- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Acknowledgments
- Forewords
- Apocalypse Interpreted
- Interpreting Apocalypse 1: The Messenger of a New Religious Revelation
- Chapter 2: His Messages for Four Earlier Faiths
- Chapter 3: His Messages for Three Later Faiths
- Chapter 4: His Message of a New Faith
- Chapter 5: The Ram
- Chapter 6: The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
- Chapter 7: The 144,000 Unity-Diamond
- Chapter 8: A History of Christianity
- Chapter 9: A History of Islam
- Chapter 10: The Glory of God
- Chapter 11: The Central Revelation Prophecy
- Chapter 12: Noble Islam
- Chapter 13: 666 is the Number of the Beast
- Chapter 14: A New Gospel
- Chapter 15: The Presence of God
- Chapter 16: Armageddon
- Chapter 17: Interpreting Revelation Symbols
- Chapter 18: Malignant Materialism Falls into a Greatest Depression
- Chapter 19: Spiritual and Economic Revival
- Chapter 20: The Jewish Seventh Millennium
- Chapter 21: The Divine Civililization of New Jerusalem
- Chapter 22: The One Religion of God
- Discussion
- A Book of Codes
- 1844 Time-Prophecies
- 1844 Switch of Cycles
- The Bab and Baha'u'llah
- Mount Carmel
- Progressive Revelation
- Eras and Cycles
- The Force Called “God”
- Afterlife
- Baha’i Founders
- Interpretive Baha’i Writings
- Baha'u'llah's Revelation Roles
- Prophecy's Multiple Meanings
- One Religion of God
- Yom Kippur
- The Temple
- Presence of God
- The Seventh Millennium
- New Jerusalem
- Twelve Commandments
- Lesser and Greater Peace
- Conflict between Faiths
- Spiritual Economics
- Summary
- Translation Section
- Illustrations and Credits
- Glossary
- Bibliographies
- Index Words
Foreword by Rabbi Suzanne Carter
Beyond Malignant Materialism is a unique parallel interpretation of the Book of Revelation that transcends religious dogma, bridges religious faiths, and explains nineteen hundred years of troubled events in Christianity and Islam with clarity and amazing prescience in providing a template for understanding and peace.
In the 1990s Able discussed with me what have now become main topics in his book, especially economic issues. Back then, few people in the United States or the prosperous West saw any economic reckoning coming. No one expected that such a collapse could happen. The economic system seemed just too well adjusted.
Even now, March 2009, people still do not understand—if Able is right—that the present recession is set to shrivel down into a universal paralysis “creeping over the minds and souls of men”. Sadly, a global depression worse than the one that our forbears went through in the 1930s seems to be needed to open the door for spiritual economics to do its work and to revive human nature.
Rabbi Suzanne Carter
Delray Beach