Dispensing
with Dispensationalism
History of Dispensationalism
Dispensationalism
came on the scene in 1830s with the
Brethren Movement. It included a
rejection of historic Christian
theological thinking. Nowadays, in more
simplified form, in particular stressing
the Rapture and an emphasis on
right-wing Christian Zionism, it
underlies much American Christian
fundamentalism.
John Nelson Darby
came on the scene. Ordained into the
Anglican ministry in 1826 in Ireland, he
left a year later to join the Brethren,
a new Christian group. He taught a
dispensationalist form of
premillennialism. Darby greatly
influenced Cyrus Ingerson Scofield who
was ordained into the American
Congregational Ministry in 1882. The
latter produced the Scofield Reference
Bible which has sold over 2 million
copies since it was published in 1909.
Scofield had no formal theological
training when he wrote it. It is this
Bible which has popularised
Dispensational Premillennialism.
Before this there
was another form of Premillennialism –
Classical Premillennialism – which was
very widely accepted by the early church
Fathers.
Characteristics of
Dispensationalism
MAIN TEACHINGS
1.
The Jews are saved through legal
obedience and repentance and will remain
for ever God’s people on earth
2.
The Gentiles are saved through
faith and will be raptured to Heaven
3.
The church is a parenthesis in
God’s purposes and will end in apostasy
4.
The kingdom of heaven is the
Davidic kingdom and the kingdom of God
is God’s universal kingdom. (The kingdom
of God is postponed until Christ
establishes his reign on earth, having
overthrown the god of this world. The
kingdom of heaven is postponed because
of the rejection of Messiah by the
Jews)
5.
There are seven dispensations
(different ways in which God deals with
humanity. "Dispensation" means
stewardship or type of economy). The way
God dealt, or will deal, with people in
any other dispensation is irrelevant, or
at best, secondary to the dispensation
in which we live. The seven
dispensations are:
i.
The Dispensation of
Innocence - Creation to the Fall
(Edenic)
ii.
The Dispensation of
Conscience - The Fall to the
Flood (Antediluvian)
iii.
The Dispensation of Human
Government - The Flood to Babel
(Noahic)
iv.
The Dispensation of Promise
- Call of Abraham to Giving of Law
(Abrahamic)
v.
The Dispensation of Law
- Giving of the Law until Death of
Christ, tearing of temple veil and
Jewish rejection of Messiah (Mosaic).
vi.
The Dispensation of Grace
- The Cross to the Rapture of the Church
(just before the Tribulation). (The
Church Age: Apostolic)
·
The word "Rapture" comes
from the Latin translation of 1
Thess.4:17 “After that, we who are still
alive and are left will be caught up
together with them in the clouds to meet
the Lord in the air” is based on the
Latin "rapere" which means to seize or
snatch.
·
This dispensation is often
seen as depicted by the seven churches
in Revelation 2-3. Their characteristics
are prophetic of seven consecutive
spiritual stages in the church's
history.
·
It is a parenthesis in
God's purposes (which are primarily with
the Jews), unforeseen by the OT and only
established because the Jews rejected
the Kingdom (it is the "mystery" of
Eph.3:3-6).
·
The Tribulation is a seven
year period of great tribulation.
Dispensationalists say this is the 70th
"week" of years – seven year period –
foretold in Daniel 9:25-27 “"Know and
understand this: From the issuing of the
decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem
until the Anointed One, the ruler,
comes, there will be seven 'sevens,' and
sixty-two 'sevens.' It will be rebuilt
with streets and a trench, but in times
of trouble. 26 After the
sixty-two 'sevens,' the Anointed One
will be cut off and will have nothing.
The people of the ruler who will come
will destroy the city and the sanctuary.
The end will come like a flood: War will
continue until the end, and desolations
have been decreed. 27 He will
confirm a covenant with many for one
'seven.' In the middle of the 'seven' he
will put an end to sacrifice and
offering. And on a wing of the temple
he will set up an abomination that
causes desolation, until the end that is
decreed is poured out on him. The same
seven year period is described in
Revelation 6-18.
During the tribulation:
·
the seals, trumpets and
bowls judgements of Revelation will take
place.
