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On the Interpretation of Revelation
When the Stars Fall: A Messianic Commentary on the Revelatoin | 6/21/05 | Michael D. Bugg

Posted on 06/21/2005 4:27:46 PM PDT by Buggman

When the Stars Fall:
A Messianic Commentary on the Revelation
by Michael D. Bugg

About the Time of the End, a body of men will be raised up who will turn their attention to the Prophecies, and insist upon their literal interpretation, in the midst of much clamor and opposition.
--Sir Isaac Newton

Introduction

Over eighty years ago, H.A. Ironside wrote, “It is certainly cause for deep regret that to so many Christians the Book of Revelation seems to be what God never intended it should be—a sealed book.”[1] Sadly, eight decades later, the situation is little changed.

Why is that? The problem is not simply that your average Christian hasn’t exhaustively studied the End Time prophecies. Few have exhaustively studied the doctrines of the Trinity, or salvation, or even the prophecies of the Messiah’s First Coming either, but those subjects are not nearly as mystifying or divisive as that as the Bible’s final book.

The biggest difference is how most churches treat the subject. Even in Evangelical churches where over half the congregation has read the Left Behind novels, serious study is all but taboo. Most pastors and Sunday school teachers are afraid to touch it because of its controversial and/or extreme nature. If I may be forgiven for using a personal example, some years ago, I began attending a Southern Baptist church with my parents, and the pastor came to our house for dinner to get to know us. I was at that time just rediscovering my love of the Scriptures after a long dry spell away from any immersion at all in God’s Word, and I felt drawn to study the prophetic books and passages in particular. Desirous of not drifting off the path that God had set, I asked the pastor if he or anyone he knew in that church had studied the prophecies in hopes of getting some tutelage. He didn’t know a single person—not one person in a congregation of over a thousand—who could help me. I, like so many others who have delved into this area, was left to my own devices.

With such an attitude all but universal in our churches, how is your average person supposed to learn? Could you imagine a pastor saying there was no one to help me with a question about salvation? Or a moral dilemma? Or about Messiah’s deity? If not prepared to give an on-the-spot comprehensive answer, the pastor would have at least been able to point me in the right direction on almost any other question. How can a preacher complain about the extremist and sensationalist views people take on prophecy if they are not prepared, and not willing, to teach it?

The problem is compounded by a pair of peculiar misperceptions: That prophecy is irrelevant, and that studying it is too hard.

How many Christians have, when asked about prophecy, said, “Oh, that’s nice, but I’d rather focus on something that actually affects my life”? Granted, the End Time prophecies will be most relevant when we are actually in the End Times—but on the other hand, how will a person really know when they’re in the End Times unless they know what the Bible says about them? But ignoring that, a basic understanding of Biblical prophecy, both of the End Times and otherwise, gives one a far greater understanding of and appreciation for the whole of God’s Word. It also gives one all new reasons to be sure that one’s faith in Messiah Yeshua is well placed.

Of course, we can hardly blame those who consider eschatology (the study of last things) to be irrelevant, because this is precisely what most of the Church has taught for the last two hundred years. We’ve turned prophecy into an intellectual game rather than a living part of our faith. Many pastors and commentators have been taught that the whole of Revelation and its related prophecies were fulfilled in a “spiritual” fashion in the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. In believing so, they do indeed remove Revelation from relevancy, for not only does it contain no message for us today, the exegesis (interpretation of the text) needed to defend that position is so poor that it is useless even to use as a part of one’s defense of the faith! Many others have been taught that the Church will be taken out of the world in the Rapture before the events of Revelation take place, so what does it matter if we understand it or not?

But what if Revelation is about our future—perhaps even our very near future—and the Church will indeed go through a significant portion of it? Suddenly, understanding this last book of the Bible becomes very important indeed!

A few years ago, I took part in a Bible study on the book of Daniel, Revelation’s sister book, that took place in a Presbyterian church. The course itself was predominantly premillennial in its direction, but because the pastor and his elders were amillennial, he wanted to address the class to offer his view. (If the reader is unfamiliar with these terms, they will be explained shortly.) Fair enough. He presented his view with grace and dignity, but was not really prepared for the questions that we asked him. In the end, trying to deflect further questions while being conciliatory, he smiled and said, “Well, if your view is right, we’ll all be Raptured out before the bad stuff happens anyway, right?”

“Sir,” I said, “I do believe that Revelation is about the future, but I don’t necessarily believe that the Rapture will be pretrib (before the Tribulation).”

What I remember most about that exchange was the stunned look he gave me. He was completely caught off-guard by my statement, and completely unprepared for the possibility of going through the Great Tribulation. Suddenly, for that moment at least, it wasn’t just an intellectual game to him.

Understanding what the prophecies of the Scriptures say will also open up new doors to witnessing the Gospel, believe it or not. First of all, one can hardly study the Second Coming without also studying the prophecies that Yeshua fulfilled in His First. Most Christians do not fully appreciate that throughout the book of Acts, the Emissaries (Apostles) present Yeshua almost entirely from the Tanakh's prophecies—and did so with such success that they often were kicked out of the synagogues because the Jewish rabbis could not refute them! Secondly, not only do those prophecies prove that Yeshua was the promised Messiah, but they also prove that the Bible was indeed authored by more than mere men. To steal a catchphrase from Dr. Chuck Missler, “We have 66 books, written by at least 40 authors over two thousand years, and yet they are an integrated message system from outside our time domain.” And third, there are many people not believers in the Messiah who can see the troubled storm clouds on our horizon who are eager to find out what the Bible says about the days ahead. And you can hardly share the Bible’s prophecies without also sharing about its Author!

Unfortunately, if you don’t hear, “Oh, it doesn’t matter,” you’re likely to hear, “That’s really neat, but it’s too hard for me to understand.” The underlying premise of that statement is that Biblical prophecy is such an arcane and mystical subject that no one but a sainted genius could ever possibly figure it out.

Not at all! Just consider the Thessalonians. In his second letter to them, Sha’ul is writing to clear up some misunderstandings and false teachings that had come out about the End Times. We’ll come to those in good time, but for now just notice what he says to them: “Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?”[2]

To understand the significance of that statement, one has to note that we are told that Sha’ul had only been in Thessalonica for three weeks.[3] Think about that for a moment: In three weeks, Sha’ul had preached about the Messiah, won several converts, and had already taught these baby Christians the basics of the Messiah’s Second Coming, including at least a rough outline of what would precede it, before being forced to flee town.[4] Likewise, the writer of the book to the Hebrews considered teaching on the Resurrection of the dead and of eternal judgment—both eschatological issues—to be foundational and elementary principles.[5] If the Emissaries considered this subject to be important enough to teach to even baby Christians, practically still dripping from their ritual immersions, why don’t we?

That’s not to say that one can just flip open the book of Revelation, read it in an hour, and all things will be instantly clear. But a basic and general understanding of just what the Bible says about prophecy is no more difficult for the average person to come to than a basic and general understanding of what the Bible says about the deity of Yeshua Messiah.[6] In both cases, one can also go beyond that basic understanding and attempt to delve into the deep theological waters if one has the desire—and this book does attempt to swim those waters. Either way, I firmly believe that a basic knowledge of Biblical prophecy will quickly dispel many of the theological myths that surrounding the End Times that confuse most people—just like a basic knowledge of the Bible’s claims regarding the nature of Yeshua will quickly dispel the claims of the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Of course, no man is an island, intellectually or otherwise, but there are a plethora of tools available to the student today that simply weren’t around to those in previous decades and centuries. In addition to the numerous books that have been written about the subject, the computer age has opened up all new resources. No longer does one need a degree in Greek and Hebrew or hours upon hours to pour through expensive lexicons; there are numerous programs that one can use to better understand the original languages and do word searches, several of which are available for free on the internet. In addition to these, one can find many older commentaries in e-book format or on searchable websites, as well as good articles written by reputable scholars on a wide variety of subjects. And finally, one can also find communities of fellow Christians online who are also interested in this subject with which one can discuss their views and get encouragement, guidance, and suggestions, as well as discover and debate opposing views. Of course, there are many sites that aren’t worth the electrons they’re printed on, but one can quickly learn to spot and avoid these. This new openness of dialogue would seem to fulfill the prophecy of Daniel that his book would be sealed “until the time of the end,” but that in that End Time, “many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased”[7]—not just knowledge in general, but a knowledge of the prophetic Scriptures.

Of course, your greatest resource in understanding any part of the Scriptures is not commentaries, websites, or lectures given by your fellow man, but the tutelage of the Ruach HaKodesh, the very Holy Spirit and Breath of God. Yeshua said that the Spirit would “teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you.”[8] This wasn’t a promise just to the Twelve. Ya’akov (James), the Lord’s brother, tells us, “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally and without reproach; and it shall be given him.”[9] That’s a promise that you personally can hold God to—in fact, He wants you to hold Him to every last one of His promises. I firmly believe that whatever wisdom may be found in this book is there because I repeatedly prayed this promise back to Adonai, opening my heart and mind for Him to teach me, and I beg that the reader, that you, do the same, especially if you feel that this subject is somehow beyond your reach.

As I engaged in my own study, I also read many commentators from a wide variety of viewpoints to learn their views on the original languages of the Scriptures, the cultural and historical background behind the Bible, and to understand how the whole fit together, and I’ve done my best in this volume to give credit where credit is due. However, I have also sought to test every writer’s interpretations against the iron yardstick of the Scriptures themselves, just as the Bereans did to Sha’ul’s teachings.[10] There is no sin in seeking the teaching of others, especially when wrestling with a difficult and controversial topic; the sin is in letting those teachers come between us and God and His Word.[11]

I call on the reader to do the same with this work. It is my hope that while you will find this book helpful and instructive, that you will also seek to test it against the iron yardstick of God’s Word and to grow beyond it in your own studies. If this book inspires you to do that, it will have accomplished its purpose even if every single one of my interpretations is completely wrong, and to Adonai will be the glory. Conversely, even if I’m somehow correct in every one of my interpretations and models (and I can guarantee that I’m not), but you simply read it, agree with it, and go no further, then it will have been a dismal failure.

References:
[1] Ironside, H.A., Lectures on the Book of Revelation (37th printing, Loizeaux Brothers, 1985), p. 7
[2] 2 Th. 2:5
[3] Ac. 17:2
[4] v. 5
[5] Heb. 6:1-2
[6] In fact, if the reader is in a rush, they could simply read the first three interludes and chapter 6 and have a good outline of the End Times. I don’t recommend this—Revelation is a book that does indeed bless the diligent student who studies it as a whole—but it is possible.
[7] Dan. 12:4
[8] Jn. 14:26
[9] Jas. 1:5
[10] Acts 17:11
[11] cf. Mt. 23:10

What Is Prophecy?

In the simplest terms, prophecy is nothing more or less than telling God’s will,[1] not simply by interpreting the pre-existing Scriptures as we are used to, but by speaking, writing, or seeing as one is moved by the Ruach HaKodesh.[2] As it turns out, prophecy did not end with the First Coming of Messiah, but continued as a spiritual gift in the Church.[3] Those who believe that any or all of the spiritual gifts came to an end with the first century Church will find a dearth of support in the Bible. Sha’ul writes, “Follow after love, and desire spiritual gifts, but rather that ye may prophesy. . . [for] he that prophesies speaks unto men to edification, and exhortation, and comfort.”[4] He was in agreement with Moses, who said, “Would God that all Adonai’s people were prophets, and that Adonai would put His Spirit upon them!”[5] It would seem that God wants each and every one of us to hear and speak His will, but few are truly walking with Him and listening.

Of course, prophetic utterances were not allowed to run amok and change the Church’s message. Sha’ul tells us that if our gift is prophecy, “let us prophesy according to the proportion of the faith.”[6] “Proportion of” is a translation of the Greek word analogia, from which we get our word “analogy.” It means “the right relation, the coincidence or agreement existing or demanded according to the standard of the several relations . . .”[7] In other words, all new prophecy must be consistent with our pre-existing knowledge of God’s will, especially that contained in the Bible. God would not contradict Himself, for “For God is not the author of confusion, but of shalom . . .”[8] Furthermore, for God to contradict Himself would require that He either have lied or be mistaken and surprised, neither of which are possible due to His very nature and character. For this reason, the whole of each congregation was called to listen and judge any prophecy given by a member.[9]

When we think of prophecy, the first thing that we think of is “foretelling” prophecy, seeing into the future—and certainly that’s part-and-parcel of what Biblical prophecy is. However, the object of Biblical prophecy, if you will pardon the cliché, is not so much to foretell as to “forthtell,” to declare God’s will. Indeed, as we survey the prophets of the Tanakh, we find them spending far more ink on exhortation than prediction. We find the same when we study prophets in the later Church. For example, a pastor who says that the Lord has laid it on his heart to preach about a particular sin that is rising in the Church or who is given the command to build a new church in the next town, just to pick a couple of examples, is really prophesying, speaking the will of God. God does not send His prophets to give “attaboys” to His people, but to correct them—which is why prophets are rarely popular in their own countries or congregations.

