Introduction
Eschatology
is a word, as most doctrinal words are, which is rooted in the
original language of New Testament Scripture; Greek. In this case, it is a compound word stemming
from two root words; eschatos, meaning last, and logos, meaning word. So, eschatology is literally “a word about
last things”.
Many Bible
doctrines have produced contention over the centuries among theologians and
scholars. But arguably, perhaps none has
stirred up as much controversy as eschatology.
The reason for this is quite simple.
What the Bible has to say about last things is steeped in future
prophecy. Although many of the prophetic
elements of the study of last things are now historical in nature to us, at the
time they were written down they were future to the writers of Scripture. And more to the point, much of what the Bible
tells us of the shape of the end times is still yet future to us. It hasn’t happened yet.
Furthermore,
in God’s wisdom and according to His grand design, He did not choose to reveal
these things to mankind in a clearly discernable, bulleted and annotated,
outline format. He chose rather to
reveal bits and pieces, here and there, from one writer at one epoch of history
to another. Sometimes these authors were
separated by several hundred years.
Their writings are at times opaque, making them difficult to
understand.
It may help
you to think of it as a giant theological jigsaw puzzle. All the pieces fit together perfectly. The challenge for the Bible student is to
find the correct placement. To make
matters worse, from the perspective of the student of eschatology, Bible
prophecies are mostly literal; but occasionally they are symbolic. Continuing the puzzle analogy, we could say
that the box top with the picture of the completed puzzle is missing, and some
of the puzzle pieces are smudged, making the image printed on them
obscure. This can be difficult to
reconcile. However, the Bible itself
often provides assistance by clarifying the meaning of various symbols that
have been used.
These
factors make interpretation challenging, but not impossible. To accurately gain a comprehensive
understanding of eschatology one must collate, work to organize, and attempt to
prioritize all available material that speaks to the issues at hand. This is not a task for the faint-hearted and
should not be undertaken lightly or with little thought. We must labor to take into account all
Scripture that speaks to a particular facet of truth. It is fitting and proper to make strong
arguments for a particular understanding of an aspect of eschatology. But it must not be done by failing to take
into account other passages on other aspects, both correlating and competing.
I realize
that is vague, but I do not want to get into any specifics with this
introduction. My point is simply
this. The best doctrines of eschatology
are those which factor in, as much as humanly possible, every single possible
element in Scripture that speaks in any way, shape, or form to the issue being
researched. And then, if any apparent
contradictions are found, they must be resolved in as normative and
straightforward a manner as possible.
This is really no different from any other systematic doctrine of the
Bible. But it is perhaps especially
significant in eschatology because of the aforementioned challenges of time,
space, and symbolism which stretch quite literally across the whole of
Scripture.
Because of
this complexity of prophetic interpretation, I believe there is only one
sensible and rational method of approaching Bible prophecies. It is really the same method with which the
serious Bible student should approach all matters of interpretation. That is, we should interpret the words of
Scripture in as normal, literal, contextual, and historically accurate a manner
as possible. Stated another way, we
should seek after the plain meaning of the text. If a prophecy says that a baby will be born,
a government will rest on His shoulders, and there will be no end to the
increase of His government or of peace, then that is exactly what will happen
at the time predetermined by God.
In matters
of eschatology, with so much symbolism and so many future events that are
shrouded in the mists of our time bound consciousness, I think it is tempting
for Bible scholars, even solid Bible scholars who hold to the literal
grammatical hermeneutic of Bible interpretation, to depart from their typical
interpretive approach when it comes to matters of the end times and move to a
symbolic or allegorical interpretation. I
believe this is a mistake. I think the
correct way to understand Scripture is to start from the assumption that it
means exactly what it says. And only
with great reason and support should we depart from that. I believe that if one follows this pattern of
interpretation, there is only one over-arching consistent, coherent, and
cohesive eschatological position that makes sense and is supported by all the
relevant texts. This is the position
that I will attempt to outline in the following pages.
After having
said all of that, I need to say this. I
am further convinced that no one can know with absolute certainty that every
detail of their eschatological interpretation is one hundred percent
correct. There are too many variables
and unknowns. Therefore, I counsel
warning to the Bible student who feels the temptation to be dogmatic about
their personal doctrine of eschatology.
It is profitable to be confident and well versed in one’s study of the
Scriptures. And as already stated, I
believe there is enough evidence to be quite convinced of the veracity of one’s
eschatological position. At the same
time, it is terribly dangerous to be arrogant and persuaded that you have
arrived at a complete and thorough understanding of truth on any aspect of
theology. This especially holds true in
the realm of eschatology.
The work
that I present on the following pages is not intended to be a comprehensive
review of all the various eschatological positions that are in existence. Much better works done by vastly more
qualified authors are widely available.
Rather, my purpose in writing this document is to clearly lay out what I
personally believe about eschatology.
This is for two purposes. The
first is my own edification. I believe
it honors the Lord when His children seek to sharpen their skills and their
understanding as much as they are able.
To that end, this is my attempt to sharpen my own eschatological
knowledge. My second purpose is to aid
in future teaching opportunities. My
hope is that putting in the effort now to understand these things to the best
of my ability, I will be better prepared and able to explain them to others in
the future.
One final
note. I have no interest in obfuscating
or attempting to hide my position in pages and pages of text. So, I will clarify right off the bat. I consider myself a Dispensational
Pre-Millennialist, for those who are familiar with the popular eschatological
labels used by folks who care about such things. If you have no idea what a Dispensational
Pre-Millennialist is, then please read on.
If you think you know what it entails, please read on anyhow. Either way, I am absolutely convinced that
the Scriptures themselves bear my position out.
The Crux of
Eschatology: Israel
Before
getting into specific aspects of eschatology, I need to lay some groundwork. The first piece is in regard to Israel. Israel is the crux upon which the whole of
eschatology hangs. They were, are, and
will continue to be the chosen people of God.
His Old Testament covenants (specifically the Abrahamic and Davidic, more
on those in a moment) with them are irrevocable, are not dependent on any human
volition or act of obedience or disobedience, and serve as the framework for
the New Covenant in Christ.
An
illustration has been given of two lines on a board, both starting from fixed
points that are very close together. If
both lines are perfectly level as they begin, and assuming the same trajectory
is maintained, then when they reach their end they will still be perfectly in
parallel, just as at the beginning. If
one of the lines is angled downward even a fraction of a degree, they will
still start off very close to each other.
But by the time they reach their end, again assuming their trajectory is
maintained, the lines will be very far apart.
In the same
way, understanding what God says in the Bible about the end times must be
approached through the proper lens of God’s covenants with Israel. And they must be understood through a clear,
non-allegorized, non-symbolized interpretation of the text. The Scriptures cannot be approached from a
position of allegory or symbolism for which we are never given mandate by
God. If the student of eschatology does
not start from this firm biblical foundation, then the location where they end
up will miss the mark of truth by a very wide margin.
But talk is
cheap. Only proof is valuable. Here is what the Scriptures have to say about
Israel, God’s covenants with them, and their assured future place in the plans
of the Lord.
God’s Covenants with Israel
There are
three unconditional and inviolable covenants that God made with the nation of
Israel. The first is the Abrahamic
Covenant. This covenant was and is
completely one-sided. Only God is the
responsible party, demonstrated by the fact that He was the only one to pass
between the cut pieces of the blood sacrifices with which this covenant was
ratified. In this covenant the Lord
specifically promises Abram a defined tract of land that extends from Egypt to
the Euphrates river (Ge.15).
The second
unconditional covenant established with Israel was the Davidic. God came to King David through Nathan the
prophet. He guaranteed him that he would
raise up Solomon, David’s son, after him.
Solomon would build a house for God, meaning the first Temple. And God would establish the throne of
Solomon’s (and thus David’s) kingdom forever.
The Lord promised to do this in spite of the future iniquity of
Solomon. Furthermore, God promised that
His divine loving kindness would never depart from the line of David and that
his house and kingdom and throne would be established forever (2Sam.7:8-17). This is an expansion of the Abrahamic
Covenant. God had already promised the
land, implying a kingdom. Now He had
added the promise of a king to rule over the kingdom.
David
responds by confirming that God has done and will do all of this purely for the
sake of His own word and according to His own heart. In other words, it was and is completely
independent of anything that Israel has done or ever will do. It is solely according to the precise intention
of God’s will that all of these things will be accomplished (2Sam.7:18-29).
The third
covenant established with Israel is the New Covenant in Christ. Many Christians may perhaps be under the
impression that this covenant is exclusively the jurisdiction of the New
Testament church. But this is simply not
true, according to the Scriptures.
Jeremiah states that God will make a new covenant with the house of
Israel and the house of Judah (Jer.31:31-34).
The particulars of this covenant will be that God will change their
hearts. He will write His law within
them. They will have no need to teach
each other the statutes of the Lord because everyone will know them. This is nothing less than New Testament
Christological salvation.
There is no
other way to understand this text than as being applicable to ethnic Israel,
unless one is content to mangle and garble the text. To be sure there is no misunderstanding, the
prophet contrasts this New Covenant with the Mosaic Covenant, which was
conditional upon Israel’s obedience and was very much exclusively the domain of
the Jews.
In Ezekiel,
we can see the exact same principles of regeneration and saving grace being
applied to ethnic Israel in their own land purely for the sake of God’s own
good pleasure. In fact, He states twice
that it is not about or for the sake of Israel herself that He will accomplish
this (Eze.36:22-38). And again, in
Deuteronomy God clarifies that it was not because of anything special within
Israel that He chose her (Deut.7:7-8). The
implication is clear that the New Covenant will be unconditional, just as the
Abrahamic and Davidic Covenants were.
God’s Election of Israel
Four
separate times in the Old Testament, God refers to Israel as elect (Sometimes
rendered as chosen, depending on translation.
