics, including youth exposed to evolutionary and relativistic curricula that undermined purpose-derived resilience.[18] To counter these developments, LaHaye promoted vigilant, knowledge-based opposition rooted in the providential framing of U.S. foundational texts, such as the 1776 Declaration of Independence's invocation of "Nature's God" and "Creator" as endowments of rights. He founded the American Coalition for Traditional Values in 1983 to mobilize education and advocacy, urging Christians to discern and resist encroachments through civic engagement rather than isolation, emphasizing historical reliance on Judeo-Christian axioms for stable governance.[73] This approach framed resistance as a defense of empirically verifiable liberties, contrasting globalist uniformity with decentralized, faith-informed structures that had sustained American exceptionalism since 1776.

Literary Contributions

Development and Impact of the Left Behind Series

The Left Behind series originated from Tim LaHaye's vision to dramatize premillennial dispensational eschatology through fiction, collaborating with writer Jerry B. Jenkins after approaching him in 1994; the first novel, Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth's Last Days, was published by Tyndale House on November 1, 1995, initially conceived as a standalone work depicting the rapture and ensuing tribulation.[2] The partnership leveraged LaHaye's theological expertise on biblical prophecy with Jenkins's narrative skills, expanding into a 16-book adult series spanning 1995 to 2007, alongside prequel and sequel volumes, which fictionalized events from the rapture through the battle of Armageddon based on interpretations of Revelation and Daniel.[2] [74] The series achieved unprecedented commercial success, selling over 80 million copies worldwide by 2016, with multiple titles topping The New York Times bestseller lists and sustaining monthly sales of around 15,000 copies as of 2022, demonstrating its penetration into both evangelical and broader markets despite theological critiques from amillennial and postmillennial perspectives.[75] [74] [76] Adaptations extended its reach, including three direct-to-video films released between 2000 and 2005 starring Kirk Cameron, a 2014 theatrical reboot featuring Nicolas Cage, and graphic novel versions, embedding dispensational end-times motifs into popular media and influencing discussions of apocalypse in non-evangelical pop culture.[77] [75] Quantitatively, the franchise's scale—encompassing dozens of ancillary products—correlated with heightened evangelical engagement in prophecy studies, as evidenced by its role in spotlighting end-times interest among conservative Protestants during the 1990s and 2000s, though direct causal links to broader Bible sales increases remain anecdotal amid the era's overall Christian publishing boom.[78] This mainstream traction, undeterred by criticisms of sensationalism or interpretive liberties with scripture, empirically revived awareness of rapture and tribulation narratives, fostering dispensationalism's visibility beyond niche circles.[2] [76]

Non-Fiction Works on Prophecy and Temperament

LaHaye's non-fiction works on biblical prophecy emphasized literal interpretation of Scripture, particularly through premillennial dispensationalism, offering practical guidance for believers anticipating end-times events. In Revelation Unveiled (1999), he delivered a verse-by-verse commentary on the Book of Revelation, interpreting apocalyptic symbols—such as the four horsemen and the mark of the beast—via the historical-grammatical method, which prioritizes the original language, cultural context, and author's intent over allegorical approaches.[79] This method, LaHaye argued, resolves ambiguities by grounding prophecy in verifiable historical fulfillments of prior biblical predictions, enabling readers to apply eschatological teachings to personal vigilance against spiritual deception.[80] Other prophecy-focused titles, including The Merciful God of Prophecy (1983) and contributions to The Popular Encyclopedia of Bible Prophecy (2004, co-authored with Ed Hindson), extended this framework to survey Old and New Testament prophecies, stressing their relevance for church preparation amid global uncertainties.[81] Complementing his prophetic writings, LaHaye's temperament series integrated ancient psychological categories with biblical principles to foster self-awareness and spiritual maturity. Spirit-Controlled Temperament (first published 1966, revised editions thereafter) categorized human behavior into four primary types—sanguine, choleric, melancholic, and phlegmatic—drawing from Galen's classical framework while subordinating it to scriptural exhortations for Holy Spirit influence.[82] LaHaye posited that innate temperaments explain behavioral patterns but require divine transformation to mitigate weaknesses, such as the melancholic's perfectionism yielding to grace-enabled balance, thereby enhancing efficacy in pastoral counseling and marital dynamics.[19] This approach, detailed across related works like Why You Act the Way You Do (1984), demonstrated causal connections between unchecked thought patterns and spiritual stagnation, advocating renewal through Philippians 4:8's mind-renewal directive for practical church application in discipleship programs.[83] Spanning over 50 non-fiction titles, LaHaye's corpus on these themes underscored the interplay between eschatological awareness and temperamental self-mastery, equipping individuals for resilient faith amid prophetic fulfillment.[84] These texts, often used in evangelical seminaries and counseling ministries, prioritized empirical observation of human nature alongside doctrinal fidelity, avoiding speculative futurism in favor of actionable insights for congregational health.[85]

