Back to the book at hand,
LaHaye and Jenkins' best-selling apocalyptic fiction novel, Left Behind, is already so ridiculous that it's hard to make a parody of it, yet the conservative Christian author, Nathan Wilson, bravely sets forth to push it over the top. Tweaked versions of all the original characters work together in an absurd tangle of Evangelical goofiness struggling to make sense of the pathetically gnostic vision of the original story. You won't want to miss all body parts, cats, and youth pastors left behind, Buff Williamson's Ivy League deductions, Haddie the Whore of Babylon, or the climactic struggle with the Tulsa Antichrist in a Christian "book store." If you regret reading Left Behind, read Right Behind to ease that pain with laughter.
1. Absurd tale of evangelical goofiness. So, this book is made to insult my beliefs. The author himself says that.
2. Gnostic vision? I've at least seen the two movies, so explain to me how the books are in any way gnostic?
This is what I know of Gnostic beliefs:
1.The human body is corrupt and therefore Jesus did not come in the Flesh.
2. There is a chain of angels you have to use to get to the Father, and not merely Jesus... Jesus is just the "final gate" as it were.
3. Since the human body is corrupt automatically, and the spirit can't be corrupted by the physical, nothing they do in it can corrupt the spirit, so you can sin all you want. That may not be the belief of all Gnostics, but it was a primary tenant of the Gnostic belief.
Jesus directly spoke against the second one (Once in Jesus, you can bring you request DIRECTLY to God without going through a middle man, and Jesus is the only way to God), John the first, and every apostle and teacher in the Bible against the third. Now, Gnosticism was heavily based on Christianity as it was just a slight perversion of it. Therefore, it makes sense that many of their beliefs would be true. That being said, I don't see any of the bad beliefs of Gnosticism present in the story, nor did I see anything that fit what Tech said, about the Manachean viewpoint. I saw the proper gospel with some bad extrabiblical stuff thrown in.
To use this as a mockery of Evangelical Christianity is DEFINATELY wrong. That I got from the Author, not just the reviews.