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The
Prophecy Club is a fringe group. They focus their so
called ministry on selling video's and audio tapes to
their followers. They deal with subjects outside of the
normal Christian Ministries. Such as the New World Order,
King James Only, God's Judgment of America, of course they
push very hard the doomsday scenarios such as the millennium
problem and other catastrophes that are sure to come. Of
course this sells more and more tapes. Their so called
prophets are not affiliated with any Church's. The group
itself has no ties or affiliations with any denominations.
So in essence they are a group without any accountability.
They answer to nobody so they can say and do what they want.
They cater to alarmist Christians, those that are always
looking for conspiracy.
The
article below was written by Donald U. Wise
When the
local Pennsylvania newspaper announced that the Prophecy
Club would be holding a three-hour seminar conducted by
"Hayseed" Stevens concerning prophecy and oil in Israel,
curiosity overwhelmed me. After a forty-year career of
research and geology teaching, I had a fair idea of Israel's
geology and the origin of its tiny oil production. Such a
case for personal "enlightenment" was not to be missed. The
following report on that January 8, 1998, seminar is a small
window on the fundamentalist movement in America and its
application of creation science.
The
Prophecy Club has a network of local chapters, with its
headquarters in Topeka, Kansas. It is a fundamentalist
Christian organization with television programs scheduled on
eight stations. It also has radio programs on fifty-eight AM
and FM stations and six shortwave stations as well as on six
satellite channels. Its January/February 1998 newsletter,
distributed at the seminar, lists a total of "765 new
conversions" and "2,441 rededications" during the last year
as "determined by show of hands and public confessions at
its sessions." This particular presentation was one of
twelve being made from Boston to Spokane by "Hayseed"
Stevens in January and February 1998. The newsletter lists
fifty additional seminars to be taught across the nation by
four other speakers during this same time period, each
charging $7 per person admission. Advertised seminar
subjects include how America is being taken over as part of
a "New World Order," prophecies of financial crisis, secret
codes embedded in the Bible, and prophecy warnings about
governmental plans concerning the use of UFOs to "destroy
the religions of the world and switch them to the religion
of the Antichrist."
Joining
approximately 150 other people, I paid at the door and
entered the rented lecture room at a local convention
center. At the back of the room were five sales tables laden
with video tapes, recordings, and a variety of pamphlets of
prophecy and doom. Following an opening prayer, the head of
the local chapter introduced Harold "Hayseed" Stevens, who
responded with another prayer ended by a lackluster chorus
of "Amens." Intent upon engaging his audience, Hayseed
requested a lustier "Amen." Eagerly embracing his role as
cheerleader, he cried, "If I told you that the Philadelphia
Eagles had just won the Super Bowl, what would you say?"
"Amen!" "Even better. Now what if I told you that Jesus
Christ was coming tomorrow?" A thunderous "Amen!" followed.
After finally warming up his audience, Stevens directed the
group to repeat after him, "The greatest oil field on Earth
is under the southwest corner of the Dead Sea." Throughout
the rest of the talk, at about ten minute intervals, he led
his audience in this same rousing cheer.
Now, with
an involved and receptive audience, Stevens proceeded to
describe his early fundamentalist religious life growing up
on a sharecrop farm in Texas, his sinful life as a
professional football player, and his final conversion to
Christian evangelism. According to his tale, one day God
told him to go into the oil business. With God's direction
he developed Hayseed Stevens Oil, Inc., as well as an
international oil company called Ness Energy International.
After a few years, God told him to go drill for oil in
Israel and He would reveal the oil's location.
Stevens
described going to Israel in 1980 with eleven other
Christian businessmen to meet with Menachem Begin. When
Begin told them that he knew nothing about oil, Hayseed
whipped off his Texas-style ten gallon hat and gave it to
Begin announcing that the gift would help him understand the
oil business. At once, the miracle occurred! The hat fit and
Begin said to him, "Maybe you should be the one to come and
find oil for us in Israel." As proof that such an event took
place, Stevens showed a photo of the group with a big white
Texas hat in front of Begin and concluded that,
"miraculously, within two hours God showed me the location
of the world's greatest oil field. . . . Now repeat after me
. . ." And the crowd thundered, "The greatest oil field on
Earth is under the southwest corner of the Dead Sea."
