Lesson 212
Last
time we went back through some of the larger considerations so that when we get
into these details you won’t lose the forest for the trees. Again I preface my
comments that we are in a difficult area of Scripture. Eschatology as we’ve said is being worked
out last century and this century; it appears to be working out pretty well but
there are divergences of views, even among those who are believers in the Lord
and Bible-believing Christians. Last
time I kind of reviewed the difference between the Church and Israel, and this
is a fundamental distinction. To that we can add a third distinction, Israel
and the Gentile, the Gentile nations.
So we actually have three groups in the Scripture and the problem in
Biblical interpretation is to understand God’s purposes with each of those
three groups. God has a purpose for
Israel; God has a purpose for Gentile nations and God has a purpose for the
Church.
We
surveyed that, we gave you the history of the world; we said it starts out with
innocence, it starts out in an unfallen universe, no sin, no death, no
suffering, no judgment for sin, and this period of time, with Adam and Eve
after creation until the fall, during that period of time there was an instance
of a sinless environment. Yet, even in that sinless environment we have people
sinning. Man chose to fall in a sinless
environment so that reveals the fact that sin is not environmental. Fundamentally sin cannot be explained away
as environmental. We have all kinds of
people that think this way. So and So
was raised in a bad home and that makes them bad; So and So had all the breaks
when they were kids and that makes them good.
It doesn’t work that way.
One
of the most interesting social examples of this is that during the depression
when people were suffering as we probably hadn’t seen that kind of suffering in
the country in a hundred years, when people were suffering in the depression
the interesting thing is that crime did not go up. If poverty and economic suffering caused crime, how do you
explain the fact that crime didn’t go up in the depression. It didn’t go up because there was a basic
ethic still left in the centers of American population. Today if we had suffering it would be
interesting to see if crime would go up.
But
the point is, the basic idea, and this is the point I’m trying to make, is as
you go through these different ages in history there are big ideas that you
want to grab onto and use those ideas to control your thinking, so your
thinking will be Biblical when everybody around you is falling apart, going off
on tangents and having problems, or doing some systematic foolishness that
leads to worse kind of mistakes. This
period of history was innocence.
Then
we had the period from the fall down to the flood and during that period of
time man had no government, no capital punishment, no police, it was all human
conscience. God allowed human society
to function that way, to prove a point; it doesn’t work! In a fallen world you can’t just contain sin
with human conscience; you need the power of forceful judgment against sin. And
that’s the argument for all people who want to do away with capital
punishment. There was a whole history
here of 1600 years when there was no capital punishment other than what was
administered by angels, for some reason maybe.
But by man it wasn’t, and what happened? Society fell apart, had total violence filling the earth, and so
God had to remove that society.
Then
we come down from the flood down to Abraham and now we have human government,
God gives revelation to every single people group on earth, there’s nobody,
there is no missions, no missionaries, no need for missionaries because every
society has access to the Noahic Bible, they all came off the same boat, they
are all sons and daughters of Noah, they all heard the story, Grandpa told
daddy and daddy told me. It was passed
on down through the families so everybody had access to revelation. Did that work? No, because what did we have?
We had man trying to define himself.
There came a point in this age when we had the great tower of
Babel. At the tower of Babel you have
an attempt, by corporate man, to form a world government that would be so
powerful as to define the nature of man.
Remember
what they said in Gen. 10, “Let us make a name for ourselves,” and when God
elected Abraham He deliberately took the same vocabulary and He said I will
give you the name, never mind making the name up yourself, I will give you the
name. In other words, God defines
purpose and meaning. Here man wanted to
define purpose and meaning and God had to shatter the culture of the world. So He broke the world up into linguistic
subgroups that can’t understand each other.
People say it would be so good if we could just get rid of the language
barriers. Would it? If you get rid of all the language barriers
you have no resistance to sin affecting us globally. At least with language barriers you’ll have some areas that can’t
be influenced by sin over because these people can’t understand what these
people are saying. So there are built
in barriers and you have the rise of nationalism. Today everybody wants to get back to internationalism, or to
globalism. But that is refuted by the
tower of Babel experience. It doesn’t
work.
Then
we come to Abraham and here we have the rise of another controversial time and
that is the rise of the need for missionaries because now God restricts
revelation to one culture. The
anthropologists and sociologists and all the people on campus hate that kind of
idea, that one culture could possibly have the truth and all the other culture
are deprived of it. How unfair, they
say. No, all cultures had the truth
prior to that point and paganized it, perverted it, distorted it. So we have a period from Abraham on when now
God is going to reveal Himself through only one culture and that means if it’s
only in one culture but there are men in many cultures you have to get the
truth from one culture out to the many cultures and how do you do that? Missionary work, that’s the need for a
cross-cultural evangelization. That’s
very offensive in our day to moral relativists, the idea that one culture could
have the truth. Well sorry, that’s the way it is, not because that culture is
better, it’s only because God works that way because when we had the truth
distributed evenly in all the people groups it didn’t work out.
Then
we come to the nation because Abraham had a family and the family was one of
the most dysfunctional families that you could imagine and out of that came a
nation. So now we have the period of
the nation of Israel. What that period
of history shows is what happens when God designs a society to live in a fallen
universe and He puts His presence, physically and politically, inside that
social unit. What happens then? What happens is what you got in Israel, and
within the history of Israel you have other great ideas that nobody thinks
of. Nobody thinks there are already big
ideas in the Bible so therefore they don’t think these things through, but if
you go back through Old Testament history in this time period of the nation,
what do you find? You find the period
of the judges, for example.
What
does the period of the judges teach us about society and politics? It teaches us, the book of Judges, that
where you have limited government which conservatives like because of the sin
issue, but the libertarians who are not necessarily Christians, libertarians
who are almost anarchists, don’t want any government authority, everybody
should do whatever the feel like as long as it doesn’t hurt somebody, never
define what it is that hurts or doesn’t hurt someone, but nevertheless, they
go forward with this libertarian idea and the book of Judges is the libertarian
idea worked out in history and what happened?
It failed because “every man did that which was right in their own
eyes.” Who defines right? Therefore then you go from almost anarchy to
the other extreme, and what is the other extreme known as in history. You have anarchy and chaos on one side and
totalitarianism of various forms on the other side.
So
you have that shift and you have the introduction of a monarchy. One of the great political chapters in the
Bible, never taught in school of course, the public schools don’t want to have
to carefully filter out anything that might possibly be construed to talk about
God, one of the things that in the Bible is a very politically crucial chapter
is 1 Sam. 8. Nobody even reads 1 Sam.
