Sunday, March 20, 2011

Why Normative Interpretation?
Because it is Consistent

Hermeneutics is the study of methods of interpretation, especially of Biblical texts. Exegesis is the process of explaining these interpretations.

There is, of course, more than one method of interpreting Biblical texts. The hermeneutic of choice for this blog is called Normative, Natural, and sometimes the historical-grammatical interpretive principle. Some refer to it as literal.

The term "literal" implies, incorrectly, that figures of speech and symbols are not considered relevant to scriptural interpretation. Therefore the term is avoided because of the baggage that accompanies it. As will be seen in the "Golden Rule of Interpretation" there are indeed symbols used in the Bible, these however are usually explained in the context of the text they appear in.

One other hermeneutic which will be mentioned here is the allegorical hermeneutic. This interpretive approach expounds the belief that the use of symbols and allegory (fables) is used extensively throughout the Old and New Testaments. There are many reasons this is believed to be so by its adherents, far too many to be addressed here. The problem with this approach is that those who make use of it cannot agree amongst themselves what is allegorical and what should be read literally. Furthermore where there is agreement concerning what is allegory and what is not, the interpretation of those allegorical passages cannot be agreed upon.

The allegorical approach is rejected here, and the normative, or natural interpretation of Scripture is affirmed. Scripture must stand upon its own merits. ( 2Ti 3:16 ) If it does not then man becomes the final arbiter of truth, and each may do what is right in his own eyes.

This declaration is made now so no one is deceived into thinking there is another approach being taken. The reader will find affirmations of:
  • The Jewish roots of the Christian faith
  • Israel's, that is the Jewish peoples, rightful place as the chosen people of God
  • Orthodoxy (right teaching/opinion)
  • The Ministry of the Holy Spirit
  • The basics of the Christian faith
The reader will also find specific explanations and rejection of:
  • Anti-Semitism, in all its guises
  • Replacement Theology - The Church is not Israel
  • Heresies
  • Apostasy - departures from the faith professed
  • Various hermenuetical approaches
The goal is to provide historical background and reasoned arguments for those who seek to understand the foundational teachings of their faith in more detail. May the Traditional, Evangelical, Charismatic, and Pentecostal all find something here.

"There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance - that principle is contempt prior to investigation." - Herbert Spencer

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Roots of the Nazi Legal System

This article from creation.com covers the full gambit of why it is so important to know what you believe and why you believe it. The contents of this article show clearly the reasons why "Normative" is so passionate about right doctrine, and why we oppose the current raft of nonsense being spouted from the pulpit of a number of local churches. Please read it!!

In the light of the escalation of violence against Jews world wide including the murder of the Fogel family in Israel this understanding is becoming more and more important.

    ‘The leaders of the [German Christian] movement, Pastors Julius Leutheuser, Joachim Hossenfelder and Siegfried Leffler, strove to convince their fellow clergy that only a completely new interpretation of Christianity … could meet the needs of the new age. They sought to rid the Church of its ‘pre-scientific’ mentality and its archaic liturgies, and to substitute a new revelation as found in Adolf Hitler. The essential was not Christian orthodoxy but Christian activism that would follow the example of the ‘heroic’ Jesus … In the new creation of the Nazi Party, they saw a vehicle for their programme that offered fellowship which they believe to be characteristic of true Christianity. If Hitler could perform what they called Christian deeds, then orthodoxy could be abandoned.’

The full article is here: Darwinian Roots of Nazi Legal System


Footnotes:
    Augusto Zimmermann, Darwinian Roots of Nazi Legal System, downloaded from http://creation.com/darwinian-roots-of-nazi-legal-system 16 March 2011.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

The Olivet Discourse

For a full and very clear discussion of this topic please visit Ariel Ministries and read their excellent analysis of the text of Matthew 24 and 25: The Olivet Discourse according to Matthew 24 and 25.

Dr Arnold Fruchtenbaum also has a dissertation which is available in manuscript form and as an appendix in his excellent book The Footsteps of the Messiah, on pages 621 to 650. Please read this book, and the relevant portions of scripture, for yourself.


