Daniel Lesson 10
Amillennialism and Postmillennialism
– Daniel 2:31
On this
occasion of the 4th of July, in the year 2001, I thought I would
read a couple of things to emphasize the importance, the value and the
significance of the freedom that we have.
Freedom is never free; freedom is always purchased with a price and the
price of our freedom is all the men and women who have sacrificed their lives
over the centuries to give us our freedom; those who have served in military
service, those who have fought in the wars and those who have given the
ultimate sacrifice to preserve our liberties. So often today we don’t teach history that well in the
schools, and so many surveys seem to indicate that children and even many
adults don’t understand the basic facts of the war for independence and what
took place 225 years ago and if you don’t understand the facts then you can’t
understand any interpretation of the facts. Too often we think of the founding fathers and the way it’s
presented today in our multicultural post-modern education system, they were
just a bunch of white European males who were imposing their particular
worldview and construction of life on everybody else and what kind of freedom
is that. But that is a concept
that is divorced from reality.
“Have
you ever wondered what happened to the fifty-six men who signed the Declaration
of Independence? Five of those
signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they
died. Twelve had their homes
ransacked and burned. Two lost
their sons serving in the Revolutionary Army; another had two sons
captured. Nine of the fifty-six
fought and died from wounds or hardships of the Revolutionary War. They signed and they pledged their
lives and their sacred honor.
What
kind of men were they? Twenty-four
were lawyers and jurists. Eleven
were merchants, nine were farmers and large plantation owners; they were men of
means, they were well educated.
But they signed the Declaration of Independence, knowing full well that
the penalty would be death if they were captured. Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader saw
his ships swept from the seas by the British Navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts and he died
in rags. Thomas McKean was so
hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost
constantly. He served in the
Congress without pay and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him and
poverty was his reward.
Vandals
or soldiers looted the properties of Dillery, Hall, Clymer, Walton, Gwinnett,
Heyward, Rutledge and Middleton.
At the Battle of York Thomas Nelson Jr. noted that the British General,
Cornwallis, had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. He quietly urged General George
Washington to open fire. The home
was destroyed and Nelson died bankrupt.
Francis Lewis had his home and properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife and she died
within a few months. John Hart was
driven from his wife’s bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his gristmill were laid
to waste. For more than a year he
lived in forests and caves, returning home to find his wife dead and his
children vanished. A few weeks
later he died from exhaustion and a broken heart. Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates.
Such
were the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These men were not wild-eyed
rabble-rousing ruffians; they were soft-spoken men of means and education. They had security but they valued liberty
more. Standing tall, straight and
unwavering they pledged “for the support of this Declaration, with firm
reliance on the protection of the divine providence, we mutually pledge to each
other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.” They gave you and me a free and independent America. The history books never told you a lot
about what happened in the Revolutionary War; we didn’t fight just the
British. We were British subjects
at that time and we fought our own government! Some of us take these liberties so much for granted, but we
shouldn’t. Remember, freedom is
never free.
Too
often today we’ve lost sight of that and we’ve lost sight of just what freedom
is to entail and as a result of that, in many college and university campuses
across the nation what is taught in the classroom is just the antithesis of
what actually happened in history and in fact, what is taught in the classroom
is really an attack on the history and freedom of the U.S. As we’ve studied Sunday about the time
of the Judges and the impact of paganism on a culture, we see it lived out
today at the university level. As
I’ve said so often, even though many of us will never darken the door of a
university, nevertheless we’re impacted on a daily basis by what goes on in the
classrooms of the universities around the country. They will produce our future leaders, they produce our
schoolteachers, they produce the future politicians and leaders of our nation
and they are influencing the way they think as young men and women.
An
interesting commentary comes from Academia, Front Page Magazine, and is written by Jamie
Glazov who holds a PhD in history with a specialty in Soviet studies. He has a unique background because his
father, Uri Glazov was a leading Soviet dissident during the Brezhnev era and
eventually left and came to the U.S. in 1972. He writes: “I think I still suffer from something of post
traumatic stress disorder. I didn’t
serve in a war” though, “I spent eleven years in academia. David Horowitz’s recent encounter with
the campus Gestapo in Berkley has given me flashbacks all over again. Try to imagine being an immigrant from
the Soviet Union—as I am—and sitting in the company of left-wing
‘intellectuals’ who think they are oppressed. Picture coming from a society where a myriad of your
relatives simply disappeared, or this relative or that family member died under
interrogation and torture for his /her beliefs – or for simply nothing at
all. Think about Alexander
Solzhenitsyn’s account of the tortures that the Stalinist machinery afflicted
for the objective of extracting ‘confessions.’ These tortures include” and then he includes a pretty
graphic description that I’ll skip over, of the nature of some of the tortures
that were inflicted upon the victims during that time. He says, “Keep in mind that many people
refused to ‘confess.’ Then think
about the Soviet Secret Police raping daughters and sons in front of their fathers
and mothers – for the sake of extracting ‘confessions.’”