8; it is an exposition by the prophet Samuel of central government and the
problems of a totalitarian structure in society. You read it and it even predicts what the tax structure is going
to be in a totalitarian society. These
are all key things.
Then
you come down and you have this nation that has God’s law behind it, we’ve
looked through the Law, the Old Testament, we can find social legislation,
economic legislation, banking rules, currency rules, public health rules, the
whole nine yards of God’s will specified in every area of society. The New Testament, by the way, doesn’t do
that; only the Old Testament specifies social legislation like that. So you have a nation here and it is totally
prepared, it has the maximum amount of information of any nation in history,
and when God Himself walks into that national society He gets crucified. What does that show? That shows that unless the change is by
regeneration inside the human heart you cannot make a perfect society by law
structures. You can’t create a perfect society because it’s all external. All that happens is you create one big peer
pressure and so and so is good as long as the peer pressure is there; take away
the peer pressure and they fall apart.
This
is why people always say oh well, my son went in the military and he went to
pot. If he went to pot because he
joined the military it’s not the military’s fault; the problem is he never had
it together in the first place. He was
around peer pressure, and in the military he had a different kind of peer
pressure and he responded to the new kind of peer pressure; before he had the
Christian peer pressure and now he has the pagan peer pressure and so he
responds to that. He’s just peer pressure
driven. So nothing has changed, he’s
the same guy, but they always want to blame the military for it. Actually the military is a great place to
learn discipline and responsibility and that’s why we have so little discipline
and so little responsibility today because nobody knows anything about the
military, we have Congressmen, probably two out of every three Congressmen have
never even been in the military, don’t know a clue about it and here we are
almost in two wars and don’t have enough military to go around, because in
15-20 years we have robbed the defense department budget, stolen it, run by a
group of jerks in our country who themselves have never had to go into battle
and defend themselves. Now we pay the
price, and it’s going to be a national embarrassment because we have no training,
we have not enough weapons and we have neglected and neglected and kept the
budget down, kept the budget down, and kept the budget down and now we’re going
to pay the price for it. That’s what happens; that’s foolishness, policies will
always reap their results. We have to
learn that way. Fallen man always has
to have his nose rubbed into it before we ever learn anything.
Actually
it’s the same thing in the Church Age because now down in the Church Age God
says I’m not going to work with the nation any more, now I’m going to work with
individuals, but here’s the difference, and this is a difference you’ve got to
grasp if we are to interpret correctly these prophetic passages. You have got to understand the difference in
the definition between Israel and the Church.
During this period of time, in the Old Testament, God worked with the
nation Israel; the prophecies concern the nation. Yes, it does talk about the remnant but, for example, in the Old
Testament it talks about the New Covenant.
The New Covenant in Jeremiah and Ezekiel, and referred to in other
passages, is a promise, a prophecy of a thing in the future that is going to
occur to the nation. All the nation
will be regenerate; yes, it means the unregenerate will be destroyed from that
nation, but at one point in the future there will be 100% of the population
believers. That’s the New
Covenant. The New Covenant is not given
to the Church; the New Covenant in this regard has nothing to do with the
Church. It is a prediction of a state of
a society of a national entity called Israel.
It will be regenerated, that is the New Covenant.
Now
when we come to the Church we come to an utterly different thing. What have we done as we reviewed, for
example, the book of Acts. When we
think back to how the Church started, what was the Church? The Church was a subset, was it not, of
Israel at first? Wasn’t it all made up
of Jews? Of course it was. But what characterized that Jewish nucleus
that first formed the Church? How would
you characterize those Jews in the book of Acts who believed in Jesus Christ
over against the rest of the nation Israel?
They’re the remnant; they are the subset of the nation that did believe
in the Messiah and did not reject Him.
So from the very first the Church was minus, it was not an organization,
it didn’t have any organization at first, it was just a group of people who
responded to the Lord Jesus Christ. So
the Church, as such, is not to be identified with an organization. It is not to be identified with a
nation. What happened on the day of
Pentecost? Were multiple national
people groups represented? What’s the
lesson from the very day of Pentecost?
They spoke in many different languages, from many different people
groups.
What’s
that a signal for, you know, God sends signals, He says hey guys, wake up,
we’ve got a new thing here. What’s the
new thing? The Church is going to be
something that was never revealed in the Old Testament. It is going to be one body made up of
believers only from multiple people groups.
So you have this definition of the Church. It is not an organization; it is not a nation. It is not a race, it is not one language, it
is people from all of those who are in this union together because they bow
their knee to the Lord Jesus Christ as Savior.
They can be black, they can be white, they can be red and they can be
yellow, it doesn’t make any difference, because all those people, ultimately,
came from the same boat, Noah’s family.
So
the Church, then, is defined as those people who have received Christ. Down through history the Church has taken on
different identities. We want to be careful about this. That’s where
dispensational theology clarifies the issue, because one of the problems is
that when the Protestant Reformation occurred… let’s go back before the
Protestant Reformation. Let’s go back
to Roman Catholicism and Greek Orthodoxy.
Both Greek Orthodox, which is the eastern part of the Mediterranean,
that part of the Church, it became the Russian Orthodox, the Greek Orthodox and
a bunch of other little orthodoxies.
Usually you can always tell them by the architecture; it has a very
distinctive architecture. That’s the
eastern side; in the west you have Roman Catholicism.
So
you have these two groups. What characterizes
these two groups? They tried to become
orthodox in deciding about the Lord Jesus Christ, because remember church
history, what was the doctrine that was being thought out, clarified in those
first centuries. It wasn’t salvation;
it was the person of Jesus Christ, the hypostatic union and the doctrine of the
Trinity. That’s a good place to start
because if that’s wrong everything else is going to be wrong. We see and observe the Holy Spirit, being
the great teacher He is, He has a pedagogical purpose to Church history. So the Church spends a lot of time, and how
did it learn about the Trinity and the person of Jesus Christ? Because of heresy. The Church never learns voluntarily. We always have to get it slammed into us with some heretical movement;
the wolves have to nip at the sheep before the sheep move. That’s not a good commentary about our
character, but that is the way the Church learns; it learns the hard way
through persecution and apostasy. So
early on the Church was looking at that area.
What
the Church wasn’t looking at was its own identity. So very early in church history we have the idea that the Church
is an organization. They knew enough to
know it wasn’t a nation, but it took on the idea that it was an organization,
so you have great emphasis on offices, the bishop, and finally the super
bishops and finally the Pope, and it was the structure that was formed and that
became identified as the Church. Then
in most people’s minds, what did that organization do? It built buildings. Now the buildings are defined as the
Church. Go to the great cathedrals of
Europe, that’s the Church. No, that’s
not the Church. The Church is the body
of Christ, but that hasn’t always been clear.
