|
Steven A. Austin and Mark L. Strauss*
Institute for Creation Research, PO Box 2667, El
Cajon, CA 92021
Voice: (619) 448-0900 FAX: (619) 448-3469
(Unpublished manuscript of January 14, 1999. These
authors published a simplified, less technical version of this
paper in 1999 under the title "Are Earthquakes Signs of
the End Times?: A Geological and Biblical Response to an Urban
Legend," Christian Research Journal, vol. 21, no. 4, pp.
30-39.)
(From: http://www.icr.org/research/sa/sa-r06.htm)
INTRODUCTION
According to a number of Christian writers and teachers on
Bible prophecy, Jesus predicted in the Olivet Discourse that
a pronounced increase in the frequency and intensity of earthquakes
would occur just prior to His return to the earth. Many of the
same writers and teachers claim that the decade of the 1990s
has experienced a pronounced increase in both the frequency and
intensity of earthquakes as compared to the earlier decades of
the twentieth century. This coincidence of Jesus' prophetic statement
and recent seismic events is viewed by these writers and teachers
as clear demonstration of the nearness of the return of Christ.
Hal Lindsey, the world's best known Bible prophecy teacher
and author of 17 books on prophecy, writes in one of his latest
books:
Earthquakes continue to increase in frequency and intensity,
just as the Bible predicts for the last days before the return
of Christ. History shows that the number of killer quakes remained
fairly constant until the 1950s - averaging between two to four
per decade. In the 1950s, there were nine. In the 1960s, there
were 13. In the 1970s, there were 51. In the 1980s, there were
86. From 1990 through 1996, there have been more than 150. 1
What is the source of Lindsey's statistics? In his book Planet
Earth 2000 A.D. Lindsey cites the United States Geological Survey
(USGS) in Boulder, Colorado.2
Yet he does not give details of the report (author, date, report
name, location, etc.).3 Lindsey's earthquake frequency
numbers have been widely circulated by popular prophecy speakers
such as Chuck Missler and Jack Van Impe.4 However,
Missler and Van Impe do not give any further information on the
source of Lindsey's statistics.
Grant R. Jeffrey, another Bible prophecy teacher and author
of nine best-selling books, could be the source of Lindsey's
statistics. Two years before Lindsey's statement was published,
Jeffrey wrote:
However, since A.D. 1900, the growth in major earthquakes
has been relentless. From 1900 to 1949 it averaged three major
quakes per decade. From 1949 the increase became awesome with
9 killer quakes in the 1950's; 13 in the 60's; 56 in the 1970's
and an amazing 74 major quakes in the 1980's. Finally, in the
1990's, as [sic] the present rate, we will experience 125 major
killer quakes in this decade (Source: U.S. Geological Survey
Earthquake Report, Boulder, Colorado).5
J. R. Church and Gary Stearman, editors of the magazine Prophecy
in the News, argued that data show a pronounced increase in the
frequency of the largest earthquakes in the 1990s. Church writes
of a distinct increase in our century.6 Stearman gives
specific numbers of earthquakes, and he cites as his source the
October 11, 1995 issue of the newspaper Philadelphia Inquirer:
According to that newspaper the number of Richter magnitude
6.0 and greater earthquakes worldwide has been increasing from
nine in the 1950s, to 13 in the 1960s, to 51 in the 1970s, to
86 in the 1980s, and to more than 100 in the 1990s.7
The computer-searchable archives of the Philadelphia Inquirer
reveal no article on earthquake frequency in that newspaper on
October 11, 1995 and no other issue of that newspaper during
the decade of the 1990s.8 What is the source of Stearman's
statistics? When several readers of Stearman's article confronted
him with much more earthquake data than in the mysterious citation
from the newspaper, he apologized in print for the bad statistics,
but, then, after his apology, reaffirmed that earthquakes are
indeed increasing.9
John Hagee, founder and pastor of the 15,000-member Cornerstone
Church in San Antonio, authored the book Beginning of the End
which became a New York Times bestseller. Hagee references a
report from the National Earthquake Information Center of the
U.S. Geological Survey: "
the number of large earthquakes
(magnitude 6.0 or greater) have stayed relatively constant
."
and notes within the government report "
the last decade
has produced substantially fewer large earthquakes than shown
in the long-term averages
."10 Remarkably,
Hagee goes on to contradict directly the government report: "
it is true that the Bible predicts that earthquakes will increase
in the last days, and the number of earthquakes measured has
increased 1.58 times between 1983 and 1992."11
The documentation given to support the supposed increase is faulty.
Adequate reason is not given as to why the conclusion of the
government report (i.e. decreasing earthquakes) is to be rejected.12
A different set of earthquake frequency numbers appears in
the recent writings of Peter and Paul Lalonde. These new statistics
are used to indicate a very large increase in earthquake frequency
in the 1990s:
Well, according to sources from Energy, Mines and Resources
Canada there were, from 1900 to 1969, about 48 earthquakes that
registered at 6.5 or more on the Richter Scale. This is an average
of 6 per decade. From 1970 to 1989 there were 33 earthquakes
measuring 6.5 or more. This is an average of 17 per decade. From
January 1990 to July 1990 there were 10 earthquakes of 6.5 or
greater. This is 10 major earthquakes in just six months. And
from July 1990 to October 1992 there were 133 earthquakes which
measured at 6.5 or greater. This averages out to 600 per decade.13
What is the specific source within Energy, Mines and Resources
Canada that supplied these statistics? Again, details are lacking.
In light of such slipshod documentation, we are concerned
about the widespread claim within the Christian community that
earthquakes are on the increase. Can these recent statements
be supported by rigorous documentation? Or have the deployment
of more seismographs during the last few decades made detection
and cataloging of earthquakes more complete, thereby enhancing
the perception of increase? Does the public have the perception
that earthquakes are on the increase because earthquakes now
afflict our larger urbanized populations, and, therefore, are
more often reported by the media? We believe the public perception
and media characterization promotes the self-sustaining "urban
legend" even among the Christian Church.14 This
"legend" widespread in western culture regards earthquakes
of the twentieth century to be on the increase. We will cite
data that directly confront the urban legend.
EVALUATING EARTHQUAKE DATA
The year 1997 marked the one hundredth anniversary of the
general deployment of standardized and calibrated seismographs.
It started with nine seismograph stations in 1898 that were capable
of detecting, locating and measuring earthquakes of magnitude
7.0 or larger (M ³7.0) anywhere
in the globe. As a result, major earthquakes have been monitored
globally and continuously for more than 100 years. By 1931 there
were 350 stations operating worldwide that were locating and
measuring M ³6.5 earthquakes
globally. By the 1950s the system of seismographs could locate
all M ³6.0 events occurring globally.
Today a network of more than 4,000 seismograph stations is locating
and measuring more than 10,000 events with magnitude less than
5.0 each year.
Global earthquake data for the century have been synthesized
and are available from several sources. These are usually extensive
lists giving each earthquake as a time, location and magnitude.
Before we look to the earthquake data of the twentieth century
for possible increase in frequency and magnitude, we need to
be able to evaluate the suitability of catalog data. Three important
properties are required of data used for frequency analysis.
Data must be (1) accurate, (2) complete and (3) uniform.
Accuracy. Earthquake data need to satisfy several
technical requirements; the most important of which is accuracy.
The consortium of seismological institutions has set standards.