That’s not to downplay the predictive power of the Bible or predictive prophecies given by the Ruach HaKodesh, but let’s make sure we understand the reasons why God proclaims the future to us. First of all, it’s to authenticate the message of the prophet. God gave two tests by which we can know a false prophet: First, if he tries to draw us away from worship of the one, true God,[10] and second, if he predicts something that fails to happen.[11]

This latter test tells us something interesting about both God and the Enemy. God says of Himself, “I am God, and there is none else; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure.’”[12] God alone stands outside of the dimension of time. In fact, by nature of being the Creator of all things, He must, for time itself is a physical property of the universe. Time is dependant on mass and velocity; it couldn’t very well exist before matter and space were created. Being outside of time, God can see every moment at once, and can declare to us the moments that are, from our perspective, yet in the future.

C.S. Lewis eloquently described God’s perspective this way:

But God, I believe, does not live in a Time-series at all. His life is not dribbled out moment by moment like ours: with Him it is, so to speak, still 1920 and already 1960. For His life is Himself.

If you picture Time as a straight line along which we have to travel, then you must picture God as the whole page on which the line is drawn. We come to the parts of the line one by one: we have to leave A behind before we get to B, and cannot reach C until we leave B behind. God, from above or outside or all around, contains the whole line, and sees it all.[13]

God alone has this outside-of-time perspective. Neither the angels, nor the cherubim (cherubim), nor Satan himself share it with Him; therefore, His ability to tell us with absolute certainty what will happen in the days, years, and even centuries ahead is His way of authenticating His message, so that we can know what is truly from Him and what is the false message of the Deceiver.[14]

The second reason God gives us predictive prophecy ties into the first. Not only does the prophecy authenticate the prophet and his message, but it also authenticates the object of the prophecy as being God’s work. God pronounced both destructions of Jerusalem so that we would know them to be His work and will as a result of the sins of Israel, not a victory of the Enemy over God’s plan. He declared that Israel would arise again in the End Times so that we would know that reemergence was also a part of His plan. The ultimate work that God proclaimed to us was, of course, the work of His Son to save us from our sins and redeem the whole world. When challenged by the Pharisees that His self-witness was not valid since it was not backed by any other witness, Yeshua answered, “I am One that bear witness of Myself, and the Father that sent Me bears witness of Me.”[15] The Father bore witness to His Son’s coming hundreds of years before, in the words of the prophets.

The third reason God gives us prophecy is to protect and comfort us. We see this particularly in the book of Revelation. Yes, many of Revelation’s passages are difficult and frightening, but just imagine if the Enemy’s chosen king were to arise “with all power and signs and lying wonders,”[16] and we hadn’t the slightest clue what to expect! By telling us about those dark days, God provides that we can know the Devil’s devices when they come to fruition so that we will not be deceived or dismayed. “Behold, I have told you before!”[17]

And the fourth and most important reason God gives us prophecy is so that we can know His will and obey it, both in a general sense and also His specific will at specific times. Michael Evans, author of The American Prophecies, writes, “The fulfillment of prophecy concerning God’s people has never been a unilateral act of God. First, God informs His prophets what is to come to pass (which can mean quickening His Scriptures to them as happened with Daniel), then His people begin to pray, and God moves in the hearts of leaders to fulfill His Word concerning these things.”[18] When Daniel realized that the seventy years of Babylonian captivity prophesied by his fellow prophet Jeremiah[19] were close to an end, his reaction was not to sit back and watch how God accomplished it, but to fall on his knees in prayer.[20] It is hardly surprising then that God chose to give Daniel the honor of presenting King Cyrus with the scroll of Isaiah, which hundreds of years before had called Cyrus by name, told the manner of how he would take Babylon captive, and called on him to release the Jewish people and allow them to return to their own land.[21] And it was again largely through those who took the prophetic Scriptures seriously that God used to bring about the resurrection of Israel some 2500 years later.

Those who take the prophetic Scriptures seriously now, and see the world moving quickly towards the events they describe should not simply treat them as an intellectual game, a mere puzzle to be unraveled for entertainment, but should fall on their knees and pray God’s promises back to Him. It is from those that the Lord will call men and women to complete His will in the acharit-hayamim, the End of Days.

References:
[1] cf. Dt. 18:15-19
[2] 2 Pt. 1:21
[3] Rom. 12:6, 1 Cor. 15:10
[4] 1 Cor. 14:1, 3
[5] Num. 11:29
[6] Rom. 12:6
[7] Vine, W.E., Vine’s Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament Words (Thomas Nelxon, 1997), p. 897
[8] 1 Cor. 14:33. The Hebrew word for “peace,” used here, speaks not simply of quietness or lack of conflict, but primarily of wholeness.
[9] ibid. v. 29
[10] Deut. 13:2-3
[11] Deut. 18:22
[12] Isa. 46:9-10
[13] Lewis, C.S., Mere Christianity (Touchstone, 1996), p. 148
[14] Being aware of this, the Adversary constantly raises up false prophets and false prophecies to muddy the water, to try to take away the distinctiveness of the Scriptures. However, at best, they provide educated guesses—none has the 100% success rate of the Bible.
[15] Jn. 8:18
[16] 2 Th. 2:9
[17] Mt. 24:25
[18] Evans, Michael D., The American Prophecies: Ancient Scriptures Reveal Our Nation’s Future (Warner Faith, 2004), p. 62
[19] Jer. 25:11
[20] Dan. 9:2-19
[21] Isa. 44:28-45:13

Modes of Prophecy

The single biggest issue that comes between students of Biblical prophecy is the most fundamental of all: How do we approach the text? Do we take it literally or do we approach it as symbolic and allegorical? If a little of both, how do we determine between the literal and the symbolic without being arbitrary and turning the prophetic Scriptures into a matter of “private interpretation”?[1] As always, let us use Scripture as our guide.

Not all prophecies are delivered to us the same way or meant to be interpreted precisely the same. Of course, many prophecies are simply given as utterances or writing, delivered in everything from simple, straightforward prose, like the latter chapters of Zechariah, to exquisite poetry like Isaiah. In many ways, straightforward prophecies like this can be considered our baseline or foundation for understanding Scripture, requiring a minimum of interpretative work beyond understanding the meaning of the words and their context. Daniel’s prophecy of the Seventy Weeks and Yeshua’s Olivet Discourse both fall into this category, and both together provide the foundation for our understanding of the book of Revelation.

It is interesting to note that every time someone in the Bible interprets a prophecy, they do so in the most literal manner possible, and often interpret the prophecy more literally than the text seems to allow! For example, Mattityahu (Matthew) understands it literally that the Messiah would come from Bethlehem[2] and be born of a virgin, rather than, say, simply a “young woman.”[3] He even cites a prophecy of Hosea as proof that God’s Son would at one point come out of Egypt[4]—even though that passage is seemingly so manifest in using God’s “son” as a symbol for Israel! If one simply goes through the Gospel accounts with an eye for how the prophecies of Yeshua HaMashiach’s First Coming, death, and resurrection were fulfilled, one finds an amazing degree of literalism! So why should we then expect that the prophesied events leading up to and surrounding the Second Coming would be fulfilled only allegorically and even that in a pale shadow of their promise? And yet many otherwise excellent scholars will say that you can’t take those prophecies literally, and thus we have a thousand years that aren’t really a thousand years, a Satan that is bound in the Abyss at the same time that Sha’ul calls him “the god of this Age,”[5] 144,000 Israelites specifically numbered from the twelve tribes that really represent the Church, unfulfilled promises to Israel of a physical, earthly kingdom that are spiritualized away and given to the Gentile Christians, and on and on . . .

But what then of the blatantly symbolic imagery that floods the apocalyptic books like Daniel, Zechariah, and Revelation? This second type of prophecy can be called symbolic prophecy or prophetic visions (some would call it “apocalyptic” prophecy). We see this kind of prophecy in both Daniel and Revelation, in which beasts and statues represent kingdoms, or in which trumpets and bowls represent the wrath of God, and so on. Strangely enough, I’m going to suggest that we should interpret these prophecies “literally,” or rather, “normally,” as well.

Are we to understand then that the Antichrist[6] will really be a beast with red skin, seven heads, and ten horns? No, not at all. But there’s a clear distinction between interpreting a symbol and allegorizing the text: When the Scripture means something to be symbolic instead of literal, 90% of the time it comes right out and tells you—and then goes ahead and gives you the interpretation right then and there! The other 10% of the time, we simply let the Bible tell us what it means by checking every other appearance of that symbol throughout the Scriptures. The heads and horns of the Beast of Revelation 13 are explained in chapter 17 and its body in Daniel 7, Daniel chapter 2 tells us with no misunderstanding what the layers of Nebuchadnezzar’s dreamt statue mean, etc. There is no need to speculate endlessly, because God has told us what everything means in His own Word. Amazingly, this collection of laws and ceremonies, histories, poetry, letters, and apocalyptic visions is consistent throughout its pages in its use of these symbols so that we do not need to have any doubt about what they mean. But in all cases, unless the Bible tells us that a symbol is in use, uses an obvious simile or metaphor, or makes an obvious symbolic comparison (e.g. “Assyria was a cedar in Lebanon . . .” in Ezk. 31:2), it is better to simply assume that God is quite capable of saying what He means and meaning what He says than to try to “help” Him with a tortured interpretation.

This is especially important when dealing with prophetic types, the third class of prophecy. Missler writes, “The western mind views prophecy merely as prediction and fulfillment.  The Jewish mind saw prophecy as a pattern being recapitulated, where a pattern of events illuminates a thematic replay in the future.”[7] A prophetic type then, is an artifact, a construction, or a historical event or figure that appeared in the past (or in a few cases, will appear in the future kingdom of the Messiah) which reflects future events or spiritual realities. Our proof-text for this type of prophecy is Hos. 12:10, in which God says, “I have also spoken by the prophets, and I have multiplied visions, and used similitudes, by the ministry of the prophets.” The word translated “similitudes” is damah, which this context means a likeness. This same word is used in Ps. 102:6, in which the author writes, “I am like (damah) a pelican of the desert . . .”

For one prominent and well-documented example of a damah, Abraham’s “sacrifice” of his son Isaac on Mt. Moriah was a type of another Father’s true sacrifice of His only Son on that same mountain (and likely on the very same spot) two millennia later.[8] Likewise, the book of Joshua, for all that it is a historical record rather than a book of prophecy, seems to prefigure the Yeshua’s ultimate “conquest of the land” in Revelation. God often told the prophets to do weird things in order to act out prophecy—poor Ezekiel, who had to lie in bed on one side for 390 days and on the other for 40 days, “besieging” a clay model of Jerusalem[9] (among many other strange acts), is a prime example.

It should be noted that evidence of a symbolic type does not deny the existence of the literal object. For example, 1 Cor. 3:16 indicates that Solomon’s Temple was a type of the believer’s life—that does not mean that Solomon’s Temple never existed, nor does it prove that the future Temple described in Ezk. 40-47 will not physically exist, or that Sha’ul was necessarily speaking of the believer’s psyche in 2 Th. 2:4. In the same fashion, Abraham’s “sacrifice” of Isaac on Mt. Moriah was a type of Messiah’s atoning sacrifice on that same spot, but that doesn’t mean that Abraham and Isaac were not real people.

It’s also important to beware of building doctrine on prophetic types, which generally are not meant to be fully understood until after the fact or in the light of a later, more straightforward prophecy. To use the previous example of Isaac’s sacrifice, we would probably not have known what it meant if not for the other prophecies of the Messiah’s atoning death and their fulfillment in Messiah Yeshua. There are doubtless many more hidden types in Scripture that we will only fully understand or even recognize after they have been fulfilled. There are others that we may be able to recognize in advance because of allusions in other prophecies and Scriptures. For example, when Yeshua warned His talmidim, His disciples, to watch for “the Abomination of Desolation,”[10] He was referring to a prophecy of Daniel that was already fulfilled, in type, by Antiochus Epiphanes when he set up an idol to Zeus in the Holy of Holies in the second century B.C. (We will explore this event and its final fulfillment in the chapters ahead.) However, we have to be very careful when looking at as-yet unfulfilled types, or we soon find ourselves wandering away from the Biblical view and into the realm of purely private interpretation and sheer speculation.

One important thing to bear in mind when interpreting prophecy is that God’s time is not our time. “But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.”[11] A prophecy of the Scripture may, in the course of a single line, or even in the space of a comma, jump from one event to another hundreds or even thousands of years apart. Nowhere is this truer than in the prophecies of the Messiah’s two Comings. An example that the Lord Himself interpreted for us can be found in Lk. 4:16-19, in which He quotes Isa. 61:1-2 as proclaiming His mission. He finishes with His mandate, “To preach the acceptable year of Adonai.” What you don’t realize unless you’ve gone back to Isaiah to read the original prophecy for yourself is that Yeshua cut off right in the middle of the sentence! The rest reads, “and the day of vengeance of our God.” In that comma, the prophecy jumped from the time of Messiah’s First Coming some two thousand or more years into the future to the time of the Second Coming. This is hardly an isolated example in Scripture, and we’ll be looking at others as we proceed.

