Satire

Recommended Reading

Books that helped us escape the Rapture countdown and discover something better.

These are the books that changed how our staff reads Scripture. They are not light reading — they are the kind of books that require a highlighter, a notebook, and a willingness to admit you might have been wrong. We speak from experience.

Start Here

The Last Days According to Jesus book cover

The Last Days According to Jesus

R.C. Sproul

The most accessible introduction to partial preterism from one of the 20th century's most trusted Bible teachers. Sproul wrestles honestly with Matthew 24 and concludes that most of it was fulfilled in AD 70. Essential first read.

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Last Days Madness book cover

Last Days Madness

Gary DeMar

A comprehensive and often hilarious demolition of newspaper exegesis and date-setting. DeMar catalogs decades of failed predictions and traces them to a faulty hermeneutic. Excellent for sharing with your dispensationalist uncle.

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He Shall Have Dominion book cover

He Shall Have Dominion

Kenneth Gentry

The definitive systematic defense of postmillennialism. Dense, thorough, and rewarding. Gentry covers the biblical, historical, and theological case for a victorious, Kingdom-advancing eschatology. The comprehensive reference on postmill thought.

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Go Deeper

Paradise Restored book cover

Paradise Restored

David Chilton

A warm, pastoral, and richly biblical case for postmillennialism. Chilton writes with joy and theological depth, tracing the story of God's dominion mandate from creation to consummation. More accessible than Gentry and equally convincing.

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Before Jerusalem Fell book cover

Before Jerusalem Fell

Kenneth Gentry

A detailed scholarly argument that the book of Revelation was written before AD 70, which dramatically changes how you read it. Gentry marshals historical, internal, and external evidence to establish the early date. Technical but essential for serious students.

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End Times Fiction book cover

End Times Fiction

Gary DeMar

A point-by-point response to the Left Behind series, examining the theological assumptions behind Tim LaHaye's claim that the novels are "the first fictional portrayal of prophetic events true to literal Bible prophecy." DeMar responds graciously, wittily, and with thorough documentation.

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Heaven Misplaced book cover

Heaven Misplaced: Christ's Kingdom on Earth

Douglas Wilson

Wilson makes the postmillennial case with his signature wit and pastoral directness. One of the most readable and enjoyable introductions to a victorious, Kingdom-advancing eschatology — especially for readers who find academic theology heavy going. Short chapters, discussion questions included.

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When the Man Comes Around book cover

When the Man Comes Around

Douglas Wilson

Wilson's passage-by-passage commentary on the book of Revelation, showing how John's most notorious prophecies concern the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70. Convictional, clear, and characteristically unafraid to take the preterist reading seriously. A fitting companion to Heaven Misplaced.

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For the Historically Curious

If you want to understand how dispensationalism became the dominant eschatology of American evangelicalism — and why it is historically quite recent — these resources are invaluable:

"For the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea." — Habakkuk 2:14. This is not a caption for a retreat. It is a promise about history.