“Now
visualize me sitting in a graduate studies lounge in Toronto, listening to my
colleagues explain to me that communism ‘isn’t really so bad,’ that the Soviet
Union made some ‘remarkable achievements,’ and that Western
democratic-capitalism is the most oppressive system of all. At the same time, picture my lecturers
having absolutely no respect for a free exchange of ideas on this
subject.”
“Both of
my grandfathers were exterminated by Stalinist terror. My father and mother both just barely
escaped the Gulag. But here I am,
with PhD students being treated to a one-hour discussion about ‘homophobia’ on
campus. My colleagues are
agonizing about how ‘Homophobia-Free Zone’ pink stickers must be put on every
door in the university. ‘But what
if a professor or teaching assistant refuses to have one put on his door?’ one
of them asks indignantly. After a
few seconds of silence the other answers, ‘Well, then a committee might just
have to be set up where these people will be taken to account.’ Serious head nods follow.”
“Fascinating,
simply fascinating, the great issues of our time.”
“I
remember when we first moved from Russia my mom was constantly crying; she was
separated from her mother and brother – who were also afraid to engage in
correspondence because it was too dangerous for them. Sometimes my mom would cry for what seemed like
forever. I will never forget as a
nine-year-old that feeling in my heart when my mom cried like that. My consolation seemed to soothe her
slightly but I understood well that they were not the panacea for her
grief. The Soviet system did that
to my mother.”
“Perhaps
some of you might understand why I’m not amused by the politics on campus; I’m
not amused by endless discussions of how we’re all oppressed because we’re
being ‘attacked’ by Pepsi commercials that are ‘trying to tell us that we are
not cool if we don’t drink Pepsi,’ a graduate student told me, ‘the capitalist
machinery practices the politics of exclusion. By trying to pretend it offers us choice, it actually
negates choice,’ he says. And
there is no debate permitted on this subject. The anti-capitalist theme is simply just drilled into your
mind. My mom’s father was executed
by the Soviet Secret Police. He
did not have the luxury of being of being oppressed by Pepsi commercials.
One day,
when I was nine years old and living in Halifax, Nova Scotia, my father and I
were on our way to church. As we
walked near the entrance I spit on the ground. In a very serious but patient way, my father said to me,
‘It’s okay to spit outside KGB headquarters but never in front of a place like
this.’ I never did it again; I was
wrong that day because I had ignorantly spit on sacred and holy ground.
“But
there is another environment that is far from sacred and holy—today’s
politically correct campus. And
there are certain individuals—the most spoiled and self-centered people I
have ever met—who remind me of the scum who fostered the Soviet
experiment, who promote the same ideas that gave us the Gulag, Mao’s Cultural
Revolution, and Pol Pot’s killing fields.
Working fervently to destroy their own society, they praise other
societies—such as the one that caused my mother’s eternal tears. They are our left-wing
intellectuals. I spit in their
faces.”
We don’t
realize what dangerous things are going on inside our own nation, seeking to
destroy the very freedoms that we have by intellectuals and elitists who don’t
have the slightest clue what freedom is all about, or what is entailed in the
sacrifice that produced our freedom.
And it is that type of thinking that threatens every one of us,
especially as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ because one of the things that
people of that type of thinking hate is the thinking of Christians because we
believe that there is a truth, there is an absolute truth, a Truth with a
capital “T” and that Truth has been revealed in the Word of God, and that there
is no freedom apart from that truth, and that there is no life apart from Jesus
Christ. We have an exclusivist
view of the truth, an exclusivist view of reality and that’s exactly like
Daniel and his three friends in the midst of one of the most pagan courts,
pagan cultures of all time. They
lived at a time of tremendous hostility to truth, and yet here were these young
men, 17 years of age, who took a stand for the truth and had a fantastic
witness against paganism and their time.
It’s a tremendous example to us because by studying them and by studying
the book of Daniel we see how they impacted the culture around them and how
they had an impact on their own Jewish culture for generations to come. And what gave them that strength, what
gave them all that they had, what enabled them to do and to be what they were,
was the truth of the Word of God in their souls, and that’s why it is so
important for us to inculcate the Word into our own souls, constantly studying,
constantly learning, listening to tapes, coming to Bible class, never giving
up, never getting discouraged, and constantly letting our thinking be reshaped
by the Word of God because sooner or later it may be us with who is threatened
with the Gulag, it may be us who is threatened with torture and it is only
doctrine that is going to give us the ability to survive.