In addition, we need to be aware of what Van Kampen refers to as a “near-far” prophecy. “In other words, prophecy often operates on two levels of fulfillment. On the first level, there is a divinely revealed ‘near’ prediction relating to a soon-coming event. But on a second level, there is a corresponding ‘far’ prediction that will be fulfilled in a later time . . .” [12] For example, there are prophecies that promise Abraham both a son and also speak the distant Son that would be the Messiah. There are other prophecies that were partially fulfilled by Antiochus Epiphanes that will be completely fulfilled by the final Antichrist. However, Van Kampen warns, and rightly so, that misuse of this principle of prophetic interpretation will cause every bit as much confusion as ignoring it. “For a near/far interpretation to be valid, it must clearly be allowed for by the context and by the specific wording of the text itself, as well as be consistent with the rest of Scripture.”[13]

References:
[1] 2 Pet. 1:20
[2] Mt. 2:6, quoting Mic. 5:1
[3] Mt. 1:23, quoting Isa. 7:14
[4] Mt. 2:15, quoting Hos. 11:1
[5] 2 Cor. 4:4, NKJV
[6] Some readers may object to my use of the term “Antichrist” on a couple of different grounds. Some may object that 1 Jn. 4:3 uses this term in a general way, not specifically of the Man of Sin at the End of the Age. Others of a Messianic persuasion may wonder why I don’t use the term “anti-Messiah” instead. In answer to both, it is simply a matter of using a familiar title of the coming world ruler for brevity’s sake, and I trust that I may be forgiven for whatever incorrectness the reader may find in me using it as such.
[7] Missler, Chuck, “Pattern, not Just Prediction: Midrash Hermeneutics,” Koinonia House, May 2001
[8] See Heb. 11:19. In fact, Avraham knew that he was acting out prophecy. “Avraham called the place, Adonai Yir’eh [ADONAI will see (to it), Adonai provides]; as it is said to this day, ‘On the moutain Adonai is seen’” (Gen. 22:14). We will continue to use this example of a prophetic type throughout this chapter because it is such a clear illustration of the Ruach HaKodesh’s way of creating a multilevel text.
[9] Ezk. 4
[10] Mt. 24:15, Mk. 13:14
[11] 2 Pet. 3:8
[12] Van Kampen, Robert, The Sign (Crossway, 1993), p. 29
[13] ibid.

The Major Prophetic Viewpoints

Of course, different scholars have different views on just how we should understand the book of Revelation and its related prophecies in the Scriptures, and out of those differing methods of interpretation come the many different and often confusing views on prophecy. The reasons why I have adopted the views I have and rejected the competing views will be explained in detail throughout this book, but since an understanding of the different views and what they believe will be useful to the newcomer to Biblical prophecy, let’s take a brief look at them.

The prophetic viewpoints can be summarized by three primary qualities: Millennial, how they view the Millennium of Revelation 20; Temporal, whether they believe that Revelation was fulfilled in the past or lies yet future to us; and Raptural, when the Rapture of the Church will take place in regards to the events of Revelation.

Millennial

In Rev. 20:1-5, we read of a period during which Satan will be thrown into the Abyss and the Resurrected saints will reign “with the Messiah a thousand years.” How one understands this passage is foundational to their understanding of the prophetic Scriptures.

Over the centuries, three competing views have developed.

Premillennialism is the view that we are now living in the time before (pre-) the Millennium of Revelation 20. As a general rule, premillennialists believe that God still has a plan for the nation of Israel and tend to interpret prophecy more literally than those of the other viewpoints. Premillennialism was unquestionably the first prophetic viewpoint of the early Church.

Amillennialism (literally, “no millennium”) holds instead that we are currently living within the Millennium, but that the thousand years described in Revelation 20:3, 4, and 5 is simply an idiom for an undefined, but very long time. Most amillennialists do believe that the Messiah is coming bodily again, but that the Church has replaced Israel in God’s plans and that there is no place for the latter as an ethnic nation. Amillennialists correspondingly tend to interpret prophecy allegorically.

Postmillennialism is a position that we can understand to be a subset of amillennialism, and throughout this book, refutations of amillennialism should be understood to apply to the postmillennial view as well. The major distinction between the two is that postmillennialists believe that Messiah will return to a triumphant Church that has successfully converted the world. Some will go so far as to posit that not only should the Church live in accordance with the Torah, but even seek to impose it on society.[1] The Dominionist, Reconstructionist, and Kingdom Now movements are all postmillennial in their view.

Temporal

In prophetic commentaries, we often see discussions or critiques of the various millennial viewpoints. What are more often ignored than not are the different temporal viewpoints of Revelation: Is the whole of Revelation about our past or future as we stand today? These can be summed up as follows:

Preterism is the belief that all, or nearly all, of the Bible’s prophecies of the End Times were fulfilled in the destruction of Jerusalem and Israel as a nation in 70 A.D. Most preterists still believe in a future, literal Second Coming, but there are those, known as extreme or consistent preterists, who believe that the only Second Coming was the Lord’s “coming” in an invisible form to judge Israel.[2] Preterisism universally holds to replacement theology (sometimes called “reform” or “covenant” theology), which means that they believe that the Church has “replaced” Israel as God’s chosen people. Preterists are nearly always amillennial or postmillennial, and very allegorical in their interpretations.

Historicism is a view that developed during the Reformation that Revelation is a book prophesying the whole of Church history from the time that Yochanan penned it to the Second Coming. This viewpoint subscribes heavily to both allegorical interpretation and the idea that days in the prophetic Scriptures nearly always stand for years—thus, the 1260 days of the Beast’s reign in Revelation 13 are really 1260 years, nearly always associated in some way with the Roman Catholic papacy. Most historicists are amillennial and replacement theologians, but there are exceptions.

Futurism, in contrast to both of the above views, states that the vast majority of Revelation is about a specific seven-year period right before Messiah’s Second Coming. Futurists tend to be dispensational to one extent or another—that is, believing that God has dealt with humanity in different ways at different times—though not all would subscribe to all of what is currently termed Dispensationalism. The vast majority believes in a more or less literal interpretation and that God will fulfill all of His promises to Israel in the Tanakh to Israel.

Idealism is a method of interpretation which removes the book from any real-world application, instead viewing it as an allegory of the Church’s or even the individual’s struggle to victory in Messiah. While certainly much of the book has application to the individual and the Church in its warnings and lessons even outside of the End Times, Revelation itself claims to be a prophetic picture of events in Yochanan’s future,[3] and as we will see, links together all of the other End Time prophecies in the Bible.

Raptural

And finally, there are several viewpoints on the Rapture, when Yeshua will catch the Church up to Himself as per 1 Th. 4:15-17 and 1 Cor. 15:51-58. Will it before, during, or after the period described in Revelation? Those of the amillennial camp, whether historicist or preterist in their outlook, view this as a moot issue—since the taking of the Messiah’s Community did not happen in the past, obviously it must come at the end along with the Second Coming. For futurists, however, this is a very important—and divisive—issue.

Pretribulationism believes that the Rapture is a separate event that will come before Daniel’s Seventieth Week (if you’re unfamiliar with this particular prophetic term, a detailed explanation appears in our first interlude), which pretribs often refer to as the Tribulation Period. Pretribulationalism is usually associated with Dispensationalism because of the clear distinction it draws between Israel and the Church, even to the point of declaring that God will not really deal with Israel until after He removes the Church from the world.

Classical Posttribulationism is the opposite view, holding that the Rapture and the Second Coming are one and the same, and both will happen at the very end of the “Tribulation Period” at the battle of Armageddon. Posttribulationalism was the clear teaching of the earliest Church fathers. Posttribs see the Church as passing through but being preserved from God’s wrath, just as Israel did in the days of the Exodus through the ten plagues.

Midtribulationism is an attempt at a mediating position between the first two. It holds that the Church will undergo the first half of Daniel’s Seventieth Week, or “the Tribulation,” but be spared from the second half, the Great Tribulation, in which the Antichrist will reign.

Prewrath, the belief held by the author of this book, is a relatively young system, the term having been coined by Marvin Rosenthal and Robert Van Kampen in the early 90s. However, it can be considered to be a modified posttrib position, and thus agrees with the earliest Church on the subject. Prewrath draws a distinction between the Great Tribulation, Satan’s persecution of the people of God, and the Day of Adonai, or the Day of the Lord, the time when God will pour out His wrath on the earth, and states that the Rapture and the Second Coming will occur in between the two, sometime within the second half of the Great Tribulation. For reasons that will become clear as we continue, this event must take place no fewer than six months before Armageddon.

As it turns out, the question of what should be considered literal and what should be considered symbolic actually has very little to do with why I interpret Revelation “normally” and view it in a pre-millennial and futurist light. The simple truth is that I have read a wide variety of prophetic books from all manner of perspectives, and to read Revelation as a highly symbolic representation of the fall of Jerusalem or of the current age as a whole falls utterly flat if one simply cross-references all of the other relevant prophetic passages before attempting to compare them to history. This book will give numerous illustrations of this as we proceed.

Does this mean that there is no value at all to be had in looking at certain prophecies from a preterist or historicist point of view? Not necessarily. The rabbis point out that every Scripture has four different interpretations, and in deed the Hebrew word for interpretation, pardes, is an acronym for those four methods:

The first is the pashut (“to spread out” or “make a road”), the simplest and plain interpretation. For example, in the Akedah, the narrative of Abraham’s “sacrifice” of Isaac that we spoke of earlier in this chapter,[4] the pashut is simply what the story says: That God tested Abraham’s faith by having him offer up his long-promised son in sacrifice, and that Abraham passed the test.

The second way of interpreting a passage is to look for its remez, a hint of something deeper or an allusion. In the Akedah, we see that hint in Abraham’s confident statement to Isaac, “God will provide Himself a lamb for a burnt offering”[5] in his naming of the place of sacrifice, “Adonai Yireh; as it is said to this day, ‘On the mountain Adonai is seen.’”[6] As has already been pointed out earlier in this chapter, Abraham knew that he was acting out prophecy, and indeed, two thousand years later, God offered His own Son as an offering on that very same plot of land, offered Himself as a Lamb in Isaac’s—and everyone else’s—place, and on the Mount of the Lord our redemption was provided. That prophetic fulfillment is the remez.

The third way of interpreting a passage is called a drash (“to follow” or “to seek and ask”) or midrash (“teaching” or “learning”). This is the homiletic meaning, the way the passage can be applied to our own lives. In the Akedah, the drash of the story is that we can trust God completely. Abraham knew that God had made a promise that through Isaac a great nation would be born,[7] so if God commanded Isaac to be killed, then God would have to resurrect Isaac to fulfill His promises. Abraham was so certain that God would do exactly as He said that he was willing to trust God even with the life of his son. “For he had concluded that God could even raise people from the dead! And, figuratively speaking, he did so receive him.”[8]

The fourth way of interpreting a passage is called the sod. This is esoteric interpretation, the mystical conjecture, the hidden meaning. The sod is often found in a coded form, like the oft-abused equidistant letter sequences (the so-called “Bible codes”) or in comparisons between the numerical value of different words. There is a danger in pursuing the sod interpretation and that is that we can be tempted away from the plain interpretation. In fact, many occultist traditions have latched onto Kabbalah, which grew out of the pursuit of the Bible’s hidden meanings at the cost of its pashut. A true sod would never contradict the plain Scriptures, nor will a true remez or drash—they will only deepen our understanding and will be confirmed by a pashut elsewhere, just as the prophetic type of Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac is confirmed in the plain interpretations of the latter prophets, and fulfilled by the plain interpretation of Messiah’s work on the cross. For the most part, one is far better off seeking the plain meanings, the hints of deeper things (e.g. the prophetic types), and the personal applications of the Scriptures than in seeking non-confirmable mystical conjectures, and those are what we will focus on in this volume.

Understanding that a given Scripture can have multiple levels of meaning brings a fresh insight to the discussion about which view of Revelation is correct. A few years ago, I had the pleasure of interning at an internationally-known apologetics ministry. Those within came from a wide variety of theological opinions and backgrounds, from pre-millennialist to amillennialist, Arminian to Calvinist.[9] During a casual conversation with one of the senior members, a well-known speaker in his own right, the subject of prophecy came up, and he said to me something that has stuck with me ever since, “Michael, to be honest, I think that when Christ finally does come back, we’ll find that all three viewpoints will have turned out to be true.” Perhaps he was just trying to avoid an argument, but his words struck me and still strike me as profound.

That is not to say that I consider the fall of Jerusalem or the whole of church history to be the ultimate fulfillment of the prophecies examined in this book, but in many cases they could easily be looked on as prophetic “types.” One moderate preterist that I spoke to pointed out to me, “To the first century Jew, the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple was the end of the world.” Indeed. Yet the world continues as it did before that destruction, as decadent and violent as ever, so even if the fall of Jerusalem was a fulfillment of prophecy,[10] it was not the fulfillment of the End of the Age or the beginning of Messiah’s rule on the earth.

