The sweep of
human history, as revealed in God' s Word, begins with Adam and Eve in the
Garden of Eden. History is moving
toward the New Jerusalem, in the new heavens and new earth, which will become
the eternal state of believers.
There are a lot of important events in the interim, but it is important
to know where we came from and where we are going.
Only the
premillennial view of eschatology provides a satisfactory climax that
corresponds to the biblical of beginnings. The story of history that commences in Genesis is brought to
a fitting climax in the book of Revelation. Such harmony is only true if the text of Scripture is taken
as God intended- literally.
Distortion of God' s plan for history sets in when individuals stray from
the historical, grammatical hermeneutic.
Not only does it go astray hermeneutically (how we interpret
literature), but it also goes astray epistemologically (how we know that we
know).
Over the years I
have heard the late Dr. John Walvoord speak many times in person about the
importance of interpreting the entire Bible literally. A few years ago he was asked " what do
you predict will be the most significant theological issues over the next ten
years?" His answer included the
following: " the hermeneutical
problem of not interpreting the Bible literally, especially the prophetic
areas. The church today is
engulfed in the idea that one cannot interpret prophecy literally." [1] Things have only gotten worse since he
made that statement ten years ago.
Today too many evangelicals believe that we need to blend literal and
non-literal hermeneutics when interpreting Holy Writ. According to Dr. Walvoord, it cannot be legitimately done,
without producing a confused and contradictory mix of Scripture in general and
specifically in the area of eschatology.
Current Evangelical Scholarship
It was also ten
years ago that Mark Noll of Wheaton College came out with his book The
Scandal of the Evangelical Mind,[2]
in which he indicts Evangelicalism for having lost its mind, if it ever had
one. Noll blames this scandal on
an anti-intellectual trend within evangelicalism.[3] I agree with his statement about an
anti- intellectual trend, however, I disagree with his location of the
problem. In essence, he says that
the cause of anti-intellectualism is due to those who hold to a literal six-day
creation in the early chapters of Genesis and those who take a literal approach
to future prophecy, like dispensationalists.[4] Noll says, " Creationism could, in fact,
be called scientific dispensationalism, for creation scientists carry the same
attitude toward catastrophe and the sharp break between eras into their science
that dispensationalists see in the Scriptures." [5] Just why are dispensationalists and
creationists damaging the intellectual life of evangelicalism according to
Noll? Noll explains:
Beyond personal
belief and the dynamics of recent social history the spread of creationism also
reflects dynamics arising from fundamentalist theology, particularly the
eschatological mentality and the fascination for dispensations. A biblical literalism, gaining strength
since the 1870s, has fueled both the intense concern for human origins and the
end times. Literal readings of
Genesis 1- 3 find their counterpart in literal readings of Revelation 20 (with
its description of the thousand-year reign of Christ). The observation by Ronald Numbers- that,
" for Christians expecting the end of the age, Whitcomb and Morris offered a
compelling view of earth history framed by symmetrical catastrophic events and
connected by a common hermeneutic" - only confirms a connection that both
creationists and premillennial dispensationalists had identified long ago.[6]
Noll' s outline of
what he proposes as evangelical scholarship is vague at best.[7] However, it seems clear to me that he
does not like a Bible only approach to the establishment of one' s intellectual
framework. He says, " a Christian
who attempts to interpret passages of the Bible with cosmological implications
will misinterpret the Bible if that believer does not take account of what can
be learned ' from reason and experience.' " [8] It is clear that Noll favors an
eclectic approach.
Os Guinness also
came out with a book similar to Noll' s, though much more simple, in which he
included dispensational premillennialism as one of the problems hindering
evangelical thought.[9] In Fit Bodies, Fat Minds, Guinness looks back to the Puritan heritage
upon which America was founded and he, as an Englishman, wishes that
evangelicals would return to those things that made Colonial America
great. I do too! However, many of those thinking
Puritans were premillennial and speculated greatly on prophecy and current
events, even more than current dispensationalists. While I agree with much of Guinness' book, I think his real
problem with premillennialism is not so much that we don' t think, it is how we
think that bothers him. Once
again, a critic is unsympathetic of a Bible first approach to worldview.