Either way it means the same thing grammatically). Before the foundation of the world, God
picked Israel as the object of His affection and love, completely independent
of any volitional acts done by her, for no other reason than that He wanted to.
- God has made a covenant with His chosen, David His servant (Psa.89:3).
- God elevated Cyrus I of Persia for the sake of Israel, his elect (Isa.45:4).
- God will bring forth His chosen Jews to inherit and inhabit the land of Israel (Isa.65:9)
- God’s chosen ones will not have their land inhabited by anyone but themselves (Isa.65:22)
Anyone who
has a proper New Testament understanding of sovereign divine election knows
that this choice of God is completely one hundred percent His own. It is inviolable, unconditional, and
independent of any created being. It
cannot be nullified by any power in the universe, save God’s own, and He has
guaranteed emphatically that this will never happen. The only ratification possible of God’s
covenant of election with His chosen is His own good pleasure and will. These facts are known and I do not have the
space to go into them in detail here. My
point is simply this. Ethnic Israel, the
specific descendants of Abraham and David, are beneficiaries of this
unconditional election that God has decreed.
God’s Punishment of Israel
This does
not mean that Israel can disobey and rebel with no consequences. In fact, it has only ever been and will only
ever be a remnant of the ethnic nation that will actually be the recipients of
God’s divine sovereign electing grace (Isa.10:20-22; Jer.23:3). Because of this, we see tremendous
application of discipline and destruction being levied against Israel because
of her national apostasy.
God raised
up Israel from nothing and built her into a strong and mighty nation that was
capable of adequately displaying His glory.
Yet they spurned Him, committed abominations of idolatry with every
nation they came into contact with, and roused Him to fury and jealousy. There are many texts I could reference to
show this. But for the sake of space I
will look at just one.
In Ezekiel
chapter 16 this concept of nurturing, rebellion, and restoration is depicted in
a graphic illustration of a dying infant, abandoned in a field, rescued by God,
cleaned and made beautiful. This child
grows into a young woman whom the Lord clothes with righteousness and
splendor. Yet she forgets him and
engages in debauched sexual immorality with every man who passes her by. So God executes swift and terrible judgments
against her.
However, and
here is the point, God says in verses 60 to 63 that He will remember His
covenant with Israel. In fact, He says
“when I have forgiven you”. The
forgiveness of God toward the nation of Israel is not a matter of chance or the
good performance of those being forgiven.
It is a foregone and emphatic conclusion straight from the mouth of God.
God’s Restoration of Israel
In spite of
His great anger, once it is spent through the application of harsh discipline,
God will draw Israel to His bosom once again.
The whole of Psalm 89 is a joyous calling to remembrance of God’s
intention toward Israel. In verses 3 and
4 God says that He intends to establish the line of David forever and build up
for him an everlasting throne and kingdom.
In verses 20 through 29 God says that He has anointed and strengthened
and protected His servant David. He will
keep him forever and confirm His covenant with him, establishing David’s
descendants forever and his throne as the days of heaven. There is no other normative and clear way to
interpret these passages as anything other than exactly what they say, that
David’s literal descendants will be exalted forever.
In verses 30
to 37 God removes any possible doubt about Israel being cut off from the
covenants through disobedience. The Lord
says that even if David’s sons forsake His laws, do not walk in His judgments,
violate His statutes, and do not keep His commandments He will still maintain
the covenant with them. There will be
discipline, to be sure, but God specifically says that He will not violate the
covenant that He made with David.
Psalm 132
continues the chorus of God’s faithfulness to ethnic Israel. Verse 11 says that God will not turn back
from the vow He made to David. Verses 13
and 14 say that God has chosen Zion (Jerusalem) for His habitation and it will
be His resting place forever.
Now then, if
all of these points regarding Israel are true, and they are, then in one’s
doctrine of eschatology there must be a place for ethnic Israel. As various passages are approached, and
understanding is sought, the interpretation, both verse by verse as well as
overall, must incorporate the fulfillment of God’s covenant promises to
Israel. If a position on eschatology is
arrived at which does not accomplish this goal, then it is invalid.
The Kingdom
of God
The second
piece of groundwork I need to explore builds off of the first; it is the
biblical concept of the Kingdom of God.
I believe an understanding of this principle is also foundational to a
correct understanding of eschatology.
Broadly, and
briefly, the Kingdom of God has four components, or iterations. I will outline them below. But first, a few notes will be helpful. There is a substantial amount of overlap
between the various Scripture references provided, because these kingdom
concepts are very closely linked to each other.
And in fact, I have placed some of the references in more than one
category. This means that some of the
decisions I have made as to how to label the Scripture verses is somewhat
arbitrary and could be open to debate.
Nevertheless, they all point in one way or another to the kingdom
concepts I am trying to describe. Also,
I have not listed nearly all of the Kingdom references given by Jesus in the
gospels. I believe those references fall
into two camps; the future Mediatorial Kingdom and the future combined
Universal Kingdom. I have listed a few
of each type, but felt that it was unnecessary to list them all, because Jesus
references the Kingdom of God a LOT.
Finally, the names of these kingdoms are not inspired. They are my attempt to be as descriptive as
possible with the form and function of each kingdom, drawn from the details
provided in Scripture that are inspired.
- The Universal Kingdom – This is the always existent, over-arching spiritual kingdom that God rules and reigns over at all times, regardless of the state of affairs on earth. This is where God’s absolute sovereignty is clearly seen at all times, no matter how evil or messed up the created order becomes. (2Ki.19:15; 2Ch.20:6; 2Ch.36:23; Ps.22:28, 45:6, 145:11-13; Is.37:16; Da.4:3, 4:34, 6:26; Mt.5:3, 5:10, 5:19, 6:10, 6:13, 16:28; Lk.23:42; 2Ti.4:18; Heb.1:8)
- The Historic Mediatorial Kingdom – This is the physical nation of Israel, from Moses (the birth of the nation at Sinai) to Zedekiah (the final deportation of Judah to Babylon and the destruction of Solomon’s Temple). God intended the Hebrews to be His surrogate representatives on earth, to display His glory to all the nations of the world. They failed at this because of their idolatry, and as punishment were removed from their land and scattered throughout the world. (Ex.19:5-6; 1Sa.10:25,11:14; 2Sa.7:12-16; 1Ch.17:21; Jer.1:15-16; Mt.8:12)
- The Future Mediatorial Kingdom (a.k.a. Millennial Kingdom) – This is the re-constituted physical nation of Israel, with hearts of flesh rather than stone, fully repentant finally, and ruled by Christ, the “Son of David”, on David’s throne. As before, the purpose of this kingdom is to display the glory of God to all the world. Only this time, under Christ’s perfect leadership with His “rod of iron”, and with a national repentance that only God can orchestrate, they will succeed at their task in showcasing God accurately. In spite of the unquestioned rule and reign of Christ, this is still not the eternal state, composed of the new heavens and new earth with the New Jerusalem as the seat of the Kingdom. (2Sa.7:12-16; 1Ki.11:11-13; Ps.110:1-7; Ez.37:1-28; Da.2:34-35, 2:44-45, 7:14, 7:22, 7:27; Zec. 14:3-21; Mt.3:2, 6:10; Mk.11:10; Lk.1:32, 22:29-30; 1Co.6:2-3; Heb. 10:13; Rev.1:6-7, 5:9-10, 11:15, 12:5, 12:10, 20:4, 20:6)
- The Eternal Universal Kingdom – This is the future kingdom, combining both the spiritual and heavenly aspects of the Universal Kingdom, and the physical and earthly aspects of the Mediatorial Kingdom, into one entity. This Kingdom will be established on the new earth in the New Jerusalem, with Christ once again taking the throne and ruling unchallenged for all of eternity. A distinction between the Millennial Kingdom and the Eternal Kingdom is that sin and death will be non-existent. Both will have been previously cast into the lake of fire, along with Satan, the Beast, and the False Prophet. Thus the Scripture describes it as a place of “no more tears” where “the wolf will lie down with the lamb”. There will be virtually no chronological separation between the end of the Millennial Kingdom and the establishment of the New Jerusalem on the new earth. Therefore, one way of looking at the relationship between the two is that the Millennial Kingdom is the first season of the eternal Combined Universal Kingdom. (2Sam.7:12-16; 1Ch.17:11-14; Is.9:6-7; Da.2:44, 7:14, 7:27; Lk.1:33; Heb.10:12)
The point of
all this kingdom talk is the following.
It has always been God’s over-arching purpose to display Himself to the
world. He desires that mankind
acknowledge His power, His glory, His authority, His righteousness, etc. That was the purpose of the establishment of
Israel. They were to be a kingdom of
priests and a holy nation (Exodus 19:5-6).
The function
of a priest is to act as a mediator between a deity and mortals. If a deity has an entire nation of priests,
then they should be seen in relation to the rest of the world. Just as the Levites were a subset of the Hebrews,
serving as priests for the rest of Israel; so was Israel to be a subset of
mankind, serving as priests for the rest of the world. This is the biblical framework behind the
concept of a “Mediatorial Kingdom”.
Furthermore,
as God states clearly in Ezekiel 36:21, everything that He did concerning
judgment of Israel was done out of concern for His holy name which Israel had
profaned. Because they had failed in
their duties as a Mediatorial Kingdom of God, they were punished and removed
out of their place. But this setback in
no way altered God’s purpose of revealing Himself to mankind through the agency
of a mediator.
Also, God
had already made an unconditional covenant with both Abraham and David,
guaranteeing them certain things in the future.
We have examined this already.
But I will briefly reiterate. To
Abraham God promised the establishment of his seed and through that a blessing
that would come to all the world. To
David God promised the eternal security of his family line upon the throne of
Israel. If God violates either of these
everlasting covenants, then He has broken His vow and been demonstrated to be
untrustworthy. This cannot be.
Finally, God’s
purpose of displaying His glory remains intact.