Normally the seismogram from the region of the earthquake is
used to estimate "authoritative" earthquake parameters
(time, location, fault mechanism and magnitude). Also, other
institutions farther away from the epicenter may estimate parameters
(usually not considered "authoritative"). The submission
process by the member organizations generates the authoritative
composite catalog.15 Even with procedures for standardization,
some noteworthy problems exist. Japanese and American seismologists
usually differ with each other by 0.2 magnitude unit for the
strength of surface waves of a particular earthquake.16
Newspapers cannot be relied on for accurate data because they
often do not cite the authoritative values established by the
working relationship between the organizations.
Completeness. An earthquake catalog needs to
be complete, not missing any events within the defined boundaries
of the catalog. Complete data sets must be established by the
painstaking process of checking numerous authoritative records.
Some catalogs, which might be assumed to provide complete records,
actually have noteworthy deficiencies.17 For example,
many events smaller than magnitude 6.5 (M < 6.5) have not
been located or properly measured for the early decades of the
century. One of the most extensive global catalogs of the present
century, the Tsapanos Catalog, contains data on 9700 earthquakes
of our century. This catalog is considered "complete"
for M ³ 6.5 beginning in the
year 1930 and "complete" for M ³
6.0 beginning in the year 1952.18 Therefore, a complete
record for M < 7.0 for the early part of the century does
not exist. Because of these limitations, we cannot compare effectively
the frequency of events of M < 7.0 from the first and second
halves of the century. However, the global synthesis of M ³ 7.0 is good, even for the earlier
decades of the century. For example, the Tsapanos Catalog has
been claimed to be "complete" for M ³
7.0 from the year 1898. 19
Uniformity. The final quality of a good earthquake
catalog is uniformity. There have been some small changes to
the seismograph design during the last one hundred years which
require back-calibration of the records to insure uniformity
with recent measurements.20 Early characterization
of shallow earthquakes (focal depths less than 70 kilometers)
and deep earthquakes (focal depths greater than 70 kilometers)
required different magnitude measurement scales. Several magnitude
scales have been used over the years - Richter magnitude (ML),
surface wave magnitude (Ms), body wave magnitude (mb), moment
magnitude (MW), and energy magnitude (Me).21 It has
been recognized that the older ML, Ms and mb scales do not properly
characterize the full wave-frequency range of the energy radiated
by an earthquake. The Ms scale, although widely used, does not
characterize deep-focus earthquakes and great earthquakes (M ³ 8.0) very well. Therefore, newer
magnitude scales use properties of the fault system (MW) or the
total radiant energy spectrum (Me) to estimate the strength of
an earthquake. These last two scales work for shallow and deep
earthquakes as well as the largest earthquakes. However, MW and
Me scales were not devised until recently, and, if used, require
the recalibration of data from the major part of the early century
to insure uniformity.
GLOBAL CATALOGS
Having stated the requirements for a catalog being accurate,
complete and uniform, we can recommend five global catalogs of
twentieth-century earthquakes.
(1) The Zirbes Data File. The National Earthquake
Information Center (NEIC) of the United States Geological Survey
(USGS) maintains in Denver data on four million earthquakes from
earliest records beginning in 2100 B.C.22 The summary
data file currently updated yearly by Madeleine Zirbes of the
NEIC includes global frequency data from this century for both
shallow and deep earthquakes.23 The Zirbes file attempts
to deal uniformly with the characterization of earthquakes (M
³ 7.0) of all focal depths globally.
(2) The "Worldwide Earthquake Database."
Four million seismic events from 2100 B.C. to 1995 A.D. are collected
into a composite catalog called the "Worldwide Earthquake
Database." Data are distributed by the National Geophysical
Data Center (NGDC) of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA). Numerous data files are included in the
"Seismicity Catalog," a two-volume CD-ROM produced
in cooperation with the NEIC. The component file called "1900.EQ"
within the "Seismicity Catalog" 24 gives
time, location and magnitude for 17690 M ³
6.0 earthquakes, and 5667 M ³
6.5 earthquakes globally from 1900 through 1995. The file lists
shallow and deep earthquakes globally, lacks rigorous uniformity,
and appears to be complete for M ³
6.5 after about 1930, and M ³
6.0 after about 1951.25
(3) The Abe Catalog. Seismologists K. Abe and
S. Noguchi from the Earthquake Research Institute of the University
of Tokyo published an excellent global catalog of large, shallow
earthquakes (Ms ³ 7.0) for the
period from 1897 to 1980.26 This database is the early
effort to apply rigorous standards to make an accurate, complete
and uniform catalog for large shallow earthquakes. The catalog
has a supplement adding deep-focus, global earthquakes (mb ³ 7.0) for 1904 through 1974.27
The accuracy, completeness and uniformity of other catalogs should
be evaluated by comparison to this noteworthy standard.
(4) The Pacheco and Sykes Catalog. Javies Pacheco
and Lynn Sykes of Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory at Columbia
University have published a global catalog of 697 shallow, large
earthquakes (Ms ³ 7.0) which
they argue is accurate, complete and uniform for the period 1900
to 1989.28 This catalog, which is a revision of the
Abe Catalog, normalizes the surface wave magnitude values of
Abe with a particular assumption of uniform seismicity throughout
the century. The normalizing assumption has generated significant
debate.
(5) The Tsapanos Catalog. Greek seismologists
have produced a global catalog of 9700 earthquakes with M ³ 5.5 from the period 1898 to 1985.29
The catalog of shallow and deep earthquakes is claimed
to be complete for M ³ 7.0 from
1898, for M ³ 6.5 from 1930,
for M ³ 6.0 from 1952, and for
M ³ 5.5 from 1966.
THE GEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE:
ARE EARTHQUAKES INCREASING?
If the popular notion of many prophecy teachers (Lindsey,
Missler, Van Impe, Church, Jeffrey, Stearman, Hagee, Lalonde,
etc.) is correct, two assertions about twentieth-century earthquakes
must be true:
(1) a noteworthy deficiency of big earthquakes existed
in the first half of the century,and
(2) an obvious increase in the frequency of big earthquakes
occurred since 1950.
These two assertions must be made by prophecy teachers so
as to support a notion of the unique "earthquake sign"
occurring in the 1990s. Both assertions, we maintain, are false.
Using the best earthquake catalog data and statements of seismologists,
we have concluded exactly the opposite:
(1) a noteworthy excess of big earthquakes existed
in the first half of the century, and
(2) an obvious decrease in the frequency of big earthquakes
occurred since 1950.
Global Earthquake Data. The frequency of this
century's biggest earthquakes is summarized in Figure 1. The
frequency of the biggest earthquakes (M ³
7.0) by year from 1900 through 1997 is shown in Figure 1a. The
data source for Figure 1a is the "Zirbes Data File"
from the NEIC. Figure 1a shows a total of 1960 events, an average
of 20.0 M ³ 7.0 earthquakes per
year. Of the 20 events, an average of one per year is a "great"
earthquake (M ³ 8.0), and an
average of 19 per year are "major" earthquakes (7.9
³ M ³
7.0). Figure 1b shows the frequency of M ³
6.5 earthquakes beginning in the year 1931, when the seismograph
detection system became established well enough to record a "globally
complete" set of these larger events. Figure 1b displays
a total of 4593 events, an average of 69 M ³
6.5 events per year. The data source for Figure 1b is file "1900.EQ"
distributed by the NGDC.30
Lines and curves are also plotted to the data in Figure 1.
Both graphical plots of global frequency data contain a dashed
line showing the best-fit linear equation through the data. In
both of the plots the best-fit linear equations have negative
slope indicating an overall decreasing frequency, not
increasing frequency with time. This decreasing seismicity
trend is opposite of the common statements of many prophecy teachers.