As Sir Robert Anderson so eloquently put it:

The question here at issue must not be prejudiced by misrepresentations, or shirked by turning away to collateral points of secondary moment. It is not whether great crises in the history of Christendom, such as the fall of Paganism, the rise of the Papacy and of the Moslem power, and the Protestant reformation of the sixteenth century, be within the scope of the visions of St. John. This may readily be conceded. Neither is it whether the fact that the chronology of some of these events is marked by cycles of years composed of the precise multiples; of seventy specified in the book of Daniel and the Apocalypse; be not a further proof that all forms part of one great plan. Every fresh discovery of the kind ought to be welcomed by all lovers of the truth. Instead of weakening confidence in the accuracy and definiteness of the prophecies, it ought to strengthen the faith which looks for their absolute and literal fulfillment. The question is not whether the history of Christendom was within the view of the Divine Author of the prophecies, but whether those prophecies have been fulfilled; not whether those Scriptures have the scope and meaning which historical interpreters assign to them, but whether their scope and meaning be exhausted and satisfied by the events to which they appeal as the fulfillment of them. It is unnecessary, therefore, to enter here upon an elaborate review of the historical system of interpretation, for if it fails when tested at some one vital point, it breaks down altogether.[11]
Like Sir Anderson, I can readily consider that Revelation and many other End Times prophecies have application to events of the past, that they may include double-prophecies or that certain cycles of history is a prophetic type of the End of the Age. As Joseph Seiss writes, “The only prerequisite to the entertainment of both [the historic and futurist interpretations] is, that the two should be homogeneous, and that the one fulfillment should be regarded as inchoate [incomplete], and only a sort of preliminary and imperfect rehearsal . . . of the other.”[12] That is, the futurist interpretation of Revelation is its pashut, the historicist interpretations (including the preterist) may be either remez or in some cases sod, and the idealist interpretation may have application as a drash. Indeed, when we study the seven letters to the seven churches, we will see just such a multidimensional interpretation in this book.

However, to suggest that when it is all said and done that we will be able to look back at the panorama of history and see how God wove events into a prefiguration of the End of the Age is a far cry from the historicist ideal wherein all has been fulfilled in a highly poetic way and all that’s left is a bowl or two before the Second Coming, or the preterist ideal that Messiah’s Second Coming was fulfilled in the destruction of the Temple and that the prophetic Scriptures have virtually nothing to say to our own age. However, to exhaust a study of Revelation and its related prophecies as partially fulfilled in the cycles of history would require decades of time and volumes of books. Of necessity, this volume is focused on the final fulfillments of these prophecies, those which are closer to being fulfilled in our time than in any time previous, and I hope that the reader will bear with my focus in that regard.

Interestingly, I have found many of the amillennialist persuasion, both preterist and historicist, who would agree with many of the broad points in this book. We share a common belief that, as Professor Englesma, a Reformed Amillennialist, writes, “The hope of the Reformed church and believer at the beginning of a new year is the second coming of Christ and the resurrection of the body.”[13] The pastor of the Presbyterian church that I spoke of earlier told me that he believed that some kind of Antichrist figure would precede the Second Coming, and I’ve spoken with several historicists who affirmed the same. Similarly, Prof. Englesma writes, “The church in the end time will be a persecuted church, not a triumphalist church. The Messianic kingdom in history is the church, not a ‘Christianized’ world.”[14]

My experience is that much (though not all) of the heat from the amillennialist side is actually directed at the teaching of a pretrib Rapture. In fact, I’ve often found amillennialists who, though reserving the right to disagree with my views, have treated them with respect because I was not a part of the “Rapture Cult” (their phrase, not mine). If you fall into one of the amillennialist camps, let me say up front that I agree with you that pretrib is an incorrect teaching circulating in the Church that usually leads to a kind of escapism: We’re all going to be beamed out before anything really happens, so why worry about it, right?

But let us not confuse the issues or throw the baby out with the bathwater. Pretrib is merely one line of thought within premillennialism, and while extremely vocal, it does not represent the whole view.

I once spent several weeks in an online message board debate in which my opponent constantly attacked straw-men built from false assumptions about my eschatology. He spent the whole debate attacking flaws in radical Dispensationalism and the pretrib Rapture belief, flaws which do not exist in the “Olive Tree” theology or pre-wrath Rapture system that I have adopted and which I will be presenting to the reader. When he realized that his attacks weren’t landing, he shifted into trying to prove to me that I was really a Dispensationalist after all, I just didn’t know it! I’m glad he cleared that up for me. Those readers who have ever had a Jehovah’s Witness, a Unitarian, a Jew, or a Muslim try to convince you that you really worship three gods, not one God in three Persons, will understand the feeling. This book, though disputing certain prophetic positions, will not intentionally misrepresent them, though of course not every conceivable variation to each belief system can be analyzed. If I have unintentionally left out a strong argument for any other prophetic view, I beg the reader’s forgiveness up front.

For those of you who come from the amillennialist camp and have read this far, I ask that you not judge this book by whatever preconceptions you may have against premillennialism (which I hold to) or pretribulationism (which I do not). Rather, I ask that you agree to meet on common ground, accepting the Scripture as our mutual source of ultimate authority.

Interpretation vs. Models

Before proceeding, I must confess that I find myself caught in a curious tension: On the one hand, as I have grown in my understanding of both the prophetic Scriptures and of the world situation, I have also grown more and more convinced that the world is very swiftly aligning exactly as God told us it would, and the time is indeed near that Messiah will return. On the other hand, I am also cognizant enough of the history of the Church to know that many others for the last two thousand years have likewise believed that theirs were the End Times. The Crusaders went to war for the Holy Land convinced that Yeshua was soon to return there. The Reformers were equally convinced that theirs was the End Time struggle between the Church and the Antichrist, which they saw as the Roman papacy. The 1800s were rife with prophetic fervor brought on by numerous attempts at date-setting by the historicist camp. During World War II, many speculated that Mussolini was the Roman Beast and Hitler the False Prophet. And of course, in our own recent history, we remember the fervor surrounding the turn of the millennium and all of the predictions that proved false there. So I am well aware that it is entirely possible that the world’s situation as we see it today could stabilize for another generation or change entirely before the rise of the Man of Sin and his destruction at the hands of Yeshua HaMashiach.

That perspective grants a certain humility and caution in approaching Biblical prophecy, and for that reason I wish to make clear the important distinction between my prophetic interpretations and prophetic models. A prophetic interpretation is just that: An analysis of a given prophecy’s original language, intent, and any cross-referencing passages of Scripture that will shed light upon it. It does not attempt to put the prophecy into the setting of today or the near future, a not so fine art that many commentators have jokingly called “newspaper exegesis,” but rather tries to see what exactly the Scripture says and not go a single step beyond.

A prophetic model, on the other hand, attempts to take the prophetic interpretation already arrived at independently of any current events and then overlay that interpretation on the world as we see it and see if there are any correlations. Obviously, great care must be taken when dealing with any kind of prophetic model, and there is enormous potential for abuse or overreaching to make a desired point. So why then risk it? Simply put, because today’s world does seem to correspond amazingly to what the Scriptures lay out about the End Times, even if not every prediction is yet perfectly lined up. If indeed we are near the time of the Second Coming, this correlation should not surprise us, and we would do well to see the world in the light of the Scriptures. For this reason, this book will occasionally offer models of how several prophecies may tie together with the world as we see it as of this writing. As I hope that the reader will see, these views were not arrived at simply by reading today’s paper and imposing my pet issues on the Scriptures, but by a careful exegesis of who the Bible says the End Time scenario will be.

While prophetic interpretations change only as we learn more about the Scriptures, prophetic models have a way of being upset every few years when God decides to reshuffle the deck. Hal Lindsey’s classic, The Late Great Planet Earth, is a prime example. Many have accused Lindsey of being a false prophet, since he cites entities that no longer exist, such as the Soviet Union, as End Time players. Such an accusation is more than a little excessive; first of all, Lindsey never claims “thus sayeth the Lord” about any of his predictions. Rather, he simply built a prophetic model around his interpretation of what the Scriptures said. While I disagree with many of Lindsey’s approaches and interpretations, his model is no more worthy of ridicule than those of the preterists or historicists. Parts of that model are now clearly outdated, while other parts are still solid even if some of the names of the nations involved have changed.

The same is true here. If the Lord tarries for another generation, doubtless the world stage will have changed as well. Conversely, even if the Seventieth Week begins this year, a misunderstanding of or unknown factor in the world political scene could render those parts of my model wrong. For that matter, I am doubtless wrong on many of my interpretations; I have no illusions that I, or any other commentator, has a flawless theology—that belongs to the Lord alone! The purpose of this book is to offer some views that I have come to after many years of study, but also to encourage the reader to study the Bible for themselves and come to their own conclusions.

References:
[1] In distinction, while Messianics may likewise choose to live under Torah and recognize it’s eternal relevance, we also recognize that it can be imposed as national law only by Yeshua Himself.
[2] Extreme preterism actually goes far beyond the bounds of what is considered orthodox Christianity, denying the physical Resurrection at the End of the Age, and for this reason, nominal preterists usually dislike having their position associated with it.
[3] Rev. 1:1 and 19, 4:1, etc.
[4] Gen. 22
[5] v. 8
[6] v. 14, CJB
[7] Gen. 17:19
[8] Heb. 11:19, CJB
[9] For this reason I will leave the ministry unnamed, as not all would approve of the direction of this book or want the ministry to be associated with it.
[10] This of course ignores the fact that there is no basis at all for placing the writing of Revelation before the reign of Domitian in the 90s A.D. Preterism requires the book to be early-dated to the 60s A.D., a position that cannot be substantiated either from the writings of any early Church Father (all of whom put the writing of Revelation in Domitian’s reign rather than Nero’s) or from the text of Revelation itself.
[11] Anderson, Sir Robert, The Coming Prince (Kregel Publications, 1957), pp. 136-137
[12] Seiss, Joseph A., The Apocalypse: An Exposition of the Book of Revelation, (Kregel, 1987 reprint), pp. 121-122
[13] Englesma, Prof. David J., “Jewish Dreams,” originally printed in The Standard Bearer (January 15, 1995), retrieved from http://www.hopeprc.org/reformedwitness/1995/RW199505.htm on June 29, 2004.
[14] ibid.

The Structure of Revelation

One of the most marvelous aspects of the final book of the Bible is the very structure built into it by its Author.

A close study of Revelation makes it clear that it is not intended to unfold the events of Daniel’s Seventieth Week in a strictly chronological fashion. Those who have attempted to build charts doing so have always run into either internal inconsistencies or issues with other parts of Scripture. And yet, knowing that ahead of time, how can we determine where and when to place these events that are described to us? In my original notes, I was often disturbed by those occasions in which I felt that I was being arbitrary in my placement of events because of a lack of clear markers showing when the overlapping timelines of events described in Revelation started and stopped.

But as it turns out, Revelation does indeed have these markers that I was looking for, and they come in three different forms. First, the book outlines itself by the threefold division given by Yeshua Himself: The things that were, in chapter 1; the things that are in chapters 2-3; and the things which will take place “after this,” in chapters 4-22, those things that were wholly future to Yochanan when he recorded the visions. These divisions are quite obvious and widely known.

In addition to these, there are also four divisions that are marked by the phrase, “in the Spirit.” First, Yochanan is in the Spirit with Yeshua (chapters 1-3). Then he is in the Spirit in Heaven (ch. 4-16). Then he is carried away in the Spirit to see the fate of Babylon, the Beast, and the False Prophet (ch. 17-20). And finally, he is taken in the Spirit to see the New Jerusalem (ch. 21-22).

In addition to these, Revelation is divided into groups of seven. Four of these are obvious: The seven letters, seven seals, seven trumpets, and seven bowls. In addition to these, I am indebted to Merrill Tenney for pointing out two less obvious groups of seven, the seven “personages” in Rev. 12-14:5, and the seven “new things” of chapters 21-22.[1] Given the emphasis on the number seven throughout Revelation, it should hardly surprise us to find a seventh group of seven. And indeed we do: There are seven angels—including Yeshua as the Angel of Adonai—listed in Rev. 14:6-20.

Each of these groups, whether divided by chronology, transports of the Spirit, or groups of seven, constitutes a separate timeline. Whether a given division follows, precedes or overlaps those to either side of it must be determined from the text itself rather than by any preconceived notions. For example, for reasons that will be fully clear in the following chapters, the seven trumpets do in fact immediately follow the seven seals rather than come before or overlap them; however, the seven personages backtrack to the time before Messiah’s first appearance (when the woman, Israel, was “about to give birth”) before proceeding forward in time to recap and expand upon the same period of time already described in the seals, particularly the fourth through seventh seals.

However, there is a progression in Revelation, as indeed many commentators state that the structure of the original Greek demands. Obviously, the three time divisions progress from past, to present, to future. Likewise, each occasion in which Yochanan is carried by the Spirit seems to progress and look to a time further in the future than the last. This same progression is found, but more subtly, in the groupings of seven. While there are occasions in which the starting point of a group of seven may begin previous to the end, or even the beginning, of the group before it (like the aforementioned seven personages, which clearly look to a time before the seven trumpets), they always seem to end a little closer to the final consummation. The seven churches continue to the Second Coming. The seven seals continue to a point just a little bit after the Second Coming, with the start of the Day of the Lord. The seven trumpets take us to the end of the Seventieth Week and Israel’s Yom Kippur, her Day of Atonement. The seventh personage, the Lamb, stands on Mt. Zion with the 144,000 a few days later, in the great Sukkot. The seven angels appear to take us right up to the time of the Last Battle, which the seventh bowl finishes. And finally, the seven new things take us right past the millennium and into eternity. In this way, the divine Author who gave these visions to Yochanan works much like a modern author writing a novel, backtracking and overlapping when two or more events are happening at the same time, but always ending a section a little closer to the final climax.

