Jan Marcussen

A. Jan Marcussen is a preacher, physical therapist, nutritionist, and marriage counselor. He is most known for controversial views and promotion, through writing and other methods, of eschatology and the seventh-day Sabbath.[1] Marcussen has offered to pay $1 million U.S. dollars for biblical proof that the Christian day of worship was changed from Saturday to Sunday.[2] The Seventh-day Adventist Church is reported to have denied any official connection between Marcussen and the church.[1]

Books

Marcussen’s writings includes self-published books by his own Amazing Truth Publications:[3] Two Months to Live; Cousin Henry Potter (and the Terrible Time Machine); and National Sunday Law. The pamphlet Seven Secrets of Family Happiness is listed as published by the “Southern Publishing Association,” however at the Amazing Truth Publications address.[4] The Seventh-day Adventist denominational publisher, Southern Publishing Association, was located in Nashville, TN, and merged with the denominational Review and Herald Publishing Association in 1980.

Marcussen’s 1983 National Sunday Law, by 2016 had reached 41.7 million copies in 70 languages.[5] National Sunday Laws focuses on prophetic apocalyptic interpretations and warnings from the biblical books of Daniel and Revelation. Marcussen encourages its random distribution, and the book is bulk-mailed by its supporters.[6][7]

    Videos

    Newsletter

    Jan Marcussen publishes a newsletter that chronicles his claims about advancement toward a civil law requiring worship on Sundays, and also promotes sales of his book National Sunday Law.[8]

    Cultural references

    Marcussen's National Sunday Law was in part the inspiration for the 2004 low-budget action movie, The 4th Beast: Mask of the Antichrist. Director Nathyn Masters, an alumnus of Chicago's Columbia College, recounts[9] how he desired to create an endtime Christian action film with a post-tribulation scenario as an alternative to such pre-tribulation films as Left Behind.[9]

    gollark: > pluralis majestatisIt MIGHT be. There's not really a consistent PotatOS/etc team.
    gollark: PotatOS *is* to occur.
    gollark: We know what you did.
    gollark: Greetings, Kanister7.
    gollark: Do people DESERVE my code if they can't infer whatever eldritch insanity was running through my brain from the one sentence of documentation and the code?

    See also

    References

    1. "Anti-Catholic Book Makes the Rounds". Catholic Herald. Retrieved 2019-10-02.
    2. "Sabbath vs. Sunday Debate Heats up with $1,000,000 on the Line". www.biblesabbath.org. Retrieved 2019-02-19.
    3. https://www.bbb.org/us/il/thompsonville/profile/publishers-book/amazing-truth-publications-0734-310350570. Missing or empty |title= (help)
    4. Herald, Reformation. "Seven Secrets of Family Happiness". Reformation Herald. Retrieved 2019-02-19.
    5. Millennium, Messiahs, and Mayhem: Contemporary Apocalyptic Movements by Thomas Robbins and Susan J. Palmer. 1997; p219
    6. "Jan's Newsletter" (PDF).
    7. "Bulk Mailings". newlifemission1986.org. Retrieved 2019-02-19.
    8. "Jan's Newsletter".
    9. http://www.columbiachronicle.com/back/2004_spring/2004-03-15/arts1.html
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