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Posted by on Jun 7, 2012 in Website News |

Most Read Posts from the Last Two Years

I haven’t really gone back and looked at stats on my posts in quite a while, so I thought it would be interesting to look back in the Google Analytics data to see which posts have generated the most traffic since I started tracking such data in March 2010. The results probably aren’t too surprising, given certain incoming links to some of these articles, but nonetheless, I did find it interesting which posts were read the most.

#1 Reformed Distance Theological Education Programs (June 2010)

This post has generated quite a bit of traffic from Google searches, probably because of the high degree of interest from the Reformed community in pursuing advanced theological degrees. It could probably be expanded somewhat (and I have edited it since it first went up), but it gives a good starting place for degrees available from a Reformed perspective by distance.

#2 Cowboys and Aliens and Earning God’s Presence (August 2011)

Now I must admit that this one surprised me a bit. I saw the movie, enjoyed it, and I just happened to be struck by one quote from the preacher in there about earning God’s presence. Almost on a whim I wrote a post about it, and I suppose many others were intrigued by the quote, because Google searches continue to drive a lot of traffic to my blog because of it.

#3: MacArthur, Calvinism, and (Dispensational) Premillennialism (Part 1, 2, 3, and 4) (April to May 2010)

Parts 1 and 4 were the most read of the four total posts, but these continue to generate significant traffic both from Google and from links from other sources. Actually, if I did count the total pageviews from all four posts, they would probably be #1 instead of #3, but I just counted #1, which has the third most pageviews overall. I suppose many people must be searching for a response to MacArthur’s talk that he gave back in 2007 on this topic.

#4: Review of Allah: A Christian Response by Miroslav Volf (March 2011)

The overall traffic to my blog is probably higher than suggested from the pageviews of this post because much of the traffic on my home page comes from this review which was also posted on The Gospel Coalition Reviews site. But it has generated a lot of link and Google traffic as many people wrestle with the ideas presented in Volf’s book.

#5: Review of Generous Justice by Tim Keller (January 2011)

I’ve written quite a bit about themes related to the subjects covered in this book, but this review draws a number of visitors in from Google who are looking for thoughts on Tim Keller’s approach to social justice.

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Posted by on Apr 30, 2012 in Covenant Theology, Dispensationalism, Eschatology | 4 comments

Review of Christ’s Prophetic Plans: A Futuristic Premillennial Primer by MacArthur and Mayhue

Why I Read Christ’s Prophetic Plans: A Futuristic Premillennial Primer

Given that I was just ordained in the Presbyterian Church in America and am strongly committed to covenant theology, one might wonder why I would choose to read a book that forcefully presents dispensational premillennialism. I suppose I had several reasons: I wanted to see how current dispensationalists present their position (as opposed to the now-outdated Dispensationalism Today by Ryrie). I also wanted to be challenged again to know how dispensationalists are responding to the views that I hold. Also, given that this is a collection of chapters from professors at the Master’s Seminary, I hoped to see some more cogent argumentation on behalf of the view so that I could be challenged to think through the issues critically again.

Why This is a Hard Review to Write

This review is tough to write primarily because of the nature of the book as a collection of chapters from different authors. Some chapters are definitely of higher quality than others, so it is hard to evaluate the work as a whole.

This review is tough to write for another reason: I found the book to be, on the whole, incredibly unpersuasive because it really fails to interact seriously with opposing views, choosing instead to use tired arguments that are no more persuasive now than they were 50 years ago.

Lastly, this review is tough to write because I have a great deal of respect for several of the men who contributed to this volume (which is not to say that there are some I don’t respect, only that I haven’t heard of all of them).

