The testimony of a notable Christian servant
confirms the development of this trend in recent
years. "Not all those who hold to the
interpretation of the prophecies which goes under
the name of 'premillennialism' are guilty of such
discrimination against those who hold the view of
prophetic truth called amillennialism,' but a
sufficiently large section of them do so
discriminate, to warrant the attempt to justify
the view in question, according to sound
exegetical canons of Biblical interpretation."
("The Basis of Millennial Faith," by Floyd E.
Hamilton, pg. 18.)
Dr. T. T. Shields, a distinguished servant of
Christ, wrote to me his experience as follows: "My
fellowship for the greater part of the time had
been chiefly with those who held what is usually
known as the premillennial view. As I believed
them to be sound in the basic principles of
evangelical Christianity, I welcomed them to my
pulpit. Even when they preached their
pretribulation rapture theory I did not contradict
them, but exercised my right in the course of my
own ministry to teach what I believe. As soon as
many of these brethren discovered that I did not
pronounce their shibboleth, if I was not
anathemized, I was certainly ostracized. It has
been a matter of observation with me for a long
time that truth is never at variance with truth,
and those who hold the truth, whose doctrinal
position can be clearly substantiated from
Scripture, will never be found persecuting others.
The persecutor will invariably be found to be one
who loves darkness rather than light. I have come
now to believe that the postponement theory, and
the pretribulation rapture notion are very
definite and dangerous heresies. Indeed, I should
probably go much farther than you would be
disposed to go. I believe the whole millennial
question needs reconsideration."
My correspondent did not know how far I had gone,
for I had many misgivings as to the details of the
prophetic program which I then held. For many
years, I was a militant and ardent
premillennialist, the possessor of large charts,
and a teacher in Bible classes and Bible
Institutes in cities large and small. I
reconsidered the postponement and pre-tribulation
rapture theories, and eventually my rethinking the
millennial question compelled me to abandon modern
Dispensationalism and the futurist interpretation
of Rev. 20.
This might prejudice some on the principle that I
now destroy what once I built. But let all such
consider that Divine Revelation is final and
complete; but illumination is progressive. A man
can do no other than change his views, if there
are good reasons for doing so, unless he violates
his conscience. It is better to tear down what one
has once built up, if it is contrary to the Word
of God, than to rebuild the middle wall of
partition which God has broken down; or to be an
advocate of a "worldly sanctuary" (Heb. 9:1).
"carnal ordinances" (Heb. 9:10), and the 'weak and
beggarly elements" of the Old Covenant (Gal.
4:8-11 ). which the Holy Spirit has said is done
away forever (Heb. 8:13).
My search for a satisfactory explanation of the
Millennium in harmony with the whole tenor of
Scripture was facilitated by the process of
elimination. Guided by ruling principles of
revelation I was able to say what it was not, and
by such elimination my search was narrowed down.
This procedure increased the possibility of
arriving at an understanding of what it is. In
pursuing this method, there are six factors of
elimination which helped me to determine what it
does not mean; namely, external evidence, internal
evidence, history of doctrine, interpretation of
Old Testament prophecies, the New Testament's
interpretation of Old Testament prophecies and
other New Testament passages. I submit to the
reader these arguments and interpretation of Rev.
20 to judge of their scripturalness.
If what I have advanced in these pages has a
tendency to free any of the subjects of Christ
from human inventions; rouse their attention
to the unerring Rule of historic, Biblical
Christianity as set forth in the inerrant,
inspired, infallible scripture, or remove the
unreasonable prejudices of premillennial brethren
from those with whom they differ on the millennial
question, my end is gained.
PART II
PRINCIPLES OF INTERPRETATION
In the study of the Old Testament there are
certain sound principles of exegesis that should
guide us in the search for Truth.
The First Principle: It is sound exegesis
to harmonize the Old Testament with the higher
light of the New Testament, and not vice versa.
Whatever Christ taught by His Holy Spirit through
the apostles is final, authoritative, and
infallible, Therefore, we cannot go first hand to
the prophecies in order to explain the New
Testament by them. We must enter the prophecies
with the New Testament key, by which they are
opened to us either by express quotations, the
history of facts, or by doctrine. Consequently,
the prophecies in general will not admit of a
strict and natural interpretation, when applying
them to the affairs of the New Testament. This
would lead us into the very error of the Jews and
Judaizing professors, who minded earthly things,
and affected a worldly kingdom. "Because they knew
Him not, nor yet the voices of the prophets which
are read every Sabbath, they have fulfilled them
in condemning Him" (Acts 13:27). Hence, the
necessity of attending diligently and adhering
strictly to the apostle's explication of the
prophecies, as well as types of the Old Testament.
As the apostles were the able ministers of the New
Testament (2 Corinthians 3:6), so they had the
infallible inspiration of the Spirit of Truth,
whereby they were sufficiently qualified to
explain and apply the prophetic word according to
its true intent and meaning.
