An
important question that many Christians often ask is " Are we living in the last
days or end times?" When people ask me this question, I usually respond with a
clear " Yes and No!" Such an answer requires an explanation. My explanation is
that the Bible uses such terminology in multiple ways, so that some references
do refer to our own day, while others do not.
Last Days Vocabulary
Sometimes Christians read in the Bible about the
" last days," " end times," etc., and tend to think that all of these phrases all
of the time refer to the same thing. This is not the case, just as in our own
lives there are many endings: there is the end of the work day, the end of the
day according to the clock, the end of the week, the end of the month, and the
end of the year. Just because the word " end" is used does not mean that it
always refers to the same time. The word " end" is restricted and precisely
defined when it is modified by " day," " week," " year," etc. So it is in the
Bible that " end times" may refer to the end of the current church age or it may
refer to other times.
There
are a number of different biblical expressions which appear to speak of the end
times. The Bible teaches that this present age will end with the rapture,
followed by the tribulation, which will end with the second coming of Messiah
to the earth. Thus, we must distinguish between the " last days" of the church
age and the " last days" of Israel' s tribulation.
Note
the following chart, which classifies and distinguishes between passages
referring to the end of the church age and the " last days" for Israel:
BIBLICAL USE OF LAST DAYS
Israel
" latter
days" -
Deuteronomy
4:30; 31:29; Jeremiah 30:24; 48:47; Daniel 2:28; 10:14
" last
days" -
Isaiah
2:2; Jeremiah 23:20; 49:39; Ezekiel 38:16; Hosea 3:4- 5; Micah 4:1; Acts 2:17
" last
day" -
John
6:39, 40, 44, 54; 11:24; 12:48
" latter
years" -
Ezekiel
38:8
" end
of time" -
Daniel
8:17; 12:4, 9
" end
of the age" -
Daniel
12:13
|
Church
" latter
days" -
1
Timothy 4:1
" last
days" -
2
Timothy 3:1; Hebrews 1:2; James 5:3; 2 Peter 3:3
" last
times" -
1
Peter 1:20; Jude 18
" last
time" -
1
Peter 1:5; 1 John 2:18
|
The
Bible clearly speaks of a last days or end time, but it does not always refer
to the same period of time. The contextual referent enables the reader to know
whether the Bible is speaking of the last days relating to Israel or the end
times in reference to the church.
Many
believe that there are specific signs that relate to the end of the church age.
However, I believe that it would be too strong to say that there are signs of
the end of the church age. Instead, the Bible indicates what the condition of
the church will be like- the general course of the age- and then warns about some
general trends toward the later part of the church age. Passages like 1
Timothy 4:1- 5, 2 Timothy 3:1- 5, and 2 Peter 3:3 most likely refer to the second
half or latter part of the church age. These passages warn believers about
beliefs and lifestyles that are common in the world will enter the church and
become common there as well. These passages do not speak about the general
moral decline of society, which I do not doubt, instead, it is a decline that
was predicted to occur within the church as part of the apostasy.
It
can also be noted, that it is hard to quantify such decline. No matter how bad
things get, they can always get a little worse. So it is impossible to know
specifically how bad things must be in order for something to be a prophetic
sign. It is the general condition within the realm of the church in which " evil men and impostors will proceed from bad to worse,
deceiving and being deceived" (2 Tim. 3:13).
The Church Age
There
are a number of New Testament passages where " last days," " last times," and
" last time" clearly refer to the present church age in which we now live. The
writer of Hebrews says, " God, after He spoke long ago
to the fathers in the prophets in many portions and in many ways, in these last
days has spoken to us in His Son" (Heb.
1:1- 2). The contextual nuance of this passage demands that " last days" is a
reference to the current church age in which we presently live. In the same
way Peter says, " For He was foreknown before the foundation of the world, but
has appeared in these last times for
the sake of you" (1 Pet. 1:20). These " last times," to which he speaks, in
that context, must refer to the last two thousand years in which we still live.
John adds support to the two previous writers when he says, " Children, it is
the last hour; and just as you heard
that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have arisen; from this we
know that it is the last hour" (1 John
2:18). Jude, speaking of things going on in his day says, " that they were
saying to you, " In the last time there shall be mockers, following after their
own ungodly lusts" (Jude 18).
The
Jewish view of Bible prophecy viewed history as consisting of two ages. The
first was this present age,
the age in which Israel was waiting for the coming of the Messiah. The second
was the age to come, the age
in which all promises and covenants would be fulfilled and Israel would enter
into her promised blessings as a result of Messiah' s coming. The present age
would be terminated by the appearance of Messiah, and the coming age would be
introduced by His advent. The present age, then, was to end in judgment, and
the coming age must be preceded by this devastation. The New Testament
references the present age as the last days. The last days of what? The last
days before the coming of the Messianic age.