People have confused buildings, organizations, and everything else for
the Church.
This
went on even to the Reformation, because the Reformation was interested in what
area of doctrine? This is where you
have to know your church history. What
was the emphasis of the Reformation?
Soteriology. So the Reformers
were concerned with how does a person get saved? What did Jesus do on the cross, how do I trust Him, what is the
gospel? Those were all crucial
questions; they had to be dealt with.
It took hundreds of years to deal with those questions. But what wasn’t dealt with in the
Reformation? The nature of the Church
and where it’s going, its purpose in history and what history is doing. The Reformers simply repeated the
eschatology and ecclesiology of Rome.
That’s why in Europe what church dominated Germany? The Lutheran Church. What church dominated England? The Anglican Church. So what church dominated Italy? That was the Roman Catholic Church. In Switzerland it was the Reformed
Church. In Holland it was the Reformed
Church.
So
the Protestants carried on the idea that there was an organization that should
dominate a community. Watch what
happens here. Let’s take a town; we’ll
call it town X. This was true of the
Puritans in New England. We have this
town, men, women and children all in this one town. The idea was that this town would be part of Christendom and as
part of Christendom your citizenship in the town was simultaneous with being
part of Christendom. So what did
everybody in the town have to do when they were babies? When a baby was born in a town what happened
to the baby? He would be christened; he
would be baptized and brought into Christendom. So you have an identity where the Church is not distinguished
carefully from society at large.
You
have, therefore, an example that worked out in American history, what happened
in Massachusetts in American history that set up Connecticut and Rhode
Island? Who was it that went down and
formed Connecticut because they got kicked out of Massachusetts Colony? Hooker.
Who was it that went into Rhode Island?
Roger Williams. Why did those
guys have to go to Rhode Island and another guy had to go to Connecticut? Because they weren’t welcome in
Massachusetts. Why weren’t they welcome
in Massachusetts? Because they taught a
different doctrine; if you want to teach a new doctrine you’ve got to go to
another town and you take care of that town.
See what was going on? It wasn’t
emphasis on individuals becoming Christians; the emphasis was communities becoming
Christians. And this is all tied in
with infant baptism because that goes along with it; infant baptism is like
your citizenship in the community. This
came out of the Reformation.
Of
course there were the Anabaptists during the Middle Ages who carried forward a
tradition; let’s look at that word, Anabaptists, the word “Ana” means again,
and what they came to was that the Church, they were right here, they had a lot
of wrong ideas in the sense that they were undeveloped ideas and they got
involved in radical different things, but one good idea they had was wait a
minute, first of all, we don’t see infant baptism anywhere in the New
Testament. The justification for infant
baptism is an analogy with what in the Old Testament? Circumcision, which was done to infants. But wait a minute, circumcision was to
Israel; was Israel a nation and a community and a town? Yes.
So you did, that was a mark of parting part of the nation, circumcision
so carrying that same idea into the Church, infant baptism, an analogy.
The
problem is the analogy fails because Israel is a nation and the Church isn’t a
nation, it isn’t a community, it is a subset of individuals who have received
Christ, as we could have seen in Acts 2 when they were not part of the Jewish community. The Christians began to break away from the
community on the basis of their personal decision to trust in Jesus
Christ. So the Anabaptists had the idea
that you had to be baptized again when what occurred? Why would you be baptized again?
If you grew up in these towns and communities of Europe you already were
baptized once, infant baptism. Well
then what were the Anabaptists talking about?
When you grew older and you trusted the Lord as a personable,
knowledgeable conscious decision, then you were baptized.
That’s
why they were called Anabaptists. Then
that dropped off and this name goes away and that’s the rise of the
Baptists. These people unfortunately
got involved in all sorts of extreme movements and there were some eschatology
distortions and they were into things that on one hand amounted to communism
and anarchy on another. Luther had it
with them and so he ordered the people to shoot them all. So the Reformers decided to go after them
physically, so the Anabaptists were persecuted all over Europe by both
Protestants and Catholics. They’d roll
them in barrels, very cruel, very, very cruel to the Anabaptists. But the Anabaptist in some areas were just
idiots and stupid because they got involved in these revolutionary movements and
that’s why Luther would have nothing to do with them. Enough of that.
My
point being that this all comes down to defining and clarifying what the Church
is and that has been clarified very clearly inside dispensational theology,
because in dispensational theology the Church is defined clearly from the very
start as made up of all believers and no unbelievers. If you have a congregation, and we always will have a
congregation that is mixed. The
congregation ultimately is not the Church; therefore people have devised two
words, two vocabulary words to describe this problem. If you have 100 people in a local church, regular attendees in a
local church, can we be sure that all 100 of those people have personally
trusted in the Lord Jesus Christ? No. What do you do? You keep preaching the gospel and teaching the Word of God. So that one or the other thing happens,
either they trust Him or they get so irritated hearing the Word of God that
they get up and go home. It either
softens hearts or it hardens hearts, or puts them to sleep so they aren’t
hardened or softened. So you have the
Church invisible, and that’s a term sometimes you’ll see, the visible and the
invisible Church. Those are just terms
that theologians have come up to try and distinguish this problem, in a
congregation of 100 people there might be, say 91 believers and 9 unbelievers,
so the visible church has 100 people in it, but the invisible Church only has
91 people in it. That was the terminology
that was devised to describe that.
Now
we’re going to come down to treating the Church’s destiny, not a nation’s
destiny, not an organization’s destiny, but this group, this group of believers
in the Lord Jesus Christ. Page 120 of
the notes. We’re going to start with
the first of five attempts in our present day to explain where the Church is
going in history; what’s our future.
I’ve already said pages 119-120 of the notes, that there are certain
future milestones we know about. I
named one on page 119, the rapture.
We’re talking about the future of the Church and we said that one thing
that is going to happen is the rapture.
What is the rapture? The rapture
is two things, it’s resurrection and it is transformation. Who are resurrected and who are
transformed? They are all believers,
but dead believers are the ones that are going to be resurrected and living
believers are the ones that are going to be transformed, so that when this
event is over both of these people are in what kind of bodies? They’re in resurrection bodies. The rapture leads to an event where 100% of
all believers have resurrection bodies, because all believers who live on earth
at that point, when the rapture happens, by definition are believers in the
Lord Jesus Christ. If they are
believers in the Lord Jesus Christ when the rapture occurs, then a split second
after that event we have 100% resurrection bodies.
