The Last Disciple
Page 1
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The Last Disciple
Copyright © 2004 by Hank Hanegraaff. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of man taken by Stephen Vosloo. Copyright © by Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Designed by Daniel Farrell
Edited by James H. Cain III
Some Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Some Scripture taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version,® NIV.® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com.
This novel is a work of fiction. With the exception of historical persons and facts as noted on the website, names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons in the present day is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the authors or the publisher.
The Library of Congress has cataloged the original edition as follows:
Hanegraaff, Hank.
The last disciple / Hank Hanegraaff and Sigmund Brouwer.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-8423-8437-7 (hc) — ISBN 978-0-8423-8438-4 (sc)
1. Bible. N.T. Revelation XIII—History of Biblical events—Fiction. 2. Church history—Primitive and early church, ca. 30–600—Fiction. 3. Rome—History—
Nero, 54–68—Fiction. 4. End of the world—Fiction. I. Brouwer, Sigmund, date.
II. Title.
PS3608.A714L37 2004
813'.6—dc22 2004010713
Repackage first published in 2012 under ISBN 978-1-4143-6497-1
To Ron Beers
Your character, competence, and courage
are a gift to us and to the body of Christ.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Calendar Notes
Part I
Intempesta
Part II
Mercury
Hora Duodecima
Vespera
Jupiter
Hora Quinta
Hora Sexta
Part III
13 Av
The Third Hour
The Fourth Hour
The Seventh Hour
14 Av
The Seventh Hour
The Eighth Hour
The Ninth Hour
15 Av
The Fourth Hour
The Fifth Hour
The Eighth Hour
The Eleventh Hour
Part IV
Venus
Hora Sexta
Hora Septina
Hora Duodecima
Prima Fax
Saturn
Hora Quarta
Hora Sexta
Hora Undecima
Hora Duodecima
Vespera
Afterword
Discussion Questions
Other Books by the Authors
Christian Research Institute
Acknowledgments
First, we would like to express our deepest appreciation to Tyndale House Publishers for their relentless pursuit of truth. We are especially grateful to Ron Beers, Becky Nesbitt, Jan Stob, Carla Mayer, and Jamie Cain for their input and editorial expertise. They personify Tyndale’s mission statement as “determined, driven, bold, risk-taking, frontier-driven distributors of God’s truth.”
Furthermore, we are deeply grateful for the staff and ministry of the Christian Research Institute—especially Stephen Ross, Adam Pelser, Brenda Marchak, Amy Leonhardt, and Kristen Ross. Thanks also to Dr. Paul L. Maier and Gretchen Passantino for their historical and literary expertise. Together they embody the maxim “In essentials unity, in nonessentials liberty, and in all things charity.”
Finally, we want to acknowledge Kathy Hanegraaff and the brood—Michelle, Katie, David, John Mark, Hank Jr., Christina, Paul Stephen, Faith, Grace; and Cindy Brouwer and the kids—Olivia and Savannah. Most of all, we are grateful for the grace that our Lord has lavished upon us.
Calendar Notes
The Romans divided the day into twelve hours. The first hour, hora prima, began at sunrise, approximately 6 a.m. The twelfth hour, hora duodecima, ended at sunset, approximately 6 p.m.
hora prima: first hour: 6–7 a.m.
hora secunda: second hour: 7–8 a.m.
hora tertiana: third hour: 8–9 a.m.
hora quarta: fourth hour: 9–10 a.m.
hora quinta: fifth hour: 10–11 a.m.
hora sexta: sixth hour: 11 a.m.–12 p.m.
hora septina: seventh hour: 12–1 p.m.
hora octava: eighth hour: 1–2 p.m.
hora nonana: ninth hour: 2–3 p.m.
hora decima: tenth hour: 3–4 p.m.
hora undecima: eleventh hour: 4–5 p.m.
hora duodecima: twelfth hour: 5–6 p.m.
The New Testament refers to hours in a similar way. Thus, when we read in Luke 23:44, “It was now about the sixth hour, and darkness came over the whole land until the ninth hour,” we understand that this period of time was from the hour before noon to approximately 3 p.m.
The Romans divided the night into eight watches.
Watches before midnight: Vespera, Prima fax, Concubia, Intempesta.
Watches after midnight: Inclinatio, Gallicinium, Conticinium, Diluculum.
The Romans’ days of the week were Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn.
The months of the Hebrew calendar are Nisan, Iyar, Sivan, Tammuz, Av, Elul, Tishri, Heshvan, Kislev, Tevet, Shevat, Adar I, and Adar II. In AD 65, the date 13 Av was approximately August 1.
Seventy “sevens” are decreed for your people and your holy city to finish transgression, to put an end to sin, to atone for wickedness, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the most holy.
—Daniel 9:24
The revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show his servants what must soon take place. He made it known by sending his angel to his servant John, who testifies to everything he saw—that is, the word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ. Blessed is the one who reads the words of this prophecy, and blessed are those who hear it and take to heart what is written in it, because the time is near.