References:

[1] Tenney, Merrill C., Interpreting Revelation: A Reasonable Guide to Understanding the Last Book in the Bible (Hendrickson, 2001), p. 37


TOPICS: General Discusssion; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: apocalypse; buggmanisanutbag; hermeneutics; interpretation; jesus; messianic; revelation; yeshua
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To: topcat54; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Perhaps we are all looking at this wrong. Jesus is a priest after the order of Melchizedec, not of Levi. Melchizedec was priest-king of the Most High God and a contemporary of Abraham, therefore not under the law. (This brings up a whole new question concerning believers alive at the time of Abraham i.e. Job and Melchizedec and perhaps others in Jerusalem. What happens to them?) This office was not superseded by Levi under the law and the office of the Levites was to assist the High Priest in his office, including the offering of sacrifices. However this worship,these sacrifices, whether offerings to atone for sin or peace or thanksgiving or praise are still being offered today. When the scriptures say that "the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin" that is the continual offering of the sacrifice, once and for all given, by our High Priest to God for our sin.

In the church today, it seems that office of assisting the High Priest (Levites) is being filled by the office of Pastor. He leads the church in worship by offering the sacrifice of praise (Jer. 33:11) peace and thanksgiving and ministering the grace and mercy of God through the preaching of the Word (Rom. 10:13-15). He is not the mediator between God and man but assists through his calling. That is why we are told to esteem them very highly for their works sake, not that they are "anointed" like the office of Levi, but because they assist like the Levites in offering worship to God.

Now Jesus, as priest after the order of Melchizedec, has not done away with the covenant with Levi. When the church is raptured, and God deals with Israel according to promise, His witnesses will be Levites, pastors according to the religious sensitivities of the Jews, who will fill the same offices that Pastors did for the church, offering the sacrifices of praise, peace and thanksgiving and the prayers of the congregants which rises like the incense offering.

Just for a minute think outside your "Post and A mill box. This seems to resolve all promises without compromising the covenants of Jer. 33.
661 posted on 07/04/2005 10:58:39 AM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Just for a minute think outside your "Post and A mill box. This seems to resolve all promises without compromising the covenants of Jer. 33.

When someone says to me, "think outside the box", what that usually means is that they are lacking any concrete scriptural support for their position and they want me to theorize.

When the church is raptured, and God deals with Israel according to promise, ...

Sorry, but this is precisely where you system breaks apart. It cannot be resolved into the teaching of the Bible.

The big problem is this unsupported notion that God begins dealing with Israel after the rapture of the Church. Apart from the fact that there is absolutely no Scripture to support that theory, it violates the entire message of the book of Hebrews and a number of other NT texts.

Lets go back to the beginning of your hypothesis.

Perhaps we are all looking at this wrong. Jesus is a priest after the order of Melchizedec, not of Levi.

Well, you can read the book of Hebrews just as well as I can. What does it say?

"But into the second part the high priest went alone once a year, not without blood, which he offered for himself and for the people's sins committed in ignorance; the Holy Spirit indicating this, that the way into the Holiest of All was not yet made manifest while the first tabernacle was still standing. It was symbolic for the present time in which both gifts and sacrifices are offered which cannot make him who performed the service perfect in regard to the conscience-- concerned only with foods and drinks, various washings, and fleshly ordinances imposed until the time of reformation. But Christ came as High Priest of the good things to come, with the greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands, that is, not of this creation." (Heb. 9:7-11)

Note the words, the greater high priest and more perfect tabernacle. Why did we need a greater high priest?

"For the law, having a shadow of the good things to come, and not the very image of the things, can never with these same sacrifices, which they offer continually year by year, make those who approach perfect." (Heb. 10:1)

"For what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh, God did by sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, on account of sin: He condemned sin in the flesh, 4 that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit." (Rom. 9:3,4)

The Mosaic law regarding the earthly tabernacle, earthly priesthood, and animal blood sacrifices, could never "make those who approach perfect." The Levitical system was imperfect in that it could not really deal with sin. It could only point us to the one who could deal with sin, that is, Jesus Christ the mediator of a new and better covenant. He stands to minister for us in a better tabernacles, as a better high priest, offering a perfect, once for all sacrifice.

The Levitical system was temporary. There is no getting around that from the NT. The older covenant was "decaying, and ready to pass away" even at the time Hebrews was written. There is no hint whatsoever from Jesus or any of the apostles that Levi would be restored. Why not? Because the greater than Levi had appeared to offer the perfect atonement for all who would trust in Him. There is no need to return to Levi. In fact those who do bring condemnation upon themselves.

662 posted on 07/04/2005 6:24:09 PM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Then you have to go back to the promise in Jer. 33:17-18 and say God lied to the Levites when he said, "If ye can break my covenant of the day, and my covenant of the night, and that there should not be day and night in their season; then may also my covenant be broken with David my servant, that he should not have a son to reign upon his throne; and with the Levites the priests my ministers." The formula "break my covenant of the day, and my covenant of the night" is a formula of impossibility. Jesus sitting on the throne of David proves this.

You rely totally on the scripture concerning the sacrifice for sin to dismiss God's promises to Israel and to the Levites while ignoring all of the other worship sacrifices that were the duties of the Levites. These too, pointed the worshiping community of Israel to God and in turn mediated God's grace to the community.

Hebrews speaks to only one aspect of the sacrificial worship required by the law, that was the annual and daily sin offerings that could not make the worshiper perfect and that was the prerogative of the high priest. The burnt offerings (self dedication) and meat offerings (thanksgiving) were offered by the Levites. Where the Old Testament blood sacrifices pointed forward to the coming "Lamb of God", now through the sacrifice of preaching, praise, thanksgiving and peace we look back to the completed atoning sacrifice and forward to the return, of the "Lamb of God". It is through the offices given to the church (Eph.4"11-13)that we are lead in this worship just as the Levites lead Israel in Old Testament times. Jesus fulfills the office of High Priest but not that of a Levite. He was not of that family and the promise of God was to the family of Levi.

What you cannot see or even entertain because of your theological system, is God fulfilling His promise to deal with Israel again through the Levitical system that points back to the finished work of Jesus and forward to His return. You will permit gaps in time to cover the absence of David's throne but not the Levitical office and yet they are both contained in the same promise. Nowhere, can you point out in the scriptures, that Israel or the Levites broke the covenant of day, and the covenant of night. The only way around this promise is for your system to ignore the problem and say that all of these Old Testament prophecies concerning Israel, the Temple, the Levites, Jerusalem and the return of Christ were fulfilled somehow in the first century, and even then, theologians of your system had to modify their position to account for the second coming and the events surrounding it or else spiritualize them as fulfilled in the church.

I believe I would rather err on the side of trying to reconcile all of the prophecies with the truthfulness and faithfulness of God than stopping at a "proof text" that supports my systematic theory at His expense.
663 posted on 07/04/2005 8:01:33 PM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: blue-duncan

who's gonna get 666 on a 666 thread?


664 posted on 07/04/2005 8:16:36 PM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: xzins
who's gonna get 666 on a 666 thread?

LOLOLOL! Here's one post closer to the dreaded numeric marker...

665 posted on 07/04/2005 9:17:47 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl; xzins; blue-duncan

I'll take it so you folks can be confirmed in your thinking that I am the antichrist.


666 posted on 07/05/2005 6:52:59 AM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; Alamo-Girl; xzins

Come on, we wouldn't be having this discussion if we weren't all part of the same family. Some of us may be like the eccentrics in the attic but what we are doing here beats mowing the lawn.


667 posted on 07/05/2005 6:59:43 AM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: topcat54; blue-duncan
I would never, ever accuse you of being "anti-Christ". As blue-duncan says, we are all part of the same family.

In the metaphor I've used before, a painting is not a masterpiece when the artist blends all the colors together into one on his palette. Our differences make for a beautiful work of art for the Lurkers (as long as we don't get irritable that is).

668 posted on 07/05/2005 7:35:23 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Then you have to go back to the promise in Jer. 33:17-18 and say God lied to the Levites when he said,

"Thus says the Lord: 'If My covenant is not with day and night, and if I have not appointed the ordinances of heaven and earth, then I will cast away the descendants of Jacob and David My servant, so that I will not take any of his descendants to be rulers over the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. For I will cause their captives to return, and will have mercy on them.' " (vv. 25,26)

This was all fulfilled in Jesus Christ. He is the greater David. He is the son of David that God raised up to sit on His throne.

Now, was the throne on earth (like the tabernacle on earth) a pattern of the throne in heaven, or was it really intended to stand alone? Are we really supposed to take the fleshly view that God's ultimate purpose is to have Christ leave His heavenly throne and sit on a fleshly throne in Israel?

Not if you believe the NT, and you read the OT in light of the NT.

Speaking of these earthly types, the writer says, "He takes away the first that He may establish the second." (Heb. 10:9)

The types have been removed once for all that the true antitype, Jesus Christ, may show forth in all his glory.

If you decide to build a home, and someone brings you a model to represent how your home will look, it's folly to go and try to live in the model after the home is built. The only purpose for the model is to show how the real thing will look when it comes. The Levites, the sacrificial system, the tabernacle, were all models to point us to Christ. Once Christ appeared they served absolutely no useful purpose, period.

There are many passages in the OT that speak of "everlasting" this or that.

"he shall make atonement for the Holy Sanctuary, and he shall make atonement for the tabernacle of meeting and for the altar, and he shall make atonement for the priests and for all the people of the assembly. This shall be an everlasting statute for you, to make atonement for the children of Israel, for all their sins, once a year." And he did as the Lord commanded Moses."

But even while this speaks of an everlasting ordinance of the day of atonement, we know from Hebrews sand elsewhere that this was ll fulfilled in the sacrifice of Christ, once for all to take away the sins of His people. No one needs to annually have a pointer placed before them of how God will deal with sin, because Jesus Christ has come. Every Sabbath day we come together, on the first day of the week, to celebrate in what Christ has done. When we take the bread and the wine were are reminded in a more perfect way of the atonement Christ made for our sins.

You rely totally on the scripture concerning the sacrifice for sin to dismiss God's promises to Israel and to the Levites while ignoring all of the other worship sacrifices that were the duties of the Levites.

It's all tied together. The Levites, the tabernacle, the sacrifices where one big package. Jeremiah 33 speaks of it that way as does the rest of the Scriptures.

It is entirely arbitrary dividing of Scripture to try to separate Levites from the sacrifices. It cannot be done.

One thing that puzzles me with this futurist interpretation is exactly what will be the duties of the Levites in some future situation, and ho that all fits with what we know if Christ and His work. I sometimes get the impression that all these prophecy are read and interpreted as if Christ had never some, or as if He work on the cross with make no matter in the futurist scenario.

"And [the Levites] shall not come near Me to minister to Me as priest, nor come near any of My holy things, nor into the Most Holy Place; but they shall bear their shame and their abominations which they have committed." (Eze. 44:13)

669 posted on 07/05/2005 7:40:16 AM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Ezekiel 20:33-44 is another prophecy concerning God's dealing with Israel during the Tribulation period. He has not brought back scattered Israel from the nations with force and fury yet and He has not dealt with them "face-to-face" yet. As I said in the last post, it looks like the Levites will play the same role for Israel (as pastors are doing now in the church) using the traditions of Israel, including Temple and sacrifices, except they will have their meanings fulfilled. There will be no looking forward in the atoning sacrifice since it has been completed, but there will be a celebration of the sacrifice, just as we do in the church with communion. The self-dedication burnt offerings are symbols of Paul's Romans 12:1-2 call for self-dedication, and the thanksgiving meat offerings are symbols of our praise and thanksgiving offered in church. Our prayers are the incense offerings; all of these sacrifices offered by Levites, in the traditions of the Jews to turn them to the real Messiah and then they will look on Him whom they have pierced in fulfillment of the promises of God. Not that the atoning sacrifice is offered again, but it is actualized, called to life for them just like the word and the ordinances (sacraments)do for the church.
670 posted on 07/05/2005 8:15:50 AM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Ezekiel 20:33-44 is another prophecy concerning God's dealing with Israel during the Tribulation period.

What "tribulation period"? Are you asserting something, or can you demonstrate what you are saying?

He has not brought back scattered Israel from the nations with force and fury yet and He has not dealt with them "face-to-face" yet.

Where was Israel when Christ came to them and ministered "face to face"? Ezekiel was written before Christ came. No?

There will be no looking forward in the atoning sacrifice since it has been completed, but there will be a celebration of the sacrifice, just as we do in the church with communion.

Pure speculation on your part. The language does not permit you to add that sort of spin. The only reason you need to spin the words here is because you have taken other prophecies and missed their application and fulfillment in Christ and His church. In other words, you being selective in your literalism based on your preconception of how things ought to be in the future. But that is all built on the house of cards that all this is entirely in the future.

671 posted on 07/05/2005 8:49:48 AM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Quix
My two cents on this rigorous debate:

Every promise, whether blessing or judgment, made by God is irrevocable. It is true because He speaks it. Jeepers, He spoke creation into being.

If any promise could be undone, then why would Christ have to suffer? God could have simply forgiven Adam and restored him.