Another
milestone for the Church beside the rapture is the bema seat. The bema seat speaks of a judgment and that
means every believer is judged on the basis of his or her works. What that does, it splits away human good
from divine good. Good done in the
filling of the Holy Spirit in obedience to the Lord, genuine fruit of the
Spirit will be identified and rewarded.
But where we have done things because of social pressure, peer pressure,
because I want to impress my boyfriend, my girlfriend, my husband, my wife,
whatever, all the other false motives, it’s just a lot of trash and human
good. It may look on the outside like
it’s a great spiritual thing but actually it turns out to be nothing more than
wood, hay and stubble. And that’s going
to be burned away because the Lord Jesus, once we get resurrected bodies He
wants to have the Church do something.
The Church is going to do something in the future, and it’s not going to
do it unless it’s clear about the whole nature of the Church. So what the Church has done down through the
centuries, all the good works, have to be clearly identified to qualify the Church
for this duty that is going to come about.
The
result is that the bema seat sets up a ranking of believes; some people are
going to be down here, some people are going to be up here, some people are up
there, based on production and fruit in their Christian life. They are given certain assignments, some of
us are going to be saved but we’re the custodians of the Kingdom or something,
and the next layer of people will be something else. The bema seat sorts this
out. Thankfully we don’t have to do it,
the Lord Jesus does that.
The
third thing that the Church goes through is this marriage feast. And that is that the Church is the bride of
Christ and at the marriage feast, all of creation at that point now views the
Lord Jesus Christ plus the Church, which is His body, as one unit. So the marriage feast brings together the
Lord Jesus who is perfect in His resurrection body plus the Church which has
been purged of human good in its resurrection bodies and we have the Church
ready to do something. Now what these
five positions try to do is sort out event number one, event number two, event
number three and mix these in, somehow fit them into the plan we see developed
out of the Old Testament, which is not in itself wrong. God is a God of coherent logic, He thinks,
His plan isn’t messy, He has logic and coherence, therefore the question is
those three milestone events that are to happen to the Church now have to be
fit into the program inherited from the Old Testament.
What
does the Old Testament tell us about the future? The Old Testament tells us that Israel… Table 8, in the Old
Testament we have the view that in the future Israel and the Gentile nations
will go through a horrible time of suffering called the Tribulation. And that Tribulation is not the same kind of
suffering the Church Age presently goes through. This is a special suffering period which has as its purpose to
bring out belief and unbelief. So we
have those people who are positive, those people who are negative within
Israel, within all the nations of the earth, in order that Jesus Christ will
set up His Kingdom. This is the Kingdom
of God and it will start out with people who are believers. It will go for a thousand years, according
to Rev. 20.
That
Kingdom is going to demonstrate in the future another point about human history
because over and over man has always tried to excuse himself by saying we have
lousy leadership. The reason society
fails is because we’ve got the wrong people in office. So every time the Republicans get in the
Democrats say that; every time the Democrats get in the Republicans say
that. In other countries it’s whatever
the parties are, it’s always the outs and the ins. And there’s always a perpetual debate over the fact that we have
lousy leaders and that’s the problem.
What do you suppose God is going to do for a thousand years to solve
that little innuendo? He’s going to
bring about perfect leadership globally and that perfect leadership is the Lord
Jesus Christ and His royal family as administrators. And that family is going to produce, which we’ll get into later,
the idea of a society and by golly, after a thousand years of perfect
leadership what’s going to happen?
Satan will be released because he is the deceiver of the nations. He’s going to be kicked out for 999 years or
whatever, and just as soon as he is let loose again, it doesn’t take him but
months to screw the world up again.
It’s
not just him that’s doing it, it is these people all through the Kingdom who
have not done what while they’ve had the presence of Jesus there. They haven’t believed. So as the thousand years goes on and on and
on and on and on there arises a segment of the population who are not
believers, they are people born after this Kingdom starts. And they grow up and
they don’t trust in the Lord Jesus. So
now we’ve got an increasing segment of people who are negative toward the Lord
Jesus Christ. What controls them? Peer pressure, law and power. What does the Bible say that Jesus rules
those nations with? A rod of iron.
Think about that. Jesus is going
to be the world dictator and when He rules He rules by force. Gentle Jesus rules the world by force for
His Kingdom. By the way, He has capital
punishment and He doesn’t even talk to the ACLU about it.
So
we come down to the end of the Kingdom and then we have the final purging, the
universe is completely replaced by a new universe and we go into the eternal
state. That is the final separation,
history is over, and every grand experiment that man could ever think of
forever and ever has been done, because history is the vestibule for eternity,
so that when, in eternity we worship before the throne, we can never, no matter
what happens, we can never in those eternal eons of time to come, we can never
doubt God’s goodness and say well God, you know, there were better ways to run
history, because every time we think that way we’ll be confronted with a
chapter of history. Every idea that we can come up with will be answered. I’m a Libertarian, read the book of Judges. I’m a Marxists, globalist, read the tower of
Babel, Gen. 10-11. You get my
point. History is a completing and a
demonstration of the depravity of man and the faithfulness and goodness of God,
such that all arguments will be silenced. There will not be any arguments. The suffering argument will not surface in
the eternal state to come because it will have been answered.
The
point is, how do we take the Church with the rapture, the bema seat and the
marriage supper and connect it with this.
That’s why on page 120, “The Church and the Tribulation,” because the
Tribulation is the inherited undone yet agenda out of the Old Testament. The first attempt, which is actually in its
modern form quite recent, it goes back in church history in a crude form, is
called preterism. We’re going to start
talking about preterism and I want to define the word and get you used to it,
because people you hear on our local Christian radio stations, some of them are
preterists and they’re teaching the Bible from a preterist viewpoint and you’d
better understand what kind of viewpoint you’re getting.
Let’s
talk about what the word means first.
You cannot think without words.
I’m going to give you the opposite word, it always helps to learn words
by contrast, it’s this against that. The
opposite of preterism is futurism. Now
that I’ve made that opposite, what do you think preterism is all about? If futurism is future preterism is past. That’s the big difference. Basically what the preterists are doing is
they’re saying that this Old Testament stuff, all that Tribulation talk about
Israel and the Gentiles, is past, it’s all over. You say WHAT??? All over, the Tribulation has happened, when
did it happen? The preterist today, now
early preterists, centuries and centuries ago, early preterists believed that
the Church was already in the Tribulation, they had Roman Emperors, etc. and
what was the great event in history when finally the Church was relieved of its
suffering and persecution under Rome? Remember
the Roman Emperors Constantine.