The earthquake data of Figure 1 also reveal a space-time frequency
pattern that specialists acknowledge is strongly nonrandom.31
Because our century's frequency data are strongly nonrandom within
both of the magnitude classes, two best-fit polynomial curves
have been plotted to discern possible patterns of variation in
earthquake frequency. The best-fit curves in Figure 1 are polynomial
functions having the mathematical form f(x) = a0 + a1x + a2x2
+ ... + anxn. A remarkable pattern is evident from both best-fit
polynomial curves. Both curves indicate a thirty-year period,
but are strongly out of phase, suggesting some type of cyclic
frequency pattern for the biggest earthquakes of our century.
The cyclic pattern is apparently characteristic of some type
of periodic tectonic process working itself out in the twentieth
century. The cause of earthquake periodicities, however, remains
a mystery. These patterns, which have been an important topic
of scientific discussion, are beyond the scope of this paper.32
Is there a noteworthy deficiency of big earthquakes
(M ³ 7.0) in the first
half of the twentieth century as many prophecy teachers suppose?
No, there is a noteworthy excess. The global earthquake
frequency data can be used to argue just the opposite of the
popular urban legend. For the data in Figure 1a we note 1093
big earthquakes for the first half of the century (1900 to 1949).
That is an average of 22 big earthquakes per year. For the nearly
completed second half of the century (1950 to 1997) we note just
867 big earthquakes. That is an average of just 18 big earthquakes
per year. When 1999 is completed, it is likely that the second
half of the century will have about 900 big earthquakes. For
M ³ 7.0 events, the second half
of the century, therefore, is expected to have about 200 less
earthquakes than the first half. Zirbes writes:
We continue to hear from many people throughout the world
that earthquakes are on the increase. Although it may seem that
we are having more earthquakes, earthquakes of magnitude 7.0
or greater have remained fairly constant throughout this century,
and, according to our records, have actually seemed to decrease
in recent years.33
Has there been a noteworthy increase in the frequency
of big earthquakes (M ³ 7.0)
since 1950 as many prophecy teachers insist? No, there appears
to have been a significant decrease. Figure 1a shows that
the frequency of big earthquakes in the 1950s averaged 20.9 events
per year, slightly above the average for the entire century.
There seems to have been a decline in frequency through the
1960s (20.4 events per year), 1970s (20.4 events per year), and
1980s (11.2 events per year). Those are the decades when Hal
Lindsey says that the frequency of big earthquakes was increasing.
From 1990 through 1997 there has been an average of 17.3 big
earthquakes per year, which is still under the average of 20.0
earthquakes per year for the entire century. It is evident that
the M ³ 7.0 frequency data do
not confirm the urban legend. Hal Lindsey is aware of the Zirbes
Data File and the evidence from the USGS that M ³ 7.0 earthquakes
are not increasing in our century.34 His response
is:
The USGS traditionally defined a major earthquake as being
"6.5 magnitude or greater, and causing significant death
or damage." That is still the category heading used when
they compile their own statistics. By the simple expedient of
raising the minimum magnitude level for the basic criteria, earthquake
statistics can be manipulated to support their contention of
no increase in major earthquakes.35
Is the USGS "selectively manipulating"36
its magnitude criteria (choosing to show data for M ³ 7.0
instead of M ³ 6.5) for the purpose of concealing the obvious
increase in frequency as asserted by Lindsey? His claim of malpractice
or deception by seismologists of the USGS is easily refuted by
going to the M ³ 6.5 frequency plot in Figure 1b. This frequency
plot is where the obvious rate increase of the 1980s and 1990s
should be most apparent, according to Lindsey. However, we see
that Figure 1b (a plot from data of file "1900.EQ")
has general declining frequency with time like Figure 1a. The
declining frequency is indicated by the best-fit linear equations
shown by dashed lines possessing negative slopes in Figure 1a
and 1b. No evidence of pronounced frequency increase is evident
from Figure 1 for the 1980s and 1990s above earlier decades.
Another significant property of our century's data is evident
in Figure 1. The figure shows that many prophecy teachers have
grossly underestimated the number of larger earthquakes, especially
in the earlier part of our century. Lindsey's statistics for
M ³ 6.0 earthquakes appear in
Table 1. His statistics seem to demonstrate increasing frequency
of M ³ 6.0 earthquakes globally,
thus, supporting the urban legend. However, Table 137
compares Lindsey's numbers from his unspecified USGS source with
the numbers for equivalent decades from the NGDC data file "1900.EQ".
Because much higher frequency of M ³
6.0 earthquakes has been demonstrated from "authoritative"
sources (e.g., NGDC data files), Lindsey's statistics are proven
incomplete, and, therefore, faulty for the purpose of frequency
analysis. Lindsey's conclusion concerning increasing global frequency,
which has been derived from the faulty statistics, must be in
error as well. Similar global earthquake statistics and conclusions
of Jeffrey,38 Stearman,39 and Lalonde40
must also be incorrect.
Regional Earthquake Data. Regional earthquake
catalogs should show the recent increase in earthquake frequency
if the urban legend is correct. What about California? Has there
been a significant increase in earthquakes within America's most
populated state? Hal Lindsey says yes:
There has been a rapid increase in major California quakes
in the last 15 years.Since 1980, the state has experienced 18
quakes worse than 5.0. That is the same number of 5.0-plus quakes
the state experienced in the entire century before 1980.41
But, again, we must ask from where did Lindsey get these statistics?
No documentation is given. Lindsey's statement that only 18 magnitude
5.0-plus earthquakes occurred in California from 1900 to 1980
is contradicted by numerous seismicity catalogs of the region.
Our search of the California region's historic seismic records
revealed 408 earthquakes with M ³
5.0 for the period 1900 through 1979.42 Because California's
seismograph systems were not well established until 1932, a significant
number of M ³ 5.0 events were
not located and measured before 1932. We can make a strong argument
for more than 400 earthquakes with M ³
5.0 in the California region from 1900 through 1979, not just
18 earthquakes during that period as Lindsey supposes. Two USGS
geologists Ross Stein and Thomas Hanks constructed their "Southern
California Catalog" that is complete for M ³
6.0 earthquakes from 1903 through 1997.43 They provide
superb documentation for the Southern California region of 28
earthquakes (M ³ 6.0, 1903 through
1979). They ignored the more frequent but less well-documented
earthquakes with M < 6.0, and they ignored all of Northern
California. Still they have 28 earthquakes, a higher number than
Hal Lindsey obtained for the whole state, for a longer time,
and for a lower magnitude. Lindsey's California earthquake statistics
must be incomplete.
Is there evidence that California's M>5.0 earthquakes have
increased during the last half of the century as Lindsey supposes?
Because of the much higher frequency of M ³
5.0 that we have demonstrated from "authoritative"
sources, Lindsey's statistics are proven to be faulty and his
conclusion, therefore, becomes vacuous. Hutton and Jones performed
a detailed study of M ³ 5.0 events
since 1932 in Southern California and found no significant region-wide
rate change, including the period after 1980.44 They
start with the year 1932 because that is the year when the data
are believed to become "complete" for M ³
5.0 events. Stein and Hanks say of Southern California, "...we
find no evidence that the rate of seismicity is increasing, now
or at any other time since 1900." 45 They contradict
both the statistics and the conclusion of Lindsey.
What about the region of Japan? As the world's most seismically
active region, Japan should have an interesting story to tell.