Now we
have going on in our study in Daniel and the last two times, rather than
focusing on exactly what’s happening with Daniel, we’re on the verge of
understanding the dream that God gave Nebuchadnezzar, that is one of the most
fantastic prophecies in all of the Scripture. It is the foundation for understanding much that’s in
Revelation; it is a foundation for understanding what comes later in
Daniel. Daniel 2 provides the
interpretative framework historically and then in Daniel 5 and Daniel 7 and
Daniel 9 and 10 more information is given and there is further development of
God’s plan for history. Before we
get into that we need to understand that Christians do interpret this in three
different ways, and these ways are called premillennialism, postmillennialism,
and amillennialism. And the reason
I’ve stopped to remind us of these different views is to examine them in terms
of their strengths, their weaknesses, how they handle Scripture, because when
we look at the details, when we come back and look at the details of the Daniel
2 prophecy, the interpretation of the image, Daniel 7, we are going to look at
how these different approaches handle this so that we can better understand and
defend our own position of a literal interpretation of Scripture and
premillennial dispensationalism.
So we have looked, as we come to our study of Daniel, going through the
first two chapters, examining how these young men were brought as hostages from
Jerusalem to Babylon, and how God is using them to take a stand for the truth
in the midst of that pagan culture.
The
first view we looked at was premillennialism and in premillennialism we have
the belief that Jesus Christ is going to return to the earth before the
millennium, and the millennium is going to be a literal one thousand year
period where Jesus Christ personally rules and reigns from the throne of David
in Jerusalem. Premillennialism
means before the millennium, “pre” before; Jesus Christ returns before the
millennium. And after the
millennium there is a great white throne judgment and then eternity.
The
second view that we looked at is called amillennialism; we began this last
time, we’ll wrap it up this evening.
In amillennialism we have the belief of no literal millennium. The “a” prefix is a negation; it means
no millennium, no literal millennium.
In amillennialism we are now living in the Church Age, but according to
amillennialism, the Church is the Messianic kingdom. They are equivalent terms, so that we are also living the
Messianic kingdom and for them the “one thousand” in Revelation 20 is not a
literal “one thousand,” it is just a symbolic number and so we are currently
living in the Messianic kingdom.
This is a time when evil and good coexist and the first resurrection
they term as a spiritual resurrection, and this age ends with the Second Coming
of Christ; at that time there will be a resurrection, a physical resurrection
of all believers and simultaneously Jesus Christ returns to the earth, there
will be the completion of all the resurrections mentioned in Scripture, all
the judgments will take place at this time and then we go into the eternal
state. This is amillennialism.
Then
we’ll look at the third structure, which is postmillennialism, “post” meaning
after, that Jesus Christ returns after the millennium. For the postmillennialist the Church
brings in the Messianic kingdom; we will bring it in because of the way we
witness, because of the Holy Spirit, because of the teaching of doctrine and
eventually the entire world will become Christianized. In postmillennialism the Church is the
kingdom, the kingdom has already, for both amillennialism and
postmillennialism, the kingdom has already been inaugurated. That’s a key word to understand is
“inaugurate,” the kingdom is already inaugurated. Another term that’s being used today is “realized”
eschatology, “realized” prophecy, we are in the “realized” kingdom, it’s
already begun but it’s not fully here and eventually it will fade in until the
kingdom is here. For them the
thousand is also not literal and the first resurrection is spiritual, then the
Second Coming of Christ occurs, you have your resurrections and Christ returns
at the end of the age; all resurrections and judgments take place at the time
of the Second Coming and then we go into eternity. That is postmillennialism.
Now the
key to understanding much of this is the term “the kingdom of God” and how it
is used in the Bible. This gets
kind of confusing; we’ll talk about it more and more as we go through our study
of Daniel. You have different
terms, you have the kingdom of Christ, the kingdom of Messiah, the kingdom of
heaven, the kingdom of God, and these reflect different aspects of God’s reign
and rule as He governs human history.
Overall there is the use of the universal sovereign kingdom; from
eternity to eternity God is King, He is the Everlasting King, He is always
King, He is the ruler of the heavens and the earth. And that is a general term of God’s rule and reign. Yet in human history there are
different instantiations of that rule and reign. Here we have a time line, major events going from Eden to
eternity. In Eden we had the first
instance of a theocratic kingdom; God walked on the earth, God’s presence was
on the earth in the Garden of Eden and He ruled on the earth, so it was a form
of the theocratic kingdom. That
ended with human sin but it was reinstated in the theocratic kingdom of
Israel. God’s presence, once
again, was on the earth symbolized by the Shekinah glory hovering over the Ark
of the Covenant or the tabernacle or temple, the pillar of fire by night and
the cloud by day, the theocratic kingdom during the Age of Israel. Finally Ezekiel pictures in the divine
discipline on Judah in 586 BC, before that the departure of the Shekinah glory.