—Revelation 1:1-3
Part I
Ten Months after the Beginning of the Tribulation
AD 65
Rome
Capital of the Empire
Four great beasts, each different from the others, came up out of the sea. The first was like a lion, and it had the wings of an eagle. . . . And there before me was a second beast, which looked like a bear. . . . After that, I looked, and there before me was another beast, one that looked like a leopard. . . . After that, in my vision at night I looked, and there before me was a fourth beast—terrifying and frightening and very powerful. It had large iron teeth; it crushed and devoured its victims and trampled underfoot whatever was left.
—Daniel 7:3-7
Intempesta
I
n the royal gardens beneath a full moon, Vitas stealthily pursued the man he had once vowed to serve with loyalty or death. His emperor.
It was a night unnaturally still and hot, heavy with the unseen menace of a building storm, with the moon above Rome and the seven hills that guarded the city—a moon that bounced mercury light off the placid lake of the royal gardens into thinly spaced trees along its shore.
Nero was fifty paces ahead of Vitas, lurching beneath an elaborate costume that impeded his progress. The costume had been pieced together from animals imported to the arenas to kill convicted criminals. Head to foot, Nero was draped in a leopard’s skin. Two pairs of eagles’ wings were sewn onto the back of the costume. A lion’s head from a massive male had been attached to the top, and Nero’s head fit completely inside the skull, allowing him to see through the empty sockets. His arms and legs were covered by the skin from a bear’s legs, which had also been sewn to the leopard skin that covered the bulk of Nero’s body. In the quiet of the night, the bear claws rattled with each of Nero’s steps.
Another man walked beside Nero. Helius. Nero’s secretary and confidant. Helius—along with a man named Tigellinus—had been a companion since Nero was a teenage emperor, when the three of them roamed the streets of Rome at night to bully and rob strangers, like common thugs.
Helius held aloft a torch, which illuminated the dull iron chain in his right hand, and it dragged along the ground, rattling in odd unison with the bear claws of Nero’s costume.
Because of the noise and the apparent focus on their destination, Vitas was not worried that his emperor would notice his pursuit. He was far more worried about Nero’s intentions. There had been times when Nero dressed in wolf skins and attacked slaves chained to stakes, but that had been part of very public celebrations.
This was too different. Too eerie. Vitas needed to know why.
Vitas was the single man in Nero’s inner circle whom the Senate trusted. There were times when Vitas felt he was a thin string holding the Senate and emperor together. If Vitas lost his awareness of Nero’s actions, he would lose the Senate’s trust that gave him such value to both sides. The string would snap. If that happened, the inevitable war would be disastrous for the empire.
Ahead of Vitas, the roar of a real lion thundered from the inside of a gardener’s hut, roiling through the heat and stillness back toward Nero’s palace.
Vitas wondered if the echoes of the roar clawed into the dreams and nightmares of the slaves in their various quarters. If those who woke to the roar pretended sleep or silently held their children and whispered prayers to their gods.
The slaves knew there was danger in the roar. But, like Vitas, it wasn’t the lion they feared.
Helius had been instructed by Nero to make no noise when they reached the hut. Just outside the closed door, Helius nodded when Nero stopped and pointed at the chain Helius carried.
Helius was a man of arrogance and certainty except in the presence of Nero; he hated himself for fumbling with the chain as he tentatively attached it to a collar around the neck of the animal costume. Bowed meekly when Nero slapped him once across the face for his clumsiness.
Nero pointed at the door of the hut.
Helius opened it, and by the chain, led Nero inside.
Two men and two women were shackled to the stone of an interior wall, each sagging against the irons, each stripped to sackcloth rags.
They faced three cages. One held the lion. Another held a bear. And the third a leopard.
Helius stepped inside, leading the disguised Nero. He jammed the torch into an iron band bolted to the wall for that purpose. He fastened one end of the chain that held the beast to a bar of the lion’s cage.
Helius turned to the first man.
They were the same height but obviously different ages. The captive was nearing sixty; Helius was in his twenties. Daylight would have shown the smooth and almost bronzed skin of Helius’s features. His hair was luxuriously curly, his eyes a strange yellow, giving him a feral look that was rumored to hold great attraction for Nero. Helius wore a toga, and his fingers and wrists and neck were layered with jewelry of gold and rubies. There was something catlike about his examination of the captive in front of him.
Helius had a knife hidden in his toga. With deliberate slowness, he pulled it up and placed the edge of it against the man’s face with sinister gentleness.
“The emperor wishes for you to bow down and worship the beast,” Helius said. His fumbling fear was gone in service of Nero. Temporary as it might be, with Nero in the costume, Helius was now the one in control.
“No,” the man said quietly.
“No?”
Helius moved to the woman beside the man. He drew the knife downward from her ear to her chin. A narrow line of blood followed the path of the knife and streamed onto her neck.