Chapter 1: What is Dispensationalism? (Michael Vlach)

This chapter is a decent chapter within the book, as Vlach does present some clarifications about dispensationalism that are helpful. Most significant in my opinion is his discussion of the supposed “literal” hermeneutic of dispensationalism. He correctly articulates that the issue is not precisely one of being literal, but rather of testamental priority. I still found his presentation unconvincing (as he still rejects the idea of the church replacing Israel, which is not how covenant theologians today formulate the question), but it is helpful for him to articulate that the hermeneutical question is more complex than simply a literal/figurative paradigm. I would also say that Vlach’s defenses of his six foundational elements of dispensationalism are not compelling at all, but it would perhaps be unfair to expect him to thoroughly defend his position in a chapter merely meant to present what dispensationalism is.

Chapter 2: What is Dispensationalism Not? (Michael Vlach)

This chapter was for the most part helpful, as Vlach responds to unfair characterizations of dispensationalism in the past. Because so many dispensationalists have been Arminian, and because Scofield and others originally did present two ways of salvation for the Jews and the church (notwithstanding Vlach’s desire to downplay this point), dispensationalism has unfairly been closely associated with Arminian soteriology in the past. Vlach makes the case strongly at this point. Arminianism is not inherent to the system. Vlach’s case is a bit weaker when he deals with the suggestions that the seven dispensations are inherent to the system. While modern dispensationalists may disagree with the number of dispensations or even the exact nature of the dispensations, the reality is that dispensations are an organizing principle for the system. Certainly the distinction between Israel and the church as two separate peoples of God is more integral to the system, but it seems unfair to downplay the dispensations themselves, when that is how the system has organized all of human history, regardless of the number presented. That is one of the significant issues that dispensationalists need to deal with, considering that the Scriptures seem prima facie to present a much different organizing principle: covenants.

Chapter 3: Why Futuristic Premillennialism? by Richard Mayhue

I do have to make one note at the outset that really applies to this whole volume. It seems that the Master’s Seminary faculty wants to avoid the label “dispensational premillennialism” for some reason, but it seems strange to me to give a new label that is not really normal in this discussion. Regarding the content of Mayhue’s chapter itself, I must say that it seems like quite a regress from Vlach’s first chapter on dispensationalism. Whereas Vlach is clearer on articulating the hermeneutical difference between dispensationalism and covenant theology, Mayhue returns to the tired and unhelpful claim that only dispensationalism uses a “literal” hermeneutic. Vlach articulated the real difference—testamental priority—whereas Mayhue doesn’t seem to acknowledge that at all. This comes out quite significantly when he does mention the biblical covenants, for he cites all sorts of OT verses about the covenants, but then fails to ever engage how the New Testament discusses those texts. E.g., he discusses the Davidic covenant, but doesn’t discuss Acts 2, and he discusses Amos 9 without referencing Acts 15. Those are serious shortcomings.

Particularly egregious is his failure to distinguish between the Reformed analogy of faith—let Scripture interpret Scripture—and allegory. He regularly interchanges “allegorical interpretation” with “spiritualized interpretation” when these really refer to separate things. Additionally, nowhere does he acknowledge the importance of genre in applying our hermeneutic to a particular text.

Further, he makes broad, sweeping claims about the inadequacy of covenant theology without backing up nearly any of his claims. For example, he says there is no evidence for the covenants of grace and works, but does not at any point discuss the evidence adduced by covenant theologians in favor of them (e.g., the elements of the suzerain vassal treaty in Genesis 1-2, Hosea 6:7, Ephesians 2:12, etc). In many of these claims, he assumes exactly what he needs to prove. For example, he regularly refers to Daniel’s seventieth week as being future, and yet he never even discusses the fact that it is a critical dividing line in this debate. The dispensationalist view of Daniel 9 is perhaps the most tenuous in its overall line of argumentation, and yet neither Mayhue nor anyone else ever seems to feel the need to defend their view of it.

Chapter 4: Why a Pretribulational Rapture? by Richard Mayhue

As someone who disagrees with the fundamental tenets of premillennialism, I found this chapter to assume things that need to be proved at nearly every point. However, the intent was more to convince post-tribulationalists rather than amillennialists. As far as that intent is concerned, I suppose it does a decent job, but not being one who believes the tribulation is future, I can’t really say whether it would have been convincing to a post- or mid-tribulationist.