His intention to establish kingdoms and nations that will accomplish
that purpose is undeterred. Everything
that we understand about the entire scope of human history must be seen in
light of this over-riding grand stratagem of God.
Eschatological
Timeline
With the
background of the covenants and the Kingdom of God in mind, here is how I
believe the flow of God’s timeline runs, from ancient history to future
eschatological prophecy.
- God establishes the historic Mediatorial Kingdom. He advises them of their role (Ex.19:5-6), provides promises of reward for obedience (Deut.11:13-15), and warns of judgment for disobedience (Deut.11:16-17, 28:37). The Jews do not listen, and as the centuries of rebellion march onward, God begins to provide prophetic revelation of things to come. These include punishment and exile (Zec.14:2), a future national revival and salvation (Ez.11:16-20, 36:22-32), the continuance of the line of David as a reward for David’s obedience (2Sa.7:12-13), and a future Messiah that would come and provide restoration (Da.9:25), leadership, and ultimately victory for Israel as a nation (Zec.14:3-21).
- God scatters the northern 10 tribes and temporarily cuts them out of the inheritance, limiting the fulfillment of His covenants (the Abrahamic (Ge.12:1-3, 15:1-21; 22:15-18) and Davidic (1Ch.17:4-27), both unconditional and inviolable in nature) to the line of David exclusively. Eventually all the tribes of Israel will be re-united under Christ (Ez.37:19-24), however, the line of David will always carry the kingship.
- God exiles Judah for continued idolatry, but promises eventual restoration and exaltation in the form of a prophetic re-imagining of the Mediatorial Kingdom. (Jer.1:15-16)
- God sends Christ to offer the establishment of that prophesied Mediatorial Kingdom to the Jews, in exchange for repentance. When Jesus taught the disciples to pray in Matthew chapter 6, the first part of His model prayer is “Your kingdom come. Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” This is a direct reference to God’s future physical kingdom and further illustrates that it was not yet in existence on earth. The Jews reject this offer, kill their Messiah, and the Atonement for the sins of mankind is accomplished through the cross.
- Christ ascends from the grave, takes the throne of the Universal Kingdom at the right hand of God, and is currently ruling and reigning over all of creation. Note however, that his reign is not presently physically incarnate upon the earth (Heb1:3). His rule is absolute but His presence in a physical form on a physical throne is not yet accomplished.
- At an unspecified future date, Christ will come on the clouds of heaven with great power and will call His bride (both dead and living saints, or Christians) to His side (Mt.24:29-31; 1Th.4:13-18), in the process glorifying her and clothing her with pure and spotless white. This is the first resurrection and the marriage supper of the Lamb in Heaven (Rev.19:7-8).
- At the same time God will begin the process of re-constituting the Mediatorial Kingdom of Israel. The first step will be the sealing of 144,000 Jews, 12,000 from each of the twelve tribes, with a mark of protection (Rev.7:4-8). These Jews will be given new spiritual birth, will be primed and ready to receive their Messiah properly for the first time (Rev.14:1-5), and will witness to the world, which in the coming years will result in both salvation and martyrdom for many people (Rev.7:14).
- Concurrent with this sealing, God will permit the ascension of the Beast of Revelation (Da.7:8, 7:23-26; Rev.13:1-6), aka the Antichrist, who will make a covenant with “the many” for one week (7 years) (Da.9:27). This will be the beginning of the Great Tribulation (Mt.24:4-31; Rev.6-19), which is cut short by God for the sake of the elect (Mt.24:22), in order that mankind is not permitted to tear himself to pieces. In the middle of this week (at the 3.5-year mark) the Antichrist will set himself up as god, cause an unspecified abomination in a third temple (presumably in Jerusalem and also presumably constructed either prior to or just after his covenant with “the many”, and will begin the systematic extermination of the Jewish race, resulting in the murder of 2/3 of the Jews (approximately 10 million people judging by current population standards) (Zec.13:8).
- The Jews will realize they have been duped and they will flee from the presence of the Beast and the Dragon, into the wilderness, to be sheltered by God (Mt.24:15-21; Rev.12:6, 12:13-17) until the end of the tribulation.
- Christ will return physically to earth to confront and destroy the Antichrist (Da.7:21-22; Mt.25:31-46; Rev.16:13-16; 19:11-16). The Beast and the False Prophet will be cast into the Lake of Fire, the first to take up residence there (Da.7:11; Rev.19:20). Satan will be bound and unable to influence human events (Rev.20:2-3), for 1,000 years (note that this is one of the evidences for a future millennium, because only with extreme difficulty can anyone argue that Satan’s power is being held in check to any significant degree now or at any time in the past 2,000 years). While Satan is bound, Christ will assume the physical throne of David in Jerusalem and usher in the future prophetic Mediatorial Kingdom (1Co.15:23-26; Rev.20:4,6).
- At the end of 1,000 years Satan will be released and permitted to raise an army from the four corners of the earth to attack Christ’s Kingdom (Rev.20:7-8). He will be utterly defeated and once and for all thrown into the Lake of Fire alongside the Beast and the False Prophet (Rev.20:9-10).
- God will gather the unbelieving dead, they will stand before Him at the Great White Throne of judgment, they will be condemned for their unbelief, and cast into the Lake of Fire for all time (this is the second death) (Rev.20:11-15).
- God will melt the existing elements with fire (2Pe.3:10), re-make everything anew (Rev.21:1), bring down the New Jerusalem to rest on the new earth (Rev.21:2), and Christ will take His place on the throne of God, ruling and reigning with His bride alongside Him, for all of eternity (Rev.21:3-4).
The Rapture
The Rapture
is an event prophesied in Scripture wherein the church will be supernaturally
gathered to Christ and will join Him in heaven.
Jesus spoke of this even before His crucifixion (Jn.14:2-3). At the appointed time, Christ will appear in
the sky with great fanfare, including the trumpet of God and the voice of the
archangel. Then those Christians and Old
Testament saints who have previously died will be resurrected and precede those
still living into the joyous reunion in heaven (1Th.4:13-17). Daniel’s description of the same event fits
perfectly (Da.12:2-3).
After being
gathered to Christ, the church will enjoy a period of time in heaven, including
a great feast with their savior (Rev.19:7-10).
Here they will prepare to come back to earth with Him to rule and reign
over the nations (1Co.6:2-3; Rev.2:26).
It seems
best to understand the timing of the Rapture as just prior to the
tribulation. In His letter to the church
in Philadelphia, Christ promised that He would keep them from the persecution
that was coming to the whole world (Rev.3:10).
Placed as it is in the context of the book of Revelation, it is likely
that what is being referenced is that which is about to be revealed in the rest
of the book. In other words, Christ is
probably not talking about a general sense of persecution, such as that which
was suffered by Christians under the Roman Empire.
The Tribulation
The Bible
teaches that, due to the corruption of sin (Ge.3:17) and the penal judgment of
God upon all of creation (Ro.8:20), everything is proceeding from order to
chaos in the world. Because of this
principle, and because of the inherent sickness and evil of mankind, the world
will grow increasingly harsher, more wicked, and further under the dominion of
Satan. God has chosen to allow his enemy
to be the “god of this age” (2Cor.4:4) and the “prince of the power of the air”
(Eph.2:2). He is, at this time, being
allowed to deceive and destroy the nations of the world. Satan is active, ravenous, and must be
guarded against now (1Pe.5:8). He is not
yet under the restraint that he will be subjected to in the future.
The effect
of Satan’s power on earth, when combined with the inherent wickedness of man
(Jer.17:9), will be visible in the increasing debauchery of the human race (Da.12:10;
2Ti.3:1-13). Indeed, we can observe this
principle at work from an extra biblical perspective, even now. The 20th century was the bloodiest
period of human history, bar none. The advent
of weapons of greater destructive power than anything previously imaginable,
combined with the aforementioned black heart of man, has resulted in more loss
of life than all the combined centuries of human history before it.
Even the
church will fall prey to the assaults of Satan.
The Scriptures tell us that in the last days people, within the church,
will no longer be interested in sound teaching and the truth of God. Instead, they will follow people who tell
them what they want to hear, who do not confront them over their sin, and who gratify
the ungodly desires of the flesh (2Ti.4:3-4).
Right in
line with these principles come the biblical prophecies of the end times. Daniel describes a time of distress beyond
anything seen before (Da.12:1). Jesus
talks about a great tribulation that is so severe that unless God cuts it
short, no human life will be saved (Mat.24:21-22). Why is this time so deadly? Because God Himself will finally take action
against His depraved creation. He will
unleash judgments out of heaven unlike anything the world has ever known.
There will
be an escalating series of disasters poured out on the earth. Men will be judged through their own natures
as war (Rev.6:1-2) and slaughter (Rev.6:3-4) will become the order of the day. This will cause massive famine across the
world (Rev.6:5-6). All of this death and
malnutrition will result in widespread pandemics which will devastate the
earth’s population. Social order will
break down, leading to anarchy and murder.
Men will even become susceptible to wild beasts that will ravage
them. Places of safety will become a
bittersweet memory for the inhabitants of the earth (Rev.6:7-8).
The power of
prayer will also be brought to bear upon mankind. The souls of Christian martyrs, killed during
this time, who are residing in heaven and waiting for their resurrection, will
be given leave to plead with God to judge the world with righteous anger
(Rev.6:9-11).
To this
point, the divine judgments going on have been in the form of natural phenomena. Those who refuse to believe in God will be
able to place blinders on their eyes and chalk up what is going on in the world
to the evils of man. But then God will
begin to take off the gloves, so to speak.
An earthquake of insurmountable power will occur. It will be like nothing ever before
experienced in the history of the world.
It will cause damage to the sun, moon, and stars. People will flee and attempt to hide from the
wrath of God. And they will finally
acknowledge that it is Him who is pouring out this destruction upon their heads
(Rev.6:12-17).