The Second Principle: We are taught in I
Corinthians 15:46: "Howbeit that was not first
which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and
afterward that which is spiritual." Everything
under the legal economy of the Old Covenant framed
and established by means of the faithful ministry
of Moses, was "for a testimony of those things
which were to be spoken after," namely, under the
gospel (Hebrews 3:5). Moreover, the law had "a
shadow of good things to come" (Heb. 10:1), but
the body is of Christ (Colossians 2:17). Thus,
many things were typical: Abraham's natural seed,
the nation of Israel, the land, circumcision, the
Old Covenant, the Tabernacle, the Priesthood, the
Sacrifices, the Sabbath, etc. According to the
principle of I Corinthians 15:46, there are two
realms in which prophetic prediction may be
fulfilled, namely, in the realm of the natural or
in the realm of the spiritual. The antithesis of
natural is not literal but rather spiritual, and
the fulfillment of the prophecy is literal in
either or both realms in which it is brought to
pass. For example, the healing of the blind man in
John 9 was in the realm of the natural or
physical, but it typified a greater miracle in the
realm of the spiritual, namely, the opening of the
eyes of the understanding unto the salvation of
the soul. In both cases, it was the literal
working of the power of God, but in different
realms.
The Third Principle: Divine Revelation is
progressive. "But the path of the just is as a
shining light, that shineth more and more unto the
perfect day" (Proverbs 4:18). There is no going
back, but always a going forward to something more
glorious. There will never be a restoration of the
"divers washings," "carnal ordinances," "beggarly
elements," "worldly sanctuary" with its sacrifices
and Levitical priesthood, and the "middle wall of
partition" between Jew and Gentile (Hebrews
9:1,10; Galatians 4:9; Ephesians 2:14). Such
carnal, worldly, Mosaic distinctions have gone and
gone forever. It seems to us that those who assert
otherwise preach a revived Talmudic Judaism and
ancient Rabbinism, and not the message of the New
Testament.
The Fourth Principle: The Old Covenant,
which was the sole and only basis of the national
relationship of Israel to God, was a temporary
arrangement, and has vanished away, never to be
restored. "In that He saith, A new covenant, He
hath made the first old. Now that which decayeth
and waxeth old is ready to vanish away" (Hebrews
8:13). Thus was dissolved the national
relationship to God of the nation Israel after the
flesh and that forever. The Old Covenant was made
with a nation after the flesh, with the promise of
material blessings in the land of Canaan, and
therefore, could not be eternal. Under the New
Covenant, which is spiritual and therefore
eternal, national distinctions were wiped out, and
the flesh is set aside forever. Christianity
transcends, supersedes, and fulfills Judaism.
Apart from the Gospel of Christ it is evident
there is nothing special in the future for the
Jews in national covenant relationship with God.
The last commissions of Christ to His disciples
offer salvation to the Jew as an individual on the
same terms that it does to the Gentile. There is
no future special bargain offer to either one in
a national capacity (Matthew 28:19,20; Luke 24:47.,
48). "But the scripture hath concluded all (both
Jew and Gentile) under sin, that the promise by
faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that
believe"- whether Jew or Gentile (Galatians 3:22).
"The heresy of Dispensationalism results from the
lack of a proper understanding of the nature of
the Old Covenant and its relationship to the New
Covenant.
The Dispensationalists have never properly
evaluated the change of covenants at Calvary" (Dr.
Cecil J. Lowry in his excellent booklet, "Whither
Israeli.")
The Fifth Principle: The great object and
end of the prophetic dispensation, as declared in
1 Peter 1:10,11, was to "testify beforehand the
sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should
follow." Christ directs the Jews to search the
scriptures, and says, "they are they which testify
of Me" (John 5:39). His disciples were greatly
disconcerted by His death: but after His
resurrection He blames them for their slowness of
heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken; and asks, "Ought not Christ to have
suffered these things, and to enter into His
glory? And beginning at Moses, and all the
prophets, He expounded unto them in all the
scriptures, the things concerning Himself" (Luke
24:26,27). And He tells them, "These are the words
which I spake unto you, while I was yet with you,
that all things must be fulfilled which are
written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets,
and in the Psalms concerning Me" (Luke 24:44). The
Apostle Peter, having adduced the testimony of
Moses, adds "Yea, and all the prophets from
Samuel, and those that follow after, as many as
have spoken, have likewise foretold of these days"
(Acts 3:22-25). And in general, Peter says, "To
Him give all the prophets witness" (Acts 10:43).
Paul declares that in preaching the gospel, or
"witnessing both to small and great,"
he was
"saying no other things than those which the
prophets and Moses did say should come; that
Christ should suffer, and that He should be the
first that should rise from the dead, and should shew light unto the people and to the Gentiles"
(Acts 26:22,23). From these passages it is
evident, that the great scope and ultimate design
of prophecy in general, was to bear testimony to
Christ, and the affairs of His kingdom (Hebrews
10:7; Psalms 40:7), which is nowhere in the New
Testament spoken of as an earthly, Israelitish,
political, or temporal one (John 18:36). And this
is what the angel means when he says to John, "The
testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of prophecy"
(Rev. 19:10), which imports, that the testimony
concerning Jesus is the real scope and spirit of
the whole dispensation of
prophecy, and that it has its ultimate
accomplishment in Him, and in the affairs of His
government.