Chapter 5: What about Israel? by Michael Vlach

Vlach begins this chapter with a defense of how God can use nations as nations. It is puzzling why he felt the need to do this, considering that several of the people he cites to defend his points are certainly not dispensationalists (notably Christopher Wright). The issue is simply not whether or not God uses nations or whether or not nations will still exist in the new heavens and new earth, but whether or not they have an identity that is separated from the church, the redeemed community.

I also find it astounding that in his whole discussion of how Israel was to be the cause of blessing to the nations (including discussion of passages such as Genesis 12, Deut 30, Ezekiel 36, and others), he never examines Galatians 3, which is a pivotal text in this whole discussion.

Similarly, he discusses Romans 11 without interacting with the exegesis of Reformed theologians on that chapter, which is absolutely crucial to the case of covenant theology. Likewise, when he references Revelation 21-22, he doesn’t interact at all with the case that covenant theologians make about the unity of the people of God in the New Jerusalem. This chapter just toes the party line without engaging in any substantive discussion with the views of those who disagree.

Chapter 6: What about Revelation 20? by Michael Waymeyer

Of all the chapters in this book, I found this one to be the most cogently argued. This is not to say that I was persuaded by it, but I did really appreciate that Waymeyer seemed aware of most of the arguments of a- and post-millennialists regarding Revelation 20, and he did take the time to respond in some detail to the views of others. A- and post-millennialists would do well to actually respond to the arguments presented in this chapter, as they are not so easily brushed off as the shoddy argumentation presented in many of the other chapters.

Chapter 7: Does Calvinism Lead to Futuristic Premillennialism? by John MacArthur

Anyone who is familiar with MacArthur’s address given at a Shepherd’s conference entitled Why every self-respecting Calvinist should be a premillennialist some years ago will know where he goes in this chapter. This chapter is only slightly more articulate than that sermon (and the later 6-part series he gave on the same topic). He argues that while Calvin and other Reformed theologians used a sound hermeneutic for most doctrinal questions, they abandoned it in favor of an allegorical approach that they elsewhere condemned when it came to prophecy. This is a sad mischaracterization of the reality. To equate Calvin’s prophetic hermeneutic with allegory is simply not accurate. The allegory of some of the early church fathers in the Alexandrian school was fanciful and speculative. Covenant theologians want to interpret OT prophecies in light of how the NT interprets them, which is a far different thing than allegorical interpretation.

In dealing with election and the relation between Israel and the church, MacArthur fails to engage in any meaningful way with what covenant theologians say about the church as the true Israel. He deals with only Romans 9:6 and Galatians 6:16, neglecting to discuss Romans 2:28-29 (other than just citing it as backing up his point when it really seems to do the opposite), Philippians 3:3, Ephesians 2:12, Galatians 3 or 4, 1 Peter 2:9-10, amongst many others.

Chapter 8: Does the New Testament Reject Futuristic Premillennialism? by John MacArthur

MacArthur begins this chapter with a puzzling point: that 1st century Jews understood OT prophecies to indicate a future physical and geopolitical kingdom for Israel. I have no doubt that they did. But they also expected a very different kind of Messiah and so rejected him. Why we should then base our eschatological expectations on theirs doesn’t follow.

It is interesting as MacArthur examines various texts in the New Testament that he leaves out what may be the most crucial ones. E.g., in answering the question “did Jesus reject futuristic premillennialism?” he doesn’t address the Olivet discourse where Jesus addresses the Great Tribulation. Amazingly, in asking whether Peter accepted futuristic premillennialism, he glosses over the crucial text in Peter’s sermon of Acts 2 from which theologians argue that Jesus is king on David’s throne now. Similarly, regarding Paul, he doesn’t address how covenant theologians deal with Romans 11 amongst other passages. Regarding John, he addresses only Revelation 20 and fails to discuss the passages from John’s gospel that relate to the 2nd coming or the resurrection and judgment. In other words, MacArthur is just preaching to the choir rather than presenting substantive arguments that might persuade someone from another perspective.

