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The Consummation of the Ages
A.D.70 and the Second Coming in the Book of Revelation
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The
Road Back to Preterism
A Brief History of Eschatology and the Church
By
Kurt M. Simmons |
In this article we briefly explore the history of eschatological
interpretation in the church, its origin, departure, and return to
Preterism.
Preterist Beginnings: Christ and the Apostles
Any discussion of eschatology’s history in the church should begin with
Jesus and the apostles, for they are the fount whence our instruction
flows. And here there can be no dispute: Jesus and the apostles were
plainly Preterists. Jesus’ very ministry began with the clarion call
that the eschatological kingdom long foretold by the prophets was “at
hand.”
“Now after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into Galilee,
preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God, and saying, The time is
fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye and believe
the gospel.” (Mk. 1:14, 15)
The term translated “at hand” is from the Greek eggidzo and means to
approach or draw nigh unto. It is used both spatially, as in approaching
unto a city or place (Mk. 11:1; Lk. 18:40; Acts 9:3), and temporally, as
near in time. When used temporally, it conveys the idea of that which
must “shortly come to pass.” (Rev. 1:1; cf. 1:3; 22:10) Thus, on the
night he was betrayed, the third time having found his disciples
sleeping, Jesus said, “Sleep on now and take your rest; behold, the hour
is at hand (eggiken), and the son of man is betrayed into the hands of
sinners. Rise, let us be going; behold he is at hand (eggiken) that doth
betray me.” (Matt. 26:45, 46)
Jesus fixed the coming of the eschatological kingdom within the span of
the apostles’ lives when he stated “Verily I say to you, That there be
some of them that stand here, which shall not taste of death, till they
have seen the kingdom of God come with power.” (Mk.
9:1) The kingdom’s coming in “power” spoke to the judgments that
would attend Christ’s coronation and kingdom. (Cf. Rev. 5:1-11:15)
During his ministry, the Lord alluded to the nearness of these
judgments, saying, “But if I with the finger of God cast out devils, no
doubt the kingdom of God is come upon you.” (Lk. 11:20; cf. 10:9, 11)
The coming of the kingdom was contemporaneous with the second coming of
Christ. (Matt. 16:26, 27; II Tim. 4:1) Jesus expressly stated his coming
would occur before the apostles had evangelized all of Israel (Matt.
10:23; cf.
Jno.
21:22); the Sanhedrin would see Jesus coming in clouds of heaven
in judgment upon the Jewish nation (Matt.
26:64; Mk. 14:62), within that very generation. (Matt. 23:36,
39; 24:30, 34)
Moving from the gospels to the epistles, we find the disciples were
unanimous in holding to the imminence of Christ’s coming and kingdom.
Paul said the “time is short” (I Cor. 7:29); the night of sin and death
was “far spent;” the eschatological day “was at hand.” (Rom.
13:11, 12) God would “finish the work and cut it short in
righteousness: because a short work will the Lord make upon the earth.”
(Rom. 9:28) He would bruise Satan under their feet “shortly.” (Rom.
16:20) The Hebrew writer urged his readers to exhort one another as they
saw the eschatological day approaching, for it was a “very little while”
(Grk. micron hoson, hoson) and he that was to come would come and not
delay. (Heb. 10:37) James said the coming of the Lord “draweth nigh” (Grk.
eggiken), it was at the very the door. (Jam.
5:8, 9) Peter said the end of all things was “at hand” (I Pet.
4:7); John, that it was the “last hour.” (I Jno. 2:18) Jesus told the
churches of Asia “behold, I come quickly;” the time is “at hand.” (Rev.
22:10, 12, 20; cf. 1:1, 3)
There can be no successful contradiction: Jesus and the apostles were
Preterists.
Kingdom’s Nature Misunderstood
If the timing of the eschatological kingdom was not left in doubt, its
nature was clothed in ambiguity. In Jesus’ day, the expectation was that
the kingdom announced by the prophets was essentially political; the
Messiah would be a national liberator who would restore the Davidic
throne, deliver Israel from Roman servitude, and propel the nation to
world dominance.
The danger inherent in such teaching is apparent, and Jesus was always
careful that his instruction about the kingdom not open him to charges
of sedition. Jesus usually did not speak directly to the nature of the
kingdom, but only indirectly, through parables. (Matt. 13:10, 11; Mk.
4:33, 34) Although this protected him from being accused of teaching
sedition against Rome, the cryptic nature of his teaching often left
details of the kingdom and eschaton unclear in the mind of his
disciples. Thus, at the climax of his ministry, Jesus’ triumphal entry
into Jerusalem reverberated with anticipation of his obtaining the
government over Israel: Large crowds followed him from Jericho (Matt.
20:29-21:1); the whole city of Jerusalem was moved at his arrival (Matt.
21:10); the crowds cried “Hosanna…blessed be the kingdom of our father
David that cometh in the name of the Lord.” (Mk. 11:10) The mother of
Zebedee’s children petitioned the Lord that her sons might occupy the
chief places in his kingdom. (Matt. 20:20) A few days later at the
Passover, we learn that the disciples have swords, as if they expect to
be called upon to forcibly advance Jesus’ claim to the nation’s head. (Lk.
22:38) When Jesus ascended to heaven, the disciples ask whether he would
then restore the kingdom to Israel. (Acts 1:7)
To a certain extent, the confusion extant during Jesus’ earthly ministry
continued during the apostles’ lives. For example, John indicates that,
because Jesus said he would live until his return, the saying went
abroad that John would not die, but would be wondrously “raptured” to
ethereal realms above at Christ’s coming. (Jno. 21:19, 20; cf. Matt.
16:26, 27) Paul found it necessary to reiterate his instruction to the
Thessalonians. The Thessalonians thought the crisis marked by the “man
of sin” was immediately upon them; Paul reminded them that not until “he
would lets” (Claudius) was taken out of the way would Nero ascend the
throne and eschatological harvest (gathering by martyrdom) break out.
(II Thess. 1-11; cf. Rev. 14:12-16) All this to say that details of the
eschaton were not fully understood from the very start, even amongst
those that accompanied Jesus.
The confusion that obtained during the lives of Christ and the apostles
was compounded after their deaths. The almost universal martyrdom of
disciples under Nero and the Jews left with church with few capable of correctly
expounding the eschatology of the kingdom and coming of Christ. The
picture that emerges in the centuries following the apostolic age is one
of great confusion: There is a great diversity of opinion concerning the
nature of the eschaton among the patristic writers; their writings
betray a fundamental lack of comprehension; they are as men groping in
darkness after something they cannot see. Indeed, men are not even
certain which books are to be received as canonical and which are not.
Irenaeus thought there would be three levels of resurrection
corresponding to individual worthiness[1]; Tertullian
thought there would be a millennial reign of Christ on earth.”[2];
Lactantius thought the earth would be wondrously regenerated during the
millennium, and all creatures restored to their primal state in the
garden.[3] Notwithstanding these rather obvious
errors, strands of Christ’s and the apostles’ original Preterism were
either preserved or recovered, and may be clearly identified in the warp
and woof of early church eschatology. Here are a few examples:
Patristic Writers
The Last Days
Eusebius states that the “last days” (translated “end of the days” in the
LXX – Gen. 49:1) referred to the destruction of the Jewish state and polity:
“For we must understand by ‘the end of the days’ the end of
national existence of the Jews. What, then, did he say they must
look for? The cessation of the rule of Judah, the destruction of
their whole race, the failing and ceasing of their governors, and
the abolition of the dominant kingly position of the tribe of Judah,
and the rule and kingdom of Christ, not over Israel but over all
nations, according to the word, ‘This is the expectation of the
nations.’” [4]
“This Generation” and the Days of Vengeance
In his Olivet discourse, Jesus spoke of his second coming
and of the “days of vengeance” upon the Jewish nation in which all that had
been written would be fulfilled. (Lk.
21:22) Jesus indicated this would occur within his own generation. (Matt.