Frameworks and Approaches
Apparently, Noll
and others like him believe that one can be too biblical. In other words, both creationists and
dispensationalists start scholarship with a " thus saith the Lord." We start with God' s revelation as our
framework through which we interpret every area of life. What' s wrong with that? I believe that it is the only view that
gives proper place to the view that the Bible does provide us with accurate
information about whatever it speaks about. It appears that Noll does not want to start with God' s Word
as the authoritative framework with which to view every area of life, but
desires to blend with the Bible pagan sources and viewpoints. This synthesis of a secular viewpoint,
with some Bible thrown in, is what Noll calls evangelical scholarship. I have heard that snake venom has about
80 to 85% protein, but using it as a protein source will be deadly.
It is instructive
that in the two major areas where we as creatures have to take God' s Word, and
it alone, as the basis for knowledge in that area, it is exactly these two
areas that are under attack from much of evangelical scholarship. Those two areas are first, what
happened in the ancient past, when there were few or no creatures to observe
events, and second, what will happen in the future. The past and the future are the main areas that we must take
God' s Word about what happened or will occur. Only God was there and I have no problem trusting His
account of what has occurred and what will take place. God, in the Bible, talks about how only
He was there in the past and only He knows the future.
In Job, the
oldest book of the Bible, at the end when God shows up and sets everyone
straight about reality, He asks Job a series of 46 questions (Job 38- 40:1). One of the first ones that he asks is
about what happened at creation, how did God do it? " Where were you when I laid the
foundation of the earth? Tell Me,
if you have understanding, Who set its measurements, since you know? Or who stretched the line on it? On what were its bases sunk? Or who
laid its cornerstone?" (38:4- 6)
This series of questions, to which God does not provide answers, is
designed to demonstrate that God is God and Job is his limited and finite
creature. This is a lesson that we
all need to keep in mind, especially when thinking about origins and the
future.
In a similar way,
God, through Isaiah, challenges Israel in Isaiah 41. He says the following:
" Present
your case," the Lord says. " Bring forward your strong arguments,"
the King of Jacob says. Let them
bring forth and declare to us what is going to take place; as for the former
events, declare what they were, that we may consider them, and know their
outcome; or announce to us what is coming. Declare the things that are going to come afterward, that we
may know that you are gods; indeed, do good or evil, that we may anxiously look
about us and fear together (41:21- 23).
In
this passage, the Lord groups together the past and future and indicates that
these are things that only God can know about, because only He was there. Someone might say, " God, who do You
think you are? God!" Well, yes, that is the whole
point. Only God can know these
things, precisely because He is God.
Yet, today many evangelical scholars do not take God' s record about
beginnings and endings as literally true.
What are they doing for an authority base?
An
Alternate Authority
I believe that
the trend among evangelical scholars is to create an alternate authority base
outside the Bible. They then use
what amounts to an alternate authority base as a basis for attacking the
literal meaning of Scripture, especially as it relates to beginnings and the
future. Having cultivated an
alternate authority base, such as the improper use of archeology, history,
mythology, science, and others sources of influence, they use these
extra-biblical " authorities" to question and challenge the Scriptures
themselves. This is done under the
guise that we must understand the background and culture of the text of Scripture
in order to properly understand it.
I too believe in the use of background material, but the question is how
should it be used. These
evangelicals are not using this material to merely add depth to an
interpretation that is gleaned primarily from the text itself, but instead they
are using this extra-biblical information to introduce whole new
interpretations of the text that one could not get without this alternate information. Thus, the basis of their interpretation
becomes the extra-textual information that they often use to discredit the
traditional and plain understanding of a given Scriptural passage.