Chapter 9: Did the Early Church Believe in a Literal Millennial Kingdom?

This chapter is better than some of the others in that it at least engages seriously with a number of early church fathers to defend premillennialism. It does present a fairly compelling case that many early church fathers accepted premillennialism. I found its case for why amillennialism developed to be slightly less compelling and more speculative, but overall, it is still a chapter that is worthy of consideration. I do find it curious that this argument from church history is given weight on this point, while on the topic of national Israel’s role in the future, church history is nearly completely ignored. The reality is that the whole system that this volume supports is radically against most of church history, including the early church, and so to appeal to church history on this point seems a bit odd. As far as it goes, though, this chapter is one of the better ones in the book.

Chapter 10: How Certain is Futuristic Premilllennialism?

Of all the chapters in this book, this one is perhaps the most painful to read. Notwithstanding my respect and admiration for John MacArthur in so many areas, this chapter is truly disappointing. Most egregious in the chapter is his charge of R.C. Sproul with date-setting because he sees Matthew 24:1-34 as having been fulfilled in the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. To equate that with the date-setting of Hal Lindsey and others is at its best absurd and at its worst incredibly disingenuous.

The entire chapter simply ignores every argument that a- and post-millennialists have developed in favor of their positions. He also assumes what he needs to prove at nearly every point, particularly regarding the Olivet Discourse and the seventy weeks of Daniel 9.

Summary

Much of this book is just an effort to motivate those already convinced of dispensational premillennialism to keep fighting for it. With the exception of Waymeyer’s chapter on Revelation 20, the chapters dealing with the biblical data concerning the issues involved simply don’t deal with the arguments of other views. They offer very little that is new to the discussion, and they fail to provide convincing responses to the arguments that others provide. So while I can recommend this book for someone wanting to get a sense for what modern dispensational premillennialists believe, I cannot recommend it to those looking for substantive engagement with eschatological issues.

Note: I received a copy for review purposes from Moody Publishers.

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Posted by on Jun 22, 2010 in Dispensationalism |

Early Church Fathers and Dispensationalism

If you’ve read many of my previous posts, you will quickly realize that I am not dispensational.  I won’t go into all the reasons for that again, but I came across a post elsewhere in the blog world today that illustrates one of the reasons that I’m not.  As I’ve mentioned before, dispensationalism seems to have a prima facie unacceptability because it goes against what the church has taught throughout her history.  Here’s what I don’t mean by that: dispensationalism was never formulated as a complete system until the 19th century, and that makes it unacceptable.  If that was the criteria, then covenant theology would be unacceptable as well, because it wasn’t formulated as a complete system until later in the church’s history.  However, what I do mean is that dispensational (as opposed to covenant theology) does contradict what the church has confessed from early on.  The problem is not that the complete system wasn’t there from early on, but rather that it contradicts what has been there for a long time (including of course, the theological formulations of the Reformers and their ecclesiastical descendants).

The fundamental assertion of dispensationalism (in all of its varieties) is that there is a distinction between Israel and the church, which means that the church is not currently “spiritual Israel,” “true Israel,” or any variation on those terms.  Michael DeWalt, who blogs at Gospel Centered Musings, posted this quotation from Justin Martyr (an early church father):

“For the true spiritual Israel, and descendants of Judah, Jacob, Isaac, and Abraham (who in uncircumcision was approved of and blessed by God on account of his faith, and called the father of many nations), are we who have been led to God through this crucified Christ.” (Justin Marty Was Premil, but Was He Dispensational? ~ Citation at his site)

Of course, this does not prove by any means whether or not dispensationalism is biblical.  I do not believe it is, but obviously a quote from Justin Marty hardly proves anything either way.  What it does show, however, is that even one who is regularly claimed as a premillennial early church father, clearly opposed the central thesis of dispensationalism.  Even this one (clear) quote doesn’t prove anything historically with reference to the early church fathers as a whole.  But it does provide at least a little (early) context to the issues between covenant theology and dispensationalism.