·
the Jews will be gathered
to their own land in unbelief. Many of
them will die in unbelief but a remnant
will survive and be saved (Rom.11:26).
·
the nominal church
remaining on earth during the
tribulation will fall into apostasy.
·
eventually the nations
will gather against Israel.
[Some dispensationalists have taught a
partial Rapture, with only believers who
are spiritually prepared for it being
included. Also some have taught a mid-tribulational
Rapture, normally at the half way stage:
three and a half years.]
vii.
The Dispensation of the
Kingdom or the Millennium - The
Second Coming to the Final Satanic
Revolt
a.
Christ will return to the Mount
of Olives with his saints. This return,
foretold in both OT and NT, will be
heralded by "signs of the times".
b.
Christ will win the Battle of
Armageddon.
c.
He will overthrow the trinity of
evil: Satan, the Antichrist and the
Beast. Satan will be bound for a
thousand years. Sin will be judged and
righteousness will fill the earth.
d.
The tribulation martyrs will be
raised.
e.
Christ will apply the efficacy of
his death to the sins of the Jews which
have been temporarily covered by the
animal sacrifices. The Holy Spirit will
cause the Jews to accept Christ's death
for their national salvation
(Rom.11:26)
f.
All OT Jews who were unfaithful
to the law of Moses will be cut off from
Israel.
g.
All faithful Jews from every age
other than the church age will inherit
the land.
h.
The Gentiles who treated Israel
well during the tribulation will join
Israel in the millennium, but will be
inferior to Israel.
i.
Israel will head the nations in
worship (centred on a glorious new
temple) in this Golden Age of peace and
righteousness. So the promises of the OT
to literal Israel will be fulfilled.
This will include the re-building of the
temple and the resumption of the
Levitical worship.
j.
The church will remain in heaven
during the millennium. Some
dispensationalist hold that the New
Jerusalem (containing the church) will
hover over the land of Israel during the
millennium. They say it will be either a
cube or a pyramid with a 1500 mile
square base and 1500 miles high, or it
may be a sphere 1500 miles in diameter.
Moderate dispensationalists say
the OT saints will be with the church in
the New Jerusalem. The saints in the New
Jerusalem will be able to travel to and
from the earth. They also hold the New
Jerusalem will descend to earth -
centred on Israel - at the end of the
millennium.
k.
At the end of the millennium
Satan will be released and deceive many,
leading them to rebellion.
l.
This rebellion will be crushed by
the Lord and will lead to the Great
White throne judgement with Satan, his
angels and unbelievers being thrown into
the Lake of Fire
m.
God will create the new heavens
and new earth. Classical
Dispensationalism teaches that Israel
and the church will be permanently
separated - Israel on the new earth, the
church in the new heaven.
[Note the
two-stage return of Christ] [*Some
interpreters combine iii-vi and add at
the end The New Heavens and New Earth as
the last dispensation].
|
Hermeneutic |
Israel/Church |
OT Salvation |
Union with Christ |
New Covenant |
Classical Dispensationalism |
NT interpreted through a literal
interpretation of OT |
Distinct forever |
By works |
OT saints not in union with
Christ |
Two new covenants -one for
Israel: Millennium; one for
church |
Neo-Dispensationalism |
Literal |
Distinct forever |
By faith (not in Christ) |
OT saints not in union with
Christ |
Two aspects to one new covenant |
Moderate Dispensationalism |
Non-literal |
Distinct only in Millennium |
By faith (usually not in Christ) |
Unclear but implied not |
One new covenant |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Christ came for Millennium |
Church |
Davidic Covenant |
Holy Spirit |
Law-Grace |
Classical Dispensationalism
|
Christ offered the Millennium to
the Jews |
Parenthesis (Eph 3:3-6) |
Not for the church |
Not a permanent experience of OT
saints |
The church is not under OT law
at all |
Neo-Dispensationalism
|
Christ offered the Millennium to
the Jews |
Parenthesis |
Not for the church |
Not a permanent experience of OT
saints |
There was grace in OT; Church
generally not under OT law |
Moderate Dispensationalism
|
Christ didn’t offer the
Millennium to the Jews |
Church a secondary fulfilment of
OT prophecy |
The church shares |
Not a permanent experience of OT
saints |
There was grace in the OT; OT
laws may be for church |
1.
