| Dispensational Truth II Pre-Millennialism
The
time of the Second Coming of Christ is the key that unlocks all
"Dispensational Truth." The vast majority of Christians believe in the
personal return of the Lord, but they differ as to the time. They are
divided into 'two schools, the "Pre-Milliennialists" and the
"PostMillennialists." The "Pre-Millennialists" believe that Christ will
return before the Millennium, the "Post Millennialists" that He will
not come until after. By the "Millennium" is meant the period of 1000
years mentioned in Rev.- 20:1-3. It is a common, but wholly erroneous
impression, that Pre-Millennialists base their belief mainly, if not
solely, on this passage in the Apocalypse. The fact is, the question of
whether Christ's return will precede or follow the Millennium antedates
the Apocalypse. The Old Testament prophets in plain language, and in
glowing terms, foretold an era or age of universal righteousness and
peace on this earth, under the reign of "Messiah the Prince." That the
disciples were not mistaken in their belief in such an "Earthly
Kingdom, " ruled over by their promised Messiah, is evident from the
fact that Jesus never reproved them for holding such a belief. And
after His resurrection, and previous to His Ascension, when they asked
Him if He would "at that time restore the Kingdom to Israel" (Acts 1:6).
He did not say– "You are mistaken in your idea of an 'Earthly Kingdom,
the Kingdom I came to set up, and that was meant by the prophets, is a
'Spiritual Kingdom, "' but He said – "It is not for you to know the
'Times' and 'Seasons."' That is, when it shall be set up. The
whole teaching of the Old Testament as to the "Coming of the Messiah"
is Pre-Millennial. The only use that Premillennialites have for the
"Thousand Year" passage in Rev. 20:1-3 is to fix the length of that "Age of Righteousness and Peace." In fact Jewish tradition, based on the "Sabbatic Rest" of Gen. 2:1-3,
taught that' the "Seventh Thousand Years" from Creation was to be a
period of "Sabbatic Rest, " or what we call the Millennium. The passage
in Revelation simply confirms this tradition. Expunge the passage and
you do not weaken the argument; you only leave as uncertain the length
of time that Age shall last. The
Apostolic Church was Pre-Millennial, and for over 200 years no other
view was entertained. The writings of the "Church Fathers" abound in
evidence of the fact. But about A. D. 250, Origen, one of the Church
Fathers, conceived the idea that the words of scripture were but the
"husk" in which was hid the' "kernel" of scripture truth. At once he
began to "Allegorize" and "Spiritualize" the Scriptures, and thus
founded that school of "Allegorizing" and "Spiritualizing" interpreters
of Scripture, from which the Church and the Bible have suffered so
much. The result was that the Church largely ceased to look for the
Lord to return and set up an earthly kingdom. When
Constantine became sole Emperor of Rome in A. D. 323, being favorable
to Christianity, he united Church and State. A new difficulty now arose
in the interpretation of scripture. If, as was at that time believed,
Rome was to be the seat of Antichrist, the question arose, or rather
was suspiciously whispered-- 'Is Constantine the Antichrist? ' Such a
notion was unpalatable to the Roman Emperor, and so a convenient
explanation was discovered and adopted, that Antichrist was "Pagan
Rome, " and that the Millennium commenced when Constantine ascended the
throne. This was given color by the great gifts and privileges bestowed
on the Church by Constantine, and led to the claim that the Millennial
blessings of the Old Testament had been transferred from the Jews to
the Christian Church. But
the claim that the "Papal Church" was the Antichrist would not down.
When it was found impossible to expunge the Book of Revelation from the
sacred canon, it was decided to lock up the Scriptures, and the Bible
became a sealed book, and the gloom of night settled down upon all
Christendom. The result was the "Dark Ages." But amid the gloom God was
not without witnesses to the truth. The Paulicians, Albigeneses,
Waldenses, and other sects, bore testimony to the Premillennial return
of the Lord. But the
darkness was not eternal. When the fulness of time was come the
"Morning Star" of the Reformation, John Wycliffe, arose, and was soon
followed by the "Sun, " Martin Luther, the brightness of whose light
dispelled the darkness. The doctrine of the Premillennial Return of the
Lord was revived, but the Reformers did not go far enough. The period
was one of religious strife and the formation of new religious sects.