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Posted by on Jun 19, 2010 in Book Reviews, Dispensationalism, Eschatology |

A Case for Amillennialism by Kim Riddlebarger

As I mentioned in my last post (From Spark to Sun: Calvin on the Covenant of Grace), I decided to go ahead and read a book that I have owned for some time: A Case for Amillennialism: Understanding the End Times by Kim Riddlebarger (see his blog: the RiddleBlog).  What follows is just a brief overview of the contents of the book with some observations about what I thought were positive and negative elements of his presentation.

Brief Overview

In Part 1, Riddlebarger seeks to provide a clear foundation for the discussion of eschatology (the last things/end times).  He provides an overview of the issues separating the three primary views (premillennialism, in classic and dispensational forms, amillennialism, and postmillennialism).  Additionally, he gives an overview of the issues of interpreting prophecy (particularly addressing the issue of “literalism” from the dispensational camp).

In Part 2, Riddlebarger seeks to approach the issue of eschatology from biblical-theological perspective.  In other words, he attempts to put the discussion of the end times in the context of the whole Bible and the whole story of the Bible.  Dealing with such topics such as “the covenant context of Old Testament eschatology,” “Christ and the fulfillment of the prophecy,” and “the kingdom of God,” he argues for the amillennial approach to the end times.

In Part 3, he moves on to look at four key texts that affect eschatological viewpoints: Daniel’s Prophecy of the 70 weeks, the Olivet discourse, Romans 11, and the millennial passage, Revelation 20.  He argues that only the amillennial approach adequately deals with these texts.  Contra premillennialism, he argues that there simply is no Scriptural evidence to suggest that there is a 1000 year gap between Christ’s second coming and the consummation.  Against postmillennialism, he argues that Scripture presents suffering and persecution as the norms for the church’s experience till the return of Christ.

Positives

There are a number of things that I thought Riddlebarger did very well.  (1) His presentation of the two-age model of eschatology (this age, and the age to come) presented in the New Testament was quite convincing.  This forms the foundation for the amillennial insistence on “the already and the not yet,” and his presentation was convincing enough that I need to spend some time figuring out how that fits into my own view of these things.  (2) His refutation of (classic) dispensational premillennialism was outstanding.  Critiquing the dispensational view of hermeneutics, of the dichotomy between Israel and the church, of its dual view of redemptive history, and the “we’ll-return-to-types-and-shadows-like-the-Temple-in-the-Millennium,” he makes the case very well against such a view of Scripture. (3) His exposition of Revelation 20 was quite compelling, particularly because of the clear connection he made with the parallel passage in Revelation 12.  (4) His exposition of Romans 11 was, for the most part, quite balanced.  I’m not sure that he characterized postmillennialism completely fairly, but for the most part, he examined the various options and explained what view he takes, which is that national Israel will en masse convert to Christ and therefore become part of the church right before Christ returns.

Questions/Negatives

I hesitate calling this section “negatives,” because I do have a lot of respect for Rev. Riddlebarger, and I thought that his book, overall, was quite well done.  However, there are some points at which I don’t think he made his case well.

(1) It seemed to me that he did very little in the way of serious interaction with postmillennialism. Now, that’s an overstatement in some ways, as he did certainly mention it regularly and did interact with some postmillennial writers such as J. Marcellus Kik.  But it seemed to me that to convincingly make his case against postmillennialism, he needed to extensively interact with the arguments of Ken Gentry, Greg Bahnsen, Gary DeMar, Keith Mathison, and others.  I’m somewhat confident that they wouldn’t have entirely agreed with his characterizations of postmillennialism.  In particular, his primary argument against postmillennialism was that Scripture doesn’t indicate economic, social, and political success for Christianity prior to Christ’s return.  There are postmillennialists who wouldn’t necessarily expect success in that way, but rather in the propagation of the gospel.  Additionally, in what reading I’ve done on the issue, it seems that postmillennialists argue that the whole period between the two advents of Christ is the millennium (as amillennialists would), not some future golden age (that was a version of postmillennialism more commonly held by some Puritan authors).