24:34; Mk. 13:30; Lk. 21:31) Modern day “prophecy experts” claim
that this is a reference to our own or some future day, but the early church
thought otherwise. St. John Chrysostom of Antioch (A.D. 375) refers to this,
indicating its fulfillment in that generation:
“Was their house left desolate? Did all the vengeance come upon that
generation? It is quite plain that it was so, and no man gainsays
it.”[5]
Abomination of Desolation
Christ’s Olivet discourse warns believers to flee Judea and
Jerusalem when they saw the “abomination of desolation,” which Luke equates
with Jerusalem being surrounded by armies. (Lk. 21:20) Origen indicates this
was fulfilled in the war with Rome begun under Nero and concluded under
Vespasian and Titus:
But let this Jew of Celsus, who does not believe that He foreknew
all that happened to Him, consider how, while Jerusalem was still
standing, and the whole Jewish worship celebrated in it, Jesus
foretold what would befall it from the hand of the Romans. For they
will not maintain that the acquaintances and pupils of Jesus Himself
handed down His teaching contained in the Gospels without committing
it to writing, and left His disciples without the memoirs of Jesus
contained in their works. Now in these it is recorded, that ‘when ye
shall see Jerusalem compassed about with armies, then shall ye know
that the desolation thereof is nigh.’ But at that time there were no
armies around Jerusalem, encompassing and enclosing and besieging
it; for the siege began in the reign of Nero, and lasted till the
government of Vespasian, whose son Titus destroyed Jerusalem, on
account, as Josephus says, of James the Just, the brother of Jesus
who was called Christ, but in reality, as the truth makes clear, on
account of Jesus Christ the Son of God.”[6]
Elijah and the Beast
The Old Testament prophets announced three figures or persons that would
mark the time of the eschatological kingdom and end: The Messiah, the
beast/little-horn of Daniel seven, and the “Elijah” foretold by Malachi.
(Mal. 3:1, 2; 4:5, 6; cf. Isa. 40:3-5) We know the identity of the Messiah,
and Jesus indicated that Malachi’s Elijah was fulfilled in John the Baptist.
(Matt. 11:7-15) Thus, the only remaining personage to be identified is the
antichrist or beast. The early church believed that Nero personified the
beast. Thus, the second coming should have occurred within the immediate
reaches of the eschatological figures of John and Nero. Primitive Christians
understood this, but misunderstood the nature of Christ’s second advent.
Therefore, when John and Nero passed from history and the world did not end
in the manner primitive believers supposed it should, they were faced with
the problem why Christ failed to return when prophesied. The solution was
that Elijah and Nero would appear a second time on the world stage preceding
the end! This is much like modern dispensationalists who, faced with Rome
and the Jerusalem temple having passed from history, believe that there will
be a “revived” Rome, a third temple with a revived priesthood and Sanhedrin,
together with another Elijah.[7] Reflecting the belief in
a second Elijah and reappearance of Nero, Commodianus (A.D. 240), bishop of
North-Africa wrote thus:
“Hear ye how the prophet foretold concerning him [the antichrist]. I
have said nothing elaborately, but negligently. Then, doubtless, the
world shall be finished when he shall appear. He himself shall divide
the globe into three ruling powers, when, moreover, Nero shall be up
from hell, Elias shall first come to seal the beloved ones.”[8]
Nero’s rising up from hell refers to Revelation 11:7 and 17:8, concerning
the beast that would rise from the bottomless pit. Thus, Commodianus
believed it was necessary that both Nero and Elijah reappear so the world
could end in the manner he supposed. Sulpicius Severus (A.D. 360-420) makes
similar comments:
In the meanwhile Nero, now hateful even to himself from a
consciousness of his crimes, disappears from among men, leaving it
uncertain whether or not he had laid violent hands upon himself:
certainly his body was never found. It was accordingly believed that,
even if he did put an end to himself with a sword, his wound was cured,
and his life preserved, according to that which was written regarding
him,-"And his mortal wound was healed," -to be sent forth again near the
end of the world, in order that he may practice the mystery of
iniquity.[9]
Although Sulpicius erroneously concludes that Nero’s life was somehow
wondrously preserved and will appear again, he correctly identified Nero
with the “beast” and “man of sin.” (Cf. Rev. 13:3; II Thess. 2:7)
Man of Sin
One of the chief eschatological passages of the New Testament is II Thess.
2, which speaks of the “man of sin” whom the Lord would consume at his
coming. (II Thess. 2:3, 8) Tradition among primitive Christians identified
St. Paul’s “man of sin” with St. John’s “antichrist” and Revelation’s
“beast,” many holding that these were references to Nero. In his fourth
homily on II Thessalonians, St. Chrysostom (A.D. 347 to 407) states,
"For the mystery of lawlessness doth already work." He speaks here of
Nero... But he did not also wish to point him out plainly: and this not
from cowardice, but instructing us not to bring upon ourselves
unnecessary enmities, when there is nothing to call for it.”[10]
He who lets
II Thess. indicates that the man of sin could not come to power until “he
who lets” and “what withholdeth” was taken out of the way. (II Thess. 2:6,
7) This has long been recognized as referring to Claudius Caesar and the
restraining power of the religio licita –religions whose practice was
protected by Roman law. Tertullian (A.D. 145-220) thought Rome was the
restraining power alluded to by St. Paul, saying “What obstacle is there but
the Roman state.”[11] This is echoed by several
patristic writers. Victorinus, in his commentary on the Apocalypse, states:
“And after many plagues completed in the world, in the end he says
that a beast ascended from the abyss…that is, of the Romans. Moreover
that he was in the kingdom of the Romans, and that he was among the
Caesars. The Apostle Paul also bears witness, for he says to the
Thessalonians: Let him who now restraineth restrain, until he be taken
out of the way; and then shall appear the Wicked One, even he whose
coming is after the working of Satan, with signs an lying wonders.’ And
that they might know that he should come who then was the prince, he
adds: ‘He already endeavours after the secret of mischief’ – that is,
the mischief which he is about to do he strives to do secretly; but he
is not raised up by his own power, nor by that of his father, but by
command of God.”[12]
Victorinus here connects the “beast” from the abyss with the Roman empire
and the “Wicked One” with the one who was prince when Paul wrote (Nero), and
would follow his father (Claudius) to the throne.[13]
Augustine (A.D. 354-430) is even more explicit:
“Some think that these words refer to the Roman empire, and that the
apostle Paul did not wish to write more explicitly, lest he should incur
a charge of calumny against the Roman empire, in wishing ill to it when
men hoped that it was to be everlasting. So in the words: ‘For the
secret power of lawlessness is already at work’ he referred to Nero,
whose deeds already seemed to be as those of Antichrist.”[14]
Origen’s Astonishing Statements
Dispensationalists to the contrary notwithstanding, Origen
states that Daniel’s seventy weeks were fulfilled in the coming of Christ;[15]
But what is more astonishing by far, Origen indicates that the
eschatological “coming” of the Lord with “fire” is to be understood
figuratively of the destruction of Jerusalem, as maintained by Preterists:
"And if the voices of the prophets say that God "comes down," who has
said "Do I not fill heaven and earth? saith the Lord," the term is used
in a figurative sense For God "comes down" from His own height and
greatness when He arranges the affairs of men, and especially those of
the wicked...So if God is said anywhere in the holy Scriptures to "come
down," it is understood as spoken in conformity with the usage which so
employs the word...But as it is in mockery that Celsus says we speak of
"God coming down like a torturer bearing fire," and thus compels us
unseasonably to investigate the words of deeper meaning, we shall make a
few remarks...The divine word says that our God is a "consuming fire,"
and that "He draws rivers of fire before him"...But when He is said to
be a "consuming fire," we inquire what are the things which are
appropriate to be consumed by God? And we assert that they are
wickedness and the works which result from it, and which, being
figuratively called "wood, hay, and stubble," God consumes as a fire.