Stevens
described the origin of this Israeli oil bonanza by using a
version of geology straight out of creation science. A large
1992 poster from the Creation Evidence Museum was displayed
with the title "Creation in Symphony" as Stevens gave
glowing attribution of the work to his friend, the
"brilliant" creationist writer Carl Baugh. The proposed
model involved a 6,000-year-old Earth with a molten interior
at 10,000 degrees. Floating above the molten interior and
keeping the surface "insulated" was a huge layer of
hydrocarbons, the mother lode of Earth's petroleum
resources. Above this and just below the crust was a layer
of water in some strange kind of density inversion. Slow
seepage of the water layer produced the humid jungle-like
conditions of the Garden of Eden with its great vapor
canopy. To create Noah's flood, God used an earthquake to
rupture the crust and allow the trapped water layer to pour
forth as the Biblical "fountains of the deep."
According
to Stevens, that Dead Sea fault zone marks the boundary of
Earth's greatest tectonic plates. (In reality the fault is
only a medium-scale plate boundary separating the African
plate from the Arabian plate.) After the escape of the
waters, this deep fracture tapped the mother lode layer of
petroleum which bled upwards to form the asphalt and tar
seeps in the region of Sodom and Gomorrah. According to
Stevens's interpretation of prophecy, God originally
intended all this oil to be the basis of Israel's future
riches and greatness. But unfortunately, the people became
evil and undeserving so God caused the fault to move. The
resulting friction ignited the oil and it exploded under
Sodom and Gomorrah. Somehow the heat was so intense that it
created an "entirely new form of sulfur which melted at
10,000 degrees and rained down on those evil people as fire
and brimstone." The intensity of the heat converted the rock
to salt (a chemical process that would certainly have
delighted the alchemists of the Middle Ages). As evidence of
this, Hayseed showed satellite photos and crude versions of
Geological Survey of Israel seismic cross sections with a
big salt plug at the southwest corner of the Dead Sea basin
in the vicinity of Sodom and Gomorrah. Encouraged, the
audience enthusiastically joined him in his incantation,
"The greatest oil field on Earth is under the southwest
corner of the Dead Sea!"
Returning
to his satellite photos, Stevens explained that the new salt
plug blocked the upward flow of the huge petroleum layer
destined for Israel. Thus diverted, the oil flowed eastward
into the great reservoirs of the Middle East. Even though a
geologic plumbing system that would allow this flow is
almost impossible to imagine, problems such as that were
never discussed. Instead, Stevens changed direction to focus
on the fact that 85 percent of the world's known oil
resources are presently under Islamic control. He assured
his audience that with his drill hole through the salt plug
to tap the mother lode of petroleum, he would change that
imbalance by making Israel the greatest oil producing nation
on Earth. Quoting Isaiah 60:5 he declared, "Then you shall
see and be radiant, your hearts shall thrill at the glorious
deliverance; because the abundant wealth of the Dead Sea
shall be turned to you. Unto you shall the nations come with
their treasures."
Stevens
pointed out that this drill site along the Dead Sea is at
the lowest point on Earth and as everyone knows, fluids flow
downhill. Thus, the well will not only tap the mother lode
but will eventually drain the Arabian oil fields (by some
unstated but geologically unthinkable mechanism). In accord
with prophecy, the enraged Arabs will attack Israel at the
final battle of Armageddon. The plains near Mt. Carmel,
according to Stevens, cover a vast reservoir of oil, and it
is across these plains that the Arabs will attack. God will
ignite the underlying oil to incinerate the Arabs and ensure
the victory of the righteous, at least according to
Stevens's reading of the book of Revelations.