(2) His critique of dispensationalism focused almost entirely on the classic form of it. Now, given that in many churches today, this form of dispensationalism is alive and well, that’s understandable.  And I can’t expect that he would cover everything in one 250-page book.  However, given that many (scholarly) dispensationalists would now consider them progressive (PD), it seems that it would have been helpful to more extensively interact with their views.  He did briefly mention PD, but did not really address its approach in much detail.

(3) His exposition of the Olivet Discourse was, in my opinion, weak.  That’s not to say that he did nothing well in that chapter.  His basic approach was that some parts of it referred to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, some will happen in the future, some will happen at the Second Coming, and some have a double fulfillment (AD 70 and the future).  However, I did not get the sense that there were any strong guidelines for deciding which elements went where.  He made a lot of assertions about when each part was/will be fulfilled, but I didn’t see much in the way of textual evidence to support these claims.  In particular, I felt that his refutation of orthodox preterism (partial preterism) was not very strong, for one primary reason: he did not deal well with the orthodox preterist insistence on the hermeneutical guideline of Matthew 24:34 (“This generation will not pass away till all of these things have been fulfilled“). As I have studied Matthew 24, I simply can’t get away from the implications that verse has for the first 33 verses of the chapter.  Riddlebarger argues that some of the elements prior to verse 34 refer to Christ’s second coming, and he doesn’t adequately address how that can be the case with the statement of verse 34 (he primarily discusses verse 34 in connection with dispensational predictions of the future).

Regardless of these aspects of his presentation, I felt that his book was an excellent contribution to the literature on the subject.  And I know now that I need to think through some of this more before figuring out where I stand between amillennialism and postmillennialism.

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Posted by on May 23, 2010 in Dispensationalism, Eschatology, Hermeneutics | 6 comments

MacArthur, Calvinism, and (Dispensational) Premillennialism: Part 4

In the first three posts (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3) I primarily discussed what was really the crux of MacArthur’s messages on Calvinism and premillennialism: his commitment to dispensational theology.  As I stated, the series would have been titled more appropriately if it had been “Why Every Calvinist Should be a Dispensational Premillennialist.”  In evaluating MacArthur’s insistence on dispensationalism, I’ve primarily looked at several distinctive dispensational elements: (1) The dichotomy between Israel and the church in terms of God’s plan, (2) the dispensational insistence on a “literal” hermeneutic, and (3) the actual implications of election for the fulfillment of God’s promises in the Old Testament.

There is much more that could be said about this topic, but much wiser people than I have written on it.  Here are some resources that have helped me in the past: Dispensationalism: Rightly Dividing the People of God by Keith Mathison, Understanding Dispensationalists by Vern Poythress, and This World is not My Home by Michael Williams.

In this last post chronicling my thoughts on MacArthur’s series on Calvinism and (Dispensational) Premillennialism, I’ll look briefly at the question of eschatology (doctrine of the last things).  MacArthur spent most of his time talking about dispensational distinctives.  However, since his topic was eschatology, and since he did make many claims about the future, I’ll address two eschatological issues: (1) The chronology of MacArthur’s approach, and (2) a bizarre eschatological consequence of dispensationalism.

The Chronology of MacArthur’s Approach

Here is how MacArthur describes the events of the future:

Now then you think about eschatology, there’s a little sequence of events that are relatively simple for you to think about, and this is the way the Bible lays it out.  If we wanted to use technical theological terms we’d call it the ordo eschaton, that is, the order of last things, the ordo eschaton.  And it kind of goes like this.  In the end, everything is begun by the Rapture of the church, the collection of the church, the gathering of the church into the presence of the Lord.  That is followed by a period called the Tribulation.