Broader Authorship and Collaborative Efforts

LaHaye extended his prophetic teachings into collaborative projects with the Institute for Creation Research (ICR), where he served on the board of trustees from its founding in 1970 until 2007, contributing to materials advocating young-earth creationism as a counter to evolutionary theory in educational contexts.[22] These efforts included resources designed to engage younger audiences with biblical literalism on origins, aligning with his broader commitment to scriptural authority over secular scientific consensus.[23] In partnership with prophecy scholar Thomas Ice, LaHaye co-authored and edited several reference works synthesizing dispensationalist scholarship, such as Charting the End Times (2001), featuring over 50 full-color charts and timelines to visualize biblical prophecies from Genesis to Revelation.[86] Similarly, The Popular Handbook on the Rapture (2012) compiled contributions from multiple experts to examine pretribulational rapture doctrine through scriptural exegesis, providing a comprehensive resource for lay readers.[87] These handbooks emphasized first-principles interpretation of prophecy texts, prioritizing literal fulfillment over allegorical approaches critiqued in other theological traditions. LaHaye's pre-Left Behind publications, including The Beginning of the End (1972) and Spirit-Controlled Temperament (1966), established his reputation in evangelical circles by applying biblical principles to end-times events and human behavior, respectively, with the latter drawing on four-temperament theory updated through a dispensational lens.[84] Overall, he produced over 80 books across non-fiction genres on prophecy, family life, and Christian psychology, maintaining output into his eighties with titles like prophecy library entries published in the early 2000s.[88]

Legacy and Reception

Enduring Influence on Evangelical Thought and Culture

LaHaye's advocacy for pretribulational premillennialism, articulated through organizations like the Pre-Trib Research Center he founded in 1994, played a significant role in sustaining and popularizing this eschatological framework amid competing views such as post-tribulationism.[46] By emphasizing scriptural interpretations that positioned the rapture before the tribulation period, LaHaye countered perceptions of doctrinal decline in evangelical circles, fostering renewed interest in dispensationalist prophecy studies.[89] This effort influenced prominent figures in prophecy preaching, including John Hagee, whose ministries echoed LaHaye's dispensational emphases on end-times events and Israel's role in biblical fulfillment.[90] The Left Behind series, co-authored with Jerry B. Jenkins and spanning 1995 to 2007, amplified LaHaye's eschatological vision, selling over 80 million copies worldwide and spawning film adaptations that reached broader audiences.[91] These works depicted a pretribulational rapture followed by tribulation, embedding such concepts into evangelical cultural narratives and contributing to a surge in popular interest in apocalyptic themes. A 2011 Evangelical Leaders Survey indicated that 65% of respondents adhered to premillennial theology, reflecting the series' reinforcement of this view among believers rather than a shift away from it.[92] The adaptations, including films released in 2000, 2002, 2005, and 2014, further disseminated these ideas through visual media, shaping generational understandings of biblical prophecy.[49] LaHaye's commitment to young-earth creationism bolstered empirical challenges to Darwinian evolution within evangelicalism, notably through his involvement in establishing the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) in 1972 alongside Henry M. Morris.[22] Serving on ICR's board until 2007, LaHaye supported its growth from a foundational apologetics ministry to an organization publishing peer-reviewed research and educational materials that critiqued mainstream scientific consensus on origins.[27] This contributed to sustained advocacy for creation science in evangelical institutions, countering what LaHaye viewed as a monopolistic hold of evolutionary theory in academia and media.[17]