The wicked man, accordingly, is said to build up on the previously-laid
foundation of reason, "wood, hay, and stubble." If, then, any one can
show that these words were differently understood by the writer, and can
prove that the wicked man literally builds up "wood, or hay, or
stubble," it is evident that the fire must be understood to be material,
and an object of sense. But if, on the contrary, the works of the wicked
man are spoken of figuratively under the names of "wood, or hay, or
stubble," why does it not at once occur (to inquire) in what sense the
word "fire" is to be taken?...for (the Scripture says) “The fire will
try each man’s work of what sort it is."[16]
A few chapters later, Origen states:
We do not deny, then, that the purificatory fire and the destruction of
the world took place in order that evil might be swept away, and all
things be renewed; for we assert that we have learned these things from
the sacred books of the prophets…And anyone who likes may convict this
statement of falsehood, if it be not the case that the whole Jewish
nation was overthrown within one single generation after Jesus had
undergone these sufferings at their hands. For forty and two years, I
think after the date of the crucifixion of Jesus, did the destruction of
Jerusalem take place.”[17]
“All things renewed” refers to Rev. 21:5, and shows Origen understood that
Revelation spoke to the destruction of Jerusalem and that we are living in
the new heavens and earth.
Space prevents more examples. None of the writers above were Preterists; one
and all still looked for Christ to come a second time. Yet, their writings
evidence definite Preterist strains and influences. They are like men being
pulled in two directions: backward to the events of the first century and
forward to the purported end of the cosmos. Unable to reconcile their
conflicting eschatologies, they synthesized futurism and preterism,
inventing fantastic notions about Nero and Elijah returning a second time.
How can this be accounted for? We submit that the original Preterism of
Christ and the apostles was never fully lost, but was handed down by
tradition and preserved by diligent study of the scriptures, and continued
to manifest itself, even when the larger truths about Christ’s second coming
were totally lost or obscured.
The Departure From Preterism
Chiliasm
(A.D. 175 – A.D. 300)
Eschatology had been the especial concern of first century Christians. The
gospels and nearly every epistle assume Christ’s imminent return. “Be ye
also patient; stablish your hearts: for the coming of the Lord draweth
nigh.” (Jm. 5:8) But in the centuries following A.D. 70, the church’s
attention turned from eschatology to apologetics. Great effort was made to
show that every detail of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection was
prophesied in the psalms, the prophets, and the law. The study of
eschatology waned as men applied their efforts to more basic doctrines of
redemption. Examples may be seen in the writings of Justin Martyr, Irenaeus,
and Tertullian who wrote “apologies,” defending the faith and proving that
Jesus was Christ. This is as it should be. The doctrines of faith and
redemption are the most important and it was natural and desirable that men
employed their efforts to establish the fundamentals of the new faith.
However, the result was that men’s understanding of eschatology and
comprehension of the prophetic method and language grew weak and attenuated.
“Chiliasm” grew up (from “chilia,” Greek for “a thousand”), which placed a
literal construction upon the language of the prophets, asserting that the
earth would be wondrously regenerated and Christ reign for a thousand years.
Lactantius (A.D. 260-330) could thus write:
But He, when He shall have destroyed unrighteousness, and executed
His great judgment, and shall have recalled to life the righteous, who
have lived from the beginning, will be engaged among men a thousand
years, and will rule them with most just command...Then they who shall
be alive in their bodies shall not die, but during those thousand years
shall produce an infinite multitude, and their offspring shall be holy,
and beloved by God; but they who shall be raised from the dead shall
preside over the living as judges...About the same time also the prince
of the devils, who is the contriver of all evils, shall be bound with
chains, and shall be imprisoned during the thousand years of the
heavenly rule in which righteousness shall reign in the world, so that
he may contrive no evil against the people of God...Throughout this time
Beasts shall not be nourished by blood, nor birds by prey; but all
things shall be peaceful and tranquil. Lions and calves shall stand
together at the manger, the wolf shall not carry off the sheep, the
hound shall not hunt for prey; hawks and eagles shall not injure; the
infant shall play with serpents.
This sort of approach betrays the most fundamental misunderstanding of the
usus loquendi (Lat. “manner of speaking”) of the prophets. It never occurs
to the writer that the prophets spoke figuratively and poetically of the
things they described. Chiliasm was quickly repudiated by the thinking
church and later condemned as heretical by the Augsburg and Helvetic
Confessions.[18] However, in England, where these
confessions had no authority, chiliasm was revived by Mede, Sir Isaac
Newton, and Whiston.[19] Later, it was picked up by
Darby and Scofield and woven into the fabric of modern day Dispensational
Premillennialism, where it has been secretly promoted and served with
advantage Jewish Zionists who have bent Anglo-American foreign policy toward
Israel and the Middle East to their purpose.
Allegorical Method
(A.D. 400 - A.D. 1200)
Another development was the rise of the spiritualizing method of Alexandria.
After the destruction of Jerusalem, Antioch of Syria became the heart of the
Christian faith. As we have seen, traces of the contemporary-historical
method show themselves in writers during this period. However, in the third
century, Alexandria rose to predominance as the intellectual center of
Christianity through the genius of Clement and Origen. Alexandria had been
associated with an allegorical interpretation of scripture since the days of
Philo Judaeus (20 B.C. - A.D. 50). According to this method, the historical
narratives of scripture are abstracted from real life and turned into
allegories of morals and doctrine. Thus, Joseph’s brethren stripping him of
his coat, casting him into a pit, and selling him into Egypt becomes a
free-ranging allegory about knowledge vs. ignorance:
“Also, in the case of Joseph: the brothers having envied this young
man, who by his knowledge was possessed of uncommon foresight, stripped
off the coat of many colours, and took and threw him into a
pit…Otherwise interpreted, the coat of many colours is lust, which takes
its way into a yawning pit.” And if one open up or hew out a pit,” it is
said, “and do not cover it, and there fall in there a calf or ass, the
owner of the pit shall pay the price in money, and give it to his
neighbour; and the dead body shall be his.”[20] Here add that prophecy:
The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master’s crib: but Israel hath
not understood Me.”[21] In order, then, that none
of those, who have fallen in with the knowledge taught by thee, may
become incapable of holding the truth, and disobey and fall away, it is
said, Be thou sure in treatment of the word, and shut up the living
spring in the depth from those who approach irrationally, but reach
drink to those that thirst for truth…This then is the type of “the law
and the prophets which were until John.”[22]
Applied to Revelation, the spiritualizing method meant that the
contemporary-historical parameters of the book were lost or ignored and it
was treated allegorically instead. The allegorical method of Alexandria
exerted great influence upon leading thinkers in following centuries. The
great personalities of the beginning of the medieval period, Eusebius,
Jerome, Tyconius, and Augustine, understood apocalyptic symbolism in terms
of the struggle between good and evil in every age, rather than specific
events in history or the world’s end.
Augustine, for example, saw Revelation in terms of a spiritual allegory
telling the story of redemption. Although the Antichrist and Elijah were
literal characters who would appear in history, for Augustine they are
merely actors upon a larger allegorical stage in which two cities co-exist:
One group, citizens of Babylon, living in sin and unbelief, the other,
citizens of the City of God, sojourning here in faith. On a superficial
level, Augustine’s interpretation and method has a certain appeal: There are
indeed two classes of men dwelling upon earth; those that are saved and
those that are lost. Identifying the saved and lost with the two cities
portrayed in Revelation loosely approximates the truth. However, upon closer
examination this method is shown to be completely inadequate: If Babylon is
a symbol for the lost and the City of God for the saved, what do the other
cities in Revelation symbolize and who are their inhabitants? (Rev. 16:19)
Moreover, how is it that the beast and kings of the earth combine together
to desolate the great city and burn her with fire? (Rev. 17:16, 17) If
Babylon is the symbolic city of unbelievers, where would these dwell after
they have destroyed supposed home? And what about the all the language of
Christ’s imminent coming so prominent in the letters to the seven churches
and other passages in Revelation? (Rev. 1:1, 32:5, 16, 25; 3:3, 10; 16:15;
22:7, 10, 12, 20) If these are to have any meaning, they must be understood
in terms of the contemporary-historical circumstances of the original
recipients, not an allegorical treatment of the text.
