Why is eschatology so hard to understand?

For many years I embraced that rather common eschatological position known as panmillennialism, the view that amounts to “I don’t know how things will go, but it will all pan out in the end.” Part of the reason I embraced this view was because my interest lay elsewhere. But part of the reason my interest lay elsewhere was because eschatology was so hard for me to understand. Here are three reasons why that is so.

First, God has determined to not lay out a clear, detailed framework about how He plans to end history. He has played His cards so close to the vest on the issue that Jesus told us, “But of that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven but My Father only” (Matthew 24:36). His reasons for not revealing more He has not revealed to us either.

Second, what He has determined to reveal He has chosen to reveal principally in apocalyptic literature. A sound theory of interpretation calls us to read different portions of the Bible in the genre that they come to us. We are not reading well when we take a metaphor and turn it into history, nor when we take history and turn it into metaphor. One of the central disagreements within the evangelical church about eschatology flows out of this problem. One school of thought not only reads apocalyptic literature as if it were designed to be read like a newspaper account, but often accuses those of us who won’t join them of “spiritualizing” the text, implying that such is one slippery step away from embracing theological liberalism. Few of us in our day are quite used to handling any apocalyptic texts, let alone apocalyptic texts from the very Word of God.

Third, what we are told about the end of the world is spoken about in the Bible in at least two different ways. That is, the Bible speaks about the end times as both something yet to come, and that something that has already arrived. It describes both the destruction of the Temple and Jerusalem, both of which happened in 70 AD. The Bible is not always clear which “last days” it is talking about. It is easy to get them confused.

All that said, however, I left behind my panmillennialism when I realized that however difficult it may be to understand what God has revealed, He did reveal what He revealed. It is never healthy to take even a small portion of the Word of God, get confused, and then decide not to bother about it. When He speaks we are called to listen. When we are confused we are called to work through that confusion.

When we do so, however, we should not be surprised that others in working through the confusion have come to different conclusions than our own. My favorite theologian has wrestled and come to one conclusion, only to wrestle some more and come to another, only to wrestle some more and come to a third. Which should encourage us to seek peace among the brethren, and to rest in the assurance that it will indeed all pan out. Whatever eschatology we embrace, we all agree that Jesus wins in the end. Because Jesus always wins.

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The Gospel at Work- Gadde and Venigalla, Healers

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Vitamin D in COVID 19- Unfolding the Mystery

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God in the Hands


It was a strange time for me. I was attending a high school that was so nominal in its commitment to the Christian faith that the high school English teacher was an atheist. Still, his was among my favorite classes, both because of what we read and because of the things we talked about. While attending this school during the week, I also attended a decidedly Christian Sunday school. The late Dr. John H. Gerstner, my father’s mentor, was my Sunday school teacher. During the week, and during the weekend, for a delightful several months, we were studying the work of the Puritans. Dr. Gerstner’s class was called “The Puritans: The Church at Its Best.” Dr. Kupersmith’s tenth-grade English class was called just that, but we read snippets from several Puritan authors as a part of our survey of American literature. We read a bit of Cotton Mather’s masterwork, Magnalia Christi Americana, and we read Jonathan Edwards’ sermon “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.”

Although I was a convinced Calvinist at the time, I must confess that it seemed a little strange that we were reading Puritans in English class. It was a sort of a good news, bad news thing. We were reading the works of men who poured their lives into striving for change, to save souls, and to shape a culture. And we were reading them like curious old, cultural artifacts, as if the proclamation of the Word of God could be turned into sociological dinosaur bones. It was true enough, though it was supposed to shock us, that people who thought this way once shaped the nation. It was true enough that it was true enough that strangest of all, one Sunday morning my atheist English teacher showed up to hear my hero and Sunday school teacher expound on the Puritans and how their thought shaped their culture. I prayed during the whole class that God would show Him the light. Indeed He did. But this man still preferred the darkness.

I think that Sunday morning at the feet of Dr. Gerstner at the least did this for my teacher, it helped him understand me a bit better. When the English class read through Edward’s sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God,” most of the students were repulsed. Well, to be more accurate, everyone in the room but me was repulsed. They couldn’t imagine that anyone could sit still to hear a sermon in which God was portrayed so harshly. If you are unfamiliar with the sermon, the imagery that shapes it is simple enough. Edwards encourages those in his audience to understand their situation, that they are like a spider, dangling on a single strand of web, precariously hanging above a raging fire. God holds the upper end of that strand, such that all that separates you and that burning cauldron is that gossamer thread. We didn’t, as a class, talk about God per se, but Edwards’ perception of him. They knew for sure that God wasn’t at all like that. They were just shocked that anyone could think he was. But of course, they figured, this was a long time ago, practically all the way back to the dark ages.