As if the
previous disasters were not bad enough, now God will begin to punish sin in
earnest. Trumpets will sound, one after
another, unleashing wave after wave of terror, consternation, and death. First will be a storm of hail, fire, and
blood which will burn up a third of the flora on the planet (Rev.8:7). Then a huge mountain, perhaps a meteor, will
smash into the oceans, killing a third of the sea creatures and destroying a
third of the ships (Rev.8:8-9). Next a
star will fall to earth, poisoning a third of the fresh water sources
(Rev.8:10-11). Following this, a third
of the light of the sun, moon, and stars will be extinguished (Rev.8:12).
Now, with
the final three trumpet blasts, things really begin to become frightening from
a supernatural perspective. An army of
demonic creatures will be unleashed on the earth. Their appearance will be the stuff of nightmares,
bodies of horse sized locusts, the tails of scorpions, the faces of men, the
teeth of lions, and breastplates of iron.
They will torture mankind for five months (Rev.9:1-10).
After being
persecuted by demonic monsters, men will face yet another foe from God’s
arsenal of wrath. An army of demon
cavalry, two hundred million strong, will be released. This force will sweep across the earth,
sending fire, smoke, and brimstone out of their mouths. And they will kill a third of what is left of
mankind at this point (Rev.8:13-19).
Finally,
just prior to the unleashing of the army of heaven and the triumph of Christ
over the Antichrist, six bowls of the wrath of God will be poured out on the
earth. The first bowl will cause
malignant sores on people (Rev.16:2).
The second will cause all remaining salt water to turn to blood, killing
everything that is left in the oceans (Rev.16:3). The third bowl will turn all remaining fresh
water to blood as well (Rev.16:4). The
fourth bowl will cause the sun to flare and scorch men with extreme heat
(Rev.16:8-9). The fifth bowl will darken
the kingdom of the Antichrist (Rev.16:10-11).
This may indicate, in accordance with Jesus’s Olivet Discourse, that the
whole earth will be darkened (Mat.24:29).
Certainly, the Antichrist will have supreme human power on earth at this
point (Rev.13:7). So, it could be said
that his kingdom is the whole earth. At
any rate, following this darkening the sixth bowl will be poured. It will dry up the Euphrates river, to
prepare a path for the armies who will take part in the battle of Armageddon
(Rev.16:12).
This is the
shape of the wrath of God being satisfied and His justice being performed. At long last the Lord will recompense man for
their unrelenting evil. Yet in spite of
all that has been done to them, the world as a whole will still refuse to
repent of their wickedness.
The Antichrist
(the Beast)
Scripture
foretells of a man who will appear on the world scene during this tribulation and
assume great power and authority. He is
called the “man of lawlessness” and his arrival will be one of the great signs
of the imminent return of Christ (2Th.2:1-3).
Also, he will be closely linked with Israel, in that he will set himself
up as god and sit in authority in the temple of God (2Th.2:4). Much of the revelation of this Antichrist
comes from the book of Daniel, where the prophet is often given visions of a
dual prophetic nature. In other words,
they are prophecies that pertain to two different people at the same time. This is not uncommon in Old Testament
prophetic literature. In the case of
Daniel, his visions point to both a historical past element (future to Daniel
at the time) in Antiochus IV Epiphanes, and a prophetic future element in the
Beast of Revelation.
Antiochus
was one of the kings of the Seleucid Empire.
After Cyrus of Persia conquered Babylon in 539 B.C. he turned it into a
province of his empire. About two
hundred years later Alexander the Great of Greece overran all the Persian
territory in his quest for world domination.
After carrying his conquests as far east as India he had to stop due to
the fatigue of his army. Three years
later Alexander died at the age of 32.
Having no legitimate heir, his empire was divided amongst his four most
powerful generals. One of these was
Seleucus I Nicator, who founded the Seleucid Empire from which Antiochus would
emerge 150 years later.
All this
history is recorded for us in the form of prophetic visions given to Daniel,
particularly in 2:31-39, 7:3-6, 8:1-8, 8:20-22, and 11:2-4. The significance of these events is that they
paved the way for Antiochus Epiphanes to rise out of the ashes of Alexander’s
empire. He would then go on to serve as
a foreshadowing of the future Antichrist.
There is an extraordinarily detailed series of prophetic revelations
given to Daniel in chapter 11. I will
not do it here, but if one takes the time to cross reference what Daniel is
told with historical facts of this period there can be zero doubt that it is
Antiochus IV who is described as the one committing the abomination of
desolation. Every single prophetic
details matches the historical record.
Antiochus’s
proper title was simply Antiochus IV.
However, he added the title Epiphanes, meaning “illustrious one” or “god
manifest”, to his name. He rose to power
through deceit and treachery, brutally slaughtered anyone who got in his way,
and held a particular disdain for the Jews.
All of this matches the character and nature of the Beast of Revelation.
His Origin
It seems
most likely that the Antichrist will have some sort of affiliation with the
remnants of the Roman Empire. Repeatedly
in Daniel we find future prophecies of a succession of kingdoms of man. In sequence, they are Babylon, Medo-Persia,
Greece, and Rome (Da.2:36-40). Rome is
consistently described as being affiliated with iron that breaks into pieces
and destroys all others (Da.7:7, 7:23).
Yet despite its great power Rome will prove to be just as ephemeral as
all the other kingdoms, and it will fall in the due course of time.
Out of the
remains of the Roman Empire will arise 10 kings after it (Da.7:7, 7:24). And from this conglomeration will come
another king. He will destroy three
kings and will be exalted on the earth (Da.7:8, 24). This is the prophetic Antichrist, or Beast.
From these
clues, we can state with accuracy that at an uncertain point in the future some
form of world power will rise out of the ancient remnants of Rome’s power. Some have speculated that this could be the
modern European Union. Whether that is true
or not, whatever form the “10 kings” or the “10 horns” take, the Antichrist
himself will come from this kingdom, which itself has roots in the ancient
power of Imperial Rome.
His Rise
He will rise
through deceit and false covenants (Da.8:23-25, 9:27). He will begin very small yet quickly rise to
extreme heights of power (Da.11:21-23).
The power behind his ascension will be Satan. Although Satan is the “god of this age” and
in one sense is behind all the evil perpetrated by world rulers, this will be
different. This ruler will have power
and signs and false wonders directly from Satan (2Th.2:9; Rev.13:2). At no point, will this be more evident than
when he suffers a fatal wound from which he supernaturally recovers
(Rev.13:3). He will be every inch the
ultimate human surrogate of Satan’s power and intent. To this end, the Antichrist will fulfill
Satan’s original rebellious purpose (Is.14:12-15) by eventually proclaiming
himself to be god (2Th.2:4).
The rise of
the Antichrist will either be immediately preceded by or concurrent with the
unleashing of God’s judgment upon mankind in the form of the tribulation we
have examined previously. Revelation
records the extent to which His burning anger over sin will be poured out. To recap, it will take the form of wave after
wave of judgments, seen as first seals (Rev.6, 8:1), then trumpets
(Rev.8:6-9:21, 11:15-19), and finally bowls (Rev.16:1-12, 16:17-21) throughout
the middle portion of Revelation. These
judgments will be utterly devastating, resulting in unimaginable loss of life. Due to the proximity of these events with the
Antichrist’s rise, it seems likely that he will offer salvation from the wrath
of God that is being unleashed.
Revelation records that men will not repent even after being subjected
to such intense and unrelenting punishment.
So, it would fit perfectly that they would leap at the chance to turn to
someone other than the Lord (Rev.13:4).
His Rule
The reign of
the Antichrist will last for a mere seven years. It will be concurrent with the time of the
Great Tribulation. During this period of
time, the Antichrist will do whatever he pleases. He will exalt and magnify himself above not
just the true and living God, but above all gods on earth. He will seek to set himself up as the only
god and the only being worthy of worship (Da.11:36-37; Rev.13:4).
During this
time, another evil leader will rise to support the Antichrist (Rev.13:11-12). This man is known to Scripture as the False
Prophet. He will have the authority and
power of Satan, like the Antichrist. He
will call down fire and cause the image of the Antichrist to speak and to kill
those who defy him (Rev.13:13-15). The
False Prophet will be the one who plans and executes the issuing of the mark of
the beast, a symbol that will identify people as being in submission to the
authority of the Antichrist (Rev.13:16-18).
The power of
the Antichrist will grow until he has acquired authority over all the nations
of the world (Rev.13:7). During the
height of his power, the Scripture says that all people on earth will worship
him, aside from the elect (Rev.13:8).
Eventually, the Antichrist will align himself with Israel. He will offer them salvation from their
enemies and make a covenant with them for the seven years of the tribulation
(Da.9:27a). This will bring him into
conflict with those nations who are opposed to the Jewish state. War will follow that results in the
Antichrist gaining even more power through plundered wealth (Da.11:40-44).
At the
halfway point of the tribulation, the Antichrist will finally reveal his true
colors to the Jews. He will abolish the
worship of God, desecrate the Temple (Da.9:27b), and begin to systematically
slaughter the Jews (Ma.24:15-22; Rev.12:17).
Two thirds of the population of Israel will die (Zec.13:8), approximately
10 million people by today’s population standards. However, those God has sealed and set apart
for life will flee and survive until the appointed time of Christ’s return
(Da.12:1; Rev.12:6,13-16).
His Fall
As suddenly
as he has risen to power the Antichrist will fall from grace. During the midst of his war with the nations
and his destruction of the Jews, he will meet his end, probably on the plain of
Megiddo (Da.11:45). What will cause his
downfall? The physical return of Christ
Himself. The Lord will conquer the
Antichrist and both he and the False Prophet will be cast into the Lake of Fire
(Rev.19:20).