Augustine’s method also comes short in terms of Revelation’s millennia. For
Augustine, the father of modern-day Post-millennialism (though
Amillennialists claim him too), the binding of the dragon and reign of the
saints for a thousand years spoke to conversion and regeneration. Connecting
Christ’s parabolic binding of the strong man (Matt. 12:29) with Revelation's
millennia, Augustine thought Rev. 20:1-7 symbolized Christ binding the
devil, permitting men to reign with him by knowledge of the gospel and
remission of sins:
“Now this binding of the devil took place not only at the time when
the church began to spread beyond the land of Judaea into one nation
after another, but it is taking place even now and will continue to the
end of the age, when he is to be loosed, because even now men are being
converted from the unbelief in which he held them into faith, and beyond
doubt men will go on being converted to the end of the age. And that
strong one is bound in every instance for any man who is taken from him,
being, as it were, a piece of his goods; and the pit in which he is shut
up is not exhausted with the death of those who were alive when he was
first shut up, but others have been born and replace them, and this goes
on to the end of the age.”[23]
The similarity between the free-ranging allegorizing of Clement and
Augustine’s explanation of the first resurrection comes through in this
passage fairly well. Like Clement who has Joseph’s being cast into a pit
represent the battle between knowledge vs. ignorance, for Augustine, the
binding of the dragon represents faith vs. unbelief. The devil blinded men
through sin and ignorance, but knowledge of the gospel binds the devil,
setting men free. Overlooking the historical context Revelation spoke to,
Augustine wanders through the pages of scripture looking for an explanation
of John’s imagery and ends up treating it as a type of allegory instead,
much as he does the great city, Babylon. The text is anchored to no specific
historical referent, but floats about through the centuries, mystifying
readers who are stymied as much by Augustine’s explanation as they are the
symbolism of the passage. [24]
The dragon (Rome, Leviathan, the world civil power) was symbolically cast
into the bottomless pit (hades, tartarus) upon receiving a mortal wound to
its head in the collapse of persecution that arose over Stephen, portrayed
in Revelation twelve. (Rev. 12:13-17; cf. Acts 9:31; Rev. 13:3, 14) It was
bound there during the reign of Claudius who maintained a policy affording
the church the protection of law, even to the point of banishing the Jews
from Rome for rioting against Christians. (Acts 18:2) However, upon the
ascent of Nero, the restraining power of the religio licita was taken away,
and the dragon and beast were loosed to persecute anew the church. (Rev.
17:8; 20:7-10) Thus, the symbolic thousand-year binding of the dragon begins
and ends before the reign of the martyrs.
John describes martyrs beheaded for not receiving the mark of the beast as
living and reigning with Christ in what is termed the “first resurrection.”
(Rev. 20:4, 6) The first resurrection therefore has to do with the souls of
the departed dead in paradise, not the regeneration of those presently
living. (Cf. Matt. 22:31, 32; Lk. 16:19-31; 23:43) The martyrs die under
Nero and the persecuting power of the empire (the beast). They reign with
Christ in hades paradise “a thousand years” until the general resurrection.
(Rev. 20:5) The common symbol of a thousand years does not point to a single
millennium, but to the timeless nature of the hadean realm. In the material
realm, time is marked by the movement of bodies through space. But the
spiritual realm exists apart from the time-space “continuum”; time as we
know and experience it does not exist there at all. Hence, one day is with
the Lord as a thousand years and a thousand years as a day. (Ps. 90:4; II
Pet. 3:8) The longest any man lived on earth was Methuselah, who lived 969
years. (Gen. 5:27) The thousand years thus exceeds the span of all earthly
life. Therefore, living and reigning with Christ a thousand years points to
the fact that the souls of the martyrs have left earthly existence and
entered the spiritual realm above. It is more than a little significant that
Greco-Roman tradition had it that the dead dwelt in hades a thousand years
before attaining new lives.[25] The symbol of a thousand
years would therefore have been uniquely discernable to the Greek and Latin
speaking disciples of the first century, who could thus face the prospect of
martyrdom with assurance God had prepared a place of rest for them in
paradise pending the general resurrection. (Cf. Rev. 6:9-11; 14:9-13)
Apocalyptic
(A.D. 1200 – A.D. 1500)
The allegorical method of Tyconius and Augustine dominated interpretation of
Revelation for the next eight hundred years. The late medieval period saw a
marked change in approach to eschatology and Revelation. Most noteworthy,
this period witnessed a proliferation of “new” revelations as unstable souls
predicted and prophesied the coming of Antichrist coupled with variations
upon utopian millennial themes. The historical moorings of Revelation were
completely lost to sight; eschatological interpretation was governed by
subjective impression of contemporary events. The leading apocalyptic writer
of this era, whose influence was to be felt for the next three centuries,
was Joachim of Fiore.
Joachim of Fiore, an abbot of the Cistercian order, wrote three major
treaties of an apocalyptic nature, and more than a dozen lesser writings. He
met with many of the important personalities of the day, including pope
Lucius III, pope Innocent II, Richard the Lionhearted, Emperor Henry VI, the
Empress Constance, and Fredrick II. Joachim believed that all the major
events of the history of national Israel were typical and prophetic of
events that would overtake the church. For example, Joachim identified seven
major “persecutions” suffered by the Jews[26] and
believed on that basis the church would undergo the same before the world’s
end:
“For we should remember that the Hebrew people bore seven special
persecution in which without doubt the seven special tests of Christians
are signified. The Apostle testifies to this when he says that ‘all
things happened to them in figure’ (I Cor. 10:11). Just as in the Old
Testament, when the seven tribulations were finished, the Savior who was
to redeem the human race came into the world, so when just as many
persecution against the Church have been completed, the punishing Judge
of this world will make his appearance.”[27]
By this direct “concordance” between the Old and New Testaments, Joachim
believed the events of the past, present, and future were clearly
identifiable in the scriptures and that the world’s end could therefore be
pinpointed. Another of Joachim’s beliefs that was foundational to his system
was that the history of the world was made of three status or ages,
consisting of forty-two generations each. These status overlapped; the
beginning of one overlapping the end of another. The first answered to the
law and began with Adam; the second answered to the gospel and began under
Uzziah; and the third began under St. Benedict. The third status Joachim
believed would succeed and completely displace the gospel/church age in A.D.
1260 and would fulfill the imagery of Rev. 21 and 22, the new Jerusalem.
Joachim thought the third status was to be marked by the perfection of the
church, which would be organized along monastic lines with two great orders
of monks leading disciplined and contemplative lives (this is why it began
with Benedict).
We think that in him who was seen sitting on the white cloud and was
like the Son of Man (Rev. 14:14) there is signified some order of just
men to whom it is given to imitate the life of the Son of Man
perfectly…Wherefore, just as in him who was like the Son of Man there is
to be understood a future order of perfect men preserving the life of
Christ and the apostles, so in the angle who went forth from the temple
in heaven is to be seen an order of hermits imitating the life of the
angels.[28]
Joachim’s belief that present and future events were predictable,
together with his belief in imminence of the coming third status, meant that
Revelation and other eschatological scriptures were to be interpreted in
light of contemporary events. Saracens, Moslems, Mongels, Tartars, princes
and popes all became the stuff of eschatological interpretation. The
imminence which marked eschatological expectation also tended to produce a
fanatic, lunatic fringe, particularly in the Franciscan order.
The Franciscan order is named after Francis of Assisi. A fanatic and
eccentric who claimed to hear voices from God and spoke to animals, Francis
began his career as an intenerate preacher a few years after the death of
Joachim in 1202. Renouncing all earthly possessions and subjecting himself
to a sever discipline of fasting and self abnegation, Francis roamed the
countryside begging and working to support himself while he preached his
particular version of the gospel. He soon attracted followers and founded
three orders of mendicants (Lat. mendicare, “to beg”) whose distinguishing
feature was their belief that a life conformed to Christ required that men
live in poverty. On or about the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross (14
September) in A.D. 1224, after protracted fasting and praying, Francis fell
into a vision in which he “saw” the seraphim. He thereafter purportedly
received the “stigmata,” the five wounds of Christ upon the cross, allegedly
witnessing to a life perfectly conformed to the crucified Christ – a
superstitious error derived from St. Paul’s statement in Galatians, saying,
he bore in his body the marks of the Lord Jesus. (Gal. 6:17)
Given the fanatical nature of its origin and rule, it is not surprising that
the Franciscan order soon became a hotbed of Joachite apocalyptic
expectation. Many Franciscans believed that their commitment to poverty and
monasticism identified them as the future order of monks, preserving the
life of Christ and the apostles, which Joachim had written about. It is with
this view that in A.D. 1250, a young friar named Gerardo of Borgo San
Donnino issued a work called the Introduction to the Eternal Gospel, which
was an interpretation and summary of Joachim’s three major works. Gerardo’s
Introduction claimed that the third status would arrive in A.D. 1260,
signaling the total abrogation of the church of the second status, including
the substitution of Joachim’s writing for the Old and New Testaments.