So Rapture, Tribulation…Tribulation ends with the Second Coming of Christ, when he comes to earth bringing his church, those of us who have already been with Him, having been rapture before the Tribulation, we come back with Him to earth, He returns, He destroys the ungodly and sets up His Kingdom…

At the end of the Kingdom you have the Great White Throne Judgment, which is the final judgment of all the ungodly who are raised from the dead and brought before the Great White Throne, the tribunal of God, where the final sentence is rendered and they are sent forever into the Lake of Fire…That’s it.  Rapture-Tribulation-Second Coming-Kingdom-Final Judgment-New Heaven and New Earth…that’s the chronology, that’s the ordo eschaton.  And if you follow the book of Revelation, that’s exactly the way it’s laid out.  It is precisely how it flows.  You see the church on earth in chapters 2 and 3, which describes the present church age, immediately you come to chapter 4 and you see the church in heaven which is indicative of the fact that they were on earth, they’re now in heaven though it doesn’t describe the Rapture, it’s described in other places, it’s clear that that is what happened.

One could write many posts examining this approach to the future.  In the interests of brevity, I’ll content myself with only asking a few questions about this understanding of eschatology.

(1) Where in Scripture do we ever see a “rapture” disconnected from the Second Coming? The idea of the “rapture” comes from 1 Thess. 4:13-18, in which Paul says that “we will be caught up together to meet the Lord in the air.”  However, Paul does not mention a tribulation after this event, nor does he seem to indicate that there will be 1007 years of history after this being “caught up in the air.”  I could go on, but I’m happy simply to ask where the exegetical evidence is for asserting the existence of two separate comings of Christ.  Scripture never simply “lays it out” this way.  To suggest that because the church is described as in heaven in Revelation 4 indicates there was a rapture at the beginning of the chapter simply doesn’t follow, considering that in Chapter 12, the church is clearly back on earth again.  Revelation simply doesn’t follow a completely chronological sequence.  But if we understand its apocalyptic genre, this shouldn’t surprise us.

(2) Where in Scripture do we ever see the Second Coming disconnected from the final judgment? MacArthur places the kingdom 1000 years after the Second Coming of Jesus.  This is the heart of the premillennial view (both classic and dispensational).  [1. The 1000 year gap comes from his insistence that the 1000 years mentioned in Revelation 20 is entirely a literal number.  I don’t have time to examine that claim, but I only mention that he provides no evidence.  Revelation is clearly a highly symbolic book (beasts coming out of the water, bowls of wrath being poured out, etc), so to immediately dismiss any suggestion that 1000 could be a symbolic number is unconvincing.] This is, in my opinion, the most difficult aspect of premillennialism to accept.  Consider the following passages:

1 Corinthians 15:23-24: But each in his own order: Christ the firstfruits, then at his coming those who belong to Christ.  Then comes the end, when he delivers the kingdom to God the Father after destroying every rule and every authority and power.  For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet.  The last enemy to be destroyed is death.

There are several important things to notice here: (1) The end comes at Christ’s coming.  I find these verses difficult to fit into a premillennial scheme.  When Christ comes, the end comes.  At the end (at Christ’s second coming), he delivers the kingdom back to the Father.  The implication is that Christ reigns over his kingdom, defeating his enemies prior to his return.  (2) Death, the last enemy, is defeated at the end of Christ’s reign.  At this point, we must compare with what Paul says later in 1 Corinthians 15:51-55:

Behold! I tell you a mystery.  We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.  For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed.  For this perishable body must put on the imperishable, and this mortal body must put on immortality.  When the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: ‘Death is swallowed up in victory? O death, where is your sting?’

These verses indicate that death will be defeated when the dead are raised (accompanied by a trumpet sound).  When the dead are raised, death is defeated.  When are the dead raised?  When do we “put on immortality”?  We put on immortality when Christ raises us from the dead at his coming: For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first (1 Thessalonians 4:16).  This verse is the one cited to refer to the rapture.  But if we interpret Scripture in light of Scripture, we see several things: (a) Death is defeated at the end of Christ’s kingdom.  (b) Death is defeated when God raises his children from the dead to new life.  (c) God’s children are raised from the dead to new life when Jesus comes back.  When we put these ideas together, the conclusion seems to be that Christ returns at the end of his reign, at which point the dead in Christ are raised and death is finally defeated.  Accordingly, the Rapture and Second Coming are synonymous, and the final judgment takes place at the Second Coming, not 1000 years later, as premillennialism indicates.