The
Abomination of Desolation
This
prophetic event is an important marker that is used in Scripture to signify the
sequence of events surrounding the last days spoken of primarily by Daniel,
Jesus, and John. Therefore, it is vital
to understand as much as we can of this mysterious prophecy so as to properly
interpret the other related eschatological events of note. But in order to understand the abomination of
desolation we must understand Daniel’s 70 weeks.
The first
reference to the abomination of desolation is given in Daniel 9:27. It is part
of a larger passage which extends from verse 24 to 27 and wherein Daniel is
given a prophecy of “70 weeks”. It is
important to understand that when Bible prophecy refers to a week it is not
talking about seven days but rather seven years. We might say “a week of years” in an effort
to understand the concept better. This means
that the duration of Daniel’s vision is 490 years in total (70 weeks times 7
years per week).
It is also
critical to notice the criteria that must be fulfilled in order for the 70
weeks to be accomplished. Daniel 9:24
gives us the list, as follows:
- finish transgression
- make an end of sin
- make atonement for iniquity
- bring in everlasting righteousness
- seal up vision and prophecy
- to anoint the most holy place.
This list is
given to Daniel, a Jew, in the context of his concern for his people, the
Jews. Therefore, the fulfillment of them
must be specifically related to the nation of Israel. And all of these events must be accomplished
by the end of the 70th week.
The reason this is important is that no credible argument can possibly
be made that all of these requirements have been fulfilled historically. Points 2 and 4 in particular, cannot possibly
have been fulfilled yet. Therefore, it
follows that because the requirements have not yet been satisfied the 70 weeks
have not yet been completed.
Now then,
what is the substance and the historical markers of these 70 weeks? The first marker is provided in verse
25. A decree was to be issued to restore
and rebuild Jerusalem. This decree would
result in the city being rebuilt with plaza and moat. From the issuance of that decree until
Messiah the Prince a total of 69 weeks will pass, or 483 years. So then, if we can figure out which decree is
being referenced and what date it was issued on, then we can begin to mark a
timeline sequence for the fulfillment of this prophecy.
The Old
Testament records four separate decrees that were issued by three different
pagan kings, for the Jews to return to Israel and rebuild the Temple and the
city of Jerusalem, as follows:
- Cyrus – 538 B.C. (Ez.1:1-4)
- Darius – 519 B.C. (Ez.4:24, 6:1-12)
- Artaxerxes – 458 B.C. (Ez.7:11-26)
- Artaxerxes – 445 B.C. (Neh.2:1-8)
Using the
ancient custom of a 360-day calendar year, and considering the requirement of
plaza and moat (indicating walls as well since you cannot conduct commerce
without safety and a moat is pointless without a wall behind it), only one of
the recorded decrees works; the last one by Artaxerxes in 445 B.C. Charting a course from that year, 483 years
into the future, we arrive at 32 A.D. It
was in the Spring of that year that Christ presented Himself as the Messiah
(Zec. 9:9; Mt. 21:1-11; Lk.19:37-38).
Continuing
the prophecy, we find in Daniel 9:26 that after the 483 years the Messiah will
be cut off and have nothing. This fits
perfectly with Jesus’s violent death by crucifixion at the hands of the Romans
and Jews. Also, the text tells us that
the “people of the prince who is to come will destroy the city and the
sanctuary.” What does this refer to?
History
records that in 70 A.D. the Roman General Titus laid waste to Jerusalem and
slaughtered a vast number of Jews in an effort to put down a Jewish
rebellion. As described in the section
on the Antichrist, he will arise out of the remains of Rome itself. Therefore, this description by Daniel of the
people of the prince who is to come matches perfectly with Titus and his
legions coming in and laying waste to the Jewish state. The Antichrist is the “prince who is to come”
and Titus with his legions are “the people of the prince”. As a side note, we have no evidence that
water was used by the Romans to destroy Jerusalem. However, the flood mentioned by Daniel in 9:26
is easily explained as symbolizing the overwhelming advance of a superior
military force. This is not an obscure
figure of speech. The same imagery and
word usage can be seen in Daniel 11:22, 26, and 40.
I need to
clarify that this Roman conquest is not itself the abomination of
desolation. The historical facts do not
fit. I think there are three reasons for
this.
We have
already seen how comparing the prophecies of Daniel chapter 7 and 11 with world
history precisely identifies Antiochus IV as the man who modeled the
abomination of desolation for the future Antichrist. We know from history that his actions were an
intentional and deliberate desecration of the Jewish temple expressly for the
purpose of destroying the worship of God.
It is true that the Romans destroyed Herod’s Temple in Jerusalem. But they did it in the context of suppressing
a rebellion and restoring their version of peace to the region. Their intent was not specifically to
desecrate the worship of Yahweh. In
fact, some historians argue that Titus did not want the Temple destroyed at
all. They would claim that the fire
which did the job was an almost accidental byproduct of war that raged out of
control. There is some doubt about the
historical veracity of these claims on Titus’s behalf. Regardless, the point stands that the Romans
were interested in the restoration of order rather than the annihilation of a
people and the desecration of God.
Furthermore,
in order for the Roman conquest of Jerusalem to be the abomination of
desolation, there must be a “man of lawlessness” who will set himself up as a
god in the Jewish Temple. It is
incontrovertible historical fact that Titus never did this. Years later he would ascend to the throne of
Imperial Rome, following the death of his father. But he never deified himself. Only after his death, at the instigation of
his younger brother and successor, Domitian, was Titus deified by the Roman
Senate. We do not know for sure why
Domitian did this. It was probably to
increase the cult of personality and emperor worship around the Flavian Dynasty
so as to cement his own rule. But the
point is that Titus himself had no part in this. And the biblical prophecy requires the one
responsible for the abomination of desolation to set himself up as god.
Additionally,
going back to Matthew chapter 24, Jesus describes what will follow on the heels
of the abomination of desolation; this can be cross referenced with Daniel
chapter 12. The Lord said there would be
a great tribulation, such as has not occurred since the beginning of the world
until now, nor ever will. Furthermore,
He said that unless those days had been cut short, no life would have been
saved. It is frankly impossible that a legitimate
conclusion can be drawn that Titus’s conquest fulfills these requirements.
Regardless
of how much life was lost and how much was destroyed, the Roman victory does
not match the criteria. What the Romans
did does not hold a candle to the brutality of the Babylonian conquest of 586
B.C. in terms of total devastation, slaughter, and enslavement of the
Jews. The Babylonians literally razed the
entire city of Jerusalem to the ground, mostly out of pure vindictiveness and
spite (2Ki.25:8-10). They carried
essentially the entire Jewish population that was left alive into captivity,
save for the elderly and the infirm (2Ki.24:14, 25:11-12). Although the historian Josephus records that
1.1 million people were slaughtered by the Romans, his figures are not
credible, as there were only around 1 million people in the whole of Israel at the time, only about half of which were Jews.
Now then,
what is the significance of all this in relation to eschatology and the
abomination of desolation? The
importance is that last week, the 70th week of seven years. That week alone of all the other 69, has not
yet occurred, and it is described for us in Daniel 9:27. He, meaning the Antichrist, will make a
covenant with many nations for seven years (one “week”). But after three and a half years (the middle
of the “week”), he will put a stop to temple sacrifice (the inference of the
vision given to Daniel is obviously Jewish in nature, indicating that the
Antichrist will have a relationship with the Jewish nation, ear-marking this
stopping of sacrifices as relating to the Jewish sacrificial system, and
necessitating the construction of a third temple in Jerusalem), and “on the
wing of abominations will come one who makes desolate”.
Here we find
perhaps the most conclusive evidence to prove that Daniel’s 70th
week has not yet occurred. There can be
absolutely no doubt of this once we cross reference what Daniel wrote with what
Jesus said in Matthew 24:15. The Lord is speaking to His disciples about things
that were to come in their future. In
that context, he references this exact event that Daniel prophesied about 500
years previously. Jesus instructs His
disciples that when the abomination of desolation is seen in the holy place, in
the future, that anyone living in Judea must flee because the end has come. He is referencing an event that is future to
them by calling to mind a prophecy from the past. And because, as we have previously
considered, the Roman destruction of Jerusalem did not fulfill all the criteria
of this abomination of desolation, and because no other event in history has
fulfilled the prophecy either, we know that this event is still future to us.
So, we have
finally arrived at the abomination of desolation. But what exactly is it? The short answer is that we don’t know for
sure. However, we have been given a very
good historical, albeit extra-biblical, hint.
Earlier I described one Antiochus IV Epiphanes, a king of the Seleucid
Empire who ruled about 150 years before the birth of Christ. As I mentioned in the section on the Antichrist,
he stands historically as a fore-shadowing of the Beast of Revelation.
In 168 B.C.
Antiochus attempted to invade Egypt to continue a long standing war of
aggression between the Seleucid (Syrian) and Ptolemaic (Egyptian) Empires, both
of which were remnants of Alexander’s original territories. However, along the way he was met by a
representative from Rome who ordered him to turn back and go home or face the
wrath of the Roman Republic.
Antiochus
decided that discretion was the better part of valor. He went back to the north with his proverbial
tail between his legs. Undoubtedly this
put him in a bad temper, and he was already a cruel tyrant at the best of
times. So when he came through Israel on
his return trip and found the Jews celebrating a rumor they had heard that he
was dead, Antiochus became enraged. He
attacked Jerusalem, killed 40,000 Jews, sold another 40,000 into slavery, and
raided the temple. He also outlawed Jewish
religious rites, ordering them to worship Zeus rather than Yahweh. While in the temple he stole its treasures,
erected an altar to Zeus, and sacrificed pigs on it. There can be no doubt that this historical
event displayed the nature of the abomination of desolation, because Daniel
specifically identifies it as such (Da.11:31).