Political Mobilization and Societal Achievements

LaHaye played a pivotal role in organizing evangelical Christians into a cohesive political force during the late 1970s and 1980s, serving as a founding board member of the Moral Majority, established by Jerry Falwell in 1979 to advocate for pro-life policies, traditional family structures, and opposition to secular humanism.[93] This organization registered millions of conservative voters and contributed to the Republican Party's electoral successes, including Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential victory, where evangelicals provided a decisive bloc of support comprising about 80% of white evangelical votes.[94] LaHaye's efforts extended to co-founding the Council for National Policy in 1981, a network that coordinated conservative leaders to influence policy on family and life issues, bolstering GOP majorities in Congress during the 1980s and facilitating appointments of judges aligned with pro-life stances, such as those under Reagan who shifted federal courts toward restricting abortion access.[95] Through his support for Concerned Women for America (CWA), founded by his wife Beverly LaHaye in 1979, Tim LaHaye helped build a women's advocacy group that grew to over 500,000 members by the mid-1980s, focusing on legislative opposition to abortion and family policy erosions.[96] CWA lobbied successfully against expansions of federal funding for abortions and influenced state-level restrictions, contributing to a decline in abortion rates from 1.6 million annually in the early 1980s to under 1 million by the 1990s, amid broader conservative gains.[32] President Reagan acknowledged CWA's role in reshaping American politics by mobilizing women against feminist-driven policies, crediting the group with sustaining pressure that fortified GOP platforms on family values.[61] These organizations, under LaHaye's influence, maintained long-term opposition to ideological shifts, including gender policies in education; as of 2022, CWA led efforts against Biden administration Title IX revisions that promoted gender identity accommodations in schools, aligning with over 20 states enacting laws restricting such curricula by 2023.[97] LaHaye's anti-communist writings, such as The Battle for the Mind (1980), framed secular humanism as a ideological successor to Marxism, rallying evangelicals against collectivist threats and supporting Reagan-era policies that culminated in the Soviet Union's dissolution in 1991, vindicating conservative resistance to atheistic globalism.[3] This mobilization established enduring structures that countered left-leaning institutional advances, evidenced by CWA's ongoing state-level advocacy blocking over 100 proposed bills advancing gender ideology in public schools since 2015.[98]