And then
we have Jesus’ teaching about the mystery form of the kingdom, starting in the
parables in Matthew 13, and the Church Age is part of the mystery form of the
kingdom. Remember the mystery form
of the kingdom is a mystery form, the expression of the overall sovereign
kingdom. It’s not the Messianic
kingdom; it’s the kingdom of God as a general principle. Then we have the Second Advent at the
end of this age, and when Jesus Christ establishes the millennium that is the
Messianic kingdom promised to Israel in the Old Testament. So that is the millennial Messianic
kingdom ending with the great white throne judgment, and that transitions into
the eternal theocratic kingdom throughout eternity. So we have to maintain these distinctions; they are different
kingdoms and this can get a little fuzzy and a little confusing at times but we
must maintain these distinctions.
So let’s
look at the summary of what we’re talking about. There are three questions we are looking at in terms of each
of these positions; three questions about premillennialism, amillennialism and
postmillennialism. First of all,
does Christ return in history?
Second question: will the kingdom of Messiah at some time dominate this
world’s culture? The third
question is will evil remain in force until Christ returns? According to the first question, will
Christ return in history, amillennialism and postmillennialism both say that
Christ’s return ends history; it ends history, you have your final judgments
and then you go into the eternal state.
Premillennialism says no, Jesus Christ’s return does not end
history. It comes in history, He
enters space/time history, when He comes to this earth it is still a fallen
earth, the curse is partially rolled back, the lion will lie down with the
lamb, a child will put his hand into the cobra’s den but it is still an earth
that suffers from the curse to some degree. Those born during the millennium will have sin nature; the
technology, all of the good technology, human advancements, etc. of this age
will go into the millennium.
Think
about that, they’re still going to fly from Washington DC to Tel Aviv, they
will still take ocean liners, they will still have diesel engines, they will
have computers, all of that survives, the human technology that is good that
survives the tribulation will go in as a starting point during the millennium
and then during the millennium there will be the development and the use of
human technology from a divine viewpoint framework and you’ll really see some
incredible growth. It will affect
art, literature, drama; every field of human endeavor will be impacted. Many of the great things that we have
had in the past in terms of good for literature, art, music, will survive into
the millennial kingdom. So
premillennialism says Christ’s return doesn’t end history, but it moves us into
the final stage of history in the millennial kingdom.
Second
question: will the kingdom of Messiah at some time dominate this world’s
culture. On this question both
premillennialism and postmillennialism agree. The kingdom of Messiah will dominate. For the premillennialist it will
dominate during the millennium. In
postmillennialism they think it’s going to dominate here and now today, and
must dominate before Jesus can come back.
For the amillennialist, the kingdom of Christ divine viewpoint never
dominates human culture, never is what God intended it to be and I think that’s
a major flaw in amillennialism, which we’ll look at.
The
third question: will evil remain in force until Christ returns. Premills and amills say yes, evil will
continue. But postmillennialism
has optimism and I think there’s an inherent flaw there that almost diminishes
the impact of evil and the human sin nature. This is one of the major problems going on today in
Christianity, is there are a lot of folks that think that somehow at salvation,
and I’m not saying this is true of postmills but it’s generally true, there are
a lot of folks who think that when people are saved the sin nature somehow goes
away, that the sin nature is not as powerful as it was and that somehow we’re
not quite the sinners we were before we were saved. But in this system what we’re saying is that evil remains
just as strong until Christ comes back, for both premills and amills.
So these
are just to compare/contrast the different systems. Now let’s wrap up what we were talking about last time about
amillennialism. Remember in
amillennialism the Church is the Messianic kingdom, it is cotemporaneous with
the Church Age, the thousand years are not literal and then Christ returns to
end this age and He establishes eternity.
This is a picture of amillennialism. Now one question that we didn’t get to last time, and that
is how does the amillennialist handle the promises of the Abrahamic
Covenant. Remember the Abrahamic
Covenant was given to Abraham by God in Genesis 12:1-3, reiterated in Genesis
15, Genesis 17, and other passages in Genesis restate it to Isaac as well as to
Jacob. And in the Abrahamic
Covenant there were three provisions: land, seed and blessing. There was a land promise that God would
give a specific piece of real estate to Abraham, it would go from the River of
Egypt, which is the Wadi El Arish, to the Euphrates, and be bordered on the
west by the Mediterranean Sea and all the way up here, and that would cover
portions of Iraq and Syria today, as well as all that we know of Lebanon,
Jordan, and modern Israel. So the
question is: what about the land promise; they understood it in the Old
Testament to be literal, that Israel would literally control this piece of real
estate.