All of this
was utter blasphemy to the Jews. In
particular, the sacrificing of swine, a traditionally unclean animal according
to the Mosaic Law, was a particularly galling abomination to the Jewish culture
as well as God’s commandments. It is
this act that seems to paint the picture for us of what the future abomination
of desolation will consist of. The
Antichrist will enter the temple, sit enthroned inside it, and declare himself
to be god (2Th.2:4). He will outlaw the
temple worship proscribed by God (Da.8:11) and will utter blasphemous
declarations about God Himself (Rev.13:6).
Finally, he will in some way desecrate the altar itself. This will be the abomination that makes
desolate. It will usher in the final
half of the Great Tribulation and the most horrific massacre of Jewish people
the world has ever seen or will ever see (Zec.13:8).
The Return
of Christ
After His
resurrection from the grave, Jesus ascended to the right hand of the
Father. He is at this time ruling and
reigning on the throne of the Universal Kingdom in heaven. This is the import of His words to the thief
on the cross. The man asked to be
remembered when the Lord came into His kingdom.
Jesus’s reply was that that very day, the sinner would be with Him in
paradise (Lk.23:42-43).
Now, this
does not mean that Jesus would be in His kingdom that same day. Paradise in the Jewish mindset was not
heaven, but rather the righteous side of Sheol, or the realms of the dead. We can see this mindset in the parable of the
rich man and Lazarus where Jesus describes Abraham’s Bosom (Lk.16:19-31). What Christ’s response to the thief does tell
us is that the thief was not wrong in his assumption that after death Jesus
would be in His kingdom.
Prior to this
Jesus had said much the same to Pilate.
When asked if He was the King of the Jews, Jesus responded that His
kingdom was not of this world, pointing to His imminent accession to the throne
of heaven (Jn.18:36). And again, we see
in Hebrews that Christ is currently seated on the throne of God (Heb.12:2).
So, there is
a very real sense in which Christ is already established in His kingdom. However, extensive prophecies throughout
Scripture foretell of a time when He will return to the earth. His first advent, or coming, was in humility
and submission (Is.53:2-12; Lk.9:58).
But His second advent will be in majesty and glory (Hab.3:3-15;
Zec.14:3-4).
Jesus
Himself told us when He would return. At
the end of the tribulation, at long last, He will appear on the scene in the
full glory and majesty of His power. He
will be unmasked and His true magnificence will shine forth like the sun. There will be no mistaking His coming. The whole earth will see His sign and His
appearance (Mat.24:30; Ac.1:11). And
there will be no doubt of His victory over the Antichrist, as discussed
previously.
When Christ
returns physically to earth, Satan will be taken captive, bound, and imprisoned
for 1,000 years (Rev.20:1-3). This will
be to prevent him from deceiving the nations during that time so that Israel
may be exalted as the head of all nations with their messiah ruling and
reigning over them at long last.
The Millennium
Previously
we have looked at the time sequence of the tribulation, the Antichrist’s
covenant with Israel, and the abomination of desolation. We know that seven years of tribulation are
called for and that the Antichrist will reveal his true colors as the man of
lawlessness after 3.5 years. Furthermore,
we know that the Jews who are sealed by God will escape the clutches of Satan,
flee, and be protected for 1,260 days or 42 months. This corresponds exactly to the 3.5 years, or
“half a week”, spoken of elsewhere.
But in
Daniel chapter 12 we find an interesting anomaly. The prophet describes two periods of time
that do not correspond to this repeated 3.5-year figure. First, he says that from the abolishment of
the regular temple sacrifice and the abomination of desolation until the end
there will be 1,290 days (Da.12:11).
Then we find that those who persevere to the end of the 1,335 days will
be blessed (Da.12:12). This is in the
very same chapter where Daniel describes the same period of time as exactly
three and a half years, or time, times, and half a time (Da.12:7).
How are we
to understand these apparent contradictions?
I believe they are not contradictions at all. Rather, these extra 75 days are given for the
establishment of Christ’s kingdom on earth.
This is the Mediatorial, or Millennial Kingdom. Keeping in mind that this comes right on the
heels of the devastation of the tribulation, the earth at this point will be in
very sorry shape indeed. Human corpses
will be everywhere, social order will be non-existent, and the earth itself
will be scarred and ravaged by the wrath of God. The extra 75 days given by Daniel will be
necessary for the clean-up of the earth, the restoral of control, and the
ushering in of the Millennial Kingdom.
We know that this Kingdom will be one of peace, security, and safety
(Isa.11). So time will undoubtedly be
spent in cleaning up and healing the wounds that have been suffered in the
tribulation.
What is the
purpose of this physical Kingdom on earth?
Why would Christ come down from heaven to reign if He was already seated
on the throne of God, as described previously?
Put simply, the reason is that God keeps His promises. As outlined at the beginning of this
document, the Lord has made certain unconditional and unalterable covenants, or
promises, to ethnic Israel. In
particular, His covenant with Abraham guarantees that Abraham’s descendants
will be blessed and prosperous. God’s
covenant with David assured the king that he would never lack an heir to rule
over ethnic Israel.
To
accomplish the first of these twin purposes, God will save His people Israel
and establish them once again in their land.
But this time it will be in the context of a national revival and
repentance. We have seen how He will
deliver a remnant of the Jews out of the hands of the Antichrist (Da.12:1;
Rev.12:6,13-16). But more than mere
physical salvation, God will at this time actually regenerate the dead hearts
of His people, causing them to turn to Him and cling to Him as their God, truly
and completely and unreservedly, for the first time ever (Eze.11:16-20,
36:22-28; Heb.8:8-12). These prophecies
are exceedingly precise, specifying that the Jews will live in the same land
that God gave to their forefathers (Eze.36:24).
Christ
Himself is the fulfillment of the second part of God’s unbreakable
covenant. He is referred to and refers
to Himself as the root of Jesse (David’s father) and the descendant of David
(Is.11:1; Rev.22:16). In the opening
lines of Matthew’s gospel, he calls Jesus the “son of David” (Mat.1:1). This pictures Christ’s status as the heir of
David’s legacy and kingdom. Luke
pictures Jesus as being given the throne of His father David (Lk.1:32-33). Isaiah describes Jesus as a child of promise
who will inherit the throne and kingdom of David (Isa.9:6-7).
As stated
many times already, there is no other way to clearly understand these passages
than as applying to ethnic Israel unless one departs from a normal literal
grammatical interpretation of Scripture.
If the text says that Jesus gets David’s throne and his kingdom, then it
means just that. And as we have seen
many times, the throne and kingdom of David is not some sort of symbolic
promise that can be fulfilled in any way other than a specific restoration of
the exact tract of land deeded by God to Abraham and the exact descendants of
David that God promised to restore and prosper.
Continuing
on, just prior to His ascension, Jesus’s disciples asked Him when He was going
to “restore the kingdom to Israel”. The
text tells us that Jesus, in His resurrected and glorified state, had just
spent 40 days with them, speaking of the “things concerning the Kingdom of God”
(Ac.1:3). These men knew that the
restoration of the kingdom was a promise of God made to their ancestors. And they had confidence, based on the
explicit teaching of Christ, in its fulfillment. Rather than correcting what could have been
an invalid assumption about His future plans, He merely tells them that they do
not need to know when Israel will receive the kingdom back (Ac.1:6-7).
In light of
all this, and to maintain faithfulness with His chosen people, Israel, God has
devised a physical thousand-year reign of Christ on the earth, just prior to
entering into the eternal state with the new heavens and the new earth. This kingdom will be marked by a number of
characteristics that distinguish it from both the present state of affairs on
earth as well as the coming eternal state of perfection.
First,
Christ is described as ruling with a rod of iron in this kingdom (Ps.2:9;
Rev.2:27). The necessity of maintaining
order is indicated by the rod of iron in His hand. If this were the eternal state no rod would
be necessary, because sin and death would be no more. Furthermore, the possibility of resistance to
His rule, with corresponding punishment, is seen (Zec.14:17-19). This also does not track with a purified new
heaven and new earth in which there will be no more tears, no more punishment
(Rev.21:4).
Second,
Christ is seen reigning on Zion, God’s holy mountain. This is more than figurative language
designed to depict Christ in heaven.
Zion is God’s special name for Jerusalem, which is also called His holy
city (Ps.48:1-2). Both Ezekiel and Zechariah
presents a clear picture of the Lord Jesus establishing His kingdom in literal
and physical Jerusalem, after rescuing her from her enemies (Eze.39:25-29; Zec.13:9-14:21).
Third, the
New Jerusalem in the eternal state has no temple (Rev. 21:22). Yet Ezekiel speaks with exhausting detail of
a temple in chapters 42 through 48 that is situated in Jerusalem. This vision is future to him, as Solomon’s
Temple had already been destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar. Yet the image is not of Herod’s Temple, built
by Ezra and Nehemiah and renovated and expanded by Herod. It cannot be that temple, for one very simple
reason. In Ezekiel’s vision, he sees the
glory of God filling the temple, just as in the first temple (Eze.43:1-9). Not only does the glory of the Lord fill this
new house, but the sons of Israel will no longer defile their God.
This fact
alone completely disqualifies Herod’s Temple from being what is pictured
here. Built up by a wicked king for
reasons of both politics and power, worshiped in by a nation of Jews that was
just as far from the true worship of their God as they had ever been, and
traded in like a secular marketplace by an apostatizing people who were more
interested in padding their pockets with wealth (Mat.21:13; Luk.19:46) and
paying lip service to the Law of God (Is.29:13; Mat.15:8).
In addition,
the layout of this future Temple that Ezekiel saw is substantially different
from Herod’s Temple and/or Solomon’s Temple.
The following features are uniquely absent from Ezekiel’s Temple:
- The wall of separation between Jews and Gentiles
- The court of women
- The Laver
- The Table of Shewbread
- The Lampstand (Menorah)
- The Golden Altar of Incense
- The Veil
Aside from
those missing elements, the sacrificial altar itself will be different. In the original Temple design, which was
copied for the second Temple, the altar was reached via a ramp from the
South. But in this prophetic Temple it
will be accessed by stairs from the East.
