puritan lad wrote:Oh, So the Covenant isn't unconditional afterall. Now we are getting somewhere.
But you have a strange definition of “everlasting”. You claim that “it does NOT mean that they get to enjoy the blessings of living in it at all times.” Well, if you take “everlasting” literally, it most certainly does. Did no one every read a prince/princess fairy tale to you?
I didn't say it wasn't unconditional. It will be fulfilled no matter what. That does not mean, however, that their enjoyment within the land was unconditional. Again, Deut. 29 gives the conditions for enjoyments of the covenant. Let's use this simple example:
Suppose you promised to buy your child a car when they turned 16, no strings attached. So, they turn 16, and you do. Their first week out, they get a speeding ticket. You take away their driving privileges. There you have an unconditional promise with conditions as to its enjoyment. Second, the covenant is everlasting. They will own the land forever, which is exactly what everlasting literally means. Now, can you show me one place where I, or any dispensationalist, has ever claimed that once the Jews were brought into the land that they would forever reside in it? Again, Deut 29 says otherwise. But Deut 29 also gives the conditions on which they will be brought back to
their land. Make more sense?
puritan lad wrote:Let's see. Joshua says that all of God's promises to Abraham were fulfilled, and not one of them failed. Jac's Maps disagree. Who should I believe?
No, it does not say that all the promises to Abraham were fulfilled. It says that all the promises to their forefathers were fulfilled. Joshua had in mind the promises in Numbers 34. In fact, if you want to hold the view that all the promises to Abraham were fulfilled in Joshua 21, you should explain how it was that Jesus had not yet come. Was He not the ultimate fulfillment the Abrahamic Covenant? I don't see how if all the promises had been fulfilled in 21 that Jesus had anything left to fulfill during His life.
puritan lad wrote:I believe God has already given Abraham's Seed (Christ) everlasting possession of the land, In fact, all nations. I answered your question Jac. Let's quit pretending that I didn't. You may not like my answer, probably because (it's not literal "the way you define it". I love that quote Jac. How can anyone ever argue with that?)
I can't help but think of your critique of Matt. 16 being "fulfilled" in the transfiguration. You say it is a "hollow" prophecy. But look at what you do here. Jesus got that land with those specific boundaries. But that was because He got
all the land in the world. That, my friend, is hollow.
But, even with that said, the Bible says that Abraham's descendants (plural!) would receive the land. Notice, "To your
descendants I give this land." I only see two ways to take this, if we agree the land is an actual land and not something to be spiritualized. Either Abraham's Jewish children (national Israel) will receive the land and defined in that passage, or Abraham's "descendants" would be the Church. In that case, you and I will receive the land. But in that case, who gets the rest of the world?
Now, with all that said, you keep saying you are answering my question and you keep not. Maybe I am not saying it clearly enough. You said that Joshua 21 was the fulfillment of Gen 15. When you look at what Joshua conquered, though, he did not conquer all the land listed in Gen 15. So, PL - was Joshua's conquest the fulfillment of Genesis 15 or not? If yes, then how do you not believe in an errant Bible? If no, then what promises were fulfilled that Joshua 21 speaks of?
puritan lad wrote:The fact is that ALL Old Testament Covenants pointed to Christ, not to some atheistic country in the Middle East founded by the UN in 1948. (BTW: Christ's owns that land as well.)
Obviously, I see that "atheistic country in the Middle East founded by the UN in 1948" as the beginning of the fulfillment of Ezekiel 37. In fact, one of the most important parts of the Dispensational view of the end-times is that Israel will be unbelieving during the Tribulation.
puritan lad wrote:However, I have answered your questions. The problem is that you don't like my answer. You keep falling back on your "literal hermeneutic", which is really no more literal than mine.
I'll deal with your charges that I don't take the time references literally below. In the meantime, I simply disagree with this statement. You can't show me one place where I spiritualize a prophecy, be that OT or NT. And yet, by your own admission, Dan. 12:2 is a spiritual resurrection. It isn't to be understood literally. I still don't know whether or not you believe the land promises in Gen 15 will be (or were?) fulfilled literally or if they should be taken spiritually.
puritan lad wrote:We take different aspects of prophecy literally. You do not have a monopoly on literalism. As I have pointed out there are things I take literally that you don't. (In fact, if we were to do a count - I won't - I probably take more items "literally" than you do.)
Feel free to take the count if you want to make this charge. We don't make statements without backing them up. Again, I take the OT and the NT literally.
puritan lad wrote:I hold that the New Testament is a valid (in fact, the only valid) was to interpret OT prophecy. That will always lead to either an amill or postmill position.