The Sixth Principle: "1. THE STARTING
POINT FOR BUILDING UP A SCRIPTURAL INTERPRETATION
OF THE FULFILLMENT OF PROPHECY IS FOUND IN THE OLD
TESTAMENT EXPRESSIONS THE LATTER DAYS, THE LAST
DAYS, AFTERWARD, AND IN THAT DAY. (Genesis 49:1;
Numbers 24:14-17; Deuteronomy 4:30; 31:29; Isaiah
2:2; Micah 4:1; Joel 2:28; Amos 9:11 ). According
to the Old Testament, time was divided into two
eras; their present age and the last days or the
Messianic age. The prophets saw imminent judgment
upon their nation as well as upon others, but in
the future the Anointed One should come. His
coming marked off a new era. The prophets were
granted the privilege of seeing some of the
glories of the time of the Messiah. Together their
glimpses form one grand composite picture of the
LAST DAYS in which Messiah should reign. The
prophets saw no third age beyond the "LAST DAYS."
This may be clearly shown by the following
illustrations:
THE PRESENT AGE (That age in which the prophets lived)
- - THE LAST DAYS - - THE DAYS OF THE MESSIAH.
2. THE NEW TESTAMENT PROPHETIC REVELATION BUILDS
DIRECTLY ON THIS OLD TESTAMENT DISTINCTION. (Acts
2:17; 15:15,16; Hebrews 1:2; 2:5; 9:26; 1 Peter
1:20,21; 1 John 2:18). More emphatic than merely
to say something is fulfilled, Peter uses language
of identification during his sermon: "This is that <>which was
spoken by the prophet Joel." He refers to the time
of Christ's first coming as THESE LAST TIMES, and
John refers to his day as THE LAST TIME. In
Hebrews the writer preserves the Old Testament
distinction, according to which the time of God's
speaking through His Son is in the LAST OF THESE
DAYS (A.R.V.) The WORLD TO COME of Old Testament
prophecy is subjected to Christ; and as he
explains, "We see Jesus ... crowned with glory and
honor." The conclusion to which these Scriptures
lead is that the present time (from Pentecost to
the end of time) is equated to the last days of the Old
Testament prophecy. What the prophets spoke
concerning the age of the Messiah is now being
gloriously fulfilled in the New Testament age.
3. THE NEW TESTAMENT DIVIDES THE LAST DAYS
INTO TWO PARTS: THE PRESENT WORLD AND THE WORLD TO
COME (Matthew 12:32; Mark 10:30; Luke 18:30;
20:34-36; Romans 8:38; 1 Corinthians 3:22;
Ephesians 1:21; 2:2,7; 1 Timothy 4:8; 6:17-19).
The present world is temporal and limited to
things of this life. The world to come is eternal,
being inaugurated by His resurrection. In the
WORLD TO COME they neither marry nor are given in
marriage. Timothy is enjoined to charge them that
are rich in THIS WORLD (age) to lay up in store a
good foundation against THE TIME TO COME. The New
Testament knows of no age intervening THE PRESENT
WORLD and THE WORLD TO COME. This may be shown as follows:
THE LAST DAYS - - - Christ's Second Coming
through His Resurrection until the present time
THIS WORLD - - - (begins with Christ's FIRST
COMING until).
THE WORLD TO COME - - - (begins with Christ's
SECOND COMING)
Into this prophetic framework of time eras falls
the New Testament teaching concerning the kingdom.
The present kingdom belongs to THIS WORLD and is
temporal, while the future kingdom belongs to the
WORLD TO COME and is eternal." ("The Fulfillment
of Prophecy," by Chester K. Lehman).
PART III
WHAT THE MILLENNIUM IS NOT
A. - EXTERNAL EVIDENCE
1. The Silence of Christ: From time
immemorial man has labored and hoped for a golden
age, a millennium. Many and futile have been the
schemes they have devised to bring it about. These
may be classified into two general groups:
non-Christian millennial theories, and nominally
Christian millennial theories. These schemes of
nationalism aimed at world domination, such as the
Communist's Millennium of Russia and China, and
schemes of internationalism aimed at world
collaboration such as the World Association of
Parliamentarians for World Government and the
United Nations Organization are examples of
political and economic utopias belonging to the
first group.
Among the nominally Christian millennial theories
are those of the Modernist with its Socialism and Inclusivist Church: the Romanist's as seen in the
Clerical-Fascism of Spain; and the
Dispensationalist's millennium of a thousand years
of Jewish supremacy. Just as the Nazis asserted
there would be a thousand-year reign of Aryian
supremacy, so the dispensationalists declare there
will be a thousand years of Jewish Semitic
supremacy with Jerusalem as the world capital
instead of Berlin,