Well,
there are three ways in which the amillennialist handles the land promise. The first is to say that the land
promise was originally a literal piece of real estate and that promise was
fulfilled under Solomon. They
would say that that promise was fulfilled under Solomon and they would cite two
passages, 1 King 4:21 and Nehemiah 9:8.
We ought to look at these passages to see if they’re right. 1 Kings 4:21 states: “Now Solomon ruled
over all the kingdoms from the River,” that would refer to the river Euphrates,
“to the land of the Philistines and to the border of Egypt,” would rule “over
all the kingdoms from the River Euphrates to the land of the Philistines and to
the border of Egypt; they brought tribute and served Solomon all the days of
his life.” This is the greatest
expansion of the kingdom of Israel under the united monarchy. At no other time in human history did
they control as much land as they did with Solomon.
Now it
looks at first glance that this passage is saying that Israel actually
controlled all of the real estate that God promised. But notice, he ruled over what? “he ruled over the
kingdoms.” These were now vassal kingdoms. The armies of Solomon had defeated them
militarily but they were still autonomous nations. They were now vassal nations
and they were paying tribute or taxes to Solomon, but they were never
Israel. They were still nations,
they were no longer fully autonomous, they were now subservient to Israel but
they were still those nations.
Israel never controlled that land as Israel. So that God’s promise to Abraham that that land would be
fully Israel’s and that that land would belong to the tribes of Israel has
never yet been fulfilled.
The
other passage is Nehemiah 9:7-8 which reads: “Thou art the LORD God, who chose
Abram and brought him out from Ur of the Chaldees, and gave him the name
Abraham.” Now the context of
Nehemiah 9 is important, the people have returned to the land, Nehemiah is rebuilding
the walls and the people are being called back to doctrine and to their
position as God’s people. And in
Nehemiah 9 there is a rehearsal of the history of how God has worked to call
out this special nation. So he is
rehearsing, he is reminding the people and just going through history, back to
the beginning, God called out Abraham, and then the next thing he did, he says
“And Thou found his heart faithful before Thee, and did make a covenant with
him, to give him the land of the Canaanite, of the Hittite and the Amorite, of
the Perizzite, the Jebusite, and the Girgashite—to give it to his
descendants. And You have
fulfilled Thy promise, for Thou art righteous.” Now all they are saying here is that You have given a chunk
of that land, it was the Promised Land, it goes on to talk about how it was
given to Joshua in the conquest generation, but it was never fully given to
Joshua, they did not control all the land, they did get the lion’s share of the
real estate but not all of the real estate.
So the
amillennialist is wrong. See,
amillennialism with their non-literal hermeneutic they tend to fudge the
passages. For example last time we
looked at the Isaiah 2 prophecy that all the nations would come to worship God
on His holy mountain in Jerusalem and the Messiah would adjudicate between, the
differences between the nations.
They extrapolate that and they allegorize that to mean heaven and that
everybody will be in heaven and everyone would simply look to God for the
answers to all the issues they face in eternity, which doesn’t even make sense
because there aren’t going to be any problems in the blessed state, when we’re
in heaven, when everything is perfection, there’s no sin nature. So this is a trap you fall into in
allegorizing Scripture.
The
second approach they use is they think that the Abraham, Land and New covenants
were conditional. We did a lengthy
study going through all the covenants but they were not conditional; God said
Abraham, I will give this to you.
Now whether or not they might enjoy the blessings of that in any
particular time in history might have been conditioned on their obedience but
God promised that eventually He would give it to them and that that land would
be owned by Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
It never was in their life; therefore there must be a resurrection where
they will fully enjoy the possession of that land.
The
third way they try to fudge the literal interpretation is to just spiritualize
it. They look at passages like
Romans 4:12, which reads: “When the father of circumcision,” that is referring
to Abraham, “father of circumcision to those who not only are of the
circumcision,” that is Jews, “but who also follow in the steps of the faith of
our father, Abraham, which he had while uncircumcised.” What they try to say there is that Jews
and Gentiles are both children of Abraham by faith and since we’re children of
Abraham by faith, that we are heirs to all the promises of the Jews. But I taught you what the problem with
that was. You were only a Jew in
the Old Testament under what condition?