Does it show a recent increase in the frequency of earthquakes
as the urban legend supposes?46 The "Japan Catalog"47
is complete for M ³ 6.0 from
1885 to 1980. Abe's catalog of global earthquakes (large, shallow
quakes between 1897 and 1980) was compared to the Japan Catalog
(large, shallow quakes around Japan between 1885 and 1980). Variation
of earthquake frequency between the entire world and the region
of Japan was demonstrated to be synchronous by sophisticated
statistical tests.48 Ogata and Abe wrote, "The
occurrence rate of earthquakes in the two areas is high in the
period of 1920's through 1940's and low in the last 30 years."49
That similar pattern of variation between Japan and the rest
of the world did not show increase in frequency in the last half
of the century. Here, again, we have an important statement that
directly confronts the urban legend.
THE BIBLICAL EVIDENCE:
DID JESUS PREDICT AN INCREASE IN EARTHQUAKES
BEFORE THE END?
If earthquakes are not on the increase, then what shall we
make of the biblical evidence that earthquakes will increase
in the last days? As noted above, Hal Lindsey says that earthquakes
will continue to increase "just as the Bible predicts for
the last days."50 If earthquakes are not increasing,
does this mean that the return of Christ cannot be near? Closer
examination of the New Testament evidence will reveal that Lindsey's
statement is wrong on both counts. Not only are earthquakes not
increasing, but also the biblical text never indicated that they
would. The popular conception that an increase of earthquakes
in frequency and severity is a key sign of the temporal nearness
of the end results from a misreading of the biblical text.
Earthquakes in Biblical Literature. Earthquakes
and other cataclysmic events often carry theophanic significance
in Scripture, demonstrating God's awesome power. At Mount Sinai
the LORD's presence was indicated by smoke and the shaking of
the mountain (Exod. 19:18; cf. 1 Kings 19:1151 ; Ps.
68:8; Job 9:6; Hab. 3:6). When the New Testament church prayed
"the place where they had gathered together was shaken"
and the Spirit's presence was manifested (Acts 4:31). Paul and
Silas were freed when God's power and presence was manifested
in an earthquake (Acts 16:26). The most unusual earthquakes were
associated with the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ. When
Christ died on the cross, an earthquake shook the temple and
rent the curtain of the temple from top to bottom (Matt. 27:51).
No human agency rolled away the stone that sealed Christ's tomb;
it was the angel in the presence of the earthquake (Matt. 28:2).
More specifically, many seismic theophanies are manifestations
of God's anger and righteous judgment (cf. 1 Sam. 14:15; Ps.
18:7,8; Isa. 5:25; 13:13; 29:6; Joel 3:16; Amos 1:1,2; 8:7,8;
Mic. 1:3-7; Nah. 1:5,6; Hag. 2:6, 21). The Day of the LORD is
the most elaborate judgment motif of Scripture. That day is without
fail marked by earthquakes and associated celestial disturbances
(Isa. 2:19, 21; 13:13; 24:18; 29:5-6; Ezek. 38:19-22; Joel 2:10;
Zech. 14:4, 5). For example, Isaiah's description of the destruction
of Babylon has cosmic overtones:
Therefore I shall make the heavens tremble,
. . . And the earth will be shaken from its place
At the fury of the LORD of hosts
. . . In the day of His burning anger. (Isa. 13:13).
Yet during the awesome shakedown of heaven and earth, "The
LORD will have compassion on Jacob" (Isa. 14:1), and all
creation will recognize God's working (Isa. 14:3-8). When Israel
is attacked by the armies of Gog, those armies are demolished
at the decree of the LORD by earthquake and cosmic hailstones
(Ezek. 38:17-23). Zechariah is even more explicit about the extraordinary
geologic upheaval in the Holy Land associated with the Day of
the LORD. A final earthquake at the LORD's return will split
the Mount of Olives, uplift Jerusalem on its site, and depress
the surrounding Judean Mountains (Zech. 14:1-10).
Earthquakes are also associated with God's self-revelation
in the eschatology of the book of Hebrews (Heb. 12:25-29). The
author warns his readers not to refuse to heed the God who speaks
as he spoke at Sinai ("And His voice shook the earth then,"
Heb. 12:26; cf. Exod. 19:18). The author then passes through
history from Sinai to the promise of a great cosmic upheaval
of the end time ("Yet once more I will shake not only the
earth but also the heaven," Heb. 12:26; cf. Hag. 2:6). God's
ultimate purpose is to give believers "a kingdom which cannot
be shaken" (Heb. 12:28) so that the faithful, having perceived
his extraordinary power, can "offer to God an acceptable
service with reverence and awe" (Heb. 12:28).
Such passages provide the eschatological backdrop for the
book of Revelation, where earthquakes are symbols of God's final
judgment upon the earth. They appear as climactic judgments throughout
the book, producing terror, awe and destruction among the earth's
inhabitants. Five earthquakes are described. These are at the
opening of the sixth and seventh seals (6:12; 8:5), just before
and after the seventh trumpet (11:13, 19), and during the seventh
bowl (16:18). This last earthquake is identified as the greatest
ever on earth (16:18), splitting Jerusalem into three parts and
destroying the cities of the nations.
Although demonstrating the awesome power and presence of God,
these passages do not indicate an increase in earthquakes in
the present age. For those who follow a futuristic and dispensational
interpretation of Revelation, these earthquakes occur during
the Great Tribulation, not before it. They are not precursors
to the Day of the LORD, but evidence of its presence.
The Olivet Discourse. The only biblical evidence
which might suggest an increase in earthquakes in the present
age appears in Jesus' Olivet Discourse in Matthew 24 (pars.).
The discourse is set in the context of Jesus' statement concerning
the destruction of Jerusalem (24:1) and the disciples' question:
"Tell us, when will these things happen, and what will be
the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age" (24:2).
Two questions are here asked, the first relating to the destruction
of Jerusalem and the second to Jesus' return (which is linked
to the end of the age). The interpretation of the discourse is
problematic because it is difficult to tell which question Jesus
is answering at any particular point in the narrative. Is the
discourse primarily about the destruction of Jerusalem or the
coming of the Son of Man? Or is it both? If both, then was Jesus
mistaken in concluding that the Son of Man would return at the
time of the fall of Jerusalem? Or does the destruction in some
sense serve as a preview of the judgment associated with the
coming of the Son of Man?52
Our primary concern is with the first part of the discourse,
where Jesus warns against being deceived by false christs or
being alarmed at wars, rumors of wars, famines and earthquakes:
And Jesus answered and said to them, "See to it that
no one misleads you. For many will come in My name, saying, 'I
am the Christ,' and will mislead many. You will be hearing of
wars and rumors of wars. See that you are not frightened, for
those things must take place, but that is not yet the end. For
nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom,
and in various places there will be famines and earthquakes.
But all these things are merely the beginning of birth pangs."
(Matt. 24:4-8)
Among dispensationalists there are two main interpretations
of these verses. As we shall see, neither confirms that earthquakes
will increase as the present Church age draws to a close.
(1) Some dispensationalists see the whole of the Olivet Discourse
as relating to the tribulation period. Verses 4-8 are usually
said to concern the disturbances of the first half of the tribulation
while verses 9-26 concern the second half - the Great Tribulation.53
Evidence for this is claimed in the similarity between the events
described in verses 4-8 and those associated with the seven seals
of Revelation 6.54 For advocates of this view, the
earthquakes identified in verses 7-8 are not part of the
present Church age, but rather the tribulation period. In this
case, even if the birth image in verse 8 were to indicate an
increase in earthquakes (which is not necessary - see
discussion below), this increase occurs during the tribulation,
not during the present Church age. Present (Church age) data
concerning earthquake frequency has little or no bearing on the
text.