So
after Constantine declared Christianity to be the official religion of Rome
because all the other religions fell apart, Rome was falling apart, when that
happened the Church said aah, we’re out of the Tribulation, at least we have
peace. And that led to the idea of a
sort of preterism then where the first 300 years of the Church was looked upon
as that horrible time of persecution and you’d misunderstand if you were there,
you could understand that kind of thinking that we got rid of that period,
thank God for Constantine. That’s an
early form of preterism. It wasn’t well
thought through; it was just kind of a reaction.
But
in our day we have a very narrow well-thought through and self-consistent type
of preterism. Basically the preterists hold that we solved the problem of the
Church by having the Church replace Israel and the nations and since the Church
replaces it, the Church has nothing to do with the Tribulation, the Tribulation
happened and is over. The question is
when did the Tribulation happen? What
was the fulfillment of the … [blank spot] … that when the armies of Rome, first
under Vespasian, then under Titus, conquered Jerusalem and conquered the Jew,
when the Palestinian problem was solved from Rome’s perspective, when all that
happened and the horrible suffering of the nation, that was the Tribulation,
that’s what the book of Revelation is all about; the book of Revelation is all
past, the book of Revelation is finished with AD 70. This may shock some of you, maybe you’ve never heard of this
before but it’s rampant, particularly in Reformed circles in this area. It’s coming in like a flood, and it’s
because so many people don’t read their Bibles and have not been taught verse
by verse so they become suckers for this kind of thing.
Preterism
has a few strings to is, so what I’m going to teach in these next few
paragraphs, I’m going to distinguish between we’ll call the extreme preterists
and the more moderate preterists. The
moderate preterists are those who have enough respect for literal hermeneutics
to say wait a minute, we may say the Tribulation is past, but we certainly
can’t say the Second Advent of Jesus is past.
So the moderates try to separate Tribulation, make it past, but kind of
save out a few verses here and there to guard the Second Advent. The consistent preterists, which are I feel
the logical, they are logical and I can’t see how the moderates are going to
stay moderate, they’re going to go one way or the other, the extreme preterists
argue that the Second Advent of Christ is past, it’s over, Christ came in 70
AD. So that’s the view.
If
you follow on page 120 I’ll go through the notes and we may get into some
verses tonight, but I’ve got to give you this background because otherwise we
lose things here. By the way, before we
go any further, futurism, what do you suppose futurism does? It says the Tribulation is future, yet to
come. So it’s preterist or
futurist.
“Preterism.
Some students, particularly in Reformed circles (e.g. R. C. Sproul), have
recently attempted to strengthen the amillennial or postmillennial viewpoints
against the logical consistency of premillennialism,” now I’ve used three words
there and you want to understand those three words. Preterism is associated, always, with amillennialism or
postmillennialism. Take the words
apart, if you don’t know what the words mean, take them apart. What does millennium mean? A thousand year millennium, the Kingdom of
God. What does “a” in front of a word
always mean? “Non.” Theism, atheism, it’s the Greek negative, so
you put an “a” in front of a word and it makes the negative, so amillennialism
means there is no millennium. Well what
do they do with the millennium passages?
Allegorize them, see, non-literal hermeneutic.
What
does postmillennial mean? That means
that the world is getting better and better, and finally it will be such a
wonderful world that Jesus can’t help it and He comes back and says thank you,
good job you guys. That’s postmillennialism.
By the way, amillennialism is inherited from what before the Protestant
Reformation? It’s a carry over from
Rome. So when Protestants are amillennial they’re just simply repeating Roman
Catholic eschatology. Preterism will
always be associated with amillennialism.
You will never find a preterist premil.
You will have premillennialism associated with futurism because
premillennialism means Christ comes before the millennium. Why?
To set it up. You can have
futurists that are amil and postmil, but logic tends to drive them in this
direction. That’s why in your Reformed
circles that have always been amil and postmil you have a receptive group for
preterism. So you want to learn the
connection.
Bottom
of page 120, last sentence: “The basic idea of preterism asserts that these
Scriptures view the fall of Jerusalem to Rome in AD 70 as the wrath of God
against unbelieving Israel.” If you are
sharp and you hold the place in the notes, and go back to Table 8 a warning
bell should go off in your head with that sentence I just read. Turn back to page 114, Table 8. From Table 8 what do we know from the Old
Testament about the wrath of God on the nation Israel? Does the Old Testament look forward to a
time when there’s a wrath of God on Israel. Sure, that’s the definition of the
Tribulation. But, does the Tribulation
and wrath of God extinguish Israel or purge Israel? It’s designed to purge Israel, not extinguish it. So knowing that, and that history, when you
come back to page 121 and you see the sentence, “the wrath of God against
unbelieving Israel,” they think of that as the last chapter in Israel’s
existence. But you see where that
clashes with the Old Testament because the Old Testament doesn’t look upon the
Tribulation as that; it’s a horrible time but it’s not the last chapter, it’s
the next to the last chapter. But
preterism argues that it is the last chapter, Israel is done with.
The
next paragraph: “What does preterism do with the Old Testament texts that
underlie these New Testament texts?”
Turn to Matt. 24:29, this is Jesus’ discourse on the Mount of Olives as
He and the disciples looked across the Kidron Valley at the Temple. Jesus is talking to the disciples, and He
says, in verse 29, we could go to a lot of verses, in the interest of time, and
as I say, please don’t think of this class as a course in eschatology, a course
in eschatology could take 2 or 3 years, I’m doing a very fast review to get you
through the material so you get some sort of handle, you learn the vocabulary,
and you kind of learn why I and most of the people you hear teach premillennial
pretribulationism.
Matt.
24:29, “But immediately after the tribulation of those days the sun will be
darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will fall from
the sky, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken, [30] and then the sign
of the Son of Man will appear in the sky.”
If you have a study Bible you will notice that verse 29 is cited out of
the Old Testament, from Isaiah. That
verse is coming out of the Old Testament.
Jesus is teaching an elaborated version, a more detailed version of what
the Old Testament taught. He’s not
teaching something radically different, He’s quoting from the Old Testament
here. If you have a study Bible you’ll
also see that that same verse that Jesus quotes here about the sun and the moon
turning dark is from Rev. 6. So in the
book of Rev. 6 you have this big day of the wrath of God and the kings of the
earth get together.