The literalism is shown by:
a.
the idea that there are as
many as four resurrections:
Resurrection of believers at the
Rapture.
Resurrection of tribulation martyrs.
Resurrection of believers who die in
the millennium.
Resurrection of unbelievers to the
second death.
b.
Also by the idea that there
are four gospels:
i.
The gospel of the kingdom:
the news about an earthly kingdom of
Israel (initially preached by Jesus
until the Jews rejected him), i.e.
Jesus came not to die but to
establish an earthly kingdom. S
D Gordon: “There is no cross in
God’s plan of atonement.” (Quiet
talks about Jesus p. 118)
ii.
The gospel of the grace of
God: that Jesus died and rose
again (preached by Jesus after the
Jews rejected him and by the
apostles other than Paul).
iii.
The everlasting gospel:
this is preached by the Jews in the
tribulation, after the Rapture. It
is news that all who are saved in
the tribulation will enter the
millennium.
iv.
Paul's gospel: an
expansion of the gospel of grace
including the "mystery" of the
church.
2.
Some dispensationalists (e.g.
Darby) believe the church is not related
to the new covenant as such but
nevertheless benefits from the blood of
the new covenant.
3.
Others (e.g. Scofield) believe
the new covenant is primarily for Israel
(to be fulfilled politically in the
millennium) and only secondarily for the
church.
4.
Others distinguish between the
kingdom of heaven (professing
Christians) and the kingdom of God
(genuine believers).
5.
The Gospels are said to relate to
three different dispensations - law,
grace and kingdom - so not all the
teaching is relevant to us, e.g. the
Lord's Prayer and the Sermon on the
Mount. Some dispensationalists say that
only the Gospel of John, Acts and the
Epistles apply to Christians. The latter
is the Messiah's Manifesto of the
Kingdom and so is for the millennium,
not now.
Critique of Dispensationalism
It is my belief
that Dispensationalism is a different
creed from that taught in Scripture:
1.
A Different Bible
Dispensationalism
teaches that the NT must be interpreted
in the light of a literal interpretation
of the OT.
It is, however,
clear from the way the NT deals with the
OT that the OT must be interpreted
through the NT and particularly
Christologically.
2.
A Different Gospel
Dispensationalism
teaches that OT salvation was not
through faith in the coming Christ but
through legal obedience.
But
Jesus said to the
two disciples on the Emmaus Road: "How
foolish you are, and how slow of heart
to believe all that the prophets have
spoken! Did not the Christ have to
suffer these things and then enter his
glory?" And beginning with Moses and
all the Prophets, he explained to them
what was said in all the Scriptures
concerning himself. (Luke 24:25-27).
Later when he met the rest of the
disciples he said to them, "This is what
I told you while I was still with you:
Everything must be fulfilled that is
written about me in the Law of Moses,
the Prophets and the Psalms." Then he
opened their minds so they could
understand the Scriptures. He told them,
"This is what is written: The Christ
will suffer and rise from the dead on
the third day, and repentance and
forgiveness of sins will be preached in
his name to all nations, beginning at
Jerusalem. (Luke 24:44-47).
· The
OT Sacrifices also refer to Christ
Paul writes that
Abraham saw Christ’s day and the Gospel
preached to Abraham (John 8:56). The NT
gospel was announced the gospel in
advance to Abraham (Gal 3:8). The gospel
was promised through the OT prophets Rom
1:1-3 cf 1 Peter 1:11).
3.
A Different Christ
·
This Christ is not a
necessary atoning Saviour and sin
offering (contrast, for example, Col.
1:19-22)
·
This Christ does not
rule the world currently (contrast, for
example, Col. 1:15-17)
·
This Christ’s current
reign at right hand of the Father has no
direct relationship to the fulfilment of
the Davidic covenant and Messianic
kingdom prophecies.
By contrast, the NT
teaches the kingdom has, in some sense,
already come in the work of Christ.
Jesus said: “But if I drive out demons
by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom
of God has come upon you. (Matt 12:28).
He added: “nor will people say, `Here it
is,' or `There it is,' because the
kingdom of God is within you." (Luke
17:21)
4.