“Leave the woman alone,” the first captive said. “Turn your attention to me.” His hair matched his beard—greasy with days of unwashed sweat from being in captivity, gray hairs far outnumbering the remainder of black ones. His torso and arms were corded with muscle, suggesting a long life of physical labor.
“Then worship the beast,” Helius answered.
“I cannot.”
“Cannot?” Helius asked softly, waving the knife in front of the woman. “Or will not?”
“I will not betray my Master.”
“Nor will I,” said the woman. “I am not afraid.”
“Listen to me, you Jews,” Helius said. “If you bow to the beast and worship him as divine, I have been given authority to spare you this.”
With his knife, Helius cut a piece of the rags that covered the first captive. He turned to the woman and used the cloth to wipe blood from her face.
Helius tossed the bloody rag into the lion’s cage, and it savaged the cloth, pinning it with its mighty front paws and tearing at it with its teeth. Beside it in their own cages, the bear roared its fury, and the agitated leopard paced back and forth.
Helius ignored the cages, letting his eyes caress the face of each captive, searching for fear. Because he knew fear so intimately in himself, he was an expert at finding it in others.
Helius smiled his hungry smile. “Let me repeat. Nero wishes for you to worship the beast. Will you accept it as god? Or shall I let the beast loose to destroy you?”
The first man remained silent. Helius had expected the resistance. But it did not matter. Either way, Nero would be satisfied by a personal triumph over these Christians. They would worship him, hidden as he was beneath the costume of the beast, or he would take satisfaction in killing them as the beast. This symbolic victory would assure Nero that he truly was in control, that the widespread resistance to him from the Christians of Rome was meaningless.
Helius turned to the others, asking one by one if they were willing to bow down and worship the beast. None answered.
“Let me kill them!” The beast that was Nero spoke in a guttural, strangulated voice. “Let me tear their livers from their living bodies! Let me—”
“Silence!” Helius barked at the beast. These had been Nero’s instructions. Play the role of the master of the beast so none of the captives would guess Nero himself was hidden beneath the costume.
To the captives Helius said, “Look at the beast closely. Do you not see it is a bear? a lion? a leopard with wings? Does it mean anything to you?”
The beast began hissing, a frenzy that ended only when Helius grabbed the torch and waved the fire beneath its head. As if it truly were beast, not man. Nero, the amateur actor, was widely known for playing his roles seriously.
After Helius calmed the beast, he spoke to the captives again. Anger tinged his words. “I understand far more about you Jews than you realize. I know of your prophet named Daniel. Hundreds of years ago, he foretold that Rome would be the fourth beast, greater than the kingdoms of Babylon and Persia and Greece. And here is your fourth beast, ready to destroy you.”
“Death cannot destroy us,” the fir
st captive said. “Through my Lord and Master, it is a fate that we greet with peace. If you would believe in His love and—”
Helius slashed at the captive with his knife, a slash of rage. The blade flashed across the man’s right bicep, instantly cutting through to muscle. Blood dripped down the man’s elbow and onto the dirt floor. This had not been part of Nero’s instructions, but Helius was at heart a coward and could not resist the power he’d been given for this role.
“You refuse to worship the beast?” Helius jeered. “Then tonight he will be the beast to destroy you! And in the next years, he will continue to destroy all the followers until the very last disciple is wiped from this earth. The name of Christos will be forgotten, but Nero will be revered forever!”
Helius spun, taking hold of the chain that held the upright beast to the lion’s cage. “Ravage these men and women and destroy them,” he spoke to the beast. “Leave their remains for the bear and the leopard and the lion!”
The beast howled.
“Yes,” Helius told the beast. “Tonight you will sleep in peace, knowing the power of the fourth beast is greater than the power of their God. You will triumph!”
Helius was forced to yell above the roars of the animals and the high-pitched screaming of Nero playing the beast.
Then Helius froze as a lone man walked into the hut.
Gallus Sergius Vitas.
Vitas had heard enough from outside to decide to stop this madness. And he knew how he would do it.
He’d made his decision to enter the hut based on a well-known story about Nero. During those years as a teenage emperor Nero had dressed himself as a slave and would roam the streets at night to loot shops and terrorize strangers. He and his friends, including Helius and Tigellinus, had attacked a rich senator and his wife. The senator was unaware that Nero was among the hoodlums and fought well, landing several punches directly in Nero’s face. Nero and his friends fled.
While Nero had recognized the man as a senator, he made no plans to take action against him, realizing the senator had been perfectly justified in protecting himself from a mere slave. Unfortunately, when someone told the senator whose eyes he had blackened, he sent Nero a letter of abject apology. Because Nero could no longer pretend he’d been an anonymous slave and it was now publicly known that the senator had committed a treasonous act against the emperor, the senator was forced to open his veins in a suicide that prevented the trial and conviction that would have ruined the senator’s family.