Gerardo’s work created such a scandal that a papal commission was held at
Anagni under Alexander IV in A.D. 1255, which condemned the Introduction,
but not Joachim himself. Gerardo was imprisoned for life and the minister
general of the Franciscans, John of Parma, was forced to step down from his
position.
The blow to Joachitism in the Franciscans was only temporary; Bonaventure,
Parma’s successor, was thoroughly Joachite in orientation and caused the
infection to further spread in the order. Bonaventure synthesized Joachim’s
doctrine of three stati with teaching from early patristic writers (viz.,
Hyppolytus) which had it that the world consisted of seven ages and as many
millennia. According to Bonaventure, Joachim’s third status answered to the
fabled millennial age of the seventh epoch of earth’s history:
In the seventh age we know that these things will take place – the
rebuilding of the temple, the restoration of the city, and the granting
o peace. Likewise in the coming seventh age there will be a restoration
of divine worship and a rebuilding of the city. Then the prophecy of
Ezekiel will be fulfilled when the city comes down from heaven (Ezek.
40); not indeed that city which is above, but that city which is below,
the Church Militant which will then be conformed to the Church
Triumphant as far as possible in this life. Then will be the building
and restoration of the city as it was in the beginning. Then there will
be peace. God alone knows how long that peace will last.[29]
The history of apocalyptic frenzy among the Franciscans reaches unto the
latter half of the fifteenth century. The Great Schism (A.D. 1378-1418)
witnessed three popes reigning simultaneously, one from Avignon, one from
Rome, and a third from Pisa. The schism was healed by the Council of
Constance, which deposed the Avignonese and Pisan popes, allowed the Roman
pope to resign, and elected a new pope, Martin V (A.D. 1417-1431). As a
necessary condition to reform the church, the Council declared its supremacy
to the pope and established a timetable for future reform councils, which
Martin and his successor preceded to undercut. Thus died hopes for reform of
the medieval church. However, the fact of the schism fueled apocalyptic
expectations. Dissident off shoot groups of Franciscans called “Fratricelli”
(Little Brothers) circulated a new generation of private revelations. The
reformation and perfection of the church continued to be a recurring theme;
the carnal church was called the whore of Babylon; the coming perfected
church of the third status/seventh age was identified with the new
Jerusalem. More and more the papacy was interpreted as the actual or
mystical antichrist. The drama finally drew to a close when, after nearly
three hundred years of spurious claims of new revelations and irresponsible
exegesis of biblical texts, the Franciscan order was reined in following a
period inquisition and executions by papal authorities on the one hand, and
determined resistance and assassinations on the other.
This brief summary does not cover all the movements and interpretive schools
of the late medieval period. Many did not subscribe to the apocalypticism of
Joachim and the Franciscans, notably, the Dominican scholastic, Thomas
Acquinas. However, it does represent the dominate trend and literature of
the period. In its failure to see the historical context of Revelation, its
interpretation of apocalyptic material in terms of contemporary events, its
characterization of the Catholic church as Babylon, and the pope as
antichrist, the latter medieval period anticipated themes of the
Reformation, the next stage in the road back to Preterism.
Continuous Historical
(A.D. 1500-1700)
The method of interpretation that came out of the Reformation is called the
“Continuous Historical.” This approach finds in the imagery of Revelation a
continuous, chronologically sequential panorama of history reaching until
the world’s end. The first to use this approach was Nicolas of Lyra (A.D.
1329) in his Postilla. A Franciscan who rejected the apocalypticism of
Joachim and his fellow Franciscans, Nicolas proffered a
continuous-historical interpretation of Revelation beginning in the first
century and reaching to his own time. The continuous-historical method was
introduced into the Reformation by Luther. Luther was much indebted to
Nicolas and adopted his approach, but, unlike Nicolas, Luther unreservedly
equated papal Rome with the beast and Babylon the harlot. Other reformers
followed Luther, finding in Revelation’s imagery allusions to papal Rome and
the Reformation. The faithful church was the woman who was hid of God 1,260
days in the wilderness. (Rev. 12:6, 14) Using the day-for-a-year approach,
it was thought the 1,260 days were the number of years from the church’s
apostasy under the popes, until the Reformation. In seeing papal Rome as the
beast and harlot, the Reformers were following themes first advanced by the
Franciscan Joachites. The Joachites were also the first to see allusions to
their own time in the 1,260 days of the woman hiding in the wilderness,
predicting that the year A.D. 1260 would bring in the fabled third status.
The continuous-historical method has few modern proponents. Its traditional
interpretation equating the beast and harlot with papal Rome has not
withstood serious scrutiny; no reputable scholars embrace it today. By far
the greatest objection to the continuous-historical method is that
Revelation is arranged more in terms of theme than order in time. The
recapitulatory nature of Revelation was first noted in writing by Victorinus:
“We must not regard the order of what is said, because frequently the
Holy Spirit, when He has traversed even to the end of the last times,
returns again to the same times, and fills up what He had before failed
to say. Nor must we look for order in the Apocalypse; but we must follow
the meaning of those things which are prophesied.” [30]
Thus, each vision often retraces the steps of its predecessor, portraying
the same period from a different perspective, but extending progressively
further in time and event toward its ultimate climax. Thus, the day of the
Lord or parts thereof are portrayed no fewer than five times. (Rev. 6:12-17;
11:15-19; 14:19; 16:19-21; 20:11-15) The eschatological war against the
saints is also portrayed several times under different names and symbols: in
Rev. 16:16 it is portrayed under the imagery of the battle of Armageddon;
but in Rev. 19:11-21 and 20:7-10 it is described as the battle of Gog and
Magog. The binding of the dragon and beast in Rev. 20:1-3, is first alluded
to in 11:7 and 17:8. Indeed, the whole of chapters 17:1 though 20:11 is a
parenthetical recapitulation of events described in chapters 13-16. Perhaps
the most obvious proof that Revelation is thematically arranged is the fact
Christ’s coronation is portrayed in chapters four and five, but his birth
and ascension are portrayed in chapter twelve! In attempting to interpret
Revelation in a continuous, chronologically progressive manner, the
continuous-historical method is at hopeless odds with the thematic and
recapitulatory structure of the book.
Academic Rebirth of Preterism
(1800s)
Preterism experienced a brief rebirth in midst of the Reformation when the
Spanish Jesuit Luis De Alcazar (1554-1613) published his commentary called
Investigation of the Hidden Sense of the Apocalypse. Alcasar proposed that
Revelation applied to Christianity’s triumph over Judaism and pagan Rome.
According to Alcasar:
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 |
Revelation chapters 1-11 describe the rejection of the Jews
and the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans.
Chapters 12 - 19 describe the overthrow of Roman paganism
(the great harlot) and the conversion of the empire to the
church.
Chapter 20 describes the persecution and judgment upon the
antichrist, identified as Nero Cæsar (54-68 A.D.).
Revelation 21 -22 describe the triumph of the new Jerusalem,
the Roman Catholic Church.
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In attempting to understand Revelation in terms of the historical
circumstances of it recipients, Alcasar employed the scientific canons of
literary criticism and thus came very close to a correct understanding of
the book. However, in ascribing the final victory to the Roman Catholic
Church, Alcasar struck a sour note at a time when Europe and the world was
committed to breaking ties with papal Rome. Preterism’s rebirth was thus
abortive and would have to wait almost three hundred years before it
received serious attention again.