Let’s
turn there so you can get the flavor of this.
Rev. 6:12, this is a picture of the Lord Jesus Christ and He’s breaking
the seals because He has earned, at this point, the Lord Jesus Christ who is
ascended, He sits at the right hand of the Father, He is perfect, He has
completed His mission, and He is now qualified to break those seals. In verse 12, “And I looked when He broke the
sixth seal, and there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as
sackcloth made of hair, and the whole moon became like blood; [13] the stars of
the sky fell to the earth, as a fig tree casts its unripe figs when shaken by a
great wind. [14] And the sky was split apart like a scroll when it is rolled
up; and every mountain and island were moved out of their places. [15] And the
kings of the earth and the great men and the commanders and the rich and the
strong and every slave and free man, hid themselves in the caves and among the
rocks of the mountains; [16] and they said to the mountains and to the rocks,
‘Fall on us and hide us from the presence of Him who sits on the throne, and
from the wrath of the Lamb; [17] for the great day of their wrath has come; and
who is able to stand?’”
That’s
the picture, and it’s not a new one in the New Testament, it comes out of
Isaiah. So the question then is, if in the Old Testament, Isaiah and the other
people, had that one promise and they looked upon the sun and the moon and the
stars and the earthquake, all this stuff, and they saw that as part of the
Tribulation to purge Israel so that Israel would go through this and eventually
come to the Kingdom, then you would think that that’s exactly what Jesus was
teaching, because Jesus doesn’t change it.
If He were to change it He would say now Isaiah said this, but I say
unto you, He did that in the Sermon on the Mount. Why isn’t He doing it here?
By not doing it He is presuming, and you presume as a reader, that He
means exactly what Isaiah meant.
So,
what do the preterists do with this? I
know those of you who have read the Bible and have been Bible students for some
time, it’s hard for you to get your mind into this, I mean, how can people do
this. I know that, but people have done
it so we have to understand where they’re coming from. Watch this:
“Matthew
24:29 and Revelation 6:12-14 speak of the same catastrophic events as Isaiah
13:9, viz.,” and I could mention other verses, “the great tribulational
judgments upon the world that figure so prominently in the Old Testament view
of Israel’s history. ‘Stars falling’
and ‘the sun not giving its light’, according to the preterist interpreters are
figures of speech that depict the fall of a nation or kingdom. When such terms occur in the New Testament,
the reasoning goes, they refer to the fall of the nation Israel for its rejection
of Jesus. In this fashion preterism
carries out the same metaphorical interpretation methodology advocated
centuries ago by Augustine.”
Augustine’s name begins with “A” and it’s therefore easy to remember
that he is the father of what kind of millennialism? Amillennialism. So you’ve
got a memory hook there; Augustine’s name begins with “A” and amillennialism
begins with “A” and Augustine was the great proponent of amillennialism, He was
the guy that got rid of premillennialism in the early church. So the pieces
start falling together here. He was
also the advocate of metaphorical interpretation of prophecy. See, he changed the hermeneutic, how you
interpret these prophetic passages.
“Augustine
was responsible for replacing the premillennial viewpoint of the early church
with the amillennial viewpoint. Under
the influence of Greek philosophy that demeaned physical forms,” those of you
who have studied Greek philosophy, the Greeks despised physical form, they
always thought of imperfection. Let me
give you an example of why they did that.
Most people, if you’ve ever taken a course in plain geometry and you
define things and you have theorems and axioms and you define a triangle, as a
good example, you can define a perfect triangle. What bothered the Greeks was you never could find one in reality,
because no matter how careful you drew one, it would always have shaky lines in
it or it would have some imperfection in it.
So their argument was that perfection could only be thought about but
never experienced.
The
point is, Greek thought led down the road to the fact that spiritually if you
were ever to attain spiritual perfection it would be in your soul minus your
body; the body was the source of contamination. So since premillennialism believes in a physical kingdom, and
what kind of bodies do people have in the Millennial Kingdom? Natural bodies, so you can’t have a
spiritual kingdom with people in natural bodies. Do you see the connection? That’s why Augustine threw out the
idea of the Millennium, because influenced by Greek philosophy he thought
perfection had to be only perceived in the mind, in the soul, in the spirit,
but not in the body, you never could find a perfect triangle, you never could
find a perfect person in the body.
“Under
the influence of Greek philosophy that demeaned physical forms and flushed with
the recent capitulation of mighty Rome to the Christianity, Augustine built
upon earlier allegorical interpretation to deny the literal and physical nature
of the Millennial Kingdom.” Then in the
next paragraph I describe the older forms of preterism. “Early preterism generally viewed the first
few centuries of Church history as fulfilling prophecy (from the fall of
Jerusalem through the rise of persecutions under Nero and other emperors variously
seen as the Antichrist to the fall of pagan Rome under Christianity in
Constantine’s day.) Today’s preterism,
however, insists that most, if not all, New Testament prophecy was fulfilled in
the first century with its fall of Jerusalem and Neronian persecutions.”
Nero
preceded AD 70; he was AD 63 or something like that. That’s why they say,
remember in the book of Revelation they talk about five kings or four kings and
one is going to raise from the dead, etc. and there was a rumor in Rome that…
you know, Nero was so bad, this guy was Saddam Hussein multiplied, he was so
bad that when he finally died nobody could believe that he would stay
dead. So there was this rumor in Roman
history, look under the table, Nero might come up here someday. So when they saw in the book of Revelation,
talking about the king that would be wounded and returning, they identified
that with Nero. Preterism isn’t
completely divorced from scholarship, that’s what I’m trying to show you.
Our
time is running out but I just want to finish this paragraph. “Today’s preterism, however, insists that
most, if not all, New Testament prophecy was fulfilled in the first century
with its fall of Jerusalem and Neronian persecutions.” In other words, Nero becomes sort of their antichrist. “Today’s preterists must insist, therefore,”
now here’s a very important point, you want asterisk this in your notes and
mark it, “Today’s preterists must insist that the book of Revelation was
written prior to AD 70.” Why do they
have to do that? Because it’s about
this thing, and its prophecy. So if
it’s prophecy and the prophecy has already been fulfilled, the book that’s
prophesying had to be written before the event, but if the event is AD 70, then
Revelation has to be early. “We now live
in the Kingdom age. Preterism thus is
bound logically, theologically, and hermeneutically to amillennial or
postmillennial views. It cannot coexist
with premillennialism.”
Preterism
in the notes goes all the way over to page 125. So if you want to read ahead that’s the area. We’re going to go
through the texts that preterism picks up and argues that they are the literal
interpreters of some texts and we are the ones that are metaphorically
interpreting.