A Disturbing Eschatological Consequence of Dispensationalism

While dispensational theology has many eschatological consequences, I here want to mention the one that I find truly disturbing.  Here it is: A dispensational approach to Scripture places sacrifices in a rebuilt temple in the millennial kingdom.  Consider what MacArthur says:

They [Jews of Jesus’ day] also believed that the temple would be rebuilt because that’s what Ezekiel says in Ezekiel 40-48, and temple worship would be at its apex.  The eschatology of the Jews at the time of our Lord is precisely the eschatology that I believe because it’s what the Bible teaches.  There were just interpreting the Old Testament in its normal sense.

I have several questions about this: (1) Shouldn’t we be concerned if our eschatological understanding is the same as that of the Jews of Jesus’ day? They missed the central message of the Old Testament.  They missed the fulfillment of God’s promises in the Old Testament.  They missed Christ.  Their eschatological understanding was fundamentally flawed.  So to ask, “what was the eschatology of the Jews of Jesus’ day?” as MacArthur repeatedly does in his series, seems fundamentally off the mark.

(2) Insisting that there will a rebuilt temple in a future millennial kingdom misses the fact that Christ is the fulfillment of Old Testament expectation, including the temple.  Jesus calls himself the temple (John 2:19-21).  The body of Christ is the temple (1 Corinthians 3:16-17; 2 Corinthians 6:16).  To return to a physical temple would be to return to the types and shadows of the Old Testament and away from the substance that is Christ (Colossians 2:17).  To return to a physical temple would be to, in effect, declare what Christ did on the cross insufficient.  Consider that the veil in the temple was torn, that the “wall of separation” (referring to the wall in the temple) was torn down through Christ’s death.  Accordingly, if my theological presuppositions (“literal” interpretation, distinction between Israel and the church in God’s plan) lead me to think that God will put a rebuilt, physical temple in his kingdom, then surely I ought to examine those pre-commitments.  Perhaps my hermeneutical model is lacking or in error.

(3)  Insisting that the temple will be rebuilt (because of Ezekiel 48) means that the sacrifices will be reinstituted.  This, ultimately, is the disturbing consequence of dispensationalism.  There are clearly sacrifices mentioned in Ezekiel 48, so if one argues that Ezekiel 48 is fulfilled in a future, post-Second Coming kingdom, then the sacrifices must also be present in that kingdom.  Hebrews (see chapters 8-10 especially) clearly says that the Old Covenant is obsolete.  The types and shadows, the sacrificial system, the Levitical priesthood, all of those aspects of the promise stage of God’s plan are gone because the reality has come. To revert to those is to say that Christ’s coming was unimportant. We don’t need a new temple, and we don’t need new sacrifices.  We need to trust (for now and forever) in Jesus, the true Temple and the true Sacrifice.  Any theology that takes us away from that ought to disturb us. [2. I am aware that some dispensationalists suggest that these sacrifices aren’t sacrifices of atonement, but rather memorial sacrifices, commemorating what Christ.  However, that claim is impossible to defend, for two reasons: (1) God gave us something to remember Christ’s death by: the Lord’s Supper.  (2) Ezekiel 48 clearly says that these are sacrifices of atonement.  One can’t just say they’re memorial sacrifices, particularly if one holds to their “literal” hermeneutic.]

Thus ends my series on MacArthur, Calvinism, and (Dispensational) Premillennialism.  As I stated in the first post, I have deep respect for John MacArthur, and I will continue to listen to his messages and read his writings, as I have profited deeply from them.  Nevertheless, I am convinced that dispensational premillennialism is a theological approach that has severe theological, biblical, and practical implications.  So despite my respect for MacArthur, I believe there is a real need for the church to leave behind this theological system, and hopefully, if nothing else, I have clarified in my own mind the issues involved in evaluating this approach.

—Footnotes—

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