With so many
unique characteristics, clearly identifying Ezekiel’s Temple as something we
have never seen before, how are we to understand it? I believe the answer is as follows. The Temple described to Ezekiel is a future
Temple, not yet built, that will be constructed at some future date by the
Jews, will be desecrated by the Antichrist in fulfillment of prophecy, and will
continue into the future Mediatorial Kingdom of Christ. This is the Millennial Temple and it must
exist at a time prior to the existence of the New Jerusalem on the new earth,
but with Christ present physically. In
fact, it is described quite clearly as the place where the Lord will “place the
soles of His feet” (Eze.43:7).
The fourth
reason that I believe in a literal Kingdom of Christ on earth is the national
restoration of Israel that is clearly and unmistakably prophesied throughout
the Old Testament. I have alluded to
this a number of times already. But I
think it is worth looking at it again here, from a different angle.
In Ezekiel
chapter 37 the prophet is once again given a vision of the future. In this vision, he sees a valley full of dry
bones. Suddenly, they come to life, are
clothed with flesh, the breath of life is breathed into their lungs, and they
come alive (Eze.37:1-10). The Lord
graciously explains this vision to Ezekiel.
He clarifies that the bones represent the whole house of Israel. In the future, they will be raised up and
brought back to their own land. But this
time God will put His Spirit within them, they will know Him for who He is, and
they will acknowledge His hand at work in their lives (Eze.37:11-14). Such a national restoration of Israel has
never before happened. Although they
have been returned to their land in some capacity at various historical points,
these occupations of the land have never been characterized by a national
restoration and repentance such as what Ezekiel is informed of.
Not only
that, but Ezekiel is shown that all the tribes of Israel will be brought back
together. This includes the northern
tribes that were taken into exile by Assyria as well as the southern tribes
that were sent to Babylon (Eze.37:15-23).
Adding to the picture of restored Israel that is emerging from the text,
we next find that God says literally that His servant David will be the one to
rule over the people. This king will
rule over a nation living on the exact same land that was deeded by God to
Jacob. Furthermore, the king will reign
over them forever, the covenant of peace between them and God will be
everlasting, and the sanctuary of the Lord will dwell in their midst forever
(Eze.37:24-27).
To cap off
the point, and draw us back to the original stated goal of God in establishing
the nation of Israel in the first place, namely to serve as His mediator
between Himself and mankind and to showcase His glory to the world, He says
that the whole world will know that He is the Lord (Eze.37:28). The point is that Israel’s function was
always and will always be to make God known to the nations. This future Kingdom of Christ will be the
ultimate expression of that purpose.
The fifth
evidence for a Millennial Kingdom of Christ is that the Scriptures clearly and
unmistakably say that He will rule and reign on the throne of His father David
(Isa.9:6-7). This is of course not the
exact same throne that David literally sat upon. It is a symbolic representation of the
continuance of the line of David, just as God promised him. But it is not wholly symbolic, because it
will be a literal throne to be literally sat upon by a literal person; namely
Jesus Christ in the flesh.
The
Scriptures clearly and unmistakably portray a difference between Christ’s
current position at the right hand of God and a future time when He will
fulfill God’s covenant with the nation of Israel on planet earth. Specifically, we are told that the saints who
persevere will be allowed to sit with Christ on His throne just as He sat with
His Father on His throne (Rev.3:21). There
is a distinction made in this passage between two different thrones. They are not one and the same. We are also advised that the kingdom of the
world will transition into the kingdom of “our Lord and His Christ” during the
events of Revelation (Rev. 11:15). This
is not the eternal universal kingdom, because that kingdom will be on a new
heaven and a new earth. It will not
reside on the same planet we currently occupy.
The sixth
and final evidence for a future Mediatorial, or Millennial, Kingdom is
this. The Scriptures clearly and
unmistakably identify a period of one thousand years in which the saints of God
will rule and reign with Christ (Rev.20:1-6).
If this thousand years were simply a part of the eternal state, there
would be no reason to specify a period of time other than ‘forever’. The Bible only needs to state a truth once
for it to be truth. There is no reason
to think that one thousand years does not mean one thousand years, any more
than 400 years in Egypt did not mean 400 years in Egypt (Ge.15:13). And aside from the specific time frame of one
thousand years, I have demonstrated a wealth of biblical evidence for a future
earthly reign of Christ. With all of that
in mind, when we come to Revelation chapter 20, there is absolutely no reason
to think that it is not talking about a literal thousand-year kingdom.
The
Millennial Kingdom of Christ on earth is the fulfillment of God’s promises to
both Abraham and David. This fulfillment
of God’s covenants with ethnic Israel confirms His faithfulness. It affirms strongly the trustworthiness of
His nature. It should not be seen as a
negative aberration from the majesty of Christ’s ascension to the right hand of
the Father. Rather, the fact that He
will rule and reign physically on a literal throne in a literal Jerusalem
alongside a literal temple populated by a literal population of biological Jews
is a testament to God’s commitment to His own word.
The Final
Judgment
At the end
of the thousand-year reign of Christ on earth, Satan will be loosed from his
prison. He will go throughout the world,
once again deceiving the ungodly nations who have been held in check by the
iron rod of Christ. They will gather
together into a mighty army which will come up against Jerusalem. But they will be defeated by fire from heaven
and Satan will be cast into the lake of fire to join the Beast and the False
Prophet (Eze.38-39; Rev.20:7-10).
Then all of
the unbelieving dead from throughout history will be resurrected to be judged
at the great white throne of God. They
will be condemned by their own deeds.
And they will be thrown into the lake of fire as well. Finally, even sin and death will be abolished
from creation, being also symbolically thrown into the lake of fire
(Rev.20:11-15).
The Eternal
State
After all
this, God will melt the existing elements, meaning the creation, with heat
(2Pet.3:10). He will create a new heaven
and a new earth. He will erect a new
version of Jerusalem to be the capital city of this freshly created world. This new order will have no death, no sin, no
rebellion, no misery, no heartache, and no pain (Rev.21:1-4).
All of those
whose names have been written in the Book of Life from the foundation of the
world (Rev.13:8, 17:8) will live in harmony with each other and with the Lord
for all of eternity. And so, the end of
the story will really be just the beginning.
Difficult
Passages
Any doctrine
of eschatology carries with it certain difficulties in interpretation. No theological position on the end times is
free from this. Certain verses will not
quite seem to fit at first glance, tending to throw the Bible student into some
consternation until an accurate explanation is found through careful study and
consideration of relevant competing or correlating passages.
With this
final section I will seek to offer my interpretation of a few portions of
Scripture that have caused me some personal difficulty in arriving at my
doctrine of eschatology. For each
passage or set of passages, I will first explain what the difficulty is. Then I will offer my interpretive solution.
Matthew 16:28, Mark 9:1, and Luke
9:27
These
parallel gospel accounts detail some instruction that Christ gave His disciples
regarding the end times. The challenge
comes from Jesus’s words. He said, in
Matthew’s account, “Truly I say to you, there are some of those who are
standing here who will not taste death until they see the Son of Man coming in
His kingdom.” This can only mean one of
two things. Either one or more of the
disciples listening to Christ would not die a physical death. Or the fulfillment of His words would occur
in their lifetime.
The former
possibility has no historical basis.
There is no credible evidence that any of the apostles were taken into
heaven as Enoch and Elijah were. We have
good historical data points on the death of every apostle except for John. Could God have taken John straight into
heaven from his exile on Patmos at the end of his life if He so chose, and
simply not recorded it in Scripture?
Certainly. But there is nothing
in the text itself to suggest such a possibility.
That leaves
us with the other possibility, that Christ’s words were fulfilled in the
lifetimes of the Apostles. However, this
presents difficulty for an eschatological interpretation that holds to a future
Mediatorial Kingdom of God on earth as I have described, because such a kingdom
was clearly not established in the lifetime of the disciples. That is, unless when Jesus made this
statement He was not referring to the future Mediatorial Kingdom, but rather
His personal ascension to the right hand of the Father and the throne of the
Universal Kingdom.
I believe
this is exactly what He meant. I think
Christ was talking about His ascension, which most (but not all, Judas Iscariot
had already hanged himself) of His disciples would observe. This event is recorded for us in Luke and
Acts. Luke’s version, found in 24:51,
states that “while He was blessing them, He parted from them and was carried up
into heaven.” The parallel account from
Acts 1:9-11 describes the Lord as having been received out of the men’s sight
on a cloud. Immediately afterward, two
angels appeared and clarified exactly where He had gone: this Jesus, who has
been taken up from you into heaven, will come in just the same way as you have
watched Him go into heaven.” Traveling
into heaven was a clear indicator of going to the Kingdom of God in the minds
of the Jews.
Even more
convincingly, back in Luke 23:42-43, we find a conversation between Christ and
one of the two thieves who were crucified alongside Him. The thief says “Jesus, remember me when You
come in Your kingdom!” The thief
believed that when Jesus departed this earth He would be in His kingdom. The Lord did not correct him. Instead, He responded “Truly I say to you,
today you shall be with Me in Paradise.”
Jesus does
not use the same word the thief did, and I think this was intentional. He uses paradise, which was a reference to
Sheol, or the realms of the dead. Those
who died were understood to enter into Sheol, the wicked into hell but the
righteous into “Abraham’s Bosom”. So the
thief could be with Jesus immediately, yet Jesus could be with His disciples
later, because there was a three-day delay between Christ’s death and His
resurrection. During those three days
Jesus must have stayed in Abraham’s Bosom, awaiting His resurrection. This is where He and the thief were together.
Jesus did
not correct the thief because what he asked for was not doctrinally
incorrect. Yet at the same time, in His
response Jesus demonstrated the precision with which He had foreknowledge of
exactly what the nature of His death, resurrection, and ascension would
be.