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I know this is true, but on what basis do you make this claim? I can think of a lot of reasons to explain why we have to interpret the NT in light of the OT. Why would we even think of doing it in the reverse? But let me use this quote of yours here to challenge your claim that you take things more literally than do I. If we have to interpret the OT
in light of the NT, aren't you saying that the OT cannot be understood in it's straightforward sense? That is why we have to have the NT, to tell us what it really means? If that is the case, then you, not me, have shown that I take the OT more "literally" than you do. I, of course, argue that the OT should be taken in its straightforward sense. I don't see any NT reason for saying otherwise. Anyway, on to your time references . . .
- Matthew 10:23 — “You (my disciples) shall not have gone over the cities of Israel, till the Son of man be come.”
This is a
great example, I think, of the differences in our interpretational approaches, and it will help show what dispensationalists mean by the term "literal hermeneutic." (It will also take the longest to explain.) First off, "literal hermeneutic" is shorthand for
literal-historical-grammatical. So some background information is essential if we are to understand the historical context in which Jesus was speaking
and Matthew was writing. Matthew's Gospel was probably written between 55 and 60 AD. This was between five and ten years before the Neronian Persecutions began, which I suspect you see as being the fulfillment of Jesus' words in these passages, with the "Coming" being a reference to the judgment of AD 70. I'll point out problems with that view--the necessity of taking it as non-literal--as I explain the literalness of my own. Second, Matthew was written to Jewish believers to answer the simple question, "If the Messiah has come, where is the Kingdom we have long been expecting?" It is exactly for this reason that Matthew presents Jesus as the King promised in the OT prophecies. Thus, I see Matthew's literary purpose as showing God's plan for Israel in light of the events of 27-30 AD.
With that in mind, we look at the text itself. In Matt. 10:1, Jesus calls to himself His twelve disciples, including Judas. It is here a comparison with Luke 10, which records the same event, is absolutely essential. In Luke 10, Jesus appoints seventy-two. He gives them virtually the same instructions up until verse Matt 10:15/Luke 10:12. Matthew does not record their journey, but Luke does. He tells us in Luke 10:17, "The seventy-two returned with joy and said, 'Lord, even the demons submit to us in your name.'"
It is of further interest that there is a second commission given by Jesus in Luke 22. He references this earlier commission, which only Luke recorded to conclusion of, and now tells them that this new commission is different. And now, "if you have a purse, take it, and also a bag; and if you don't have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one" (Luke 22:36). Why? Because now people will be hostile, whereas they were not in the previous commission.
Now what is the point of this comparison? First off, we have to remember that Matthew does not tell us about the results of the disciple's mission throughout Israel. In fact, he doesn't even tell us they left! If it were not for Luke, we would be left with the impression that their trip began with their witness of Christ after His resurrection, which is, of course, exactly how preterists want to take this passage. But we know from Luke that not only these, but sixty others, did go, they did complete the mission Jesus had for them, and they came back and reported the events. So why did Matthew not tell us that part? What is he
literally trying to say?
Number one, the immediate reference in Matt 10 is the proclamation of the Gospel of the Kingdom (Matt 10:7) to the Jews. This message was NOT to be given to the Gentiles (10:5). This itself is proof that reference in 10:23, whatever it is, could not be referring to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 simply because these same twelve did preach to Gentiles before that date! No, taken literally, this commission was given and fulfilled during the earthly ministry of Jesus Christ.
Number two, the commission through verse 16 is clear and echoed by Luke. Verses 17 and following, however, present serious problems. At no time during the disciple's first trip did the experience the persecution mentioned in these verses. They were never brought before kings, they were not flogged, brothers were not betrayed until death, etc. It is here that we have to ask what is happening at a literary level. Matthew's first readers were Jewish Christians living immediately before the Neronian Persecution, but even they had not seen the level of persecution mentioned here. It is therefore obvious that Jesus' words in Matthew 10:17ff have broader and longer reaching impact than the immediate context in which He spoke. However, it was not necessarily much broader and longer reaching than the immediate context in which Matthew wrote! In other words, these Jewish readers would have been expected to read this and understand that Matthew was talking about
someone other than the twelve disciples at this point. Further, we don't know whether or not the original twelve hearing this would have suspected that they were the ones being spoken of. It is commonly thought that a great portion of the sermons in the Gospels, and especially Matthew (i.e., the Sermon on the Mount and the Olivet Discourse), are actually collections of various sermons tied together and presented in one place. Did Luke simply forget the last half of the passage, or did Matthew see a broader connection to this commission and a future commission and connect them here, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit?
So, regardless of what you believe, we know for sure that the events of Matt 10:17ff were not fulfilled by the original twelve by the first missionary trip. Both Scripture and history confirm this. By whom, then, were they, or will they, be fulfilled? On one hand, the preterist insists this was fulfilled by those who preached until AD 70, but serious problems with this view have already been noted, not the least of which is the fact that Gentiles were given the gospel. Futurists see Matthew's purpose here in the context of his broader purpose, which is to demonstrate God's plan for the Jewish people in light of their rejection of their Christ. As per Matt 24, the reader will know that in the future, God will again work to establish His Kingdom among the Jews. In Matt 21:23, Jesus says that "Therefore I tell you that the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people who will produce its fruit." Thus, from a literary perspective, these Jewish Christians are thoroughly told to expect a future preaching of the Gospel to their people.