But the promises cannot be undone and instead, God pours mercy upon mercy on top of the promises. Therefore although man dies because of the law of sin and death, yet we who believe in Christ live as new creatures - not born of man, nor by our own will but by His Spirit. (John 1 and Romans 8)

Likewise every promise He made to Israel will be kept, indeed, is already kept in timelessness.

Who are we Christians, the ones who started working the fields in the middle of the day, to dispute the Master if He chooses to be equally generous to the ones who didn't begin their work until the very last hour?

The Jewish people are blind to the gift of Christ that we may receive it (Romans 11). But that blindness is not permanent, if it were then God's promises would mean nothing - to them and to us.

672 posted on 07/05/2005 9:14:01 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: topcat54; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
"Where was Israel when Christ came to them and ministered "face to face"?"

They were right where Ezekiel prophesied they would be in Ezek. 20:30-32, unbelieving and apostate. That's why Jesus prophecies they would stay in that state until they say, "Blessed is He who cometh in the name of the Lord." Matt. 23:39. Jesus is speaking to Israel, not the church. So under your system, when will Israel as a people be converted and see Jesus again and say, "Blessed is He who cometh in the name of the Lord" if there is no people Israel?
673 posted on 07/05/2005 9:55:54 AM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
They were right where Ezekiel prophesied they would be in Ezek. 20:30-32, unbelieving and apostate.

Do you believe there will be a time with God will be more "face to face" with Israel than when Jesus came to earth and ministered the gospel?

Jesus came and brought the message of the kingdom to Israel. Those who believed and followed Messiah were identified as the true children of Abraham. "Therefore know that only those who are of faith are sons of Abraham. ... So then those who are of faith are blessed with believing Abraham."

Those who posit some future for national Israel make it appear as if nothing happened for the Jewish people when Jesus came to earth 2000 years ago. They seem to believe that the "real deal" is yet in the future. You can see how this attitude tends to minimize Jesus' death and resurrection, and the work He accomplished on behalf of His people.

"And she will bring forth a Son, and you shall call His name Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins."

"From that time Jesus began to preach and to say, 'Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.'"

For 2000 years Jews, along with gentiles, have recognized Jesus as the true Messiah of Israel. To demonstrate their realized faith in the promises of God through Abraham, they became baptized and members of Christ's body, the Church. There is no greater glory for any man, whether Jew or gentile, that to believe on the Lord Jesus Christ to be saved. This movement of the Holy Spirit will continue on until Christ returns to finalize all His work.

"Then comes the end, when He delivers the kingdom to God the Father, when He puts an end to all rule and all authority and power. For He must reign till He has put all enemies under His feet."

674 posted on 07/05/2005 10:30:12 AM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
I agree that Jesus came "face-to-face with Israel and Israel rejected Him. Then in Matt. 23:37-39 He says to Israel,"you killed the prophets and you, Israel, will be desolate, and won't see me again until you say 'blessed is He who cometh in the name of the Lord'". Do you agree that Jesus is speaking to Israel, not the church? Is He not saying that Israel, as a people, will see Him when they acknowledge Him for who He is?
675 posted on 07/05/2005 10:46:09 AM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
I agree that Jesus came "face-to-face with Israel and Israel rejected Him. Then in Matt. 23:37-39 He says to Israel,"you killed the prophets and you, Israel, will be desolate, and won't see me again until you say 'blessed is He who cometh in the name of the Lord'".

The section in question begins:

But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you shut up the kingdom of heaven against men; for you neither go in yourselves, nor do you allow those who are entering to go in. Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you devour widows' houses, and for a pretense make long prayers. Therefore you will receive greater condemnation. Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you travel land and sea to win one proselyte, and when he is won, you make him twice as much a son of hell as yourselves. Woe to you, blind guides, who say, 'Whoever swears by the temple, it is nothing; but whoever swears by the gold of the temple, he is obliged to perform it.'

So the context has to be the failed leadership of Israel that was leading the nation in apostasy against the Lord Jesus.

Later He's says to that generation of Jews:

"Therefore, indeed, I send you prophets, wise men, and scribes: some of them you will kill and crucify, and some of them you will scourge in your synagogues and persecute from city to city, that on you may come all the righteous blood shed on the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, son of Berechiah, whom you murdered between the temple and the altar. Assuredly, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation. "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing! See! Your house is left to you desolate; for I say to you, you shall see Me no more till you say, 'Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!' " (Luke 13 has a similar but condensed version of this account.)

So, several questions need to be answered:
1) to whom is Jesus speaking? Directly? Indirectly?
2) is the a definite time indicator in the text that would require us to see this fulfilled at a single point in time?
3) what other texts help us to understand this text? "Then the multitudes who went before and those who followed cried out, saying: "Hosanna to the Son of David! 'Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!' Hosanna in the highest!" (Matt. 21:9)

It's also interesting that Jesus is quoting from a portion of Psalm 118, where also we read, "The stone which the builders rejected Has become the chief cornerstone." Jesus say the fulfillment of all these things in His coming. As Israel turned to Him, and recognized His messianic office, and became like those people shouting "Hosanna!" in Matt. 21, then the words of Jesus were fulfilled.

The herald has appeared (Mal. 3:1; Matt. 11:10). The Priest-King has entered His temples to the shouts of the people. Believing Israel has followed her King. The apostates have been cast into outer darkness, awaiting the final judgment.

"Hear another parable: There was a certain landowner who planted a vineyard and set a hedge around it, dug a winepress in it and built a tower. And he leased it to vinedressers and went into a far country. ... But when the vinedressers saw the son, they said among themselves, 'This is the heir. Come, let us kill him and seize his inheritance.' ... 'Therefore I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken from you and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it. And whoever falls on this stone will be broken; but on whomever it falls, it will grind him to powder.'"

In order to shout "Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!" the people needed to have their spiritual eyes opened. Then they could look on Him.

Do you agree that Jesus is speaking to Israel, not the church? Is He not saying that Israel, as a people, will see Him when they acknowledge Him for who He is?

"Israel as a people" as opposed to Israel as what? Believing Israel is part of the Church. Just ask Peter and Paul, the rest of the Twelve, and the 3000 baptized on Pentecost. All who were "saved from this perverse generation" (Acts 2:40). Those 3000 on Pentecost were in fulfillment of Zech. 12:10, "And I will pour on the house of David and on the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication; then they will look on Me whom they pierced." And Isaiah 44:3, "For I will pour water on him who is thirsty, And floods on the dry ground; I will pour My Spirit on your descendants, And My blessing on your offspring;"

I won't get sucked into making a distinction that cannot be supported from the Bible.

676 posted on 07/05/2005 11:42:38 AM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl

Come on, look at the context of the passage and the subsequent history. Use your grammatical-historical tools and see that Jesus is not talking about the church nor is he looking at Pentecost. He says Israel will be desolate until they recognize who he is. You can't say that the church is desolate, especially at Pentecost, it is the people of Israel, not individuals, the nation as a whole who will be desolate and it still is and will be until it recognizes Jesus for who he is. He is not talking about scribes and Pharisees here for he has already mentioned them by name many times in the passage. He is speaking to the same people who just the day or days before were unknowingly blessing him, he now weeps over because he knows what is in store for them.


677 posted on 07/05/2005 1:16:36 PM PDT by blue-duncan
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To: blue-duncan; The Grammarian; Buggman; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Come on, ...

Where are we going?

Use your grammatical-historical tools and see that Jesus is not talking about the church nor is he looking at Pentecost.

Argument by assertion.

He says Israel will be desolate until they recognize who he is.

Is that really what it says?

"See! Your house is left to you desolate; and assuredly, I say to you, you shall not see Me until the time comes when you say, 'Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!' " (Luke 13:35)

Let's use the proper rules of interpretation.

It says "your house is left to you desolate." Period. It says nothing about undoing any desolation. It says nothing about what will happen after the time of desolation, if there is any human time period. Does it?

Who is "your" in "your house" and what is it referring to? Verse 31 tells us that Jesus was speaking to the Pharisees. Same thing in the context of Matthew 23. "On that very day some Pharisees came, saying to Him, ..."

So the context says that Jesus was conversing with the Pharisees.

Jesus metaphorically uses the imagery of old Jerusalem, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her!" Was it literally Jerusalem that stoned the prophets? Or was it unbelieving Israel as represented by her leadership, the scribes and Pharisees?

What do we know about old Jerusalem? "this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia, and corresponds to Jerusalem which now is, and is in bondage with her children--" Old Jerusalem is a picture of bondage. The one who kills the prophets.

Christ desires for His people to be identified with the new Jerusalem, which will one day come down from heaven in all her glory. There is no glory in earthly Jerusalem. It represents barrenness and futility.

But we, believing Jews and gentiles, the true sons of Abraham, have a real hope, "But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, to an innumerable company of angels,"

The bottom line is that when you read Luke 13 or Matthew 23 in context, it just does not say what you want it to say. The kingdom was "taken from you and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it."

he now weeps over because he knows what is in store for them.

"Now as He drew near, He saw the city and wept over it, saying, "If you had known, even you, especially in this your day, the things that make for your peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. For days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment around you, surround you and close you in on every side, and level you, and your children within you, to the ground; and they will not leave in you one stone upon another, because you did not know the time of your visitation." (Luke 19)

AD70 was a brutal time for the apostate nation of Israel. God had withdraw His favor from thosde people because they killed the son of the landowner. The only consolation for Israel was that some of her childern would be blessed by being including in the righteous gathering of God's elect people, the Church. That is when the remnant would say, "Blessed is he that comes in the name of the Lord."

"Though the number of the children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, The remnant will be saved."

678 posted on 07/05/2005 2:07:14 PM PDT by topcat54
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To: topcat54; blue-duncan; The Grammarian; P-Marlowe; xzins; Alamo-Girl
Ah, so this is what happens when I take a weekend off. ;-)

Sorry about that, guys. What was originally just going to be an overnight at a friend's house to watch a few movies and then a quiet weekend at home turned into two overnights, two parties, helping my minister move stuff from one storage bin to another due to a leak in the first, and dinner with my parents for the 4th. My appreciation to everyone who has carried on the discussion in my absence.

In the interest of answering the posts made to me (directly or indirectly), I'm going to try to pull answers to posts #653, 654, 657, 660-663, and 669-676 together in one post. I'm quite sure that I won't address every point in as much detail as I would like, and it's possible that I'll accidentally miss some argument that the person who originally made it considers to be crucial. If so, I apologize in advance, and ask that you just restate the argument or point me back to it.

So, with no further ado:

Gram, post #653: As it was not pinged to me, and I don't scour the thread searching for things to read, I did not see it.

My apologies, you are correct that I forgot to ping you.

Jeremiah 33:20-21 clarifies that God's promise is conditional; "If you can break My covenant with the day and My covenant with the night so that day and night cease to come at their regular time . . . He then says that despite this condition--broken again and again by the Israelites . . ."

Right there you lost the argument. What is God's covenant with the day and the night? "While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease" (Gen. 8:22). This was a universal, pre-Abrahamic covenant that God made which is linked to His promise never again to destroy the world by a flood.

Israel has no power to break God's covenant with the day and the night. It could never do so. Ergo, neither could it break God's promise that the Messiah would rule on David's throne forever, or that there would be Levi'im cohenim, Levite priests, to offer sacrifices. The only way that you can say that there will be no more Levites is to also say that the linked promise of the Messiah is also void.

Clarke's commentary is distinctly unconvincing on this point:

"The two families which God chose for the priesthood . . . are both extinct. Nor has the office of high priest, or priest of any kind offering sacrifice, been exercised among the Jews for nearly eighteen hundred years.

It seems to miss Clarke's attention, as well as your own, that the Davidic kings had ceased to be for over six hundred years before the birth of the Messiah. If God could restore the Kingship in the Messiah, He can and will also restore the Levitical priesthood to keep His promise to Aaron that the priesthood was his and his descendants:

And you shall put the holy garments on Aaron, and anoint him and sanctify him, so that he may minister to Me in the priest's office. And you shall bring his sons and clothe them with tunics. And you shall anoint them, even as you anointed their father, so that they may minister to Me in the priest's office. For their anointing shall surely be an everlasting priesthood for their generations. --Ex. 40:13-15
Messiah Yeshua may certainly transform the Levite priesthood (and indeed He has, in that their sacrifices are no longer a covering for sin) and transfer the office of High Priest to Himself by His Sacrifice, but He could not utterly do away with it nor remove it from the family of Aaron without violating ADONAI's contract with them.

Consider this too: We are a holy priesthood. So was all Israel called to be "a kingdom of priests" (Ex. 19:6)--and yet, not all of Israel were called to be Levite priests serving in God's Tabernacle. Thus we see that even under the Mosaic covenant, there were different degrees of priesthood, each with their own purposes.

Actually, it does. Again, they are part of that "system which is ready to pass away" which Hebrews describes.

According to your reading, God lied to Aaron and He lied to Jeremiah--and you have yet to even attempt to reconcile the earlier promises with the elucidation of Hebrews. I don't think God lies.

I accept that there was a change--that is, a transformation or a transference, not a complete replacement--in the priesthood, as well as a change in the Torah. That's clearly Biblical, and even the rabbis expect as much of the Messiah. But a change does not mean a doing away with. Say that you've contracted to do a job, and at some point along the way, your boss changes your job responsibilities, or even puts another person over you. Clearly your job has changed and there has been a transference in your boss, but you would still have your job.