In the mid- to latter eighteen hundreds, scholars began to realize the
preterist context of Revelation and related eschatological events. Some of
the preterist titles of this period include:
Concerning the seventh trumpet of Revelation 11:15 and the “latter
days” Terry stated:
“The seventh trumpet, as we understand this book, is the symbolic signal
of the end of the old dispensation and the consequent beginning of the
new era of the kingdom of Christ on earth (comp. xi, 15). But the Old
Testament prophets contemplated the appearance of the Messiah and the
going forth of the new word of Jehovah as occurring “in the end of the
days” – that is, the last days of the eon or dispensation under which
they were living…This “end of the times” belongs, not to the era of the
new dispensation, but to the concluding days of the old…It is a serious
error, therefore, when learned exegetes persist in assuming that the
phrase “the last days,” as employed in the Scriptures, means the period
of the new Christian dispensation.” (Milton S. Terry, Biblical
Apocalyptics, (Eaton & Mains, NY, 1898; reprinted 1999 by Wipf and Stock
Publishers, Eugene, OR), p. 361)“
With the exception of Russell’s Parousia, the above titles were “partial
Preterist” – the assumed that at least some of Revelation’s imagery remained
to be fulfilled. At this stage, Preterism was merely academic, existing only
in scholarly circles. It would be another hundred years before Preterism
would become a grass roots movement. Because at this stage Preterism existed
only at academic levels, it was destined to be eclipsed by a rebirth of
chiliasm in the form of Dispensationalism.
Dispensationalism
(1800-1900s)
Dispensationalism
is probably the dominate approach to eschatology today, particularly in the
United States. It usually credited as the child of John Nelson Darby of the
Plymouth Brethren. Darby believed in the future salvation and restoration of
national Israel. He believed that Old Testament promises and prophecies to
Israel were not fulfilled in the church or New Testament. Dispensationalists
deny that the church replaced Israel as God’s covenant people, arguing
instead that ethnic Jews are still the object of God’s special promises.
Dispensationalists believe that Jesus came to set up an earthly kingdom over
the Jews and world. However, when the Jews allegedly rejected Jesus (but see
Jno. 6:15), God’s plan was foiled, the prophetic clock of Daniel’s 70 weeks
was stopped, and the church was created instead as a type of “parenthesis”
in God’s larger plan. Thus, instead of being the culmination of God’s plan,
the cross was supposedly an unforeseen contingency. Dispensationalists
believe in an “any moment” “rapture” of the church. Once the church is
wafted away, the prophetic clock of Daniel will resume ticking and the
seventh week ensue. During the 70th week, national Israel will again assume
center stage, the temple be rebuilt, and the Old Testament sacrificial
system resumed. After this, Dispensationalists believe the second coming
will occur and there will be a millennial reign of Christ on earth at
Jerusalem. Darby’s and the Brethren’s writings influenced protestant
ministers in America, including D. L. Moody, James Brookes, J. R. Graves, A.
J. Gordon, and C. I. Scofield.
Dispensationalism gained grass roots enthusiasm where preterism of the 1800s
failed largely through the Bible Conference and Bible Institute movements.
Beginning in the 1870s, various Bible conferences sprang up around the U.S.
These conferences were not started to promote Dispensationalism, but
proponents of this new theology promoted their program at the conferences.
In time, conferences like the American Bible and Prophetic Conferences
(1878—1914) would actively promote Dispensationalism. In the late 1800s,
several Bible institutes were founded that taught Dispensational theology.
These included The Nyack Bible Institute (1882), The Boston Missionary
Training School (1889), and The Moody Bible Institute (1889), the Bible
Institute of Los Angeles (1907), and the Philadelphia College of the Bible
(1914). However, Dispensationalism received it greatest promotion by Cyrus
Scofield. The publication of Scofield’s Reference Bible by Oxford University
Press in 1909 was a wind fall for advocates of Dispensationalism. The
Scofield Reference Bible became the leading Bible used by American
Evangelicals and Fundamentalists for the next sixty years. Finally,
following WWI, many dispensational Bible colleges were formed. Foremost of
these was Dallas Theological Seminary (1924). Dispensationalism thus began
to be taught in an academic setting, influencing generations of college
students.
The basic suppositions of Dispensationalism are heretical in that they deny
that the cross and church represent the culmination of God’s soteriological
purpose in Christ, insisting instead that God’s program is somehow still
centered in ethnic Jews. Logically, if the Jews had not rejected Christ and
he had established his earthly kingdom at that time, the cross would not
have occurred and there would be no salvation of the human race.
Dispensationalism’s teaching that there is to be a resumption of the temple
service also denies the cross of Christ and represents a reversion to the
types and shadows of the Law. Yet, it was their very adherence to the temple
and its service that marked out the Jews as the enemies of Christ in seeking
to perpetuate a system founded in denial and unbelief: “He that killeth an
ox is as if he slew a man; he that sacrificeth a lamb, as if he cut off a
dog’s neck; he that offereth an oblation, as if he offered swine’s blood; he
that burneth incense, as if he blessed an idol.” (Isa. 66:3) As long as the
temple service on earth endured, it stood in denial of Christ’s priesthood
in heaven; as long as the nation endured it stood in denial of his kingdom.
Return to the temple service is nothing less than apostasy from Christ. “For
if I rebuild again the things which I destroyed, I make myself a
transgressor.” (Gal. 2:18; cf. Heb. 10:26-29; 13:8-10) Far from coming to
establish an earthly kingdom and re-institute the temple service, Christ’s
second coming was to destroy these types which stood in denial of his
Sonship, substitutionary death, and atoning blood: “A voice of noise from
the city, a voice from the temple, a voice of the Lord that rendereth
recompence to his enemies.” (Isa. 66:6; cf. Matt. 24:3, 34; Acts 6:13; Heb.
9:26-28; 10:37; 12: 27, 28)
Dispensationalists have been taking a beating in recent years from debaters
of the Preterist camp, and today they will no longer accept challenges to
debate. Let us hope this is a sign that the sun is beginning to set on his
dangerous doctrine.
Modern Preterism’s Beginnings: the Churches of Christ
(Early to Mid 1900s)
The Preterist movement today originated largely in the churches of Christ.
The Churches of Christ have their origin in the American Restoration
Movement of the early 1800s. The movement placed a strong emphasis in
departing from traditional forms of worship and organization, and man-made
creeds and dogmas, in favor of returning to the Bible as the all sufficient
rule of faith and practice. “Christ our only creed, the gospel our only
plea, the Bible our only rule of faith and practice” was one of the
movement’s leading slogans. Because it was a movement whose emphasis was on
doctrinal reform, the Church of Christ placed unusually strong emphasis on
personal Bible study and an unmatched command of the scripture in members
and leaders alike. Emphasis on the need for doctrinal correctness and the
movement’s traditional abhorrence of creeds created an environment conducive
to recovering New Testament Preterism.
Foy E. Wallace Jr., the Father of Modern Preterism?
If there is a single individual that can be credited as the father of modern
Preterism it is the Church of Christ preacher, evangelist, author and
editor,
Foy E. Wallace Jr.
Wallace was a leading figure in the Churches of Christ coming out of the
1930s. A superb speaker, able debater, and writer, he quickly rose to
national prominence in the Churches of Christ, holding numerous meetings
across the U.S. each year. Wallace also served as editor of the Gospel
Advocate (Nashville), a leading monthly publication within the Churches of
Christ. In his role as editor, writer, and preacher, Wallace would help
define the issues and establish the norms that would shape the church for
the next fifty years.
One of Wallace’s contributions toward the modern Preterist movement was his
attack upon Dispensationalism (Premillennialism). Premillennialism
threatened to enter the Churches of Christ in the early twentieth century
through Robert H. Boll, a prominent preacher, who also served as editor of
the Gospel Advocate. Boll became enamored with the Premillennialism of
Charles Taze Russell, founder of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, and began writing
Premillennialist articles for the Gospel Advocate (circa 1910). Boll was
forced to resign, but continued to teach and disseminate Premillennialist
doctrine within the church, gaining a following.