My
strongest impression of the evening was of the interplay of
prophecy, prophets, and profits. The entire talk was
sprinkled with overhead projections and handouts of about
twenty verses of Biblical prophecy. Most prophecies were
supplemented by Stevens's interpretation inserted in
parentheses. Considerable strain seemed to be required of
the English language to make Biblical statements conform to
oil exploration and the present world of geopolitics.
However, once these prophecies were accepted there could be
no doubt that, "Repeat after me . . . !"
In 1985
Stevens organized a consortium to drill at the Dead Sea
site, but the drill string sheared off at about one mile
depth. He is now planning to drill a 19,000-foot, $25
million well through the salt plug, and his company is about
to offer public stock sales for this venture. If the
evening's talk was a promotion, it was done as a soft sell
but the phone number listed on the handouts to reach his
company was clear, as was the possibility of merging
prophecy with profits. Stevens pointed out that God's plans
even include the former Shah of Iran's financing of a
42-inch oil pipeline that was completed across Israel from
the Red Sea to the Mediterranean, but never used because of
the Shah's fall. This pipeline passes within a few miles of
the drill site and is now standing there empty, waiting to
take the supposed 200,000-barrel-a-day production that will
result just as soon as the well is completed.
The more
immediate financial aspects of the evening were well covered
starting with the $7 admission charge ($7 3 150 = $1,050) to
cover rental of the room, etc. The plethora of video tapes
for sale, mostly at $20 to $40, certainly met their
production cost as did several thin pamphlets selling at $5
to $10 each. Considering the admission cost it was
surprising to see an additional offering with helpers
passing collection plates through the audience. The number
of $10 and $20 bills and personal checks in those plates was
impressive. Following the mid-evening break Stevens
proceeded to extol the great works done by the Prophecy Club
and to propose that this warranted an unheard-of second
special collection. He noted that no one should feel any
pressure to contribute and that this offering should be from
the heart. He made a show of announcing his personal check
for $1,000. As the plate was passed this second time, he
kept rephrasing the theme that this offering should be
voluntary, that there was no peer pressure to do God's work,
and so on. I watched in amazement as people around me wrote
additional checks and put more $10 and $20 bills into the
plate.
The
evening concluded with a revival-style prayer session
complete with exhortations to anyone who had sinned and
wanted redemption to raise their hands while everyone, with
one exception, bowed their heads. Stevens acknowledged these
secret hands and counted them as part of the increasing list
of recipients needing prayer. With an "Amen," Stevens
invited everyone who felt the evening had been a success to
stand and let it be known. In response, 149 people stood,
waved their hands in the air and shouted "Hallelujah" and
"Amen."
Hayseed
Stevens folded his oil operations into and took over the Kit
Karson Corporation, a 19-year-old oil company listed as KTKC
on the NASDAQ. In 1996 KTKC reported its total assets as
$1,604 with a net loss of $1,179. After the takeover, the
July 23, 1998, SEC annual report for KTKC lists Stevens as
president, holding 56.5 percent of the common stock, which
has "no par value."
The
latest Church of the Mail Newsletter from Hayseed Stevens
announced that on October 13, 1998, the Israel Oil Company
had granted him drilling rights for 32,000 acres at the
southwest end of the Dead Sea. The first was well slated for
April 2000 at a cost of $30 million and an expected depth of
19,000 feet. To judge the effect of this news on the market,
the December 8 share price of KTKC was $0.24, nearly its
lowest point in a 52-week trading range of $0.21 to $13.75.
In early summer 1999 KTKC changed its name on the NASDAQ to
NESS, one of Hayseed's early names for his company. On July
2, 1999, NESS traded at $0.48 per share.
Whatever
happens with his oil explorations, I'll always find that
January evening one to be remembered and certainly one not
easily confused with any other lecture on oil resources.
"Right now we are only one well short of finding (repeat
after me) the greatest oil field on Earth . . ."
Donald U. Wise is a research associate at
Franklin and Marshall College, in Lancaster, PA and
professor emeritus of geology, University of Massachusetts
at Amherst
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