Were you a Jew because you were related to Abraham? No. Were you a Jew if you were related to Abraham and Isaac? No. You were only a Jew if you were related to Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob. Remember, Abraham had a
son, Ishmael, but Ishmael was not a Jew.
Isaac had a son, Esau; Esau was not a Jew. Unless you were a descendant of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob you
were not a Jew. So just because we
follow Abraham in faith and Abraham is our father spiritually, because we have
the same faith Abraham does, does not make Church Age believers Jews or heirs
of those promises that God made to Abraham. So we see in amillennialism that there is an attempt to
spiritualize, allegorize and avoid the literal interpretation of those
passages.
Now
let’s look quickly at the last view.
This is postmillennialism.
Christ returns at the end of this age which is coterminous with the
kingdom and as this age progresses the kingdom comes in, the thousand years are
viewed as non-literal and the Church, through the ministry of God the Holy
Spirit, through witnessing, evangelism, teaching of the Word, will gradually
influence all the world till everyone eventually becomes Christians. And that is when you are in the
kingdom, and only then will Jesus come back. He won’t come back until we have completed that
project. They too, like
amillennialists would say that the first resurrection is spiritual and the
second resurrection is physical which takes place when Jesus Christ returns,
and at that same time He returns there is a physical resurrection; He ends
history, all the resurrections and judgments take place at that time and then
we enter into the eternal state.
Postmills believe that the kingdom of Christ is now extended through all
of the teaching, preaching and missionary activities of the Church and the
world will gradually become Christian and that will then be followed by
Christ’s return.
Now the
interesting thing is both amills and postmills look to Augustine as the
originator of their system, and that’s because Augustine had this view that
Christ comes back at the end and establishes eternity. But the difference between
postmillennialism and amillennialism, or one key difference, is that
postmillennialism is optimistic; things are going to get better and better and
better because the world is going to become more and more Christian. And that element of optimism was
completely missing from Augustine.
Postmillennialism, though, in its real systematic development didn’t
come about until after the Reformation.
The father of modern postmillennialism was a man by the name of Daniel
Whitby, in the 17th century.
Whitby
is an embarrassment to postmills because he was a Unitarian; he didn’t believe
in the Trinity and he didn’t believe that Christ was the God-man who died on
the cross for our sins, so that’s something of an embarrassment to them. Postmillennialism affected the
Puritans; during the colonial period, Jonathan Edwards, who was from
Massachusetts and died just after he became President of Yale, he developed
smallpox from a smallpox vaccine, he was also postmill and this had a
tremendous impact on American church history. It entered into liberalism in the 19th century
and became identified with social progress, and that became humanized in human
works so that the Church was going to bring in the kingdom through all kinds of
social works projects, political agenda, it was a heavy emphasis… the idea of
postmillennialism was a tremendous influence during the War Between the States
because many of the abolitionists had this idea that they were perfecting
America and once America came perfected by doing away with various social sins,
then they would enter into the utopic kingdom and it was all works oriented and
it laid the ground work for the victory of Protestant liberalism in the
mainline denominations in the 19th century.
Even
though there were many conservatives at that time who were also postmill, it
had a tremendous impact on American thinking that led to the War Between the
States. Men like Charles Hodge at
Princeton, and A. A. Hodge were postmills, as well as a man named Robert Lewis
Dabney who was a theologian from Virginia, who was the Chief of Staff for
Stonewall Jackson and after the War Between the States he went down to Texas and
started a little place called the University of Texas and Austin Presbyterian
Seminary. So postmills were
influential and were prominent, especially in the 19th century. It kind of died out after World War I
because our culture, liberalism thought everything was getting better and
better and better, and then World War I came along and with all the devastation
and the horrors of trench warfare they realized how terrible man was and
postmillennialism was dealt an almost fatal blow by World War I. In fact, some men like Lewis Sperry
Chafer founded Dallas Seminary and some others, Charles Feinberg in his book on
millennialism stated, they wrote in the 40s that postmillennialism was
dead. Well, it made a resurgence
in the 70s and 80s under the guise of Christian reconstruction from men like
Rousas Rushdoony, Gary North, Gary DeMar and Ken Gentry. So it is very much a major player on
the church scene today, it is becoming more and more popular.
In
postmillennialism, let’s look at our main questions. In postmillennialism Christ’s return ends history and
following Christ’s return there’s the eternal state. In terms of the second question, the kingdom of God will at
sometime literally dominate this mortal world’s culture, and they believe that
is true, just as we do as premills, and that there is a mandate for mankind as
creatures in the image of God to subdue the earth in all areas of thought,
that’s part of Paul’s mandate in 2 Corinthians that we are to take captive
every thought for Christ, we’re to still subdue the earth.