The Premillennial movement within the churches of Christ was destroyed
primarily by Foy Wallace Jr. during his four year (1930-1934) tenure as
editor of the Gospel Advocate and in two debates with Charles Neal. The
first Wallace-Neal debate was held in Winchester, KY., Jan. 2-6, 1933, and
was later published in book form. Neal affirmed "The Bible clearly teaches
that after the second coming of Christ and before the final resurrection and
judgment, there will be an age or dispensation of one thousand years during
which Christ will reign on the earth." Wallace also started a publication
entitled the Bible Banner to refute Premillennnial doctrine and would
publish God’s Prophetic Word (1946, revised 1960), a volume of several
hundred pages, which today remains one of the most thorough treatments
exposing Premillennial errors. Central to Wallace's refutation of
Premillennialism was proof of the restoration of the Davidic throne and
kingdom in Christ beginning with his ascension.
The other side of Wallace’s contribution to the modern Preterist movement
was his commentary on Revelation, published in 1966. Wallace devoted
forty-five pages to defending the early date for composition of Revelation,
and demonstrated throughout that Revelation’s major theme was the
destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. Although Wallace’s commentary was
merely partial Preterist, seeing in Revelation twenty’s millennia imagery
extending beyond the first century and into the indefinite future, it
remains a favorite in Preterist circles today.
Wallace’s efforts to establish the historical, first century context of
Revelation and the fulfilled nature of the Davidic kingdom and throne in
Christ’s church paved the way for later generations in the Church of Christ
to arrive at the full Preterist position.
Preterism Reaches the Grass Roots
(Mid to later 1900s)
One of the earliest advocates of fulfilled eschatology was
Max R. King,
a preacher from Warren, Ohio. King published a book entitled The Spirit of
Prophecy (1971), in which he argued that Christ’s second coming occurred in
A.D. 70. King’s book drew fire and a debate was held between King and Jim
McGuiggan (1975), a prominent writer and preacher in the churches of Christ.
King soundly defeated McGuiggan. The debate was later published as the
McGuiggan/King Debate (1975). King’s able defense established that there was
more to Preterism than met the eye and required closer looking at.
Subsequent attacks upon “Kingism” in brotherhood papers and periodicals only
served to give the movement publicity and win more to its side.
Other Church of Christ preachers whose studies independently led them to the
full Preterist position and who would join forces with King included Jack
Scott (Pinole, CA/ Kalispell, MT),
Don Preston
(Ardmore, OK), and William Bell (Memphis, TN). Together these, with Ed
Stevens (Bradford, PA) and John Noë (Indianapolis, IN) (more below), would
become the leading edge of the Preterist movement in the 1980s and 1990s,
writing articles and reasoning with those that would meet them in public
debate. King has since lost significant influence in the movement due to
peculiar beliefs about the nature of the eschatological resurrection (the
“corporate body” view). According to King, all New Testament passages about
the resurrection have their primary application to the spiritual
resurrection of Christ’s mystic body from Judaism’s “sin-death;” the
individual’s personal resurrection from hades is only secondarily alluded
to, if at all. Although embraced by many in the early days of the movement,
most preterists have moved away from King on this position. Few today see
reference to the resurrection of a corporate body anywhere in the New
Testament, it being the general consensus that the eschatological
resurrection spoke to the resurrection of soul from hades; Christians dying
today go straight to heaven. King’s son, Tim, is presently at the head of
Presence Ministries, an organization King founded to promote preterism, but
has taken it in a direction that has further alienated it from mainstream
preterism.
Ed Stevens espoused partial Preterism while at Texas Tech in 1972 through
Foy E. Wallace Jr.’s commentary on Revelation, and was well on his way to
full Preterism in the mid ‘70s while studying at Sunset School of Preaching
in Lubbock, Texas, a Church of Christ institution, where he met King and
obtained a copy of his book The Spirit of Prophecy. King was then engaged in
the written debate with McGuiggan, who was an instructor at Sunset. Few have
advanced the cause of Preterism like Stevens. Versed in computers and HTML
when the industry was still young, Stevens established an early presence for
Preterism on the internet. Stevens would go on to leave the Church of
Christ, joining the Reformed Church, carrying the message there, and wining
many to the cause. His International Preterist Association continues to be a
leading voice in Preterism today.
Don Preston came into the movement in the early nineties and is perhaps the
most studied and able voice in Preterism today. Don is testimony to what one
man can do with the support of a congregation behind him. His position as
preacher at the Ardmore church of Christ, where he has served for 15 years,
has enabled him to devote much time and effort to the cause. Don has
published numerous articles, books, and tracts, and met many big names in
debate, including Tommy Ice, F. LaGard Smith, and James Jordan.
Other Church of Christ ministers that have published Preterist works include
Jesse Mills (Results of Fulfilled Prophecy, 2001, Commentary on Daniel,
2003; Commentary on Revelation, 2004); Gene Fadely (Revelations, Kingdoms in
Conflict, 1995; Hebrews, Covenants in Contrast,1996; Prophecy: Year 2000 and
Beyond, 1998); Tom and Steve Kloske (The
Second Coming: Mission Accomplished, 2003), and Kurt Simmons (The
Consummation of the Ages, 2003).
Non-Church of Christ names that have risen to the top of the movement
include John Noë and John Anderson. Noë has been active in the movement
since the early nineties. Noë is the first full Preterist to be awarded a
PhD (2003). Noë’s published works include The Apocalypse Conspiracy (1991),
Beyond the End Times (1999), Shattering the Left Behind Delusion (2000), and
Dead in their Tracks (2001). Noë has also recently had a Preterist article -
An Exegetical Basis for a Preterist-Idealist Understanding of the Book of
Revelation - accepted and awaiting publication in JETS (Journal of the
Evangelical Theological Society), which he has been a member of for many
years. John Anderson has hosted a weekly radio broadcast since Feb. 2001,
which has carried the message of Preterism to untold thousands across the
U.S. and around the world. John joined Don Preston in debating Tommy Ice and
Mark Hitchock (2003), and has hosted a conference in Sparta, NC, since 2001,
featuring many leaders from within the movement.
Today, Preterism has leaped over all denominational boundaries and claims
champions and adherents from every major church in Christendom.
The Attack upon Preterism
(Early Twenty-first Century)
Beginning in the late eighties, Preterism received an enormous boost from
individuals who would later become some of its most vitriolic opponents. In
1983,
R. C.
Sproul Sr., a leading voice in the Reformed Church, wrote the
foreword to a republication of J. Stuart Russell’s The Parousia. Russell’s
book, written in the late 1800s, took a full preterist position regarding
the second coming, arguing that Christ returned in the events culminating in
the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. Although Sproul stopped short of
giving full endorsement to Russell’s conclusions, the republication of The
Parousia by Baker Books, a leading publishing house, with Spoul’s name
appended, gave Preterism an enormous boost, taking it from the fringe and
thrusting it into mainstream Christendom. Baker Books would later publish
Sproul’s The Last Day’s According to Jesus (1998), in which Sproul made the
case that most New Testament passages traditionally understood to speak to
the end of the world actually spoke to the destruction of Jerusalem. In his
book, Sproul mentioned by name several advocates of full Preterism,
including Ed Stevens and Max King, giving further credit and exposure to the
movement. Sproul also discussed, but did not decide, various views about the
resurrection, leaving, or appearing to leave open the distinct possibility
that the full Preterist position was viable.
In 1989,
Kenneth
Gentry Jr. published Before Jerusalem Fell. Gentry’s book argued
from both external evidence of patristic writers and internal evidence from
the text itself that Revelation was written before, and is about, the
destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. Gentry’s book has since undergone
several reprints and has contributed significantly to the cause of Preterism.
Other works of Gentry include his contribution to a commentary on Revelation
(Four Views of Revelation), Perilous Times (1999) and The Beast of
Revelation, each of which argues a first century context for many
eschatological passages.
Unwilling or unable to go the whole way to full Preterism, still clinging to
the empty promise of Postmillennialism, Sproul Jr., whose father authored
The Last Days According Jesus, Gentry would go on to become outspoken
enemies of Preterism. Both men contributed to a book edited by Keith
Mathison entitled When Shall These Things Be, A Reformed Response to Hyper-Preterism
(2005) - a surprisingly weak, but bitter attack on full Preterists,
particularly Ed Stevens. This book has created a chilling effect upon many
who were looking at full Preterism, but a response is in the offing,
featuring the contributions of many leaders in the movement (including the
present writer), and is due to be published by Ed Steven’s International
Preterist Association in November of 2006. We predict that this attack on
full Preterism will backfire when readers see how contributors respond to
the objections put forward in Mathison’s book. The result will be a
wind-fall for truth! As has so often been true in the past, the more the
truth is attacked, the more it prospers and grows.