One such example
in the area of eschatology is Brent Sandy' s Plowshares & Pruning Hooks.[10] Typical of those under the spell of
today' s postmodern influence, Sandy exalts the interpretative process at the
expense of arriving at a definite theology. Sandy' s doublespeak is evident in the following:
The limitations of prophecy
as a source of information for the future were demonstrated with examples from
various prophetic parts of Scripture.
It became evident that the predicative element of prophecy is more
translucent than transparent.
Prophecy is always accurate in what it intends to reveal, but rarely
does it reveal information so that we may know the future in advance. Figures of speech function to describe
not the details of what is going to happen but the seriousness of what is going
to happen.[11]
So typical of
those evangelicals who want to assign to biblical prophecy some special
category or literary genre they call " apocalyptic," Sandy says, " interpreters
must withhold judgment on many particulars of prophecy, unambiguous prophetic
themes abound throughout Scripture, centering on the second coming of Jesus the
Messiah." [12] Well, many preterists, who agree with
his vague and shadowy handling of biblical prophecy don' t believe in a future
second coming. Sandy concludes,
" if my conclusions about the language of prophecy and apocalyptic are correct,
all systems of eschatology are subject to reconsideration." [13] It should not be surprising, since
Sandy is beholden to a postmodern mindset that he believes that the correct
understanding of the Bible' s eschatological message will be composed of a blend
of all the different prophetic views.[14]
One thing is clear
about Sandy and the evangelical scholarly view is that prophecy should not be
taken literally, as has been done by dispensationalists. And they say we know this, primarily,
because the prophetic portions of the Bible are apocalyptic, which were not
intended to be taken literally.
They may not be able to tell you what these sections of Scripture
actually mean, but this one thing they know: prophecy should not be interpreted literally (that is
according to the historical, grammatical approach).
Harmony of the Past and the Future
In our newly
released book The Truth Behind Left Behind,[15] Mark
Hitchcock and I defend the theology of Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins upon which
they developed the Left Behind
novel series. We have a chapter in
the book explaining what we, and those within our dispensational camp, mean by
literal interpretation.[16] It is often different than the false
characterizations found in our critics.
I have long been impressed with the way in which the literal approach to
biblical beginnings produce harmony with the literal understanding of the
future. Henry Morris, who comes
under great criticism by Noll for his role in the modern creationist movement,[17]
charts the relationships between themes begun in the Garden of Eden and their
culmination in the City of the future as follows:[18]
GENESIS
• Rise
of Satan (3:1-6)
• Satan' s
judgment pronounced (3:15)
• Presence
of God removed (3:24)
• Curse
received (3:17-19)
• Death
enters the natural creation (3:19)
• Pain
and sorrow experienced (3:16-19)
• Entrance
to the tree of life barred (3:24)
• Cycle
of night and day (1:5)
• First
heaven and earth (1:1- 2:3)
• God
clothes fallen man (3:21)
• God' s
face is hidden (4:4)
|
REVELATION
• Demise
of Satan (20:10)
• Satan' s
judgment performed (20:2)
• Presence
of God restored (21:3)
• Curse
removed (22:3)
• Death
excluded from new creation (20:14; 21:4)
• Pain
and sorrow excluded (21:4)
• Entrance
to the tree of life blessed (22:14)
• No
night, only light (21:25; 22:5)
• Final
heaven and earth (21:1)
• God
clothes redeemed man (6:11; 7:9, 14)
• God' s
face revealed (22:4)
|
Conclusion
The literal
interpretation of the Bible (especially Genesis and Revelation) may be
offensive to many current evangelicals, but regardless of the many others
reasons why it is the correct method, such an approach tells us where we came
from and where we are headed in the future. It is not surprising that too many evangelicals want to cast
a cloud upon those portions of Scripture for which we as creatures are dependant
upon God' s Revelation. If God does
not tell us about beginnings and the future, we cannot know from any other
source. Nevertheless, the Bible
tells us that history began in a garden and is moving toward a city. Maranatha!