Now they
believe they’ll do it before Christ comes back and we believe that it won’t
fully come to past until Christ comes back, and amills believe it’ll never
happen. But they think that when
the look at different issues, for example like in Revelation 20, they interpret
it as if it has already occurred, that Satan is bound, and that Christ is now
ruling and reigning in heaven.
They believe Christ is reigning from the Davidic throne in heaven. This is the problem with the new view
coming out of Dallas Seminary called Progressive Dispensationalism. They are interpreting passages in the
Scripture in ways that are very similar to amills and postmills. Christ has already reigned; they
believe that the rule of the Holy Spirit in the heart of the believer is in one
sense the millennium. So the
millennium is not going to be a literal kingdom but it is something that rules
and reigns in our hearts, it’s more private.
They
believe that the binding of Satan is really just a metaphor or symbol for his
defeat at the cross, that he’s not literally bound, restricted, taken away from
the earth where he has no impact on the institutions of man, but they believe
that it’s just a metaphor for his defeat at the cross or else they would say
that it’s gradually taking place through the growth of the Church. For example, one man, Lorraine
Boettner, who for years in the middle of the 20th century was the
only postmill anybody knew of.
Lorraine
Boettner wrote: “The binding of Satan occurs by imperceptible degrees.” Now that’s not what I get out of
Revelation 20, there he’s bound.
But he says: “The binding of Satan occurs by imperceptible degrees. We can’t pinpoint when it begins but
passages like Isaiah 2 which refer to all the nations coming to Jerusalem and
learning the law of God really refer to the Church that has attained a position
so it stands out like a mountain on a plain and it becomes prominent in world
affairs so that all the nations come to the Word of God for their directives.” Do you see how he spiritualized that
passage, where it talks about all the nations going to the mountain of God,
there he says that’s really they come to the Church, they’re coming to the Word
of God, they’re coming to the Bible, so he spiritualizes or allegorizes that
particular passage. In chapter 7
of his book, which is entitled The World is Getting Better, he even states that “all the false
religions of the world are dying today.”
He wrote that back in the 40s, that was before the resurgence of
Islam. So there’s this pseudo
optimism by postmills; it’s not grounded in reality.
Now of
course the major issue in saying all of this is the degree to which we take the
Scriptures literally and we have to understand the basic principle of literal
interpretation and that is this; I’ve put it on the overhead to make sure you
can get it written down if you need to.
“When the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, make no other
sense.” In other words, if it is
feasible, it if seems to be literally possible, then that’s what it means. Don’t try to make it mean something
else unless the context indicates.
So when the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, make no other
sense; therefore take every word at its ordinary, usual, literal meaning unless
the facts of the immediate context studied in the light of related passages,
comparing Scripture with Scripture, unless the facts of the immediate context
studied in the light of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental truths
indicate clearly otherwise. There must
be clear contextual reasons for taking something as metaphor.
For
example, recently I engaged in a discussion with someone who was trying to say
that some of the descriptions of the king of Tyre in Ezekiel 28 were
metaphorical, that passage which says that the king of Tyre was a cherub who
fell, an anointed cherub from heaven, to make that passage apply to any human
being, which is what he was trying to do, you would have to be able to go into
Scripture and show where the term like “anointed cherub” was ever used in a
non-literal way. And it never is;
the term “cherub” always refers to a particular type, classification of
angels. And so this is the
problem; the problem is the methodology that is used is to take terms and say
well, I can’t really be literal because I don’t understand how that would work
out so I’m just going to… it must be symbolic. And that’s a false methodology; you have to be able to
demonstrate by comparing Scripture with Scripture, that the Scripture use these
phrases in non-literal ways in other passages.
So, when
the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, make no other sense. So there has to be a sense of
historical possibility, and that’s our first rule. Our first rule is that the passage, we need to be able to
answer the question, would it or would it not be historically possible or
feasible for a particular passage to come to pass literally. If the nature of the cosmos is such
that there is enough flexibility built into the way creation is set up that the
passage can be understood literally, then it must be understood literally.
Let’s
look at a couple of passages. The
first is Isaiah 65:25, “The wolf and the lamb shall grace together, and the
lion shall eat straw like the ox; and dust shall be the serpent’s food. They shall do no evil or harm in all My
holy mountain, says the LORD.” Now
we need to ask the question, could this in fact occur literally? On the basis of the changes we’ve seen,
we’ve studied this and before the fall in Genesis 3 this was true, all the
animals originally created were created as gramnivorous, herbivores, they ate
grass. So this would be nothing
more than reversing the curse backward, the curse that came in Genesis 3,
developed those animals, certain animals, into carnivores, meat eaters. This would be reversing that element of
the curse. So it is feasible, it’s
possible, and it makes sense in a Biblical context.