Criticisms, Controversies, and Balanced Assessments

LaHaye faced accusations of anti-Catholic bias due to his portrayal of Roman Catholicism as a "false religion" incorporating pagan elements and prioritizing tradition over Scripture, as articulated in works like The Unholy Alliance (1978), where he critiqued perceived doctrinal errors such as transubstantiation and papal authority.[4] Critics, including the Catholic League, highlighted negative depictions of Catholic figures in the Left Behind series as evidence of bigotry, arguing it equated the Church with end-times apostasy.[99] LaHaye rebutted such claims by emphasizing scriptural primacy—sola scriptura—over ecclesiastical traditions, insisting his critiques targeted unbiblical doctrines rather than individuals, and noting Catholic readers among his audience.[100] His warnings against globalist agendas, including a one-world government and secular humanism, drew labels of conspiracy theorizing, particularly for linking contemporary institutions to prophetic patterns like the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11) and Revelation's Babylon system (Revelation 17–18).[101] Detractors dismissed these as unfounded paranoia, yet LaHaye grounded them in historical biblical archetypes of centralized power opposing divine order, such as Babel's unification under rebellion, rather than ad hoc speculation.[102] Similarly, his opposition to homosexuality, outlined in The Unhappy Gays (1978), invoked Levitical prohibitions (Leviticus 18:22, 20:13) and New Testament condemnations (Romans 1:26–27, 1 Corinthians 6:9–11), supplemented by anecdotal testimonies of behavioral transformation, countering charges of bigotry with claims of redeemable sin patterns akin to other biblical vices.[103] The Left Behind series encountered literary critiques for sensationalism, simplistic theology, and one-dimensional characters, with reviewers citing bathos, verisimilitude lapses, and fear-based appeals over nuanced exegesis.[49] Such assessments, often from theological opponents of dispensational premillennialism, contrasted with the series' empirical impact: over 80 million copies sold by 2016, credited with evangelistic conversions despite stylistic flaws.[104] Balanced evaluations acknowledge these works' role in popularizing prophetic literalism, fostering moral vigilance against perceived societal decay, though elite theological circles undervalued their causal contribution to evangelical cultural mobilization amid biases favoring amillennial or postmillennial frameworks.[105] Overall, LaHaye's positions prioritized exegetical fidelity and historical scriptural precedents, yielding societal awakenings that outweighed dismissals rooted in interpretive disagreements rather than evidential refutation.

Personal Life and Death

Marriage, Family, and Private Character

Tim LaHaye married Beverly Jean Ratcliffe on July 5, 1947, in Highland Park, Michigan, while both attended Bob Jones University; the union lasted nearly 69 years until his death.[106][107] Beverly, a prominent conservative activist who founded Concerned Women for America in 1979, collaborated with LaHaye on family-oriented initiatives and authored books complementing his teachings on Christian living.[33] The couple raised four children, instilling evangelical values through structured home life that prioritized biblical discipline over contemporary secular influences.[108][11] LaHaye's domestic practices aligned with his writings on temperaments and family dynamics, such as in The Spirit-Filled Family (1978), which advocated daily devotions, mutual respect among spouses, and tailored child-rearing to individual personalities—principles he and Beverly reportedly modeled to foster harmony and avoid discord.[109] Their home exemplified fidelity and restraint, contrasting with moral scandals that ensnared evangelical peers like Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart in the 1980s; no verified accounts of infidelity, financial impropriety, or abuse emerged in LaHaye's personal record across decades of public scrutiny.[110] Private generosity marked their character, with the LaHayes channeling church and personal funds to support missions, including launching and financing a church plant in Atlanta that grew into an independent congregation.[111] This reflected a pattern of discreet philanthropy, donating millions overall to faith-based causes while emphasizing self-reliance and scriptural stewardship in family decisions.

Health Challenges and Final Years

In his later years, Tim LaHaye persisted in writing and public engagements on biblical prophecy despite a 2006 diagnosis of Parkinson's disease that curtailed his productivity.[5] He conducted interviews on end-times topics into early 2016, including discussions of prophetic timelines and current global alignments.[112] His final published work, The Mark of Evil (2014), extended themes from his End series, portraying apocalyptic scenarios rooted in dispensationalist interpretations.[113] LaHaye suffered a stroke in July 2016 while in San Diego, leading to his death on July 25, 2016, at age 90 in a local hospital.[16][114] In the years preceding this, he emphasized interpretive updates to prophecies, such as those in Ezekiel 38–39, linking Middle East geopolitical shifts—including alliances involving Iran and Russia—to anticipated end-times conflicts against Israel.[115] LaHaye's death without the pre-tribulational rapture he anticipated prompted observer reflections on the imminence doctrine central to his theology, which held the event could occur at any moment without prior signs, rendering his unfulfilled expectation doctrinally consistent rather than disconfirming.[116]

References

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