Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!decvax!harpo!eagle!mhuxi!mhuxl!ulysses!unc!bts From: bts@unc.UUCP Newsgroups: net.religion Subject: Re: End of the World Survey Message-ID: <6046@unc.UUCP> Date: Thu, 20-Oct-83 17:47:54 EDT Article-I.D.: unc.6046 Posted: Thu Oct 20 17:47:54 1983 Date-Received: Sat, 22-Oct-83 00:30:16 EDT Lines: 39 I've been asked, in reference to the "End of the World" survey, if anyone *really* was offended by the film "2001" suggesting that Jesus wasn't going to come back in the year 2000 to end it all. Yes, they were. However, they did not interpret 2000 A.D. as the 2000th year after His birth. No, they would tell you that just as "B.C." stands for "Before Christ", "A.D." stands for "After Death". The years during His life had no numbers. Who were these people? Mostly members of small, independent protestant churches. I saw several of them on Sunday mornings at a local radio station in a semi-rural North Carolina county. A friend ran the station on Sunday mornings, and we'd sit in the control room and play cards while groups of people would come in to preach for 1/2 hour at a time. Many of them worked in local cotton mills and saved up money for air time from their paychecks. They'd come in with a cigar box stuffed with change and small denomination bills and pay cash for the chance to preach on the radio. They weren't necessarily stupid people, but they were almost totally uneducated. Most were functionally illiterate. They had to make up their own theologies from the little fragments they could read from the Bible. These churches typically had memberships of less than 100 people, but there were everywhere. As far as I can tell, that sort of church is dying out in the South. (Maybe things have been going down hill ever since most of them gave up their snakes?) They're being replaced by the PTL Club, etc. Big business taking the place of people who did it just out of faith. Finally, a special bonus for anyone who's had the pati- ence to read this far: The PTL Club in Charlotte, N.C., when they were first getting started in TV Evangeli$m had P.O. Box 666-- that's where they'd ask you to mail your con- tributions. I guess someone told 'em, 'cause it's dif- ferent, now. Bruce Smith, UNC-Chapel Hill decvax!duke!unc!bts (USENET) bts.unc@udel-relay (other NETworks)