Another
passage that they would go to to argue for non-literal interpretation would be
Micah 5:5-6. “And this One will be
our peace. When the Assyrian
invades our land, when he tramples on our citadels,” notice, this is a
reference to the invasion that comes at the end time related to the antichrist
and it calls him an “Assyrian.”
Now Assyria was destroyed in the ancient world, but the antichrist is
going to be an Assyrian by heritage.
He may know that, we may not be able to pick that out now and there are
some people who would argue on the basis of this passage that the antichrist
really comes out of Iran or Iraq rather than out of the Revived Roman Empire
and we will look at some of those issues as we go through Daniel because I
think Daniel makes it clear he comes out of the revival of the Roman Empire in
what is now western Europe. So,
“when the Assyrian,” that’s the antichrist, invades our land, when he trampled
on our citadels, then we will raise against him seven shepherds and eight
leaders of men. [6] And they will
shepherd the land of Assyria with the sword, the land of Nimrod at its
entrances; and He will deliver us from the Assyrian when he attacks our land
and when tramples our territory.”
Now the
amill and post mill would say well, see, you can’t take that literally because
they’re going to be using swords and other passages talk about horses, and see,
we’ve gone way beyond that in terms of modern warfare and modern
technology. But the mistake that’s
being made there, I think, is that we’re assuming that in the future times
they’re going to have all of modern technology available to them. And just to point out the fallacy of
that, we don’t know how it’s going to work out or what’s going to take place,
but just look… here we are today, living in the year 2001 in America and
California is periodically experiencing these rolling blackouts, and there’s
indications that that could affect other things. Now when you plug this into the context of the Tribulation,
and the fact that there are going to be all these things happen in the heavens,
that there are going to be all of these geologic disaster, there’s going to be
earthquakes, almost 40% of the earth’s population is going to be killed in
these tremendous disaster, natural disasters that take place during the
Tribulation, wouldn’t that have some impact on the production and the use of
technology and even the use of power.
It may be such that as a result of all of the judgments starting in the
middle of the Tribulation that man is forced to give up the technology of
modern warfare and go back to more primitive warfare based on the use of horses
and swords and not being able to use computers and electricity.
So we
just have to wait to see how this is played out, but the reality is, the
principle is that when you look at all the prophecy that has been fulfilled to
date, especially all the prophecies related to the incarnation of Christ, the
First Coming, they were all literal.
They were not figurative, they were not allegorical, they were not
general, and they were specific and literal. So we can expect that just as all prophecies fulfilled to
date have been literal, all future prophecies will be fulfilled literally.
The
second thing we need to understand is the impact of the principle of the
creation mandate. At the creation
of man God said, Genesis 1:26, “Let us make man in our image, according to our
likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the
sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing
that creeps on the earth.” Man was
created to rule. Genesis 1:27,
“And God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male
and female He created them. [28]
And God blessed them; and God said to them, ‘Be fruitful and multiply, and fill
the earth, and subdue it; and rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds
of the sky, and over every living that move on the earth.” The point is, man was created to subdue
nature and to rule over nature as God’s representative in the angelic
conflict. If, according to
amillennialism, there is no resolution where man rules and reaches the complete
fulfillment of this mandate, then man never fully resolves the angelic
conflict, because part of our role is to rule as God’s representative over this
creation and demonstrate that true rulership is not on the basis of self-rule
and self-involvement, self-emphasis like Satan has in his arrogance, but it is
through humility and subservience to God and under divine authority. So in the millennial kingdom the saints
of this age will be ruling and reigning with Christ and we will be
demonstrating that the creature can only be what God intends him to be if he is
completely subordinate to the authority of God, and it is in that we resolve
key elements in the angelic conflict.
So we
look at all of these passages and it leads us to say that Scripture must be
interpreted literally.
Now
let’s get back to Nebuchadnezzar’s dream.
Remember where we were, Nebuchadnezzar has had a dream, he’s been
tossing back and forth at night because of what he has seen in the dream. At this point in his career he has
reached the pinnacle of human power; no king has ever had the power, no human
being has ever had more wealth, no one has ever had more than Nebuchadnezzar
had at this time. Some have been
similar but none have had it greater than he. And yet he has this dream and in this dream he realizes that
his position, his power, his empire will be threatened, it may not be
permanent, and so he is seeking an answer. We’ll have to wait till next time to come back and look at
that answer, we are about out of time and rather than getting into this we’ll
just wait till next time to get into Daniel’s interpretation of
Nebuchadnezzar’s dream.