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God and the Bible Are Dispensational (Part Four)

Part One     Part Two     Part Three

Covenant Theology

I hope it seems too convenient to you that men think and say they have a secret system of interpretation.  They apply the unique lemon juice to the Bible and the invisible ink comes to the surface.  God didn’t write that book.  The one He wrote, we can understand as a child (2 Timothy 3:15).  Scripture presents no peculiar scheme for deciphering what the Bible says.

Covenant Theology depends on speculation and human ingenuity to find a hidden meaning of scripture.  The subjectivity of it allows someone to see something others don’t, giving the impression of an extraordinary insight for an exclusive few.  You might read what they say they see in scripture and you don’t see it.  It is not apparent.  Only with their key to understanding, the developed system or code, can you grasp how they got there.

A literal interpretation, a true version of dispensationalism, is true.  Covenant Theology is false.  The Bible is not an opaque book that keeps you guessing.  It isn’t fine having several spiritualized, very personal interpretations.  Could we not just call them “private interpretations” (2 Peter 1:20-21), because they are so individualized?

Subjective and Strange

Someone could dedicate a whole book to the strange interpretations of Covenant Theology.  You can read many of these in their advocates’ commentaries and hear them in their preaching.  I was listening to a presentation a little while ago by well-known Covenant Theologian Kim Riddlebarger (I do love his last name).  He said he was doing a series through the Old Testament book of Joshua, a book which he said was an obvious explanation of God’s future judgment of the world.  Have you heard this kind of preaching?

The book of Joshua doesn’t address endtime judgment.  The conquest of the land testifies to God’s will for His covenant people, Israel.  God required the conquest.  The refusal of a former generation manifested its unbelief.  Joshua led toward faithful obedience of Israel to God’s directive.

I heard John MacArthur provide a brief critique of Covenant Theology, and he gave an example of a Westminster Seminary professor’s preaching.  The man used Isaiah 9:6-7, the part about the government upon the Messiah’s shoulders, to say this was turning over the government of your own life to Jesus.  He made a spiritual interpretation, not connecting it at all to the future, real kingdom of Jesus Christ.  How would anyone think that passage meant future New Testament Christians and their relationship to the Lord?

Contrast with Literal Interpretation

If you pick up the Old Testament and start reading it, early on you get to a point of a real nation Israel.  National, ethnic Israel dominates the Old Testament as a subject matter.  Covenant Theology directs one to read church in a spiritualized way into Old Testament references of Israel.

God makes many promises to Israel.  Will God fulfill the promises He made that are not yet fulfilled?  Yes.  If you never read the Old Testament, and you picked it up to read without having read the New Testament, you could understand what I’m saying here.  This is dispensationalism.

Attraction of Covenant Theology

What for covenant theologians, the main opponents of a literal reading of scripture, makes their system to them so attractive?  I see three reasons.

One, Covenant Theology says that it examines New Testament usage of the Old Testament as an interpretational model.  Two, Covenant Theology accentuates continuity or unity of the Old and New Testaments.  It finds this overt, extreme continuity with its interpretational grid.  Three, Covenant Theology leans on caricatures, exaggerations, and extreme examples of dispensationalism.

Some proponents of dispensationalism provide negative fodder for Covenant Theologians.  The latter use these bad examples from the system of dispensationalism and apply them to the whole.  The extremes do not debunk a literal reading of scripture.

More to Come 

The Bible Teaches Premillennialism, But Premillennialism Also Fits What We See Happening In The World

If you read a word like premillennialism and you just stop reading, I understand.  Why does anyone need to use a word like that to explain or represent the Bible?  I didn’t come up with the words amillennialism, postmillennialism, and premillennialism, but they are historic words that stand for particular representations, explanations, or systems of interpretation of the Bible.

As a system, the first of the three above words, amillennialism was the first to appear, even though it wasn’t coined until the 1930s.  Every one of the previously stated terms have “millennialism” in them.  This means that each of them pivot on the meaning of “the kingdom,” because the millennium refers to the kingdom in the Bible.

Amillennialism says “a” or “no” millennium.  Instead of saying that Revelation 20 is a literal 1,000 year reign of Jesus Christ on earth, amillennialism spiritualizes 1,000, doesn’t take it literally.  In that way, it says there is no millennial reign of Jesus Christ.  Amillennialism itself is an explanation of scripture that relies on spiritualization of the text, a highly subjective approach to the Bible.

If someone can read into the words of scripture by spiritualizing them, he can become the authority for scripture.  He can make it mean what he wants it to mean.  The system of ahmillennialism began with Catholicism or Roman Catholicism, that latter the terminology for the former that arose during the Protestant Reformation.  Catholicism said the church is the kingdom of God and the true nation of Israel.  It reached that conclusion through allegorical interpretation, which arose from Catholic theologians.

Both amillennialism and postmillennialism say that the kingdom of Christ is the church and a true Israel.  However, postmillennialism claims the added feature of an optimistic view of the success of the church in bringing in the return of Christ to earth.  Amillennialism arose out of a Catholic church that ruled like a kingdom on the earth, a point of view very pragmatic and appropriate for that day.  Theologians systematized that into amillennialism, then postmillennialism.

Premillennialism as an approach takes the Bible literally, that is, grammatically and historically.  It takes an Old Testament priority, believing that plain meaning of the text understands scripture as those first hearing it in that day.  Anyone who takes the Bible literally will also be a premillennialist.  Premillennialism asks how people understood the Bible that were hearing it in the day it was written.  It is called premillennialism because Jesus comes back before He sets up a thousand year kingdom on the earth, a literal reading of Revelation 19-20.

What I see happening through history and in the world today matches up with a premillennial approach or explanation.  So much we read in the news fits right with the Bible.  The application of scripture with a literal interpretation easily corresponds with contemporary events.

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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