It is in that context--that literal, literary, and historical context--that I take Matt 10:23. The Gospel will be preached again to Israel, but that preaching will not be completed before Jesus returns at His Second Advent. That, in my view, is the plainest way to take the text. It spiritualizes nothing, takes all relevant Scripture into account, and gives the most consideration to the general flow of Matthew's purpose.
- Matthew 16:28 — “Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom.”
This was literally fulfilled six days later in the transfiguration. It is important to note that very
very next verse opens with, "After six days Jesus took with him Peter, James and John the brother of James . . ." Remember there were no chapter/verse breaks in the original text, it is very plain that this is exactly what Matthew had in mind.
- Romans 13:11-12 - "You know what hour it is, how it is full time now for you to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed; the night is far gone, the day is at hand."
Philippians 4:5 - "The Lord is at hand."
James 5:8-9 - "The coming of the Lord is at hand. ... Behold, the Judge is standing at the door."
1 Peter 4:7 - "The end of all things is at hand."
I grouped these all together because you are focusing, apparently, on "at hand." In Romans, Paul is exhorting the Roman Christians to wake up from their moral laxity (cf 1 Thess 5:6-7). Why? Because Christ's return is immanent. That is, it is "at hand." As for that phrase, "at hand," it refers to the final stage of time (See BDAG, p. 871). From a literalist's perspective, we cannot take "at hand" to be a
euphemism for "about to happen as humans count 'soon'", which is how you seem to want me to take it. To take but one example, Isaiah 13:6 says, "Howl ye; for the day of the LORD is at hand." In other words, I don't see any reason that this "literally" has to mean it is going to happen in the next few years or few days. Literally, the reference is to immanence. It will happen. It could happen at any moment. Maybe sooner, maybe later, but it is "at hand."
- 1 Corinthians 10:11 - "On [us] the ends of the ages have come."
This is just a silly translation here. The word translated "ends" here is
telos. It means maturity or perfection or goal or completion. The NIV has a good rendering, I think: "These things happened to them as examples and were written down as warnings for us, on whom the fulfillment of the ages has come." Do I take this literally? You bet I do! On us, that is, on believes, has come the fulfillment of the
ages. Notice "ages" is plural. I'm sure you are aware that Jews thought in terms of "this age" and "the age to come." The former was characterized by Gentile dominance and by unrighteousness in general, whereas the latter was to be characterized by Jewish dominance via the Messiah, and thus it would be an age of righteousness. This is why we translate the phrase
zoen aionion as "eternal life" rather than the more literal "life of the ages." The point is that we get to take part right now in the future age--the age that all of history is moving towards, which is the Messianic Kingdom. We HAVE "the life of the ages" right NOW. So has that fulfillment come on us? Yup. It has.
- 1 Corianthians 7:29-31 - "Brethren, the appointed time has grown very short; from now on, let those who have wives live as though they had none, and those who mourn as though they were not mourning, and those who rejoice as though they were not rejoicing, and those who buy as though they had no goods, and those who deal with the world as though they had no dealings with it. For the form of this world is passing away."
Funny, you didn't quote the very next verse: "I would like you to be free from concern. An unmarried man is concerned about the Lord's affairs—how he can please the Lord."
I think the meaning of this passage has been obscured by our relative freedom in the Western world. In the world in which Paul wrote, and in much of the world today, to claim the name of Christ is as good as a death-sentence. It is better, if possible, not to shackle yourself to the cares of this world in light of that persecution, but to instead focus on the "affairs of the Lord." Further, I don't know what translation you are using here, but it does not say that "the appointed time has grown very short." It simply says that the time is short. Do I take that literally? Yup. Bear in mind that "short" is a comparative adjective. "Short compared to what?" How about . . . compared to eternity, which is what Paul is always thinking about? Or how about compared to the history of man? If men have been around 30,000 years, then 2,000 is pretty short . . . especially when Paul is mostly interested in immanence.
- 1 John 2:18 - "It is the last hour ... we know that it is the last hour."
This doesn't need much comment other than to say "the last X" is a biblical phrase that refers not to the 24th hour of the day or the 365th day of the year, but to the final part of God's program. I can provide a litany of Scripture to prove that if you need them. As the author of Hebrews says, God has spoken to us in these last days through Jesus Christ. Same idea in both passages.
Anyway . . . so is there anything else you'd like to say I don't take literally, or perhaps you'd like to challenge the understandings given above as non-literal?
God bless