The result was an ebb of Spirituality and the growth of Rationalism,
which refused to believe that the world was fast ripening for judgment,
and a new interpretation of the Millennial Reign of Christ was
demanded. This interpretation was furnished by the Rev. Daniel Whitby
(1638-1640), a clergyman of the Church of England, who claimed that in
reading the promises made to the Jews in the Old Testament of their
restoration as a nation, and the re-establishment of the Throne of
David, he was led to see that these promises were spiritual and applied
to the Church. This view he called a "New Hypothesis." He
claimed that Israel and Mount Zion represented the Church. That the
promised submission of the Gentiles to the Jews was simply prophetic of
the conversion of the Gentiles and their entrance into the Church. That
the lying down of the lion and the lamb together typified the
reconciliation of the Old and New natures, and that the establishment
of an outward and visible kingdom at Jerusalem, over which Christ and
the saints should reign, was gross and carnal, and contrary to reason,
as it implied the mingling together of human and spiritual beings on
the earth. His "New
Hypothesis" was that by the preaching of the Gospel Mohammedanism would
be overthrown, the Jews converted, the Papal Church with the Pope
(Antichrist) would be destroyed, and there would follow a 1000 years of
righteousness and peace known as the Millennium; at the close of which
there would be a short period of Apostasy, ending in the return of
Christ. There would then be a general resurrection of the dead,
followed by a general judgment, the earth would be destroyed by fire
and eternity would begin. The
times were favorable for the "New Theory." A reaction had set in from
the open infidelity of those days. All England was in a religious
fervor. The "Great Awakening" followed under Whitefield and Wesley, and
it looked, as Whitby claimed, that the Millennium was about to be
ushered in. That he was mistaken the events of history since that time
have shown. It is evident that we are not in the Millennium now. Nevertheless
his "Theory" was favorably received everywhere, and spread with great
rapidity and became an established doctrine of the Church, and is what
is known today as the "Post-Millennial" view of the Second Coming of
Christ, and supposed to be the orthodox faith of the Church. In short,
"Post-Millennialism, " as advocated in our day, is barely 200 years
old, while "Pre-Millennialism" dates back to the days of Isaiah and
Daniel. The sad thing
is that this "false doctrine" of Post-Millennialism is taught in our
Bibles by the headings of the chapters in the Old Testament. For
illustration the headings of chapters forty-three and four of Isaiah
read-'The Lord comforteth The Church with His promises, " whereas the chapters are not addressed to the Church at all, but to Jacob and Israel,
as we see by reading them. The ordinary reader overlooks the fact that
the chapter headings of the Bible are put there by the publisher and
should be omitted, as they are misleading, as for illustration the
title to the Book of Revelation, which is called- "The Revelation of St. John the Divine, " whereas it should be called- "THE REVELATION OF JESUS CHRIST." Rev. 1:1. Premillennialists
are divided into three different "Schools of Interpretation, " which
are fundamentally antagonistic, known as the "Preterist, " "Historical"
and "Futurist" Schools. The
"Preterist School"-originated with the Jesuit Alcazar. His view was
first put forth as a complete scheme in his work on the Apocalypse,
published in A. D. 1614. It limits the scope of the Apocalypse to the
events of the Apostle john's life, and affirms that the whole prophecy
was fulfilled in the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus, and the
subsequent fall of the persecuting Roman Empire, thus making the
Emperor Nero the "Antichrist." The purpose of the scheme was
transparent, it was to relieve the Papal Church from the stigma of
being called the "Harlot Church" and the Pope from being called the
"Antichrist." It is a view that is now but little advocated. The
"Historical School, " sometimes spoken of as the "Presentist" scheme,
interprets the Apocalypse as a series of prophecies predicting the
events that were to happen in the world and in the Church from john's
day to the end of time. The advocates of this School interpret the
symbols of the Book of Revelation as referring to certain historical
events that have and are happening in the world. They claim that
"Antichrist" is a "System" rather than a "Person, " and is represented
by the Harlot Church of Rome. They interpret the "Time Element" in the
Book on the "Year Day Scale." This School has had some very able and
ingenious advocates. This view, like the preceding was unknown to the
early church. It appeared about the middle of the Twelfth Century, and
was systematized in the beginning of the Thirteenth Century by the
Abbot Joachim. Subsequently it was adopted and applied to the Pope by
the forerunners and leaders of the Reformation, and may be said to have
reached its zenith in Mr. Ellicott's "Horae Apocalypticae." It is
frequently called the Protestant interpretation because it regards
Popery as exhausting all that has been predicted of the Antichristian
power. It was a powerful and formidable weapon in the hands of the
leaders of the Reformation, and the conviction of its truthfulness
nerved them to "love not their lives unto the death." It was the secret
of the martyr heroism of the Sixteenth Century. The
"Futurist School" interprets the language of the Apocalypse "literally,
" except such symbols as are named as such, and holds that the whole of
the Book, from the end of the third chapter, is yet "future" and
unfulfilled, and that the greater part of the Book, from the beginning
of chapter six to the end of chapter nineteen, describes what shall
come to pass during the last week of "Daniel's Seventy Weeks." This
view, while it dates in modern times only from the close of the
Sixteenth Century, is really the most ancient of the three. It was held
in many of its prominent features by the primitive Fathers of the
Church, and is one of the early interpretations of scripture truth that
sunk into oblivion with the growth of Papacy, and that has been
restored to the Church in these last times. In its present form it may
be said to have originated at the end of the Sixteenth Century, with
the Jesuit Ribera, who, actuated by the same motive as the Jesuit
Alcazar, sought to rid the Papacy of the stigma of being called the
"Antichrist, " and so referred the prophecies of the Apocalypse to the
distant future. This view was accepted by the Roman Catholic Church and
was for a long time confined to it, but, strange to say, it has
wonderfully revived since the beginning of the Nineteenth Century, and
that among Protestants. It is the most largely accepted of the three
views., It has been charged with ignoring the Papal and Mohammedan
systems, but this is far from the truth, for it looks upon them as
foreshadowed in the scriptures, and sees in them the "Type" of those
great "Anti-Types" yet future, the "-Beast" and the "False Prophet."
The "Futurist" interpretation of scripture is the one employed in this
book. The Second and
Premillennial Coming of Christ is the "Key" to the Scriptures. All of
the prophetical writings make it their terminal end. This is a dark
world and the "Sure Word of Prophecy" is given as a light to show us
the way over the stormy sea of time? 2Pet. 1:19. Prophecy is not a haphazard guess, like our weather probabilities, it is History Written in Advance. The
moment we grasp this idea of prophecy and clearly see the relation of
Christ's Premillennial Coming to scripture truth, the Bible becomes a
new book, and doctrinal and prophetical truths at once fall into their
proper place, and our theological system is no longer a chaos but an
orderly plan.
Previous Chapter | Contents | Next Chapter |