A Different Kingdom
The Dispensational
distinction between the Kingdom of
heaven and the Kingdom of God is
invalid. They are simply different terms
for the same thing. Note the following
interchangeable use of the two terms in
the NT.
Matthew 11 12 From the days of John the
Baptist until now, the kingdom of
heaven has been forcefully
advancing, and forceful men lay hold of
it. 13 For all the Prophets and the Law
prophesied until John.
cf.
Luke 16 16 ``The Law and the Prophets
were proclaimed until John. Since that
time, the good news of the kingdom of
God is being preached, and everyone
is forcing his way into it.
Matthew 10 7 As you go, preach this
message: `The kingdom of heaven
is near.'
cf.
Luke 9 2 and he sent them out to preach
the kingdom of God and to heal
the sick.
Matthew 4 17 From that time on Jesus
began to preach, ``Repent, for the
kingdom of heaven is near.''
cf.
Mark 1 14. After John was put in prison,
Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the
good news of God. 15 ``The time has
come,'' he said. ``The kingdom of God
is near. Repent and believe the good
news!''
Matthew 19 23. Then Jesus said to his
disciples, ``I tell you the truth, it is
hard for a rich man to enter the
kingdom of heaven. 24 Again I tell
you, it is easier for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle than for a
rich man to enter the kingdom of God.''
Another point is
that, if, as the Dispensational view
teaches, Jews could frustrate God’s past
plan, what guarantee have we that they
won’t frustrate the future plan?
5.
A Different Church
The Dispensational
Church is:
Yet the NT teaches the opposite: “For he
himself is our peace, who has made the
two one and has destroyed the barrier,
the dividing wall of hostility, by
abolishing in his flesh the law with its
commandments and regulations. His
purpose was to create in himself one new
man out of the two, thus making peace,
and in this one body to reconcile both
of them to God through the cross, by
which he put to death their hostility.”
(Eph 2:14-16). “His intent was that now,
through the church, the manifold wisdom
of God should be made known to the
rulers and authorities in the heavenly
realms, according to his eternal purpose
which he accomplished in Christ Jesus
our Lord.” (Eph 3:10-11)
But the following passage shows that the
church is no parenthesis: “And God
placed all things under his feet and
appointed him to be head over everything
for the church, 23 which is his body,
the fulness of him who fills everything
in every way.” (Ephesians 1:22).
Yet the NT teaches otherwise: “His
intent was that now, through the church,
the manifold wisdom of God should be
made known to the rulers and authorities
in the heavenly realms, according to his
eternal purpose which he accomplished in
Christ Jesus our Lord. (Ephesians
3:10).
Much
Dispensationalism also teaches that
Christians are not party to the New
Covenant. However the NT teaches
otherwise:
·
Paul and Timothy are
ministers of New Covenant 2 Cor 3:6 “He
has made us competent as ministers of a
new covenant-- not of the letter but of
the Spirit; for the letter kills, but
the Spirit gives life.”
·
Holy Communion celebrates
the New Covenant
Israel will carry
out God’s main purpose in Millennium –
Eph 3:10-11
6.
A Different Hope
The Dispensational
Hope is:
1.
Escapist
The pre-tribulational
Rapture theory removes the church from
the sufferings of the world. Yet the
Lord normally keeps us safe when we go
through tribulation rather than keeping
us out of tribulation.
The Greek word
apantesin (meeting) in 1 Thess 4:17
was often used as a technical term for
the elders of a city going out to give a
public welcome to a visiting dignitary
and to lead him back into the city with
red-carpet treatment. It is used three
times in the NT. The other two
references have this meaning (Matt.25
the foolish virgins; Acts 28 the
brethren meeting Paul outside Rome).
Hence this may be the meaning here. The
saints meet the Lord in the air and
immediately return with him to earth.
Also in 2
Thess.1:5-10 Paul comforts the saints
with the hope of rest when Christ
returns in flaming fire to judge their
enemies. This implies a post-tribulational,
single return of Christ.
2.
Divisive
It permanently
divides Jew and Gentile believers and
creates an apartheid hereafter. Sadly
this erroneous dispensational teaching
underlies much American fundamentalist
views of the End Times and fuels their
prophetic interest in Israel to the
present day.