    The Olivet Discourse, recorded in Matthew 24 and 25, Mark 13, and Luke 21, is one of the most important prophetic utterances in the Scriptures. If one has a clear understanding of this prediction, one will have an outline into which almost all other subjects of prophecy will fit perfectly.1

Notes: (taken entirely from the Olivet Discourse by Dr. Arnold G. Fruchtenbaum)2

  1. The discourse is recorded in three of the four Gospels. Matt 24-25, Mark 13, and Luke 21:5-36
  2. Purpose: To answer the the question When and how would the Messianic Kingdom come into being?
  3. Israel had just rejected the Messiah, so the Kingdom could not be set up at that time.
  4. Matthew 23:37-39 - denounced Israel's leadership, He would not return again until Israel requested Him to.
  5. Question: What circumstances would cause this invitation to be issued?
  6. All Gospels must be studied to get the answer to the question
  7. Three questions asked by disciples:

    Tell us, when shall these things be? These things refer to:

    1. The destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple;
    2. What shall be the sign of your coming? This question concerns the second coming and not the rapture which is imminent;
    3. What shall be the sign of the end of the world? This is a question about the end of the age, rabbinic theology recognised two ages, this age, and the Messianic age. So the question is what is the sign that the last days of this age have begun and that will lead to the Messianic Age?
  8. Things that were NOT signs:

    1. The Rise of False Messiahs
    2. The Existence of Local Wars
  9. The Sign of the End of the Age (Answer to Third question)

    1. Matt 24:7-8, Mark 13:8 and Luke 21:10-11 - World wide wars will indicate that the end had begun
    2. Fulfilled by World War I and World War II
    3. Nation will rise against Nation, and Kingdom against Kingdom is a Jewish idiom which means world wide war
  10. Personal Experiences of the Apostles

    1. Mark 13:9-13, Luke 21:12-19 - But before all these things...
    2. There will be a time of suffering, and a successful ministry
  11. The Sign of the Fall of Jerusalem (Answer to First Question)

    1. Luke 21:20-24
    2. Jerusalem would be surrounded by armies. When this happened they were instructed to get out of Jerusalem.

      A. D. 66 Cestus Gallus surrounded Jerusalem, but noticed his supply lines were not secure. He lifted the siege and returned to Caesarea. The Jewish believers left Jerusalem.

    3. A. D. 68 Vespasian and his Son Titus surrounded and, in A. D. 70, destroyed Jerusalem and the Temple.
    4. 1,100,000 Jews were killed in this assault. Not one Jewish believer died.
    5. Jerusalem will not be free of Gentile nations until her Messiah returns.
  12. The Great Tribulation

    1. Matt 24:9-26, Mark 14-23
    2. Matt 24:9-14 - first half of Tribulation
    3. Matt 24:9-14 is not dealing with the same events as Mark 13:9-13 and Luke 21:12-19
    4. Matt 24:15-28, Mark 13:14-23 - second half of Tribulation

  13. The Sign of the Second Coming of the Messiah (Answer to Second Question)

    1. Matt 24:29-30, Mark 13:24-26, Luke 21:25-27
    2. Preceding the sign of the second coming there will be a blackout
    3. The sign of the Son of man will appear in Matt verse 30a
    4. This sign will be coupled with God's glory and will be the Shechinah Glory

Footnotes:

  1. Dr. David L. Cooper, The Olivet Discourse according to Matthew 24 and 25, Downloaded from http://www.ariel.org/dlc/dlc-wg-43.htm 5 March 2011, Copyright © 2009 Ariel Ministries. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
  2. Dr Arnold G. Fruchtenbaum, The Footsteps of the Messiah, Copyright © 2003,2004 Ariel Ministries. All rights reserved. Used by permission. pp 621 - 650

Friday, March 4, 2011

A. D. 70: Preterism's Prohetic Dead End
by Randall Price


The following article is reproduced with the permission of the Author in it's entirety without alteration or erasure. The article is an edited version of the original and appears in the January/February 2005 edition of Israel My Glory. It is reproduced here as it appeared in that edition of Israel My Glory. Dr. Randall Price is the Director and Founder of the World of the Bible Ministries and the full text of this article concerning preterism is published in PDF format on his site at http://www.worldofthebible.com.

We thank Dr. Price, World of the Bible Ministries, and Israel My Glory for permitting us to use this excellent analysis of Preterism.


In recent years a system of interpreting biblical prophecy known as Preterism has invaded the church, brining confusion and division to many congregations that have historically held to the future return of Jesus Christ.

Promoted by popular radio teachers, such as Reformed scholar R. C. Sproul, whose book The Last Days According to Jesus advances the moderate preterist position, Preterism has made inroads into evangelical seminaries and stimulated public debates on Bible college campuses. Although most Christians have never heard of the teachings of Preterism, its approach to prophecy diminishes the prophetic hope of the church while undermining the basis of the prophetic promises for Israel.