After all the bellowing from my classmates finished, I gingerly raised my hand. “I’m sorry,” I said, “but I think you all have completely missed the point of this sermon. Edwards wasn’t trying to paint God as an ogre. He wasn’t trying to impress upon his flock the harsh judgment of God. No, this is a sermon about the grace of God.” There was a brief and stunned silence as the class took in my hypothesis. When they understood what I said, they saw Edwards in a new light. He wasn’t the world’s worst Calvinist — I was. They bellowed like so many spiders dangling over a fire. Grace?! Grace?! How in the world could I argue that this was about grace?

I went on to explain, though I doubt I persuaded anyone, that the grace was simple enough to see. It was found in that gossamer thread, and in the hand that held it. Edwards isn’t telling his audience how mean God is to hold them over the fire, but how gracious He is that He hadn’t yet dropped them in the fire.

The difference, then, between Puritan culture and our culture isn’t found, in one sense, in differing conceptions of God. Rather, it is found in different understandings of man. The culture’s wholesale rejection of the theology that served as its foundation isn’t of the predestinating God, but of the total depravity of man. The world, and that which is of the world in the church, hates the Reformed faith because of what it rightly tells us we deserve. We affirm we have earned the wrath of God, while they affirm God has earned our wrath. Which is why our attempts at soft-selling the living God have failed so miserably. As we, in trying to call the lost to Christ cover over the wrath of God, we in turn cover over the one thing they need to grasp. Everyone’s already alright with God, because we aren’t spiders, but the pinnacle of creation. Indeed, we are so committed to our own goodness that we leave God dangling over the fire, finding Him guilty for not making all our dreams come true.

Perhaps by God’s grace, one day students will be shocked at how we in this century misunderstood the nature of God and the nature of man.

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Unionism; Humble Gods

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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No Study Tonight Due to Health and Weather.

Hopefully we’ll be back on next week.

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Are Jewish believers and Gentile believers one body together?

Of course they are. Paul tells us in Galatians, an epistle written specifically to deal with questions related to the above, “Therefore know that only those who are of faith are sons of Abraham” (3:7). If you have faith and only if you have faith you are the sons of Abraham, Jew or Gentile. That’s one family, one patriarch. The truth is, however, that not even the most diehard of classical dispensationalists has ever denied this. They, after all, not only read their Bibles but revere them. They may hold to a paradigm and an eschatology that I think are in error, but they’re neither idiots nor devils.

Think of it this way. I could have asked this question, “Are Gentile believers a replacement for God’s people, the Jews?” The answer would have been, “Of course not.” The truth is that not even the most diehard classical covenant theologian would ever affirm this. They, after all, not only read their Bibles but revere them. We may hold to a paradigm and an eschatology that dispensationalists think are in error, but we’re neither idiots nor devils.

All of which should tell us that each view is rather a bit more nuanced that it is often painted to be by the loyal opposition. Dispensationalists agree that all those who will spend eternity in the new heavens and the new earth will be there because of the work of Christ applied to them through faith in that work alone. Covenant theologians agree that the Jerusalem Council left room for Jewish believers to be circumcised and Gentile believers not to be. In short, there is a connection that is real, organic and biblical. And there is a distinction that is real, organic and biblical. Perhaps we ought to learn to be a bit more gracious to our brothers and sisters on the other side of this issue.

Just today I heard for the first time that John Wesley, when asked if he thought he would see George Whitefield, with whom he had worked closely for many years but with whom he’d had a falling out over predestination, said, “I don’t think so. He’ll be far too close to the throne of heaven for me to see him.” Truth be told, I’d heard the exact same story. I’ve told the exact same story with this key difference, it was Whitefield who was asked the question and answered the same. It was the honorable Dustin Benge who told the story that revealed my story was inside out.

I was disappointed to learn that I’d had it wrong. Not because I don’t like being wrong. I don’t, but that isn’t the issue. I was disappointed because I wanted the guy on my side of the predestination scuffle, George Whitefield, to be the gracious one in the story. Which reveals my own weakness in showing grace to my brothers and sisters with whom I disagree on secondary matters. Let Wesley be the hero because either way, Jesus is the hero.

We need to stop bemoaning the impact of the internet on our discourse and start repenting and changing. We need to be good Augustinians in affirming not just “In essentials unity, in non-essentials liberty” but in practicing “In all things, charity.”

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The Unbearable Immutability of Being

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Immutable Love

It’s a good thing to have nice things. I’m all in favor of it, for me and for everyone else. You won’t find me confusing poverty for piety. That said, it was a wise poet who first wrote, “Mo’ money, mo’ problems.” The same is true not just of the money that can buy nice things but the nice things that money already bought. Our earthly goods are surely good, but they are decidedly not safe. Even if we manage to hold on to all our good stuff until the day we die, they will maintain their nature as earthly goods. We can’t take them with us.

What if, however, we had something infinitely more valuable than nice things? What if that thing was both earthly and heavenly? And what if it was utterly and absolutely secure? It is a good thing for us to consider the reality of the forgiveness of our sins, to contemplate the great price paid. It is a good thing to rejoice over the deliverance He gives to us. It is a wonder beyond imagining that He has adopted us as His children. What, however, should stop us dead in our tracks is that all these blessings are as immutable as God Himself. They can never be taken away from us, thrown away by us, diminished through our failures nor increased through our successes. His love for me isn’t grounded in what I’ve done for Him but in what He’s done for me.