We see that there are at least four
clear references in the New Testament that use end times vocabulary to refer to
their own day and the entire church age as the last days. Thus, in that sense,
we are clearly living in the last days, since the entire church age is
considered the last days. However, that is not what the average person means
when they ask, " Are we living in the last days?" They want to know if we are
living in a time when the final prophecies of Scripture are being fulfilled.
Before I can answer that, we need to look into the use of Old Testament
terminology and the last days.
Old Testament Use of Last Days
When we look at Old Testament usage
of these terms, we see that they are used differently than those which speak of
the church age. I believe that the Old Testament use of this language refers
to the time leading up to the coming of Messiah to set up His kingdom on earth,
which I would call the tribulation period.
A clear example of this is found in
Deuteronomy 4:30, which says, " When you are in distress and all these things
have come upon you, in the latter days, you will return to the Lord
your God and listen to His voice." The English word " distress" is the Hebrew
word for tribulation- in this context, the tribulation- which means that this
text equates the tribulation with the " latter days." Thus, the " latter days"
are the tribulation period, which we are not currently living in, but may be on
the brink of entering. Of course, the church will be raptured before the world
enters the tribulation. Deuteronomy 31:29 uses " latter days" as a reference to
the tribulation when it says, " evil will befall you in the latter days."
The term " latter days" is used of
the tribulation period twice in Jeremiah (30:24; 48:47). Daniel also uses it
this way: " However, there is a God in heaven who reveals mysteries, and He has
made known to King Nebuchadnezzar what will take place in the latter days" (Dan. 2:28). Daniel commences to
reveal God' s plan for the future, which revolves around events that will unfold
in the tribulation period. This is also the case concerning another passage in
Daniel: " Now I have come to give you an understanding of what will happen to
your people in the latter days, for the vision pertains to the days yet future" (Dan. 10:14).
The
prophet Daniel uses a whole cluster of other " latter day" terms that all refer
to the tribulation period or prepare the way for the kingdom reign of Messiah.
Terms like " end of time" (Dan. 8:17; 12:4, 9) and " end of the age" (Dan. 12:13)
speak of the end-time, tribulation period, which is yet to come. These terms
are used three times in Daniel 12, which is said in verse one of that chapter
to " be a time of distress
such as never occurred since there was a nation until that time." " Distress"
is the Hebrew word for tribulation. Thus, the entire context is once again a
reference to the coming tribulation.
Daniel
12:4, says the teachings about the end-times in Daniel will be sealed up for
the Jewish people until " the end of time." Many prophecy teachers believe that
shortly before Christ' s return the world would experience an increase in the
speed of travel coupled with an explosion of information based upon Daniel
12:4, which says " many will go back and forth, and knowledge will increase."
No one would quarrel with the fact that the last one hundred years has indeed
witnessed an exponential increase in both the speed of travel and the
accumulation of knowledge and thus would be a sign in our time that the end is
near. But is this really what Daniel is saying in the passage? I don' t think
so.
The
correct interpretation of the passage is given by Dr. Charles Ryrie in his
famous Ryrie Study Bible when
he says, " As the end approaches, people will travel about seeking to discover
what the future holds." [1] Not just people in general, but the
Jewish people in particular. This means that many Jews during the tribulation
will study the Book of Daniel in an attempt to find out what is going on during
this unique period of time. Harry Bultema says, " The movement of to and fro
may refer to that of the eyes through leaves. . . . Thus considered it seems
to us that the text here speaks of the diligent search of the Scripture at the
end of time." [2] Thus, the scope would be limited to
the future time of the tribulation and could not justly be applied to our own
day.
There
does not appear to be any real textual basis for the first interpretation. The
meaning of the Hebrew words and grammar do not support such a view.
Conclusion
So
are we living in the last days? As you can tell from the above discussion, we
are currently living in the last days because we are in the church age, which
is called the " last days," " last times," and " last time." However, in no way
shape or form are we in the last days, as the Old Testament says of Israel.
Those terms, " latter days," " last days," " latter years," " end of time," and
" end of the age" all refer a time when Israel is in her time of tribulation.
This is a future time, which we could very well be on the verge of entering. I
believe that we are seeing the stage being set for last days or end time events
of the tribulation. But we are not currently in those times at the present
time. Maranatha!