What is Preterism

Derived from the Latin word preter (past), Preterism holds fast that most, if not all, of the prophetic events of the Old and New Testaments have already been fulfilled. Like historicism, which interprets the book of Revelation as symbolic of church history, Preterism spirutalizes prophecy to make if fit historical events in the Church Age. However, unlike historicism, Preterism seeks to fit certain, if not all, prophecies relating the Christ's Second Coming and Israel's restoration into a specific historical event in the past.

As moderate preterist Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr., explains, "Matthew 24:1-34 (and parallels) in the Olivet Discourse was fulfilled in the events surrounding the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. In Revelation most of the prophecies before Revelation 20 find fulfilment in the fall of Jerusalem."1

Preterists contend that Jesus' use of the phrase this generation in His Olivet Discourse requires fulfillment in the first century; R. C. Sproul, in particular, argues that Christ's words failed unless this interpretation is adopted.

By contrast, Futurism (what we believe) maintains that the literal fulfillment of Messianic prophecy in Christ's First Advent confirms that His prophetic teaching must also be interpreted literally. Thus the Olivet Discourse and the Revelation will find fulfillment in the future, particularly during the Tribulation and Christ's Millennial reign.

Two types of Preterism today contend with each other for primacy. Partial, or Moderate, Preterism is the most popular version. Although it argues that most prophecy (such as the events of the Tribulation) was fulfilled in A.D. 70, it still understands that some prophetic teachings like Christ's Second Coming and the bodily resurrection, have a future fulfillment.

Partial Preterism, therefore , holds to two Second Comings: one that occurred in A.D. 70 as a parousia (Greek, "coming" or "advent") and Day of the Lord for the purpose of judging the Jewish nation and one that will occur universally at the climax of human history as the final and ultimate Day of the Lord.

Leading advocates of Partial Preterism who have published popular defenses of their position include R. C. Sproul, Gary DeMar, and Kenneth L. Gentry Jr., as well as the late David Chilton, who changes to Full Preterism after his books were published.

Full, or Extreme, Preterism contends that all prophecy (including Christ's Second Coming and bodily resurrection) was fulfilled by A.D. 70.

Full Preterism maintains that believers have been spiritually resurrected and the creation spiritually restored, so the church presently exists in the eternal state of the new heavens and new earth.

According to Thomas Ice, executive director of the Pre-Trib Research Center and one the foremost experts on Preterism, there is no evidence of any preterist interpretation in the history of the early church through the Reformation. 3

Preterism's View of Israel

Preterism teaches that Christ came in A.D. 70 to judge Israel and end the Jewish age.

Like historicists, preterists argue that the promises made to Israel were misunderstood as national promises. Therefore, when Israel rejected Christ, these "spiritual" promises passed to the church, the "true Israel."

Preterism, however, which forces the fulfillment of most prophetic texts, particularly the fall of Jerusalem and the Temple, in to the events of the First Jewish Revolt, views the destruction of the Jewish people as the central focus of prophecy.

    As Preterist David Chilton stated, The Book of Revelation is not about the second coming of Christ. It is about the destruction of Israel and Christ's victory over His enemies in the establishment the New Covenant temple...Revelation prophesies the judgement of God on apostate Israel; and while it does briefly point to events beyond its immediate concerns, that is done merely as a "wrap up", to show that the ungodly will never prevail against Christ's Kingdom. 3

For preterists, the Jewish people are the true enemies of Christ; and their overthrow by the Roman army, sent by Christ to do His bidding, is the triumph of Christ over the Antichrist. In fact, they say, Christ came spiritually in the judgement by the Roman army (hence, a judgement-coming) fulfilling His promise "to come quickly."

The Jewish Temple is likewise seen as the center of spiritual apostasy and its destruction as the fulfillment of the abomination of desolation, which was God's holy judgement for the wicked crucifixion of Christ by the Jews.

Preterists, therefore, reject any aspect of a future for ethnic Israel (apart from the church) and contend that any eschatological system that looks for a restoration of Israel and its Temple is heretical, for such would be tantamount to rejecting Christ and restoring blasphemy.