(2) Other dispensationalists (as well as many non-dispensationalists)
claim that verses 4-8 (or verses 4-14) concern not the tribulation
period, but general signs which are characteristic of the present
age. Lewis Sperry Chafer wrote that the events described in verses
4-8 "are the characteristics of the unforeseen intervening
or intercalary age"55 - that is, the Church age.
John Walvoord similarly affirms that "verses 4-14 are general
prophecies that can find fulfillment throughout the present age,
with verses 15-30 fulfilled in the Great Tribulation."56
He adds, however, that these former events "are repeated
in the Great Tribulation when what was perhaps partially fulfilled
earlier then have a very literal and devastating fulfillment."57
The primary evidence that verses 4-14 are signs characteristic
of the present age are their general nature and the fact that
Jesus identifies them as events which do not indicate
the end ("but that is not yet the end") and so should
not provoke apocalyptic fervor ("see that you are not alarmed").
Assuming for the sake of argument that this latter view is
correct, why would Jesus feel the need to warn against taking
such events as evidence of the end? The likely answer is that
the apocalyptic expectations of the Jews at this time often associated
catastrophic events with the nearness of the end. In the third
vision of the apocryphal book of 2 Esdras (= 4 Ezra), Ezra asks
the Lord when the signs he has been showing him will take place.
The Lord responds:
Measure carefully in your mind, and when you see that some
of the predicted signs have occurred, then you will know that
it is the very time when the Most High is about to visit the
world that he has made. So when there shall appear in the world
earthquakes, tumult of peoples, intrigues of nations, wavering
of leaders, confusion of princes, then you will know that it
was of these that the Most High spoke from the days that were
of old, from the beginning. (2 Esdras 9:1-5 NRSV; cf. 2 Baruch
27:7; 70:8)
Cataclysmic events, whether natural disasters or human conflicts,
naturally raise expectations for a soon end.58 Hagner
captures the disposition of human thought concerning war, "The
horror and human suffering connected with war are bound to raise
eschatological thoughts - and they have indeed throughout history."59
In this latter view, then, Jesus warns his disciples against
mistaking catastrophic events in human history with the cataclysmic
events that will characterize the End. Dispensational writers
who take verses 4-14 as part of the present age recognize this
qualitative difference between the "general signs"
of verses 4-14 and the "specific signs" which follow
in verses 15-26. John Walvoord writes,
Taken as a whole, the opening section, ending with Matthew
24:14, itemizes general signs, events, and situations which mark
the progress of the age, and, with growing intensity, indicate
that the end of the age is approaching. These signs, however,
by their very characteristics and because they have occurred
throughout the present age, do not constitute a direct answer
to the question of "the sign" of the coming of the
Lord.60
While Walvoord affirms that these are events common to the
present age and that they, therefore, do not constitute the answer
to the disciples' question ("what will be the sign of your
coming?"), he jumps to the unwarranted conclusion that these
"general signs" will increase in intensity as the end
of the age approaches. But Jesus did not indicate such an increase.
He rather downplayed their significance and encouraged his followers
not to be alarmed or disturbed by them. He certainly did not
say to count their frequency and calculate the end.
Eschatological Birth Pains. The only statement
which might suggest an increase in famine and earthquake activity
is the final clause, "But all these things are merely the
beginning of birth pangs (hwdíneß)" (Matt.
24:8). Because birth pains begin small and then increase in intensity
and frequency, this passage could be interpreted to mean that
earthquakes will start small and infrequent and gradually increase.
When they reach their greatest severity and frequency, they will
give birth to the new age.
But is this the correct way to interpret this clause? If so,
the lack of seismic increase we have noted above would confirm
that Jesus' return is not near. This would then contradict the
many biblical statements that it is near! But there is good reason
to believe that Jesus' words do not indicate an increase in frequency
or severity of these "general signs," but only indicate
their continued recurrence until the end of the age.
The image of eschatological birth pains was not new with Jesus,
but was a common one in Jewish apocalyptic and later rabbinic
writings. The "messianic woes" or "birth pains
of the Messiah" referred to a period of suffering that would
immediately precede the coming of the messianic age.61
The primary conceptual significance of this image was not that
the pain would increase in intensity, but rather that the present
period of suffering would be followed by the joy of new birth
(i.e., salvation and restoration). Pain will give way to rejoicing
for those who persevere.
The apostle Paul uses the birth image in a similar way in
Romans 8:18-25. The present creation - for which salvation has
been achieved but not consummated - "waits eagerly for the
revealing" of the children of God (v. 19). This period of
waiting is metaphorically described as groaning and suffering
"the pains of childbirth (sunwdínw)" (v. 22).
The point is not that creation's pain is growing worse and worse,
but that the pain itself (the residual effects of humanity's
fall) provokes eager longing for the new birth (the consummation
of salvation).
Paul uses the birth image elsewhere to illustrate the abruptness
of the arrival of the Day of the LORD. It will be unexpected
"like a thief in the night" and "like labor pains"
on a pregnant woman (1 Thes. 5:2,3). Paul's two images are reminiscent,
of course, of the Olivet Discourse (Matt. 24:8,43,44). Obviously,
Paul is not saying here that we can predict our Lord's appearance
by noting precursor birth pains.
CONCLUSION
A number of prophecy teachers say that a pronounced increase
in frequency and intensity of earthquakes has occurred in the
latter part of the twentieth century, a worldwide trend fulfilling
a prophecy made by Jesus. Contrary to these prophecy teachers,
no obvious trend is found indicating an abnormal increase in
the frequency of large earthquakes during the last half of the
twentieth century. Neither is there a noteworthy deficiency of
earthquakes in the first half of the century. Graphical plots
of global earthquake frequency indicate overall a decreasing
frequency of earthquakes through the century. The decades of
the 1970s, 80s and 90s experienced a deficit of larger earthquakes
compared to earlier decades of the century. The 70s, 80s and
90s are precisely those decades that many prophecy teachers suppose,
erroneously, show a dramatic surplus of larger earthquakes. Regional
earthquake data from California and Japan also do not argue for
increasing earthquake frequency in the latter decades of our
century.
At the time of Christ the Jews had a heightened anticipation
that wars, famines, pestilence and earthquakes communicated signs
having apocalyptic significance. Jesus responded to apocalyptic
expectations in the Olivet Discourse. Whether one interprets
Matthew 24:4-14 as (1) events which will occur during the tribulation
period, or (2) general signs of the present age, there is no
clear scriptural warrant for the claim that earthquakes will
increase dramatically prior to the return of Christ. In the former
interpretation, these earthquakes would be part of the tribulation
period and so of little significance for any increase in earthquakes
during the present Church age. In the latter interpretation,
earthquakes are seen as recurring catastrophic events common
to the present age - events that must not be misinterpreted as
"signs" of an immediate end. It is ironic that a passage
that intentionally teaches that earthquakes are not indicators
of the "end of the age" should be so frequently interpreted
as teaching exactly the opposite.
Jesus' statement, "all these things are merely the beginning
of birth pangs" (Matt. 24:8), has been misunderstood to
imply that pain would increase steadily in time. The birth image
associated with such signs does not point (necessarily) to an
increase in pain with time. Paul's understanding of creation's
pain (Romans 8:18-25) is not that pain will grow steadily worse,
but that the present period of suffering provokes eager longing
for the new birth and the consummation of the coming age. The
author of Hebrews sees a similar hope, not in anticipating a
future "sign" of increasing earthquake activity, but
in the coming of a sudden cosmic cataclysm producing a "kingdom
which cannot be shaken" (Heb. 12:28).