Conclusion
The original Preterism of Christ and the apostles never perished. Although
other schools of interpretation have come and gone, Preterism has always
remained. Its reemergence as a grass roots movement in the Churches of
Christ in the mid-twentieth century was the result of the ministry of Foy E.
Wallace Jr. a generation before, and its members unflinching zeal for the
truth. By letting the Bible speak to readers directly (sola scriptura),
rather than through the voice of antiquated creeds and confessions whose
utility has long since vanished, the original Preterism of the New Testament
was recovered. Today, the truth, long hemmed in by ecclesiastical
authorities and tradition, has broken out and promises to sweep the field.
Let the enemies of Preterism be ware!
Kurt Simmons has served as a minister in the Church of Christ and is
president of the Bimillennial Preterist Association; he is author of The
Consummation of the Ages, the first and only full length commentary on
Revelation from a Preterist perspective. www.preteristcentral.com
Notes:
[1]
Irenaeus, Against Heresies, V, xxxvi, 1, 2; Ante-Nicene Fathers,
Vol. I, p. 567.
[2]
Tertullian,
Against Marcion, III, xxv; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. III, p. 342.
[3]
Lactantius, Divine Institutes, XXIV; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII,
p. 219.
[4]
Eusebius,
Demonstratio Evangelica, VIII, ccclxxv; Ferrar ed.
[5]
St. John Chrysostom, Homily LXXIV
[6]
Origen,
Contra Celsus, II, xiii; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. IV, p. 437
[7]
John
Walvoord, The Revelation of Jesus Christ (1966, Moody Press), pp.
126, 176, 178, 189, 197,199.
[8] Commodianus, Instructions, XLI; Ante-Nicene Fathers,
Vol. IV, p. 211. Cf. Hippolytus, Treatise on the Antichrist, 44-46;
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. V, p. 213; Lactantius, Divine Institutes, VII,
xvii; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII, p. 214; Victorinus, Commentary on the
Apocalypse, ad Rev. 7:2; 12:6, 7-9; 14; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII, p.
356. See also, Augustine, City of God, XX , xxix, where the writer devotes a
whole chapter to the future coming of Elijah, without once understanding
that Malachi wrote of John the Baptist.
[9] Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, II, xxviii-xxix;
emphasis added. Lactantius (A.D. 260-330) makes remarks about Nero commonly
interpreted in reference to Revelation’s beast. See Of the Manner in which
the Persecutors Died, Chpt. II; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII, p. 302.
[10] St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on II Thess.,
Nicene-Post Nicene Fathers, Vol. XXIII; emphasis added.
[11] Tertullian, Concerning the Resurrection of the
Flesh, XXIV; cf. Apology, XXXII.
[12] Victorinus, Commentary on the Apocalypse, ad 11:7;
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII, p. 354; emphasis added.
[13] Victorinus’ commentary is semi-preterist throughout:
Jerusalem and the temple still exist; Nero is the beast; his death is
indicated by beast receiving a wound to the head; the seven heads point to
Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Vespasian, Titus, Domitian, and Nerva
Victorinus, Commentary on the Apocalypse, ad 11:8; 13:13; 17:10, 11, 16;
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII, pp.355, 357, 358.
[14] Augustine, City of God, XX, xix; cf., Irenaeus,
Against Heresies, V, xxv-xxviii; Lactanius, Divine Inst. VII, xxv; emphasis
added.
[15] Origen, De Principiis, IV, vi; Ante-Nicene Fathers,
Vol. IV, p. 353.
[16] Origen, Contra Celsus, IV, xii, xiii; Ante-Nicene
Fathers, Vol. IV, pp.501, 502.
[17] Origen, Contra Celsum, IV, xxi-xxii; Ante-Nicene
Fathers, Vol. IV, p. 505, 506.
[18] Article XVII: Of Christ's Return to Judgment. They
[the scriptures] condemn also others who are now spreading certain Jewish
opinions, that before the resurrection of the dead the godly shall take
possession of the kingdom of the world, the ungodly being everywhere
suppressed.
[19] See generally, R.H. Charles, The Revelation of St.
John, International Critical Commentary (1920, Edinburgh), p. clxxxiv.
[20] Ex. 21:33, 36.
[21] Isa. 1:3
[22] Clement of Alexandria, The Stomata, V, viii;
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. II, p. 457.
[23] Augustine, City of God, XX, viii; Loeb ed.
[24] Augustine, The City of God, XX, xiii; Loeb ed.
[25] Plato, Republic, Bk. X, 315-320; Virgil, Aeneid, Bk.
VI, 734-769; cf. Justin Martyr, 1st Apology, VIII, Ante-Nicene Fathers, p.
165.
[26] 1) Egyptians, 2) Midianites, 3) other nations during
period of the judges, 4) Assyrians, 5) Chaldeans, 6) Medes and Persians, 7)
Greeks under Antiochus.
[27] Joachim, Commentary on an Unknown Prophecy as
reported in Visions of the End, Apocalyptic Traditions in the Middle Ages,
Bernard McGinn (Columbia University Press, 1979), p. 131.
[28] Exposition on the Apocalypse, ibid pp. 136, 137.
[29] S. Bonaventurae Opera Omnia, 5:405-6, 408; ibid. p
200. Franciscan commentaries on Revelation included Peter Olivi’s Lectura
and Ubertino of Casale’s The Tree of Life of the Crucified Jesus, both of
which are nothing if not a complete “Franciscanization” of Revelation.
[30] (Victorinus, Commentary on the Apocalypse, ad 7:2;
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. VII, p. 352.)
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Date: 22 Feb 2006
Time: 09:14:35
Comments:
In the middle of the third century an Egyptian named Origen scratched his
head and said: "Duh! I'm a patristic writer and it's my belief - my personal
opinion - my private interpretation of the scriptures - that New Testament
references to judgment by fire must be understood literally or naturally to
mean the burning of Jerusalem by Roman arsonists. As a patristic writer, I
reject the possibility that fire is used in a figurative sense to mean God's
spiritual judgment and way in the future Christians should attach extra
weight to my personal opinions because by then they'll be really old.
Date: 23 Feb 2006
Time: 07:35:56
Comments:
I appreciate all your insights and historical research but I have one
question. How can Jesus and his apostles be considered preterist when that
word means "past in fulfillment"? Jesus and his apostles were futurists as
the events Jesus predicted were in the future, albeit near future but still
future. We can say everyone after 70AD is a preterist but certainly not
before. Just a thought.
Date: 28 Feb 2006
Time: 22:54:33
Comments:
Great article. I really appreciate the way Simmons lays out the historical
development of eschatological thinking in the church. He mentioned the
commentary on revelation by Alcazar. I have been trying to locate a copy for
over a year with no success. Is it currently available anywhere?
Andrew
Date: 20 Jul 2006
Time: 20:15:20
Comments:
Great article, thanks for enlightening us and given us this valuable
information which we can share and direct others to.
Many will be surprised to learn that preterism predates futurism, especially
those that think preterism is a new view.
Blessed Preterist
Date: 03 Nov 2006
Time: 08:16:01
Comments:
Great Job! Your historical outline was fantastic! The more I read articles
of such genius, the more uneducated I feel. I've often wondered why many of
the early church fathers were not quite able to grasp the truth. Iranaeus is
the one who baffles me most of all. He tought Christ died at age 50 and then
states that John himself told Polycarp this. Yet many futurist's cling to
hiw belief. It does appear, however, that futurism has evolved into multiple
interpretations over the years, but none more rediculous and absurd is the
Hal Lindsey camp. The TBN (Trinity Broadcast Netword) has increased their
efforts in an end time teaching that huge football stadiums are crowding
themselves expecting a returned Messiah. Yet the extremely flawed futurists
eschatology is taking a huge beating by Preterist's to the point many are
afraid of a one on one debate. |