    Preterist Gary DeMar explains:
    There is nothing in Jesus' teaching in this Gospel [Matthew] which suggests that after this period of judgement there will be a restoration. ... The Apocalyptic Discourse (ch. 24) moves away frm Jerusalem. ... Does the Bible, especially the New Testament, predict that the Temple will be rebuilt? It does not. ...To make the Temple of stone a permanent structure in the light of Jesus' atoning work would be a denial of the Messiah and His redemptive mission. 4

Preterism's Problems

(1) - The Date of the Book of Revelations
For the prophecies of Revelation to fit in to the Roman conquest of Jerusalem, it is necessary to date the composition of the book before A.D. 70.

Preterists understand the necessity of dating the book early in Nero's reign (A.D. 64-67), confessing, "If the book was written after A.D. 70, then its contents manifestly do not refer to events surrounding the fall of Jerusalem." 5

However, if dating the book was so crucial to its interpretation, why did not the apostle John clearly indicate somewhere in its 404 verses the time of its writing? However, as Mark Hitchcock, who wrote a doctoral dissertation on the subject, concluded, "I do believe that the case for the late date (A.D. 95) can be proven at least by a preponderance of the evidence, if not beyond a reasonable doubt." 6

This evidence includes the external testimony of the most reliable early church fathers, such as Irenaeus (A.D. 120-202), who made the unambiguous declaration, "For if it were necessary that the name of him [Antichrist] should be distinctly revealed in this present time , it would have been told by him who saw the apocalyptic vision. For it [the Revelation] was seen no long time ago, but almost in our generation, toward the end of Domitian's reign." 7

In addition, the internal evidence favours the late date in the time of Domitian. This support includes (1) the condition and description of the seven churches in Revelation 1-3, which make no mention of Paul's missionary journeys; (2) John's banishment to Patmos, rather than execution, as with Peter and Paul under Nero; and (3) the prophecy of the New Jerusalem (Rev. 21:9-22:5), which implies that the old Jerusalem has already been destroyed.

(2) - Lack of Historical Agreement With First-Century Fulfillment
If Preterism's interpretation of prophecy were correct, the historical record should support details. However, the opposite is the case.

For example, the direction of Christ's advent to Jerusalem (Mt 24:27) is compared with lightning flashing from "east to west." But the Roman army, which preterists interpret as fulfilling this prophecy, advanced on Jerusalem from "west to east." Even if we take this simply to mean the Roman army advanced "like lightning" (i.e., quickly), history reveals a very slow assault on Jerusalem; the war lasted several years before Jerusalem was even besieged!

In many cases a "correlation" can only be made through the eschatologically biased interpretation of first-century historian Flavius Josephus, such as (1) associating divine signs with the Roman army's impending conquest; (2) reinterpreting the text to fit the preferred historical data, such as taking "the clouds of heaven" as the dust kicked up by the Roman army's advance; or (3) taking statements that do not fit the historical events, such as the unprecedented and unsurpassed nature of the Tribulation, as hyperbole in order to claim first-century fulfillment.

Even the central concept of Preterism - that Christ's judgement-coming was to end the Jewish nation - cannot stand in light of Judaism's continued vitality and the modern state of Israel.

The historical consequences for Israel in the aftermath of A.D. 70 were indeed critical. But the Jewish people and Jewish nationalism not only survived, but hope for the restoration promised by the prophets increased. Moreover, the "Temple consciousness," perpetuated through rabbinic Judaism's spiritual transference to the synagogue, also expressed itself in tangible ways.

Whenever circumstances favoured rebuilding the Temple, there were Jewish activists who returned to Jerusalem to attempt it. Today the Roman Empire is long vanished; but the Jewish people are again in the Promised Land, in control of the Holy City and its Temple Mount, and making plans to rebuild the Temple.

Is it reasonable to accept the events of A.D. 70 as a fulfillment of God's program for the Jews but not accept these subsequent events as also part of His ongoing divine plan? A futurist interpretation agrees much better with Jesus' statement in the Olivet Discourse that, when He comes, the Jewish people are to "look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near." (Lk 21:28) Clearly this text teaches that Christ's Second Coming involves Israel's redemption, not destruction.

As a result of such historical and textual incongruities, Robert Gundry commented concerning the preterist interpretation of a first-century fulfillment:

    Whether writing just before, right at, or just after 70 C.E., Mark [or any of the other gospel writers] is not liable to have suffered from very much ignorance of what went on. From beginning to end, then, the events and circumstances of the Jewish war disagree with the text of Mark [also Matthew and, in part, Luke] too widely to allow that text to reflect those events and circumstances. 8

If the historical correlation with an A.D. 70 fulfillment for the Olivet Discourse fails, and Preterism depends on such a fulfillment for the maintenances of its eschatological system, then Preterism itself fails as a viable eschatological interpretation.