 |
|
Figure 1. Global frequency of the largest
earthquakes during the twentieth century. Graph (a) shows the
frequency of M ³ 7.0 earthquakes during the entire century
(1960 events). Graph (b) shows the frequency of M ³ 6.5
earthquakes after 1930 (4593 events). In both plots a general
decrease in earthquake frequency is evident through the twentieth
century. |
|
|
Table 1. Numbers of M ³ 6.0 earthquakes
worldwide in the twentieth century. The numbers of earthquakes
reported in the National Geophysical Data Center file called
"1900.EQ" greatly exceed those reported by Hal Lindsey
from his unspecified U.S. Geological Survey source. |
REFERENCES
1 Hal Lindsey, Apocalypse Code
(Palos Verdes, CA: Western Front Ltd., 1997), p. 296. The term
"killer quake" is not defined. See also Hal Lindsey,
Planet Earth 2000 A.D. (Palos Verdes, CA: Western Front Ltd.,
revised edition, 1996), p. 85, where Lindsey says these statistics
refer to earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 and greater. Lindsey has
been writing about the twentieth century increase of earthquakes
for almost 30 years. See his book The Late Great Planet Earth
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1970), p. 52, that sold over 20 million
copies.
2 Lindsey, Planet Earth 2000 A.D.,
p. 86. Table 1 lists Lindsey's earthquake statistics.
3 Lindsey's citation here is suspicious. Though he
claims to be using a USGS source, his endnote (p. 105) refers
only to the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, May 22, 1984. One wonders
how a newspaper published early in 1984 could provide data for
an increase in earthquakes in the 1980s and 1990s.
4 Chuck Missler and Mark Eastman, Alien Encounters
(Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, Koinonia House, 1997), pp. 170-172. On
page 170 the authors say: "In the last 100 years there has
been a dramatic increase in the frequency and intensity of earthquakes
worldwide." Jack Van Impe, "News about Natural Phenomena,
Killer Earthquakes on the Rise," Intelligence Briefing at
website: http://www.jvim.com/IntelligenceBriefing/May1997/nature.html
5 Grant R. Jeffrey, Prince of Darkness (Toronto: Frontier
Research Publications, 1994), pp. 310, 311. Jeffrey gives no
information on how a copy of this report can be obtained (author,
date, report name, and location). Furthermore, the numbers from
Jeffrey's USGS source differ slightly from Lindsey's USGS source.
Which is the better USGS source? Jeffrey repeats these statistics
in his later books The Signature of God (Toronto: Frontier Research
Publications, 1996) p. 194, and Armageddon: Appointment with
Destiny (Toronto: Frontier Research Publications, revised edition,
1997), pp. 251, 252. In Armageddon (p. 252) Jeffrey is very confident
in his earthquake statistics: "Anyone who examines the record
of massive increases in earthquakes in our century must acknowledge
that this is extremely unusual. The increase is unprecedented
in recorded human history and, in light of the Bible's prophecies,
these statistics provide incontrovertible evidence that we are
living in the last days.
6 J. R. Church, "Riders of Revelation 6, Mount
Up!," in William T. James, Foreshocks of Antichrist (Eugene,
Harvest House, 1997), p. 336: "Nevertheless, when one looks
at modern records, one invariably sees a steady increase in earthquake
activity, ranging across the spectrum from large events to small
tremors.
7 Gary Stearman, "Are Earthquakes on the Increase?"
Prophecy in the News 16 (June 1996): pp. 3-5. These are the numbers
cited by Lindsey.
8 We searched the archive of the Philadelphia Inquirer
on July 22, 1998 on the Internet at URL: http://www.phillynews.com.
We searched all earthquake articles of the 1990s through June
1998.
9 Gary Stearman, "Earthquakes Are Indeed on the
Increase," Prophecy in the News 16 (October 1996): pp. 27,
28.
10 John Hagee, Beginning of the End (Nashville, Thomas
Nelson Publishers, 1996), p. 193.
11 Hagee, Beginning of the End, p. 193.
12 Hagee, Beginning of the End, p. 193. Hagee, Beginning
of the End, p. 98, "
the number of earthquakes recorded
has risen from 2,588 in 1983 to 4,084 in 1992." Here Hagee
has committed a serious error by citing the "No Magnitude"
row in the National Earthquake Information Center (NEIC) worldwide
seismic frequency table. He supposes erroneously that the "No
Magnitude" row is the total number of earthquakes that have
been located globally for both of the years. The NEIC "Preliminary
Determination of Epicenters" database (PDE) for 1983 locates
9,842 events globally (2,588 events with no magnitude data given),
and that database for 1992 locates 19,548 events globally (4,084
events with no magnitude data given). The apparent doubling of
earthquake frequency from 1983 to 1992 is caused by significant
improvement by 1992 in the detection and location of magnitude
less than 5.0 earthquakes. For magnitude greater than or equal
to 5.0, the PDE locates 1813 events in the year 1983, but locates
only 1668 events in 1992. For magnitude greater than or equal
to 6.0, the PDE locates 140 events in 1983, but locates only
127 events in 1992. The data might better argue for decreasing
frequency with time, contrary to the conclusion of Hagee. The
above numbers were obtained on November 28, 1998 by going to
the NEIC files on the Internet at http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov
and then going to the NEIC-PDE data using the "Search Earthquake
Data Base" function. The earthquake data file cited by Hagee
contains the cautionary statement, "As more and more seismographs
are installed in the world, more earthquakes can be and have
been located." See the summary NEIC-PDE data file at: http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/eqlists/eqstats.html
which closely resembles the source of Hagee's numbers. Therefore,
our analysis shows Hagee's argument for increased earthquake
frequency in the 1990s to be seriously flawed. Charles Capps
in End-times Events-Journey to the End of the Age (Tulsa, Harrison
House, 1997) commits a similar error by citing the much-increased
lower-magnitude location ability within the most recent NEIC
data: "A recent U.S.G.S. report shows there were 4,139 earthquakes
in 1970 -and 19,996 in 1996." Capps concludes, "...earthquakes
are definitely on the increase." (p. 13).
13 Peter and Paul Lalonde, 301 Startling Proofs &
Prophecies (Niagara Falls, ONT: Prophecy Partners Inc., 1996),
p. 248. The Lalonde earthquake frequency numbers have been widely
quoted in popular publications. For example, we found the above
Lalonde quote reprinted in Daymond R. Duck, Revelation: God's
Word for the Biblically-Inept (Lancaster, PA: Starburst Publishers,
1998), p. 242. The Lalonde statistics were rephrased by Jack
Van Impe, "Last Days: Hype or Hope?," Perhaps Today
(September, October 1996), viewed on August 20, 1998 on the Internet
at http://205.244.46.136/PerhapsToday/SeptOct1996/last.html.
Van Impe says: "In Matthew 24, Jesus predicted such fearful
signs just before His return. He said they would be like birth
pangs - increasing in frequency and intensity as the time of
the end drew near.... From 1900 through 1969, a 70-year period,
there were only 48 quakes of 6.5 magnitude or greater. But from
July 1990 through 1992, a three-year period, there were 133 great
quakes!" For other statements about the apocalyptic increase
of earthquakes in the 1990s see David Allen Lewis Signs of His
Coming (Green Forest, AR: New Leaf Press, 1997): "
there
have been more earthquakes in the last 50 years than in the previous
1,500 years." (p. 24). Lester Sumrall, "Famines, Pestilence,
Earthquakes, as Man Rebels," in Bob Anderson et al., Earth's
Final Days (Green Forest, AR: New Leaf Press, 1995), p. 68 says:
"In this century, there have been more earthquakes than
all the rest of history put together
. Every 10 years, earthquakes
double in number, and so it has been for the last 10 decades.