-----------------------
Question
asked, how does the rise of Origen fit in: Clough replies: I emphasized Augustine and the role of
introducing amillennialism into the Church through allegorical
hermeneutics. He actually picked up
some of the allegorical hermeneutics from Origen. But think about it, where was Origen? He was in Alexandria and Alexandria along with Athens was one of
the great intellectuals centers in the eastern Mediterranean. It was a center of the Hellenistic culture
too, because the Jews that lived in Alexandria, 200-300 years before Christ
[Clough asks someone when the Septuagint was translated, can’t hear] The point is in Alexandria where all this
was going on, that’s the place where the Jews, many of them really probably
lost their Hebrew and Greek was the common language, so they wanted a (quote)
“modern” translation, and that’s how the Septuagint got started, because they
translated the Old Testament into Greek. And really it’s nice they did because
now that tells us how Greek words were used versus Hebrew so it’s a good vocabulary
source. But later on, after Christ, after a century or two, this guy Origen
showed up, and Origen, again under Greek philosophy, he really started a lot of
allegorical hermeneutics.
Question
asked about wasn’t he older when he came to Christ: Clough replies: I’m not
sure of that. What you want to see in
these men, Origen and Augustine were brilliant men and probably motivated to
try to help the Church. If you were to
walk up to Augustine, for example, Augustine would be shocked, probably, to see
the results of his own thinking.
Augustine did some wonderful things, those of you in classic books, one
of the classic books of western civilization is The City of God, and Augustine wrote that and it’s a book that
really we should all read because it’s a mediation by a Christian who saw the
collapse of Rome and had to come to grips with the fact that the Christians
were blamed, largely, for the collapse of Rome. The Christians were the people who refused to worship Caesar and
you can imagine if you were a pagan and you have this rising group of these
people who refuse to worship the Emperor, wouldn’t you come to the conclusion
that these people are dangerous and now our society is falling apart and here
come the Vandals and the Visigoths and everybody else, and you know, let’s go
after the Christians. And Augustine
stood up to that and he answered them, and that’s why he’s famous and
well-known for doing that.
He
was also very good on the sovereignty of God. Augustine had some great ideas.
The problem is he also had some pretty crummy ideas, and this was one of them
this allegorical business. He thought
what he was doing was saving the Church from being filled with falsehoods,
naïve falsehoods, and the other thing that Augustine did which I haven’t mentioned
was the thing that he was the one that first preached the supremacy of the
Roman Church. In other words, Augustine went so far as to say, I believe
somewhere, that he did not believe anybody was saved unless they were members
of the Church at Rome, meaning that other bishoprics elsewhere that were not
connected intimately with the city of Rome were not really Christian. So Augustine in one sense was the father of
certain ideas of the Reformation in his strong view of sovereignty, but he was
also the father of Roman Catholicism, of all things. He was the one that tied in the Church with amillennialism and so
the Protestant Reformers never really dealt with him on that basis.
So
what you see today that goes under the term Reformed Christianity is only
partially reformed; it’s reformed soteriologically but it’s not reformed in the
other areas. So yes, the answer is
allegorical hermeneutics have a long background. There was a Jew by the name of Philo that did the same
thing. So you have a long history of
this fanciful [can’t understand words] is that we are more intellectual, the
common people take those parables literally but we see the deeper principles in
it, that kind of attitude to the text.
Question
asked: Clough replies: A lot of people
do. The question concerns the fact that
there are obvious figures of speech in the Bible. Just let me start with just this observation. If you go into a Christian book store that
has come classic books to it, or if you look at Christian Book Distributors you
should see some time by an author called Bullinger. I forgot the name of the book but it’s on metaphor, Figures of Speech used in the Bible I
believe it is called. Do you know what
the funny thing is? Bullinger was a
dispensationalist and he wrote the classic text on figures of speech. And this book is filled, filled, I mean, you
just marvel at what these men were able to do before they had a computer. You’d think that we would be the productive
people but we spend too much of our time reading e-mails to get any serious
work done. Those guys didn’t have
e-mail and so therefore they had the ability hour after hour to get these
classic works built. Bullinger has
thousands of references, detailed classifications, sub classification of
figures of speech. I want to throw that
out to start with, because if Bullinger is the father of classifying figurative
speech and he’s a literal hermeneutic, how do you put that one together? Well obviously they must not be in collision
and here’s the problem.
God
has created the world in such a way that in numerous ways there’s a
repetitiveness in His designs. For
example, most mammals have four feet; I guess all of them have four feet. Why do they have four feet, they all have
four feet. Why is that? It’s because it
is a good design, it’s repeated. You
see in physics things where you have chains of energy that cascade on different
scaled. For example, when you cook a pot of water if you look when the water
starts boiling down the pot you see big bubbles and little bubbles, etc. and
you have all this convective currents in the fluid of different scales. It turns out interestingly that if you study
the hydrodynamics of the small little bubbles they look exactly like the hydrodynamics
of the big bubbles, which looks like the hydrodynamics of some parts of the
universe. Why this repetitiveness all
the way? If you look at the seeds of a
sunflower, the way rabbits reproduce and certain Greek architecture, they all
have the same geometric ratio, the golden rectangle or golden triangle, which
are fibonacci numbers. And God has
repeatedly put fibonacci numbers in the creation. He must have liked fibonacci numbers, I don’t know why He did it but
He has these forms.
When
you go and you see the visions of the angels, it’s always remarkable to me
since I have a veterinarian son and we talk about animals and their place in
the creation a lot, I always told him, you know animals can be looked upon as
being designed after the angels, not the other way around, the angels are often
pictured with animal parts, but actually the animals are made of angelic parts
if you reverse the cycle here. Why do
angels have wings and birds have wings?
I believe that since all creation is revelatory that where you have
these features, literally, you first have to start all texts on a literal
basis, then you decide are we dealing with a figure or are we dealing with a
parable, or are we dealing with a literal prophecy. And we’re dealing here with literary issues, so figures of speech
are legitimate literary issues, and we see Jesus using these. Why do we not then carry this figuration
over to prophecy? Let’s think about
that for a minute.
Let’s
go back to what we discussed earlier.
The Bible, one of it’s foundational structures is that of the
covenant. The word “covenant” doesn’t
catch us too well because we are all schooled up here in our head to get very
religious when we hear the word “covenant.”