Every bit of worry and fear that I go through stems from one of two great errors. Either I am fearful that some harm will come to my idols, wood, hay and stubble or I am fearful that something will rob, steal or tarnish the Pearl of Great Price. How bold might I become, how rich a harvest of peace might the Spirit bring forth from me if I knew, unshakably, the unshakable truth that He loves me by name, infinitely and immutably? How might I better love my enemies, my neighbor, my wife and family if I never worried whether my own emotional needs were met in Him? How much more brightly might the glory of His reign shine if I built my own house on the rock of His love for me?

It’s a good thing to give careful study to sound doctrine. We need it and are in danger without it. We ought always be busy about the business of looking more deeply into those things that angels long to look into. We would, however, be wiser to know that more important than knowing more is believing more. My failures do not flow out of insufficient information but insufficient appreciation for the information I already know.

Do you agree? Are you striving for more information for you or for more formation in you? Are you praying “Lord, explain it to me again” or “Lord I believe. Help Thou my unbelief.” Are you rejoicing in your intellectual attainment or in the simple truth that He has you in His scarred hands and will never let you go? Let us repent and believe.

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Forever Friend, Ted Craig; Work, and Watch for His Coming


Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Three Wars

It has long been my habit whenever I speak somewhere, to remind those to whom I am speaking of our historical context. Context is everything. My goal isn’t to place us in the declining years of the west — though that is where we are. Nor is it important to me to note that we have entered the third millennium. Rather, I want people to understand that the context of our lives is the same as the context for everyone’s life, from the first advent of the first Adam to the second advent of the second Adam. All of our lives take place in the context of the battle between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent. God declares in Genesis 3:15: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, between her seed and your seed. You will bruise His heel, and He will crush your head.” The God who creates the world in Genesis 1 and 2, who divided day and night, sky, land and sea, in turn divides the world in Genesis 3. There is no neutral ground. History, not church history, but history, is the story of the work of Christ in crushing the serpent, and bringing all His enemies into subjection.

This one war that is the context of our lives, isn’t, however, the only war in our lives. We fight a lifelong battle as Christians, the battle against our old nature, that dead, old man that just keeps fighting to the death. Sanctification is the process by which we, by and through the power and grace of God, win that battle. Over time, as we grow in grace, our fallen nature begins to fall away, and we become more and more what we were in the garden. As we grow in grace, we better and better reflect the image of our Savior, who is the express image of the Father.

But there is a third war as well, besides the war between us and them, and the war between us and us. It is the war between them and them. That is, just as our old and new natures vie for survival in us, so too in those outside the kingdom there is a battle between the image of God and their fallen nature. But history is moving as inexorably here as it is in our own lives. Just as we become more and more what we were created to be, so those outside the redeeming grace of God become less and less what they were created to be. To put it another way, there are not only three wars going on, but three great siftings. First, the sheep and goats are separated. Second, that which is goat-like is separated from the sheep. And third, that which is sheep-like is separated from the goats. In eternity that which is white will be all white, that which is black will be all black. Grey will simply fade away.

The culture wars are fought in this context. As the culture seeks to live in greater and greater rebellion, we who are citizens of heaven grow more slowly. And as we become salt and light, they, servants of the serpent, decay more slowly. All sinners, those inside and outside the kingdom, want convenience. But all sinners in turn tend to love their own children, a reflection of the One whose image we all bear. A culture is in decline, however, when the love of convenience trumps the love of children, as it has in these United States now for more nearly 50 years. Sixty million image bearers never became warriors in the great battle precisely because the image of God is eclipsed, not principally in how we see them, but in what we are in ourselves. That is, it is the destruction of the image of God in mothers that has led to the denial of the image of God in babies, and through that brought their wanton destruction.

That the evangelical church has barely uttered the least objection is condemning proof that we are not only not fighting well the culture war, but are not fighting well the war within ourselves. Our indifference is a shameful portent of the remaining power of sin in our lives.

It is because our enemies in this great battle yet bear the image of our God that we can and must love them. We love them, however, not by laying down our arms, but by taking them up. We love them not by trying to become like them, but by being the ekklesia, the called-out ones, set apart, separate, holy. We love them by being salt and light. When we seek to protect the unborn because they bear God’s image, we are in turn seeking to protect the already born, because they bear His image.

Though the war is all too real, the weapons with which we fight are not carnal. No gunship will vanquish the serpent. No smart bomb will annihilate the old nature within us. No howitzer will strengthen the image of God in the lost. Rather, the battle cry, indeed the great weapon in all three battles is one, this confession — Jesus Christ is Lord. The more we believe it, the more we will be Him. The more we will be Him, the more they will see Him. And the more they see Him, the more the world will change.

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