During the later part of this decade, earthquakes will occur
with increasing regularity, creating terror and panic throughout
the world. Jesus said that was one of the signs of His coming."
If earthquakes are increasing so rapidly in the 1990s, then what
is there to prevent Christ's return? Therefore, in Larry Wilson,
The Revelation of Jesus (Brushton, NY: Teach Services, 1992),
p. 1, we find the former Seventh-day Adventist pastor predicting
four global earthquakes beginning about 1994 and ending in 1998
with the Second Coming of Christ.
14 For a recent survey of thinking on earthquakes
and other natural disasters as apocalyptic signs see Richard
Abanes, End-time Visions: The Road to Armageddon? (Nashville,
Broadman & Holman, 1998), 428 p. For a review of authors
before the 1990s who advocated the increase in frequency and
intensity of twentieth-century earthquakes see the chapter "Earthquakes
and Historical Facts" in Carl O. Jonsson and Wolfgang Herbst,
The "Sign" of the Last Days - When? (Atlanta: Commentary
Press, 1987), pp. 46-87.
15 Interested researchers can investigate the Council
of the National Seismic System (CNSS) composite catalog on the
Internet at http://quake.geo.berkeley.edu/cnss.
16 O. J. Perez and C. H. Scholz, "Heterogeneities
of the Instrumental Seismicity Catalog (1904-1980) for Strong
Shallow Earthquakes," Bulletin of the Seismological Society
of America 74 (1984): p. 685.
17 An incident illustrates why earthquake catalogs
need to be checked carefully for completeness. In 1997 we consulted
the "Worldwide Earthquake Catalog" maintained by the
Council of the National Seismic System (CNSS) for seismic events
of the 1990s. The CNSS "Worldwide Earthquake Catalog"
was examined at http://quake.geo.berkeley.edu/cnss on November
28, 1997. Because this is a composite database assembled from
the records of the thirty member organizations, we might assume
it to be a "complete" catalog. However, when we consulted
records maintained by CNSS member organizations, we found them
to include earthquakes not in the composite database. We even
found many earthquakes of the early 1990s with M ³
7.0 that were not in the composite database. The lesson is obvious:
careful study must be conducted before an earthquake catalog
can be said to be "complete." It takes a deliberate
process to make a "complete" catalog.
18 T. M. Tsapanos and P. W. Burton, "Seismic
Hazard Evaluation for Specific Seismic Regions of the World,"
Tectonophysics 194 (1991): p. 154.
19 Tsapanos and Burton, "Seismic Hazard Evaluation
for Specific Seismic Regions of the World," p. 154.
20 K. Abe, "Complements to 'Magnitudes of Large
Shallow Earthquakes from 1904 to 1980'," Physics of the
Earth and Planetary Interiors 34 (1984): pp. 17-23.
21 For an excellent summary of earthquake magnitude
scales see W. Spence, S. A. Sipkin and G. L. Choy, "Measuring
the Size of an Earthquake," Earthquakes and Volcanoes 21
(1989): pp. 58-63. The paper has been posted on the Internet
at http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/general/handouts/measure.html.
21 For an excellent summary of earthquake
magnitude scales see W. Spence, S. A. Sipkin and G. L. Choy,
"Measuring the Size of an Earthquake," Earthquakes
and Volcanoes 21 (1989): pp. 58-63. The paper has been posted
on the Internet at http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/general/handouts/measure.html.
22 An Internet site with National Earthquake Information
Center databases and summary files is open to the public. The
Internet URL for the NEIC home page is http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov.
23 The Internet site at http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/eqlists/7up.html
contains the summary data listing
24 National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration,
Seismicity Catalog (Boulder, CO: National Geophysical Data Center,
1996), two volumes on CD-ROM disks. A description and current
updates to the "Worldwide Earthquake Database" and
its Seismicity Catalog are maintained on the Internet at http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/seg/hazard/earthqk.html.
25 The file "1900.EQ" is part of the global
NGDC "Seismicity Catalog" on CD-ROM. The data file
has not been screened rigorously for duplicate events below magnitude
6.5, and some of the events of lower magnitude, which normally
might be supposed to be aftershocks or foreshocks, are likely
duplicated listings. Therefore, the data file "1900.EQ"
probably overestimates the frequency of magnitude 6.0 events
globally.
26 K. Abe, "Magnitudes of Large Shallow Earthquakes
from 1904 to 1980," Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors
27(1981): pp. 72-92. K. Abe and S. Noguchi, "Determination
of Magnitude for Large Shallow Earthquakes 1898-1917," Physics
of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 32 (1983): pp. 45-59. K.
Abe and S. Noguchi, "Revision of Magnitudes of Large Shallow
Earthquakes, 1897-1912," Physics of the Earth and Planetary
Interiors 33 (1983): pp. 1-11. K. Abe, "Complements to 'Magnitudes
of Large Shallow Earthquakes from 1904 to 1980'," Physics
of Earth and Planetary Interiors 34 (1984): pp. 17-23.
27 K. Abe and H. Kanamori, "Temporal Variation
of the Activity of Intermediate and Deep Focus Earthquakes,"
Journal of Geophysical Research 84 (1979): pp. 3589-3595.
28 J. F. Pacheco and L. R. Sykes, "Seismic Moment
Catalog of Large Shallow Earthquakes, 1900 to 1989," Bulletin
of the Seismological Society of America 82 (1992): pp. 1306-1349.
29 T. M. Tsapanos, E. M. Scordilis and B. C. Papazachos,
"A Homogeneous and Complete Catalog for World's Great Earthquakes
Covering the Time Period 1898-1985," Publication of the
University of Thessaloniki, Geophysics Laboratory (1988): p.
182.
30 The NGDC statistics come from the file "1900.EQ"
contained in volume 2 of the CD-ROM called "Seismicity Catalog"
issued in 1996 jointly by the NGDC and the NEIC. Anyone wishing
to evaluate completeness of earthquake statistics globally for
M ³ 6.0 cited by prophecy teachers should consult this file.
The file is in ASCII code that can be read by any word processor
and imported into a spread sheet. Because the file "1900.EQ"
is not copyrighted, the authors can make a copy available on
floppy disk to anyone requesting it.
31 Abe and Kanamori, "Temporal Variation of the
Activity of Intermediate and Deep Focus Earthquakes." J.
Xanthakis, "Possible Periodicities of the Annually Released
Global Seismic Energy (M ³ 7.9) during the Period 1898-1971,"
Tectonophysics 81 (1982): pp. T7-T14. Y. Ogata and K. Abe, "Some
Statistical Features of the Long-Term Variation of the Global
and Regional Seismic Activity," International Statistical
Review 59 (1991): pp. 139-161. I. Liritzis and T. M. Tsapanos,
"Probable Evidence for Periodicities in Global Seismic Energy
Release," Earth, Moon, and Planets 60 (1993): pp. 93-108.
Y. Ogata and K. Katsura, "Analysis of Temporal and Spatial
Heterogeneity of Magnitude Frequency Distribution Inferred from
Earthquake Catalogues," Geophysical Journal International
113 (1993): pp. 727-738.