A good way of disarming that defense on yourself is every time you see
the word “covenant” replace it with the word “contract,” and think of your
mortgage, your car loan. When you deal
with a contract document, what are some features in a contract that are always
there? First of all you have legal
parties that enter into a contract.
What is the purpose of a contract?
To govern and calibrate and measure behavior, is it not? Is the bank interested in your economic
behavior when you take a loan from them?
I think so. Next question, when
you see that mortgage contract or the loan agreement, how do you interpret it,
literally or allegorically? To ask the
question is to answer it; nobody… and by the way, how long does the literal
hermeneutic stand in place? As long as
the contract stands because the contract presumes a conservation of the hermeneutic
over the period of the performance of the contract. Wouldn’t it be lovely if we could all interpret certain clauses
in our mortgage contract allegorically?
But nobody in his right mind would do this in any business
contract. Yet the same word, “covenant”
taken over to the Scriptures all of a sudden we get greasy, we want to
allegorize it. Why do we want to
allegorize it? We don’t do that to
other contracts, why are we doing it to God’s contract? I’ve never seen the logic in this. The reason we want to allegorize it is
because it gives us theological problems.
The
reason we want to allegorize these prophecies of the Kingdom is because they
teach a view of nature that is utterly opposed to that which is around us. Why did Peter say… what was the agenda, the
spiritual agenda behind denial of the Second Advent of Christ according to
Peter. Remember what he said, they are
willingly ignorant. Not innocently ignorant,
not accidentally ignorant, but willingly ignorant, that the world of the
heavens and the earth which once was was changed and destroyed and now the
heavens and earth which are are grounded on fire like the others were grounded
on water. I mean I don’t how you want
to interpret 2 Pet. 3 but that’s a very radical passage. That teaches something
about the fundamental structure of the universe there, and it says it’s a house
of cards, and all God has to do is reach down and He can start a
self-destruction process, and what we thought were these inviolable laws of
physics, what we thought were all these predictable entities are going to
really blow up, our equations are going to blow up because the equations
themselves presume uniformity. That
operates fine as long as the contract is in place.
See,
there is uniformity in the contracts.
Think about Noah’s contract, what was the uniformity in Noah’s
contract? God made a contract with
Noah, and who else by the way, an interesting point. The Noahic contract was
not made with just man; it was made with every living thing. Your dog is a party to the Noahic
Covenant. Your cat, guinea pig,
whatever, they are all part and parcel of this Noahic contract. I don’t know what animals think of contracts
but the point I’m making is that God has an ecological contract that says
certain things will behave the way they will in the physical universe and one
of them is that the world will never be flooded again. Do you know what that tells me? That God has to control the moon, the
planets and all the stars. Why is that?
Because if they get out of orbit and their gravitational field interferes with
our gravitational field what’s going to happen to the oceans? They’re going to be pulled over the
continents.
So
the Noahic contract implies a totality of physical sovereignty over the
universe, because you can keep extending that.
How do you stay the planet is going to stay in orbit, when you can think
a star might move out of some place in the Milky Way and come close to our sun
and rip the planets off. So God not
only has to stabilize the planets, He has to stabilize the Milky Way. Well then the Milky Way could be
destabilized by another galaxy out from that, so you work your way out
logically until you consume the whole physical universe, all because God made
one promise to a man in a boat. But you
see the logic of how it triggers off a line of reasoning, and God wants us to
trigger that line of reasoning so when you hit these covenants, and that’s what
we’re dealing with in prophecy. When
you read that verse that we cited in Matthew tonight about the sun and the
moon, ultimately how is that related back to a contract? It’s related back to the contract God made
with Israel. And He promised those
things against Israel and the nations persecuting Israel.
Now
why are they literal and not figurative?
Why aren’t they figures of a nation just falling, why are they
literally, physically correct? Think
about the pagan mind. When those
contracts were made what were some things that the pagans worshiped, the ones
that didn’t worship Jehovah God. The
stars, the sun, and the moon. And what
is the great story in the Old Testament of one powerful super power pagan
nation whose leader defied the living God and was brought to his knees, and his
nation, by a series of judgments against those parts of nature that he
worshiped. The Exodus. Now with the Exodus record, during those
Exodus judgments was there darkness in the land at one point? Did the sun not give its light? Not only did the sun not give its light but
it was a supernatural thing because the darkness wasn’t in the area of the
Jews, it was only in the areas of the pagans.
So not only do we have a weird astronomical phenomenon, but we have it
doubly weird because, to cite a favorite lawyer and politician word, it
discriminated. So with the Exodus
record and with the contract, how else do you interpret those passages? Can you get away with allegorizing
them? I can’t because it’s part of a
contract.
Question
asked or statement made: Clough replies: Sure, there is Paul and Galatians talks
about Jerusalem is an allegory, he’s using Jerusalem allegorically there to
interpret the principle of law. There
are some allegorical passages in the Scriptures.
Question
asked: Clough replies: That’s a good
question, in the early church history you would have thought, you could have
justified a preterist impulse by saying well gee, whew, we’re getting rid of
that period, that’s gone away. But what
do you do today where you have Israel coming back to the land, etc. I think
it’s precisely Israel coming back to the land that has triggered this because
in their mentality any apparent drift of history toward fulfilled prophecy of
Israel is a threat theologically and the main bug-a-boo in the text to an
amillennial position and a postmillennial position, particularly a
postmillennial position, and by the way, many of the preterists are postmillennialists,
not just amillennialist. In the
postmillennialist, what does the postmillennialist believe? He believes that the Church has taken over
in such a way that it is the Kingdom of God that’s going to conquer and then
Jesus comes back to end history. Post
millennial, Jesus comes post, after the millennium; the Church Age is the
millennium.
Well
now if you believe that, think about it, what on earth are you going to do with
all the texts that talk about Tribulation as a future event? See, a future Tribulation blocks
postmillennialism logically speaking. So if you’re a convinced
postmillennialist you’ve got to get rid of the road block. That’s a very good device of doing it, and
that, I believe, is what’s happening here.
They try to make their system more consistent but it’s more consistently
wrong, but it’s more consistent. They’ve
got to get rid of the roadblocks to an open future for the Church. And they believe that we believe a closed
future, the Church is going to just shrink away and do nothing and become
insignificant. That’s not what we’re
saying, but it’s their view of what we believe. So in order to get rid of the roadblock to the future they want
to somehow deal with all these pessimistic Scripture passages. And what finer way if I’m a
postmillennialist to put it in back of me; that gets rid of the road block in
front of me, doesn’t it. And that’s the
function, theologically of what preterism does.
We’ll
see you next week.