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"Past Fulfillment of Bible
Prophecy" "Is the End of the World near?
Are we living in the Last Days? Is Christ's return at hand? For 150
years here in America we have constantly been told we were living on
the threshold of the end of the world and Christ's return.
Prediction after prediction has failed to materialize, and false
hope after false hope has been foisted upon the Christian community.
Many Christians have been disillusioned, and are already looking for
more reasonable explanations. Some have been so disillusioned they
left the faith altogether. And the secular media (who are always
looking for an excuse) are further discrediting Christianity because
of it. Something is terribly wrong with traditional views of Bible
Prophecy. There is a serious need to re-examine the whole issue of
Last Things.
Bible
prophecy can be understood, but Futurist views have fallen far short
for many reasons: their extreme physical/literalizing approach,
their seeming inability to distinguish between figurative and
literal language, and their failure to properly take into account
the historical-grammatical-cultural context of the prophecies
(specifically what they meant to their original audience). Even the
most difficult prophetic passage comes alive when approached
properly. It is time to look at some alternatives, and the Preterist
view is a great place to start.
"Preterist" means past in
fulfillment, and "Futurist" means future in fulfillment. Preterist
basically means the opposite of Futurist. Futurists believe most
end-time prophecies (especially the major ones) are yet to be
fulfilled. Preterists believe that most or all of Bible Prophecy has
already been fulfilled in Christ and the on-going expansion of His
Kingdom. Most Futurists do not really believe Christ has been
successful yet in fully establishing His kingdom.
The
"Preterist" interpretation of Bible prophecy has been mentioned
several times in publications such as Christianity Today, Christian
News, Great Christian Books catalog, World Magazine, and several
others. There is already at least one daily radio program teaching
from the preterist perspective and several monthly and quarterly
publications. Scores of preterist books, tracts, video and audio
tapes have been produced and many more are on the way. It is
beginning to capture significant public attention, and is "spreading
like wildfire" at the grass roots level. It is compatible with the
essential beliefs of all Christians, and is already represented in
nearly all Protestant denominations and the Roman Church.
When
will Christ return? This question is relevant, and can be answered
by scripture. Jesus seems to have answered it very clearly in these
passages (Matt. 10:23; Matt. 16:27,28; Matt. 24:34). Ever wonder why
the First Century Christians expected Jesus to come in their
lifetime, and where they got this expectation from? Take a look at
the extreme sense of imminency in these passages: James 5:8,9; 1
Pet. 4:7; Matt. 10:23; Matt. 16:27,28; Matt. 24:34. These verses
have always troubled Bible students, and have been used by liberal
theologians to attack the inspiration of Scripture. They reason that
these passages were not fulfilled when they were supposed to be (the
first century generation), so Jesus and the NT writers failed in
their predictions and were therefore not inspired. But these verses
point to Christ's coming in some sense in connection with the Fall
of Jerusalem at 70 AD. So, Jesus' predictions were fulfilled. He did
not fail, nor do we need to engage in theological gymnastics to try
to explain-away the seeming delay or postponement of His return. It
happened right on schedule. Many knew the destruction of Jerusalem
in 70 AD was important in God's scheme of redemption, but never
understood its full significance. It has to do with the consummation
of the plan of redemption. The final events of the redemptive drama
came to pass in the first century within the apostles' generation
(before A.D. 70). Christ's kingdom is here now. Paradise has been
restored in Christ (spiritually-speaking). We live in the Garden of
Eden now (if we are in Christ), just as sure as we can know we have
"eternal life." These are present and abiding benefits, not
pie-in-the-sky bye-and-bye. Christ has conquered all His enemies and
has given us the Kingdom.
This view
offers a much more positive and realistic worldview. It is
conservative, consistent, optimistic, responsible and accountable.
And it robs us of no motivation for either living the Christian
life, or evangelizing the world. In fact, it's the only view which
gives us a consistent reason for being constructively involved in
making the world a better place for the long-term, unlike the
short-term escapist and withdrawal mindset of most futurists.
Bible
prophecy absolutely makes sense when approached from this
past-fulfillment (preterist) perspective! It puts emphasis on the
spiritual nature of God's Kingdom, not on the physical,
materialistic, sensual, and sensational. It teaches a realized
spiritual salvation in Christ and the Church now, instead of a
frustrated hope for a postponed sensually-gratifying paradise way
off in the future. It has an optimistic worldview that gets
involved, makes a positive difference, and lights a candle, rather
than cursing the darkness, longing for a rapture-escape, or
retreating from society. It doesn't engage in wild-eyed speculation
like futurist views. It's just simple, straight-forward Bible
interpretation.
Some
of the great theologians and scholars of the last 300 years have
suggested the preterist view for consideration, but traditional
Christianity was too caught up with the idea that the Pope was the
Antichrist or some other such Futurist notion. But that has changed.
We are not as gullible now as they were when William Miller, Darby,
C. T. Russell, Rutherford, Scofield, Walvoord, and Hal Lindsey came
along. A constant barrage of false predictions has made us more
wary.
Most
Christian theologians in Europe a century ago took a somewhat
preterist approach, and none of them considered it unorthodox. One
of the leading proponents of the preterist view a century ago was
James Stuart Russell (not to be confused with the Jehovah's Witness
founder with the same last name, Charles Taze Russell - there is no
relation). J. S. Russell (1816-1895) published a book in 1878
entitled, The Parousia. We
here at Kingdom Publications recently reprinted it. Some leading
theologians and Christian spokesmen have had the following to say
about the book and the preterist view:
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F.
W. Farrar said Russell's book was "full of suggestiveness."
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Charles H. Spurgeon, who did not accept the preterist
view, nevertheless stated that Russell's book "throws so much
new light upon obscure portions of the Scriptures, and is
accompanied with so much critical research and close
reasoning, that it can be injurious to none and may be
profitable to all." |
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Walt Hibbard (Chairman, Great Christian Books) "In view
of Dr. Russell's marvelous and insightful observations, no
serious student of Biblical eschatology should attempt to
construct a systematic scheme of apocalyptic events without
first consulting this 19th century work, The Parousia."
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Gary DeMar (President of American Vision) "How many
times have you struggled with the interpretation of certain
Biblical texts related to the time of Jesus' return because
they did not fit with a preconceived system of eschatology?
Russell's Parousia takes the Bible seriously when it tells us
of the nearness of Christ's return. Those who claim to
interpret the Bible literally, trip over the obvious meaning
of these time texts by making Scripture mean the opposite of
what it unequivocally declares. Reading Russell is a breath of
fresh air in a room filled with smoke and mirror
hermeneutics." |
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Dr. Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr. (Sr. Pastor of Reedy River
Presbyterian Church) "Although I do not agree with all the
conclusions of J. Stuart Russell's The Parousia, I highly
recommend this well-organized, carefully argued, and
compellingly written defense of preterism to serious and
mature students of the Bible. It is one of the most persuasive
and challenging books I have read on the subject of
eschatology and has had a great impact on my own thinking.
Russell's biblico-theological study of New Testament
eschatology sets a standard of excellence."
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Dr. R. C. Sproul (Ligonier Ministries) "I believe that
Russell's work is one of the most important treatments on
Biblical eschatology that is available to the church today.
The issues raised in this volume with respect to the
time-frame references of the New Testament to the Parousia are
vitally important not only for eschatology but for the future
debate over the credibility of Sacred Scripture."
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Many who never knew anyone else took
the preterist view have independently discovered it in the
Scriptures, and are finding Biblical prophecy bursting with meaning
now. If you haven't taken a look at it, it is time you did."
By
Edward E. Stevens
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