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The Seven Churches Ages: Difference between revisions

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''Remember, up at the tabernacle, when them…You got tapes. I guess, all of you take them. How that the Lord showed there that day, in the tabernacle, exactly where those church ages would be and how they would be! I had them drawed out on the board up there, them church ages which you see here drawed out in a book. '''And if that Holy Spirit didn’t come down in a big Pillar of Fire''', and went right back '''there on that wall and drawed them out''', Hisself, while '''three or four hundred people setting, looking at It!'''<ref>William Branham, 65-1204 - The Rapture, para. 61</ref>
''Remember, up at the tabernacle, when them…You got tapes. I guess, all of you take them. How that the Lord showed there that day, in the tabernacle, exactly where those church ages would be and how they would be! I had them drawed out on the board up there, them church ages which you see here drawed out in a book. '''And if that Holy Spirit didn’t come down in a big Pillar of Fire''', and went right back '''there on that wall and drawed them out''', Hisself, while '''three or four hundred people setting, looking at It!'''<ref>William Branham, 65-1204 - The Rapture, para. 61</ref>


=Video Transcript=
William Branham told his followers that he received his revelation of the seven church ages directly from God:
:''...when we got finished with the book of the revelation of the church, what God did to those seven churches, which were then in their infancy, or their shadow, in Asia Minor. Then the Holy Spirit revealed and opened to us all the mysteries in There, of how He has brought His Church through history.<ref>64-0719M - The Feast Of The Trumpets, para. 38</ref>
The problem is that William Branham stole significant parts of his “revelation” from Clarence Larkin’s book, “Dispensational Truth, or God’s Plan and Purpose in the Ages“ which was published in 1918.
Now I do understand that William Branham referred to Clarence Larkin but the first time he did so was over seven months after preaching his series on the church ages.  Specifically, he refers to Larkin in relation to research he was doing on the seventy weeks of Daniel:
:''I've been reading Dr. Larkin's book, Dr. Smith's book, Dr. Scofield's notes, different commentaries from men everywhere, and yet I cannot put theirs together to make it come out right.  See?<ref>61-0730M, Gabriel's Instructions to Daniel, para. 33</ref>
He never mentions Larkin in connection with his sermons on the seven church ages or the seven seals.  And when he does mention Clarence Larkin, it seems as though he disagrees with him.
[[Image:Larkin Church Age Dates.png|right|thumb|250px]]
But the truth is that the amount of material that William Branham copied from Larkin in the seven church age series is so significant that it goes beyond the scope of a video presentation.  If you wish to see the extent of the theft, please refer to the details on our website and in the information below this video.
[[Image:WMB Church Age Dates.png|right|thumb|250px]]
Here are dates of the church ages according to Clarence Larkin.  William Branham copied Clarence Larkin’s dates for each of the ages almost verbatim.
William Branham repeatedly stressed that the messenger to each church age came at the end of their particular age:
God sends the messenger of that age at the end of the time; always at the end, never at the beginning. At the end!  (63-0116 - The Evening Messenger, para. 79-80) 
But this is completely nonsense. Let’s look at each age:
Most scholars put Paul’s death in either 64 or 65 AD.  This is only 12 years after William Branham said the age started.  He did change the start of the Ephesian church age from A.D. 70 to A.D. 53 to coincide with the writing of Paul first epistle.  The problem with this change is that the letter to the Ephesian church, as contained in Chapter 2 of the book of revelation was not written until after Paul’s death.  So Paul never got the letter that William Branham said was addressed to him.  How does that make sense?
[[Image:WMB Church Age Messengers.png|right|thumb|500px]]
Irenaeus was at the start of the age and so was Martin.
William Branham really messed up with Columba as he was born in the Pergamos age and never even made it to the age of Thyatira.  How could he be the messenger to that age?
Luther and Wesley were both ministering at the beginning of their respective ages.
Finally , William Branham was convinced he was at the end of the Laodicean age but as time moves on it is clear he was born at the beginning of the age. 
William Branham’s church age doctrine is outdated and obsolete.  While it was at one time accepted by pre-millenial dispensationalists like Clarence Larkin, the continued study of church history has shown that the doctrine was based on poor research and certainly does not fit the current state of the church. 
The clearest example of this is the Laodicean age.  On a cursory examination it does appears that our current age is one of excess riches and lukewarmness.  But that comparison disappears as soon as one looks outside of the first world.
Less than 20% of evangelical Christians live in North America or Europe where lukewarm churches abound.  Today, more evangelicals live in Asia than any other continent. 60% of evangelicals are in Asia or Africa.  The churches in the third world… particularly in countries where the church is persecuted… are anything but lukewarm. 
In fact, according to current research, “More Christians have died for their faith in this current century than all other centuries of church history combined.” (Christianity.com)
The only reason William Branham preached the church ages was to point to himself.  It is now over 60 years since he initially preached the church age series, and the only thing about his ministry that is clear, is the failure of his claims as a prophet.


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