The Dangers of Preterism

Every teaching has consequences for the spiritual life. Therefore, the teachings of Preterism must be considered for their practical dangers.

Preterism teaches that Christ has already returned (spiritually) and, in its extreme form, that He will never return again bodily. However, the divine declaration in Act 1:11, "This is the same Jesus...will so come in like manner as you say Him go into heaven," contradicts both Partial and Full Preterism.

The teaching then is false. It not only distorts the prophetic program and denies the blessed hope (Ti 2:13) but promotes the deception that there will be no end to history, that evil has been eradicated from the world (Full Preterism), and that believers now live in the eternal state.

Such false doctrine also prevents Christians from obeying the manifold commands of Scripture directed to those awaiting Christ's Second Coming (1Th. 1:10). Practical admonitions given in light of Christ's return - such as "awake...walk [behave] properly" (Rom. 13:11-13; cf 1 Th. 5:4-10); "live soberly [sensibly], righteously, and godly" (Ti. 2:12); and live in purity (1 Jn. 3:3) - have no meaning to those who believe His coming is past.

Preterism also corrupts the understanding of the present work of Satan and his demons by teaching Satan was crushed and bound at the cross and that apostasy is a thing of the past. Yet Scripture states that our struggle is "against powers, against rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places" (Eph 6:12); "the whole world lies under the sway of the wicked one" (1 Jn 5:19); and "in latter times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of demons" (1 Ti 4:1).

How then can Christians obey such commands as "Resist the devil" (Jas 4:7; cf 1 Pet 5:9) and "from such people [apostates] turn away!" (2 Tim 3:5)?

Moreover, the preterist approach to prophecy affects the way Christians understand God's purpose for the Jewish nation and their political views toward the existence of the modern Jewish state. Preterism replaces Israel with the church, teaching that "ethnic Israel was excommunicated for its apostasy and will never again be God's Kingdom" 8

If Israel's future salvation and restoration (Rom 11:25-27) in God's program is abrogated, so, too, is God's promised blessing for the world (Rom. 11:12) in fulfillment of the Abrahamic Covenant (Gen. 12:3).

The apostle Peter summed up the divine verdict towards Preterism when he wrote, "Scoffers will come in the last days, walking according to their own lusts, and saying, "Where is the promise of His coming?" (2 Pet.3:3-4), Even so, come, Lord Jesus.


Endnotes:
  1. Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr., He Shall Have Dominion: A Postmillennial Eschatology (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1992), p. 159.
  2. Thomas Ice, “The History of Preterism,” The End Times Controversy. Edited by Tim LaHaye and Thomas Ice (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2003), pp. 42-46.
  3. David Chilton, Paradise Restored: An Eschatology of Dominion (Tyler, TX: Reconstruction Press, 1985), p. 43.
  4. R. Gary DeMar, Last Days Madness: Obsession of the Modern Church. 4th ed. (Atlanta: American Vision, 1999), pp. 52, 61.
  5. R.C. Sproul, The Last Days According to Jesus (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1998), p. 140.
  6. Mark Hitchcock, “The Stake in the Heart – The A.D. 95 Date of Revelation,” The End Times Controversy, p. 125.
  7. Irenaeus, Against Heresies 5.30.3.
  8. David Chilton, Paradise Restored, p. 224.

Randall Price is an archaeologist, author, and president of World of the Bible Ministries, Inc., an organization dedicated to exploring and explaining the past, present, and prophetic world of the Bible.

Copyright © 2004-2006 World of the Bible Ministries, All Rights Reserved. Used By Permission.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

A Rebuttal of Preterism

We have today added to our collection of resources (see links on the right hand side of this page) a link to the World of the Bible Ministries. This site has a very good set of resources which we recommend. We discovered this site while trying to source permission to reproduce an article that appeared in Israel My Glory in January/February 2005 rebutting Preterism. Dr. Randall Price is this author of the resource we were seeking. The article is published on the World of the Bible site under the resources section titled "preterism." It is not our habit to beg, but this is a must read for those who are concerned for the truth. Please do read it.

We have also added and entry to our Apostasy page, and our Heresy page. The entry of course concerns Preterism, which we view very seriously, as it has the potential to feed the fires of anti-Semitism and alas we fear it has already done so.

This is a matter we cannot stay silent about, and will oppose where ever it arises.