You assume something not in evidence. Where does God say to any Christian, "You are a priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek"?

Where does He call us Levites? He doesn't. That's an assumption on your part that you cannot back up. Since He nowhere calls Christians "Levites," and the Levitical priesthood was very clearly given to the descendants of Aaron forever, then our priesthood must be of another order than that of the Levites. Since our Cohen HaGadol, our High Priest, is of the order of Melchizedek, I infer that the priesthood of those adopted as His children must be the same, just as the order of Aaron's sons was the order of which Aaron was the head.

We cannot infer from our adoption that we hold the same rank as Christ.

I never said we could. We are but the cohenim, but He alone is the Cohen HaGadol.

When God calls Christians "a royal priesthood" (1 Peter 2:9) he is quoting the Old Testament (Exodus 19:6) and applying it to Christians in general rather than Jews strictly.

Exactly. But as I've already pointed out, all Israel was called to be a kingdom of priests, but not all Israel were called out to be the Levite priests who served in God's Tabernacle. Neither are we Christians Levites, though we are a kingdom of priests, grafted into Israel.

n a spiritual sense, there is what Luther called "the priesthood of all believers," offering up spiritual sacrifices as 1 Peter 2:5 points out.

One of the great truths that Luther recovered.

But this does not mean that the title of priest in the order of Melchizedek is inherited.

Okay, if you see it so, fine. But you've still yet to show that we replace the order of Levi. What order, then, should we call ourselves? I'm fine with the Order of Yeshua, if that's all that's bugging you.

But again, the fact that all believers are called out as a kingdom of priests no more makes us a replacement for the Levitical priesthood than all of Israel being called out as such made them so.

Further, the reason that there were many Levite priests was because "they are prevented by death from remaining in office. 24 But because He remains forever, He holds His priesthood permanently."

According to that argument, neither are we priests, since Yeshua "holds the priesthood permanently." Yet this would violate 1 Peter, so we recognize that this is not what the passage is saying. Here, though "priest" is used, the High Priesthood is clearly the focus of the author's argument (v. 26).

So you think that the Levitical priesthood has a purpose beyond the Old Testament?

Absolutely. Back to Jer. 33, my friend--if the Levite priesthood is done away with, then Yeshua's kingship is in just as much trouble, as is the continued rotation of the earth.

The purpose of the Levite priesthood was indeed to act as intercessors before God for the people, and this purpose has now been given over to Yeshua. However, their sacrifices did not only atone for sin (which they no longer do, agreed), but served as a reminder of sin (Heb. 10:3), ceremonially purified the flesh (but not the concience, Heb. 9:13-14), and served as a prophetic type, a memorial-in-advance of the Messiah's ultimate and truly atoning sacrifice on the Cross.

Now we see a change, a transformation, in the priesthood: The High Priest is no longer a descendant of Aaron, but is the Messiah Himself. Sacrifices no longer atone for sins, for the perfect Sacrifice has atoned for all sins for all time. However, sacrifices as a memorial of that act and as a visual reminder of the price of sins would still have their place, and recognizing this means that one no longer has to simply ignore Jer. 33 (which I'm still waiting on a decent counter-exegesis for) or the latter chapters of Ezekiel or the Torah's promise that the Levitical priesthood belongs to the sons of Aaron forever.

And I'm sorry, but when God says "forever" and "to all their generations" and until "there should not be day and night in their season," I can't read that and interpolate "until the Messiah comes" when God has not said so. Forever means forever--and if it doesn't, those of us expecting "eternal life" are in for a rude surprise.

1) Our sacrifices are not superior. Jesus Christ's sacrifice is superior. Our sacrifices are sacrifices of praise; Jesus Christ's sacrifice was the sacrifice of His own life, once in atonement for all sin.

Yeshua's sacrifice is certainly superior to ours, but a spritual sacrifice of praise and obedience is also superior to the sacrifice of bulls and goats after an act of disobedience, wouldn't you agree?

2) You seem to think that when the author of Hebrews said that the Old Testament sacrifices "served as a reminder of sins," that this was a good thing.

Rather, a necessary thing. Frankly, as I look through what passes for Christendom and see how lightly the vast majority regard their sins or the Lord's sacrifice for them, I find myself more and more thinking that seeing the bloody mess of a true sacrifice might wake a few up.

How much more after the Messiah returns to sit on David's throne and the earth is restored to near-Edenic conditions, and the generation that saw God's wrath and what preceded it passes away, will people need a reminder of the true cost of sin?

3)The Levitical sacrifices never served as reminders to the world of sin "and its true cost," even less so now after the Levitical system has been extinct for almost 2000 years and the standards by which men know they have sinned is because their conscience speaks out against them.

You can go argue with whoever penned Hebrews 10:3 over that. If you won't believe the plain word of Scripture about one of the purposes of animal sacrifice (just as you don't believe the Scripture when it speaks of the eternality of the Levitical priesthood), then I'm not going to waste my time showing you that Scripture is true.

Isaiah 64:17-20 does not exist.

Sorry, typo. It's Isa. 65:17-20.

Further, assuming a premillenial interpretation of the Millenium, "reminders of sins" will be useless after the Second Coming.

Not at all. One thing almost every form of Premillennialism agrees on is that there will be a mortal remnant after the Day of the Lord that were not part of the Bride of the Messiah. Many of them (such as the 144,000) will be Jews, but as Isa. 66 points out (and this is why I cited it), not all will be--and the Gentiles "will bring all your brothers (the Jewish people) for an offering to ADONAI out of all nations" (v. 20).

The fact that Steele (at least as you've quoted him) doesn't seem to even be aware of this major point of premillennial eschatology renders him rather useless as a rebutting source.

Once again I point out that Jer. 33:17-20's promise of an eternal line of Levites is conditional . . .

On the continuation of day and night. And the continuation of the Messiah. Which makes it effectlvely unconditional. You've not even stepped into the vague realm of showing otherwise.

You assume a third physical temple because you think that when Ezekiel describes a temple in physically impossible terms, and in a vision to boot, it must mean that this third temple must be physical.

There's nothing the least bit "physically impossible" about Ezekiel's temple. It would require some changes in geography (or, as some would read it, that the Temple would be placed to the west of Jerusalem--that's not my take, however), but any reading of the Day of the Lord prophecies that doesn't simply allegorize them away tells us that there will be vast geological upheaval.

Frankly, I'm always amused when professing Christians trot out the "that's impossible" argument against theologies they don't like. Is there anything that is impossible for our God?

First off, employing a different hermeneutical approach hardly means that one is taking only selected portions of Scripture seriously.

No, but twisting a passage that links the eternality of the Messiah's Kingship to the eternality of the Levite priesthood into a conditional promise so as to protect the "traditions of men" does. You simply ignore or call "spiritual" (which the way you use it, may as well mean "fictional") whatever in the Tanakh you don't like. That's why I accuse you of being unserious in your study of the whole of the Scriptures.

When you are ready to deal with the Scriptures as they are instead of as your traditions say they should be, and when you are ready to stop simply dismissing 3/4ths of the Scriptures as "old" and "passed away," then you'll be a serious student. Until then, you are a serious student of Protestant theology of the New Testament, but not of the Bible itself as a whole.

Second, only by inserting a very strong pro-Torah bias . . .

I stand in good company, then:

Do not think that I have come to destroy the Torah or the Prophets. I have not come to destroy but to fulfill. For truly I say to you, Till the heaven and the earth pass away, not one jot or one tittle shall in any way pass from the Torah until all is fulfilled. Therefore whoever shall break one of these commandments, the least, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of Heaven. But whoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of Heaven. --Mt. 5:17-19
Read that again. Yeshua HaMashiach Himself said that heaven and earth would pass away before the least letter of the Torah. He further said that those who taught others not to keep the least of its commandments would be the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. He most certainly had a "very strong pro-Torah bias," to use your phrase.

Therefore, even if Sha'ul or the nameless author of Hebrews said that the Torah is dead or done away with, Yeshua said it wasn't, so guess who wins? Hmm . . . the Messiah, the very Word of God, or a rabbi and an annonymous source . . . hard choice there.

Unlike some who have rejected Sha'ul or some of the other NT writings for this reason, I do believe that Sha'ul's writings should be regarded as sacred Scripture. However, I do not believe that Sha'ul rejected the Torah, despite the misinterpretations that would say otherwise. From his own pen:

Do we then make the Torah void through faith? Let it not be! But we establish (or keep) the Torah. . . So indeed the Torah is holy, and the commandment is holy and just and good. --Rom. 3:31 and 7:12
Sha'ul himself kept the Torah and even participated in Temple sacrificial worship some three decades after the Cross (Ac. 21:20-26). Given that both Yeshua and Sha'ul--and indeed, Ya'akov (James) and Kefa (Peter) and all the other first-generation of Yeshua's disciples--revered and kept the Torah and proclaimed it in the present tense to be in effect and holy, I am not ashamed to say that I do have a very strong pro-Torah bias!

Call me ambitious--I don't want to be the least in the Kingdom of Heaven.

Now, against such a host of men zealous for God's Torah, even if the annonymous author of Hebrews said that the Torah were done away with, he or she would be wrong and the book heresy rather than Scripture. But I don't believe that's the case. Hebrews describes the transformation of God's priesthood and its purposes in light of the revelation of the Messiah and the new understanding of Torah that He gave us--but it by no means says that the Torah is "old," nor does it lump together all of God's promises into the Tanakh as the "Old" Testament and simply dismiss them the way you have done.

Sha'ul himself pointed out that no prior covenant, or promise, from God could be aborogated by a later covenant (Gal. 3:17). Nor has God ever done so--what He has done is add His newer covenants to His old to provide for a greater blessing.

For example, does the covenant that God made with Abraham annul His promise to Noah never again to destroy the world by flood? Did the giving of the legal part of the Torah annul His unconditional promise to Abraham? Did His covenant with David to continue his line forever (in the Messiah) annul the blessings and the curses of the Torah?

No, no, and no.

Did the New (or Renewed) Covenant made through Yeshua's blood annul any of the promises that went before it?

No. Not even the promise that the Levites would have their position forever.

Your problem is that you are lumping all of God's pre-Messianic covenants into one category--the "Old" Covenant, which you claim has passed away--and are not doing careful exegesis of the many covenants that God made with His people. Of them all, there was only one that was conditional, and that is the covenant that Israel made with God through Moses, "Everything that ADONAI has spoken, we will do and obey" (Ex. 24:7), "the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day I took hold of their hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt" (Heb. 8:9, quoting Jer. 31:32).

That is the only covenant that Israel broke, to keep the Torah, because that is the only one they could break--everything else was solely on God. Therefore, God says, "I will cut a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah . . . I will put My Torah in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people" (Jer. 33:31, 33).

To write the Torah on His people's hearts does not make it any less the Torah. To write the Torah on His people's hearts does not aborogate the least of the Torah's commands or promises, save one: The Torah promises God's curse on those who do not keep every command, but "the Messiah redeemed us from the curse of the Torah, being made a curse for us (for it is written, 'Cursed is everyone having been hanged on a tree'); so that the blessing of Abraham might be to the nations in Yeshua Messiah, and that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith" (Gal. 3:13-14).

The Torah has not been done away with--it has been brought to its fulness by the saving grace of God in Yeshua HaMashiach. It has even been transformed in certain particulars. But it could not be transformed in a way that violates any of God's earlier promises, unless God is a liar.

I don't think so.

Alamo-Girl, post #654: I assert that this is not an “either/or”. We must accept that both statements are true as sworn by God in the full reading of Jeremiah 33 and as Christ said in the Sermon on the Mount:

Amen. I love how you can always sum up what I say in ten pages in a single sentence.

topcat54, post #660: God's plan, according to the prophets and the writer of Hebrews, was always to institute a greater covenant by the work of Messiah. The Levites, the physical tabernacle, the animal blood sacrifices were temporary.

The first part is correct, the second part is not. Certainly, God always intended to institute a greater priesthood than Aaron's--but nevertheless, He assured Aaron that the Levitical priesthood was his and his children's forever.

Now, obviously some need to twist the word of the prophecy to say that "never lack" doesn't really mean never. The need to account for the time in which we live. There are no Levites. There are no sacrifices and burnt offerings. So never has to be interpreted to mean.

No man sat on David's throne for six hundred years before Yeshua was born. Was God's promise made void by that fact, or did He preserve the line and provide the Eternal King at the time of His own choosing? And if the latter, why could He not preserve the line of Aaron to be restored to their service at the time of HIs choosing as well?

Nowhere in Hebrews or the rest of the NT is there even the slightest hint of a future, reconstituted earthly priesthood and animal sacrifices.

Mt. 24:15, 2 Th. 2:4, Rev. 11:1-4 all refer to the Temple, and the allusion in the Olivet Discourse to the Abomination of Desolation makes it clear that the sacrifices must be interrupted just as they were in the time of the Maccabees. Revelation 7 even makes it clear that God knows who belongs to what tribe, including the tribe of Levi.

