The earliest on the subject is Somebody Loves Me, which focused on a young boy being bludgeoned to death by a drunken guardian after not getting enough to pay on the rent.
Some of the tracts that explicitly describe this belief in detail include Almost Time,[14] The Beast,[15] Camel's in the Tent,[16] Global Warming,[17] The Great Escape,[18] The Last Generation,[19] Love the Jewish People,[20] The Only Hope,[21] Somebody Angry?,[22] Then What?,[23] Things to Come?,[24] Where Did They Go?,[25] Where's Your Name?,[26] Who is He?,[27] and Why Should I?.
[29][30] The Hindu American Foundation has stated that "Chick Publications promotes hatred not just against Hindus, but also towards Muslims, Catholics, and others".
In October 2011, the Northview Baptist Church in Hillsboro, Ohio, gave out copies of the Chick tract Mean Momma[32] along with candy at Halloween.
"[34] Avon and Somerset Police investigated the distribution of Chick publications in Bristol, England, in July 2020 as hate speech due to the tracts' homophobic and anti-Semitic messaging.
One notable tract, Wounded Children, depicts Satan robbing a young boy's innocence while exposing him to homosexuality before reaching adolescence.
The mother convinces the elder that Mary was not a perpetual virgin after confronting her about the fact that her Catholic priests were sex offenders.
[41] Several Chick tracts have featured the ideas of anti-Catholic conspiracy theorist Alberto Rivera,[42][43][44] such as claims that the Catholic Church created Islam, Communism, Nazism, and Freemasonry.
[45] For example, in the tract Love The Jewish People, one line reads: "In 1933, Catholic Germany, serving under the Vatican, launched a 20th-century inquisition, murdering 6 million Jews.
"[20] In The New Anti-Catholicism, religious historian Philip Jenkins describes Chick tracts as promulgating "bizarre allegations of Catholic conspiracy and sexual hypocrisy" to perpetuate "anti-papal and anti-Catholic mythologies".
The tract Camels in the Tent claims that Muslim immigration will lead to the establishment of Sharia law in the United States and the forceful conversion of non-Muslims to Islam.
[56] In 2014, the Chick tract Unforgiven[57] was distributed by Bible Baptist Church in Garden City, Roanoke, Virginia, drawing outrage from the area's Muslim community.
In Doom Town, Chick claims that HIV-positive gay men plan to donate blood illegally to protest a lack of federal funding for HIV/AIDS research.
(which also attempts to refute the existence of the strong nuclear force)[65] remains "the most widely distributed anti-evolution booklet in history".
[73] Catholic Answers stated that "Chick portrays a world full of paranoia and conspiracy where nothing is what it seems and nearly everything is a Satanic plot to lead people to hell.