32 Researchers suggest the inhomogeneity of earthquakes
may be related to some type of internal global fluctuation within
the earth, perhaps a variation in the large-scale motion of the
earth. Could a slight wobble during the earth's rotation correlate
with the inhomogeneous data? Is there occasional chaotic motion
within the earth's liquid outer core that correlates with earthquakes
in the crust? Earthquake frequency cycles appear to be real,
but the cause remains speculative. An observer might say it is
like monitoring birth pangs. When will the next ones come? How
long will we have to wait? The observed earthquake frequency
pattern is consistent with creationist ideas suggesting overall
exponentially declining tectonism and volcanism following a recent
geologic upheaval such as Noah's Flood. The data may present
a problem for the skeptic of the doctrine of Creation and the
opponent to the reality of Noah's Flood. Such a uniformitarian
skeptic would want to say, "everything goes on as it has
since the beginning of creation" (2 Peter 3:4 NIV). The
skeptic might not want to acknowledge such a declining pattern
over time.
33 M. Zirbes, "Are Earthquakes Really on the
Increase?" National Earthquake Information Center Web site
Documents (Denver, CO: United States Geological Survey, updated
14 October 1997). This document was viewed in November 1997 at
http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/general/handouts/increase_in_earthquakes.html.
34 Lindsey, Planet Earth 2000 A.D., p. 88.
35 Lindsey, Planet Earth 2000 A.D., p. 88.
36 Lindsey, Planet Earth 2000 A.D., p. 89.
"By selectively manipulating the criteria used to determine
a 'major quake,' the USGS can effectively argue against any increase
in seismic activity." Lindsey's assertion of selective manipulation
is demonstrated to be incorrect by data displayed in Figure 1b.
37 Lindsey's statistics for M ³ 6.0 earthquakes
in Table 1 come from Planet Earth 2000 A.D., p.85,86.
38 Jeffrey, Prince of Darkness, pp. 310, 311,
and Jeffrey, Armageddon: Appointment with Destiny, pp.
251, 252
39 Stearman, "Are Earthquakes on the Increase?"
40 Lalonde and Lalonde, 301 Startling Proofs &
Prophecies, p. 248.
41 Lindsey, Planet Earth 2000 A.D., p. 86.
On page 85 Lindsey says: "One of the major birthpangs Jesus
predicted would increase in frequency and intensity shortly before
His return is earthquakes. Those of us who live in California
are only too aware of the increase in earthquake activity in
recent years."
42 Our computer search of "authoritative"
records revealed the date, location and magnitude of 408 earthquakes
with M ³ 5.0 during the eighty-year period from 1900 through
1979 in the California region. We located these authoritative
records for M ³ 5.0 by accessing the "U. S. Geological Survey
Earthquake Data Base" of the NEIC on the Internet at http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov.
For the period 1900 through 1974, we searched at the NEIC website
the California Division of Mines and Geology catalog ("CDMG")
and located 364 earthquakes. For the period 1975 through 1979,
we searched by rectangular areas the Preliminary Determination
of Epicenters catalog ("PDE") and found an additional
44 earthquakes. Our search was conducted totally within the NEIC
database for M ³ 5.0 records on August 28, 1998.
43 R. Stein and T. Hanks, "M ³ 6.0 Earthquakes
in Southern California during the Twentieth Century: No Evidence
for a Seismicity or Moment Deficit," Bulletin of the Seismological
Society of America 88 (1998): pp. 635-652. Their catalog can
be accessed through the Internet at http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/study/deformation.
44 L. K. Hutton and L. M. Jones, "Local Magnitudes
and Apparent Variations in Seismicity Rates in Southern California,"
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 83 (1993): pp.
313-329. Hutton and Jones document 63 M ³ 5.0 events in Southern
California from 1932 through 1979, many more than the 18 events
for all of California that Lindsey supposes from 1900 through
1979.
45 Stein and Hanks, "M ³ 6.0 Earthquakes
in Southern California during the Twentieth Century: No Evidence
for a Seismicity or Moment Deficit," p. 635.
46 In Planet Earth 2000 A.D. (page 85), Lindsey refers
to a recent earthquake increase in Japan: "But California
is not the only place where earthquake activity has increased.
There has been a destructive series of quakes in Armenia, Australia,
Japan, China, India as well as California."
47 T. Utsu, "Catalog of Large Earthquakes in
the Region of Japan from 1885 through 1980," Bulletin of
the Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo 57 (1982):
pp. 401-463 (in Japanese).
48 Y. Ogata and K. Abe, "Some Statistical Features
of the Long-Term Variation of the Global and Regional Seismic
Activity," International Statistical Review 59 (1991): pp.
139-161.
49 Ogata and Abe, "Some Statistical Features
of the Long-Term Variation of the Global and Regional Seismic
Activity," p. 131.
50 Cf. The Late Great Planet Earth, p. 52, where he
writes that Jesus said these signs "would increase in frequency
and intensity just like birth pangs before a child is born."
51 Although in 1 Kings 19:11 the point is that God
did not speak in the earthquake, the expectation is that he normally
would have. The gentle whisper is contrasted with God's more
typical theophanic manifestation of power.
52 For summaries of the various views see D. A. Carson,
"Matthew," in The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Vol.
8, ed. Frank E. Gaebelein, (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1984), pp.
491-495; J. Dwight Pentecost, Things To Come. A Study of Biblical
Eschatology (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1964), 277-278.
53 See Pentecost, Things To Come, pp. 278-279; idem,
Thy Kingdom Come (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1990, pp. 250-252;
L. Barbieri, "Matthew," in The Bible Knowledge Commentary.
New Testament (eds. J. Walvoord & R. Zuck, Wheaton: Victor,
1983), pp. 76-77. A modification of this interpretation extends
the first half of the tribulation to verse 14.
54 See Pentecost, Things To Come, pp. 278-279.
55 L. S. Chafer, Systematic Theology (Dallas: Dallas
Seminary Press, 1948), p. 120.
56 J. Walvoord, The Bible Knowledge Handbook (Wheaton:
Victor, 1990), p. 381. While Walvoord is here describing various
views (not identifying his own), this view is also expressed
in his commentary on Matthew: Matthew. Thy Kingdom Come (Chicago:
Moody, 1974), p. 184.
57 Walvoord, Bible Knowledge Handbook, pp. 382-383.
58 Josephus describes an interesting episode which
occurred following a severe earthquake in Judea in 31 B.C., an
earthquake which reportedly killed 30,000 people. Hearing exaggerated
reports of the devastation, the Arabs to the East seized the
opportunity and invaded the territory of Herod the Great, embroiling
his nation in war. When many of Herod's demoralized troops interpreted
the earthquake as an evil omen, Herod responded with a speech
declaring it to be an event without divine causation: "Do
not let the convulsions of inanimate nature disturb you or imagine
that the earthquake is a portent of a further disaster. These
accidents to which the elements are subject have physical causes,
and beyond the immediate injury inflicted bring no further consequences
to mankind." (Josephus, War, 1.19.4 [§376-377]; tr.
H. St. J. Thackeray, Loeb Classical Library; Cambridge: Harvard
UP, 1961).
59 Donald A. Hagner, Matthew 14-28 (Word Biblical
Commentary 33B; Dallas: Word, 1995), p. 691.
60 J. F. Walvoord, Matthew, p. 184.
61 For references see G. Bertram, Theological Dictionary
of the New Testament, Vol. 9, ed. G. Friedrich; tr. and ed. G.
W. Bromiley (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974), pp. 670 ff.; Hagner,
Matthew 14-28, p. 691.
* Steven A. Austin is Chairman of the Geology
Department at the Institute for Creation Research in Santee,
California. Mark L. Strauss is Associate Professor of New Testament
at Bethel Seminary San Diego in San Diego, California.
World-wide Seismic
Monitor (USGS Data)
http://www.ldolphin.org/quakes2.html |