This
exchange between Christ and the thief further serves to confirm that when Jesus
was speaking to His disciples before His death, He certainly would have been
referring to this same understanding of the Kingdom of God. Again, as stated elsewhere, the future
prophetic Mediatorial Kingdom should not be seen as some sort of aberration
from God’s Kingdom. It is simply the
promised expression and reality, to the nation of Israel, of the Kingdom of God
on earth.
Heaven can
and should be seen as Christ’s kingdom, which I have already affirmed in this
document as entirely biblical. I have no
problem with the concept of Christ ruling and reigning right now at the right
hand of God in heaven on the throne of the Universal Kingdom. I just do not think there needs to be a
distinction made such that because Christ is reigning in heaven now, He cannot
also reign in the future on earth in a restored Israel in an earthly expression
of the heavenly reality of the Kingdom of God.
And the reason I believe this is because the Bible explicitly and
voluminously confirms the future existence of such an earthly kingdom. I am convinced that of this there can be no
doubt unless one is willing to twist the plain meaning of Scripture into
something it is not.
Acts 2:25-36
In this
passage the Apostle Peter is delivering his famous sermon on the Day of
Pentecost. He extensively quotes the Old
Testament throughout. Toward the end of
his message he references one of David’s Psalms, 16. In this messianic psalm David speaks of the
future Messiah. Peter quotes him and
then provides his own Holy Spirit inspired commentary on what David wrote. In verse 30, about David, Peter says “and so,
because he was a prophet and knew that God had sworn to him with an oath to
seat one of his descendants on his throne, he looked ahead and spoke of the
resurrection of the Christ, that He was neither abandoned to Hades, nor did His
flesh suffer decay. This Jesus God
raised up again, to which we are all witnesses.”
Now, the
issue is this. In this sermon is Peter
making the claim that David looked forward to the resurrection of the Christ
and categorized that as the fulfillment of God’s covenant to him? I say categorically, of course not. First, when one considers the vast body of
Old Testament writings that we have already looked at concerning the covenantal
promises of God to David and Israel, it is clear that Peter cannot possibly be
making the claim that because Christ is resurrected and now reigning in heaven,
that Israel is back in their land with the Son of David reigning over them.
Secondly,
consider the context of the passage.
Peter’s whole point here has nothing whatsoever to do with the
fulfillment of the Davidic covenant. He
is discussing the resurrection of Jesus.
That is precisely why he quotes a psalm where David prophecies that the
Christ would not suffer decay. The
implication for David was that, because God would not allow His Holy One to
suffer decay, He would certainly fulfill His inviolable promise to David
through this same Holy One. This is why,
in verse 31, Peter says that David, in looking ahead to Christ’s resurrection,
saw that “He was neither abandoned to Hades, nor did His flesh suffer decay”.
To pull this
passage out of the context of the point that Peter was making is a serious
error. And all one has to do is turn to chapter
3, containing Peter’s next sermon, to have Peter’s own personal eschatology
clearly revealed. He again describes how
God had sent Jesus as the Holy and Righteous One, but the Jews disowned Him and
had Him murdered by the Romans (Ac.3:13-15).
Peter proceeds in verses 19 to 21 to spell out the process whereby Christ
was received into heaven, but only until the period of restoration that
was spoken of by the prophets in ancient times (Ac.3:19-21). The Apostle literally says, in regard to
Christ, “whom heaven must receive until the period of restoration of all things
about which God spoke”.
What is this
period of restoration? Could it be the
eternal state? Only if you believe God
will break His covenant with Israel by not restoring them to their land and
exalting them. And Peter confirms just a
few verses later exactly what sort of restoration he is talking about; “It is
you who are the sons of the prophets and of the covenant which God made with
your fathers, saying to Abraham, “and in your seed all the families of the
earth shall be blessed” (Ac.3:25).
I think it
is unequivocal what Peter’s view of eschatology was. It was centered around the fulfillment of
every single one of God’s covenantal promises to the Jews, given by the mouth
of the prophets in the Old Testament. The
only way these promises can be achieved is if Israel is restored to their land
and their Messiah reigns from Zion, just as He was prophesied to do. To walk away with any other impression is to
render all of those Old Testament covenants either allegorical or symbolic or
both.
Psalm 110:4, Zechariah 6:12-13, and
Hebrews 8:4
These are
not parallel passages. Rather, they are
somewhat disconnected verses that paint a picture of Christ on His throne. First, Psalm 110:4 describes Him as a priest,
according to the order of Melchizedek.
Then Zechariah 6:12-13 specifies the parameters of this priesthood;
namely, that Christ will be a priest on His throne. In other words, He will be a priest and a
king simultaneously. Finally, Hebrews
8:4 offers the statement that if Christ were on earth He would not be a priest
at all.
The
difficulty with this is the nature of Christ’s priesthood. Jesus of Nazareth was of the tribe of Judah,
not of Levi. This means that, according
to the Mosaic Law, He could not be a priest.
That role was specifically reserved for Aaron’s descendants. This is the point of the Hebrews verse. If Christ were on earth, according to the
standards of the Mosaic Law, He could not be a priest.
The obvious
solution is in the nature of Christ’s priesthood. He is not a priest from the tribe of Levi,
descended from Aaron and Zadok, and functioning according to the Law of
Moses. Rather, if we consider the very
first verse I mentioned, Psalm 110:4, we see that Christ will be a priest
according to the order of Melchizedek.
Melchizedek predates the Levitical priesthood by over 500 years. This means that Christ will not be bound by
the restrictions and parameters of the Law.
Backing up to
the previous chapter of Hebrews, this is confirmed conclusively. Christ will be the high priest in the Millennial
Kingdom. He will be holy, innocent,
undefiled, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens. He will not need to offer up sacrifices daily
like the Levitical priesthood did, because He offered up the ultimate once for
all sacrifice when he offered Himself up on the cross (Heb.7:26-27). Furthermore, the Law of Moses appoints weak
and faulty men as high priests. But the
word of the oath of God appoints a divine Son who is perfect (Heb.7:28). This oath from God is the very same promise
made back in Psalm 110 and written down by David.
If there is
still doubt, all we need to do is go back to the original Hebrews verse and
read on a bit further. The author spells
out the fact that the original Mosaic Covenant was faulty, depending as it did
upon a sinful human priesthood (Heb.8:7).
Note that neither the Abrahamic or Davidic Covenants are in view
here. It is the Law of Moses that
instituted the Levitical priesthood.
That is what Hebrews has been discussing throughout its chapters up to
this point.
Then he goes
on to quote from Jeremiah 31, where the prophet describes the New Covenant in
detail (Heb.8:8-12). We have looked at
this previously, so I will not dwell on it again. But I think it must be said that the Bible
just pounds over and over the truth that God is not finished with Israel. His relationship never depended on them in
the first place. And it never will. Just as the salvation of the church is not
dependent upon works but rather faith granted freely by God; in the same way,
the restoration of Israel does not depend upon the conduct or circumstances of
the Jews.
And again, I
realize I am driving this point into the ground, but I think it must be so
driven because it is absolutely critical that we see this; the whole of an
accurate doctrine of eschatology depends on understanding the relationship
between God and Israel in the context of the unconditional, unilateral, and
inviolable covenants that He ratified with them.
Jeremiah 22:28-30
In this
prophetic book, we come across an initially troubling puzzle. Jeremiah is speaking of Jeconiah, the son of
Jehoiakim the king of Judah. Both of
these men were in the lineage of David.
And remember that David’s lineage was guaranteed by God to endure forever. The problem comes when we read what God says
about Jeconiah. A prophecy is given that
no man of his descendants will prosper or sit on the throne of David or rule
again in Judah (Jer.22:30).
It would
seem, at first glance, that this should disqualify Jesus from sitting on
David’s throne. Yet, God cannot break an
unconditional covenant that He essentially made with Himself, such as the
Davidic Covenant. So then, how can this
covenant be fulfilled by Christ on earth yet the curse against Jeconiah remain
in force at the same time?
Some have
suggested that the solution is to understand David’s throne covenant as being
fulfilled by Christ in heaven. In other
words, when He ascended to the right hand of the father the Lord Jesus sat down
on “the throne of David”. This means
that the Davidic Covenant will not be fulfilled literally but rather
symbolically. As we have looked at
extensively, if one starts down the road of interpreting Bible prophecies this
way the result is guaranteed to be a horribly distorted eschatology.
I think
there is another solution that is much better. The key is to remember that Jesus only had one
human parent, Mary. Both of His parents
were in the line of David. But He was
only the son of Joseph legally, by Joseph’s marriage to Mary. And Joseph is the one who was descended from David
through Solomon and eventually Jeconiah.
On the other hand, Mary was descended physically from David through
Nathan, a brother of Solomon’s. These
facts can be confirmed by examining the genealogies of Jesus, given in Matthew
and Luke.
Matthew’s
account records the genealogy of Jesus from the perspective of Joseph, His
legal father. And indeed, Jeconiah is
included in this genealogy (Mat.1:11).
But again, Jesus had no blood relation to any of these men other than
David and his ancestors. Matthew even
makes a point to call attention to the fact that Jesus was born of Mary not
Joseph (Mat.1:16).
In Luke’s
version, covering Mary’s lineage, notice that Jeconiah is conspicuously
absent. And rather than listing Solomon
directly before David we find the name Nathan (Lk.3:31). As if to echo Matthew, Luke drives home the
point of Jesus’s unique parentage by writing, of Jesus, that he was “as was
supposed, the son of Joseph” (Lk.3:23).
When these
things are taken into account I think it becomes obvious that God Himself
provided the perfect solution to our interpretive dilemma by precisely
orchestrating the family lineage of Jesus over hundreds of years of human
history. There is no problem with Jesus
reigning on a literal throne of David in Jerusalem because He was never a blood
descendant of Jeconiah in the first place.
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