But again, even if it were true that there is no NT teaching that the Temple would be restored, that wouldn't matter. More than 3/4ths of Scripture are contained in the Tanakh, not the NT, which was endorsed by Messiah Yeshua and all of His disciples and apostles. Ergo, an argument from silence in the NT doesn't prove anything, except that you have a bias against the Hebrew Scriptures.

blue-duncan, post #661: Now Jesus, as priest after the order of Melchizedec, has not done away with the covenant with Levi. When the church is raptured, and God deals with Israel according to promise, His witnesses will be Levites, pastors according to the religious sensitivities of the Jews, who will fill the same offices that Pastors did for the church, offering the sacrifices of praise, peace and thanksgiving and the prayers of the congregants which rises like the incense offering.

I'd leave the Rapture aside for the moment, since that's another whole ball of wax, but I'd like to quote my own book on this issue for a moment:

But to what purpose will the resumed sacrifices of an unsaved Israel just before the Second Coming serve? They will serve to once again remind Israel of the terrible price of sin and thus prepare the hearts of that nation to receive the Savior Messiah, the Lamb of God, as their King. Remember that for two millennia, the Jews have been, as Hosea predicted, “without king or prince, without sacrifice or sacred pillar, without ephod or teraphim” (3:4). Talmudic Judaism has become a religion of works, of trying to make one’s good deeds outweigh the bad. The return of animal sacrifice will bring many to realize again the human need for salvation from their sins, to remember that all sin must be forgiven by the shedding of blood (Lev. 17:11), and therefore preparing the way for Yeshua in the hearts of many.
topcat54, post #662: When someone says to me, "think outside the box", what that usually means is that they are lacking any concrete scriptural support for their position and they want me to theorize.

More likely they're trying to get you to look at what Scripture actually says, and not just what you've been told it says, as we are here.

The big problem is this unsupported notion that God begins dealing with Israel after the rapture of the Church. Apart from the fact that there is absolutely no Scripture to support that theory, it violates the entire message of the book of Hebrews and a number of other NT texts.

So you say with just as little support.

The Levitical system was temporary.

Jeremiah says otherwise, and all Hebrews says is that the priesthood has been changed, not that it has been done away with (see the top of this post). You're arguing without Scriptural support here.

blue-duncan, post 663: Hebrews speaks to only one aspect of the sacrificial worship required by the law, that was the annual and daily sin offerings that could not make the worshiper perfect and that was the prerogative of the high priest.

Exactly, though the daily sacrifice was not a sin-offering, but a burnt-offering, which represented complete dedication, not the removal of sins. Even the "sin-offering" might still be offered (and the prophets say will be), but it's character would have to be as transformed as the priesthood--no longer would it be considered to atone for sins, but simply to be a worshipful representation of the Messiah's ultimate sacrifice, and a reminder of sins.

(Indicentally, note that Heb. 10 says that the sacrifices are a "reminder of sins," present tense, in his or her own time, after the Messiah's sacrifice. Ergo, even after the Cross, I would argue that a sin-offering as a reminder of sins would still be acceptable by the writings of both the Tanakh and the NT).

You will permit gaps in time to cover the absence of David's throne but not the Levitical office and yet they are both contained in the same promise.

You noticed that too, huh?

topcat, post #669: This was all fulfilled in Jesus Christ. He is the greater David. He is the son of David that God raised up to sit on His throne.

Oh, com'on! You're not even trying to reconcile the two. Simply saying, "This was all fulfilled in Jesus Christ" isn't exegesis, it's isogesis at best, and simply ignoring the problem and hoping that it'll go away at the worst.

Now, was the throne on earth (like the tabernacle on earth) a pattern of the throne in heaven, or was it really intended to stand alone? Are we really supposed to take the fleshly view that God's ultimate purpose is to have Christ leave His heavenly throne and sit on a fleshly throne in Israel?

You've just got to love Augustinian neo-gnostic thought in the Church.

The answer is that the Messiah's throne on earth will be both a physical reality and a type of God's throne in heaven. "Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven."

If you disagree, feel free to show anywhere in the NT where it says specifically that the Messiah will not reign on the earth from Jerusalem. Bear in mind that I will happily correct you if you quote out of context--say, if you quote Mt. 23 and leave off the end: "You will not see Me again until you say, 'Blessed is He who comes in the name of ADONAI."

Speaking of these earthly types, the writer says, "He takes away the first that He may establish the second." (Heb. 10:9)

If that meant what you're claiming it does, you would have a contradiction in Scripture--not just Buggman's interpretation of Scripture (as much as you'd love to claim that), but what it actually says in plain text. Me, I don't believe in contradictions in Scripture.

The reconcilliation is that God took away sacrifices as necessary for atonement for sins (see vv. 16-18) because of the perfect Sacrifice that paid for them all (v. 14), not that He took away all types.

In other words, you went well beyond the rules of gramatical-historical interpretation to justify your predetermined belief.

f you decide to build a home, and someone brings you a model to represent how your home will look, it's folly to go and try to live in the model after the home is built.

Granted, and that's a good illustration. However, you might still show the model of your house to those who have not yet seen it, since the model shows more than pages of description. "A picture is worth a thousand words."

The Levitical priesthood and all of the types of the Torah are a picture, a model. Even today, we can learn much about God's work in us by studying Leviticus--I'm planning to write a book on the subject, in fact--for we yet "see as through a glass darkly" not yet "face-to-face" (1 Cor. 13:12).

But even while this speaks of an everlasting ordinance of the day of atonement, we know from Hebrews sand elsewhere that this was ll fulfilled in the sacrifice of Christ, once for all to take away the sins of His people.

You realize that you're using your premise to prove your premise here. And again, having knowledge of the reality--and that but through a glass darkly--does not remove the command to keep the type. It makes the type all the more poignant and powerful, as any Christian who has celebrated a proper Seder can tell you. Why else do you think the first-century Messianics continued to worship in the Temple? Is your vision so much clearer than Ya'akov, Kefa, Yochanan, and Sha'ul, who actually saw the Lord face-to-face?

It is entirely arbitrary dividing of Scripture to try to separate Levites from the sacrifices. It cannot be done.

Nor do Jeremiah, Ezekiel, or Moses do so. Neither does Hebrews--again, all Hebrews does is explain the Temple service in light of the Messiah and describe His superior priesthood.

One thing that puzzles me with this futurist interpretation is exactly what will be the duties of the Levites in some future situation, and ho that all fits with what we know if Christ and His work.

I already went into that in a previous post, so if you're confused, go read that, read Ezekiel 40-48, and then we'll take that part of the conversation up again. But as I said in post #634,

Thus, in the Millennium, when there will be a mortal remnant (Isa. 64:17-20 [sic, should be Isa. 65:17-20] and 66:18-21) in addition to those who rose with Yeshua and have already been glorified in Him, there will still be a need for that reminder of sins--especially in a society and a world where the effect of sin won't be as obvious to those who did not grow up in this present age.

In the eternal age, I have no doubt that the role of the two priesthoods will again transform, but we simply don't have enough information to know for certain just how they will. God doesn't tell us much at all about that time. But what I do know is that the two priesthoods will continue. Why? Because the Messiah is a priest forever (Ps. 110:4), just as the Levitical line will have priests foever. If the end of sins meant the end of priests, of intercessors, then He would only be a preist for a short age, not forever. I don't have to have all the answers about what their role will be to trust Scripture when it says they will still have a role.

I sometimes get the impression that all these prophecy are read and interpreted as if Christ had never some, or as if He work on the cross with make no matter in the futurist scenario.

Obviously you need to read more on the futurist perspective if your understanding of our views is that poor.

From post #671: Where was Israel when Christ came to them and ministered "face to face"? Ezekiel was written before Christ came. No?

Yes, but unless you've completely left the bounds of orthodox Christianity, you still believe that there will be Two Comings, no?

The language does not permit you to add that sort of spin.

No, but the whole of Scripture does permit it. As Alamo-Girl pointed out, you're treating this as an either/or, we're dealing with it as a both/and. The Scriptures say plainly that the Messiah both provided the final atonement for all sins and that there will be continuing sacrifices in the Temple that Ezekiel describes. Therefore, instead of simply ignoring one of these two truths, we reconcile them by supposing that the sacrifices are memorials only, "a reminder of sins," as Hebrews says.

From post #674: Do you believe there will be a time with God will be more "face to face" with Israel than when Jesus came to earth and ministered the gospel?

Yes. Even you believe that God will be "face to face" with Israel and the rest of the world at the sheep and goat judgment--this time not veiled in the form of a servant, but as Yochanan saw Him on Patmos, the glorified King.

Jesus came and brought the message of the kingdom to Israel. Those who believed and followed Messiah were identified as the true children of Abraham. "Therefore know that only those who are of faith are sons of Abraham. ... So then those who are of faith are blessed with believing Abraham."

And, if you'll stop reading selectively, you'll see that Sha'ul goes on to say that the natural branches that were broken off for disbelief will be restored, that the blindness of Israel will be removed "when the fulness of the Gentiles is come in," and that "all Israel will be saved, as it is written."

It is we who are saved by being grafted (adopted) into Israel, not Israel who will be saved by being grafted into us.

You can see how this attitude tends to minimize Jesus' death and resurrection, and the work He accomplished on behalf of His people.

Oh, baloney. Nothing we say minimizes Yeshua's sacrifice in the least--but we affirm what the Apostles affirmed, that He will return in power to judge the earth and keep God's covenants (all of them) with Israel by bringing the whole nation into the New Covenant.

In that sense, yes, the "real deal" is yet future:

Beloved, now we are children of God, but it has not yet been revealed what we shall be. But we know that when He shall be revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. And everyone who has this hope on him purifies himself, even as that One is pure. --1 Jn. 3:2-3

For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men, teaching us that having denied ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live discreetly, righteously and godly, in this present world, looking for the blessed hope, and the glorious appearance of our great God and Savior Yeshua the Messiah, who gave Himself for us that He might redeem us from all iniquity and purify to Himself a special people, zealous of good works. --Tit. 2:11-13

I say then, Did they not stumble that they fall? Let it not be! But by their slipping away came salvation to the nations, to provoke them to jealousy. But if their slipping away is the riches of the world, and their default is the riches of the nations, how much more their fullness? For I speak to you, the nations; since I am the apostle of the nations, I glorify my ministry; if by any means I may provoke those who are my flesh to jealousy, and might save some of them. For if their casting away is the reconciling of the world, what is the reception except life from the dead? --Rom. 11:11-15

We seem to be in some pretty good company.

For 2000 years Jews, along with gentiles, have recognized Jesus as the true Messiah of Israel.

Agreed. That would be the remnant Sha'ul speaks of in Romans 10. However, the remnant is not the whole of the promise, as Sha'ul himself explains in great detail in chapter 11 (see the above quote). God's promises were to the nation of Israel as a whole, not to just a remnant.

Post #676 (and I really hope that the conversation hasn't progressed by twenty posts while I've been writing this):

There's too much for me to want to quote point-for-point. Most of your questions/arguments have been long since answered anyway. I again refer you to Romans 11: Yes, the bulk of Israel was blinded and broken off for their failure to follow the Messiah when He came the first time; however, that does not annul the promises of God, and the day will come when the broken branches will be restored, and "all Israel (not just the remnant which was already in existence) will be saved."

You are again guilty of selective reading.

Whew. I'd come up with a final summary of the debate, but we've been all over the map and I'm frankly ready to just post this and be done with it. All I can say now is that it's a pity that in order to justify the traditions of men, you are willing to just toss away 3/4ths of Scripture as "old." When you learn to treat the Tanakh with the same reverence and seriousness that you do the NT, as Yeshua and His disciples did, your understanding of Scripture will greatly benefit.

679 posted on 07/05/2005 4:38:28 PM PDT by Buggman (Baruch ata Adonai Elohanu, Mehlech ha Olam, asher nathan lanu et derech ha y’shua b’Mashiach Yeshua.)
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To: Buggman; xzins; Alamo-Girl
So I see what you mean, and I agree that there are probably far more types in Scripture than most people have an appreciation for. However, I don't think they make up the majority of prophecy in Scripture (the majority of lessons about the spiritual world, on the other hand . . . .), and a significant number of types are partially or even fully explained to us.

Rev 19:10 And I fell at his feet to worship him. And he said unto me, See thou do it not: I am thy fellowservant, and of thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus: worship God: for the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.

I have noticed that in every passage of scripture, there is something concerning Christ. In all of the emblems, types, shadows, parables etc in scripture, you will find Christ somewhere. Of course this would make the entire Old Testament, to be prophecy and most of the New Testament.

As I said before, the metaphors are not generally explained in scripture. I will qualify and say they are explained, but only in part, perhaps even far more than we have understood, but scripture points us in the right direction, and it is only when we add the guidance of nature and the spirit, that we can search the deep meanings. It is good to remember that nature was given first, and God adds more light, as we are able to receive it.

It is my belief that scripture contains more treasure, undiscovered, than all that has been found. To use a metaphor, there is more gold in the world, not mined, than mined. I may not be able to prove this, but if true, how can we know if 90% of the metaphors are explained in scriptures?

Sorry to be off topic here. Just my thoughts.

Seven

680 posted on 07/05/2005 6:41:20 PM PDT by Seven_0 (You cannot fool all of the people, ever!)
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