From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a general overview of the different eschatological interpretations of
the Book
of Revelation held by Christians. The differences are by no
means monolithic as representing one group or another. Many
differences exist within each group.
Interpretations of
the Book of Revelation
Judgments Chapters 1 -
19: Four views
- Preterism: Past, first-century
fulfillment of literary text; real events
-
- Futurism:
Future, and in some cases imminent fulfillment of literal
text; real events
- Historicism:
Text is fulfilled during the span of Christian History. Text is
taken as symbolic of real events, rather than literally true.
- Idealism:
Present continual fulfillment of symbolical or
literary text; spiritual events
Millennium Chapter 20:
Three views
Comparison of Christian millennial interpretations
- Premillennialism: Christ's Second coming before
a literal one thousand year period, known by some as a
thousand-year sabbath, is preceded by a gradual deterioration of
human society and behavior, and the expansion of evil through an
endtime government or kingdom. This school of thought can be
divided into three main interpretations: Dispensational,
Mid-tribulation/Prewrath and Historic Premillennialism or Post-Tribulation
viewpoint.
- Dispensational Premillennialism: The rapture of the church occurs
just prior to the seven-year tribulation, where Christ returns for
his saints to meet them in the air. This is followed by the
tribulation, the rise of the Antichrist to world-rule, the return of
Christ to the Mount of Olives and Armageddon, resulting in a millennial reign
of Messiah over the Jews, centered in restored Jerusalem.
- Prewrath/Mid-tribulation View: The rapture of the church occurs in
the midst of the seven-year period. Mid-tribulation view holds that
the rapture occurs halfway through; Prewrath holds that the rapture occurs some
time in the midst of the tribulation in the latter 3.5 years, but
before God's wrath is poured out upon the nations.
- Historic
Premillennialism or Post-Tribulation View: The rapture of the church (the body
of true believers) happens after a period of great tribulation, with the
church being caught up to meet Christ in the air and will accompany
him to earth to share in his (literal or figurative) thousand year
rule.
- Postmillennialism: Christ's Second coming is seen
as occurring after the one-thousand years, which many in this
school of thought believe is ushered in by the church. This view is
also divided into two sub-schools of interpretation:
- Revivalist Postmillennialism: the millennium
represents an unknown period of time marked by a gradual Christian
revival, followed by widespread successful evangelism. After these
efforts is the return of Christ foreseen.
- Reconstructionist Postmillennialism: the
Church increases its influence through successful evangelism and
expansion, finally establishing a theocratic kingdom of 1,000 years
duration (literal or figurative) followed by the return of
Christ.
- Amillennialism: Non-literal
"thousand years" or long age between Christ's first and second comings; the millennial reign of
Christ as pictured in the book of Revelation is viewed now as
Christ reigning at the right hand of the Father. It can be hard to
draw a fine line between Amillenialism and Revivalist
Postmillenialism. Amillenialism tends to believe society will,
through growing rebellion, continue to deteriorate, while
Postmillenialism believes the Church will influence the world
producing greater righteousness.
Interpretive
and hermeneutical overviews of the Bible
The hermeneutic method held by an individual or
church will greatly affect their interpretation of the book of
Revelation, and consequently their eschatological scheme.
Supersessionist
Supersessionism is the belief that the New Covenant in Christ supersedes, or
replaces, the Old
Covenant with Israel. It comes in at least two forms: covenant
theology and kingdom theology. It was the predominant teaching
of the church until the rise of dispensationalism in the 19th
century.
Covenant
theology
Hermeneutics: Usually Grammatical-Historical typologised and contextualised. There are three
covenants - the Covenant of Works or Law, the Covenant
of Redemption and the Covenant of Grace. This shares
much in common with Kingdom theology (see below) but emphasizes the
covenants more than the Kingdom of God itself.
Overview: Under the Covenant of Works
mankind, represented ultimately in a covenantal sense under Adam
beginning from the Garden of Eden, failed to live as God
intended and stood condemned. But beyond time the Covenant of
Redemption was made between the Father and Son, to agree that
Christ would live an acceptable substitutionary life on behalf of,
and as a covenantal representative for, those who would sin but would trust in Christ as their covenantal substitutionary
representative, which bought them into the Covenant of
Grace. The Covenant of Grace applies to all who trust
Christ for their salvation, regardless of ethnicity, and thus the
Covenant covers Jews and Gentiles alike with regard to salvation, sanctification,
and resurrection.
The Covenant of Grace forms the basis of the later covenants with
Noah, Abraham, Moses, David and the New Covenant in Christ.
Adherents: Held by many evangelical Reformed
Protestant Churches who take a Historical-grammatical and Typological interpretation of the
Bible. Adherents would include the Reformed church,
most of the Presbyterian
church, some low
church Anglicans, some Baptist churches, some Wesleyan/Methodist churches and certain Lutheran
churches.
Approaches to Revelation:
Judgements: Revelation Ch 1 - 19
- Idealism: the
book of Revelation was not designed as a historical document or
future prophecy, but instead teaches timeless truths about good and
evil, Satan and God, etc., by way of metaphor, allegory, and/or
story.
- Futurism:
Historic or covenantal futurism, as opposed to Dispensational Futurism or Dispensational premillennialism: the book
of Revelation is limited to a specific future period--the
tribulation.
- Historicism
(See the eschatology of Martin Luther, John Calvin, Joseph Mede, Isaac Newton, John
Gill, Matthew
Henry, E. B. Elliott, Henry Grattan Guinness, and Charles Haddon Spurgeon; for contemporary
cases see especially Ian
Paisley and Seventh-day
Adventist eschatology): the book of Revelation portrays the
span of church history, from the first century to the return of
Christ: events in Revelation are symbolically interpreted to
portray literal events in the life of the Church.
- Preterism: the book of Revelation
was prophecy at the time, but all or most of it has already been
fulfilled in the very early days of the Church; esp. centering
around the destruction of the Temple and the Jewish nation in 70
A.D. Differences:
- Full Preterism: All of Christian
prophecy was fulfilled in the first century, including the return
of Christ and the resurrection of believers. The resurrection is
interpreted to mean receiving a spiritual body after death, with no
promise of a physical resurrection for any besides Christ.
- Partial Preterism: Most of
prophecy was fulfilled in the first century, except Christ's return
then was as a judge of Israel, but not his final literal coming. He
is still to return and literally raise the believing dead.
Millennium: Revelation Ch 20
Kingdom-Dominion
theology
Hermeneutics: Similar to the covenantal system,
but emphasizes the Kingdom of God rather than the three covenants.
Exemplified in works such as Graeme Goldsworthy's Gospel and
Kingdom. The Old Testament is interpreted using typology and the grammatico-historical method. Revelation is read according to the
conventions of the apocalyptic genre.
Overview: God's purpose for all time was to
redeem for himself a people through the death and resurrection of
Christ. The incarnation of Christ is the centrepoint of
the Bible and all history. The
Old Testament is understood to contain a number of covenants and
'types' which are fulfilled in the past and future work of
Jesus.
Goldsworthy schematizes the Kingdom of God as the expression of
God's rule over God's people in God's
place. In the beginning, God himself ruled over Adam and Eve in the
Garden of
Eden. After the fall, the rule of God was expressed through the
Law, the Judges, the King
of Israel and finally the promise that God would write his law on
his people's hearts (Jer 31:33). "God's place" came to be the Tabernacle in the
wilderness, later the Temple in Jerusalem, and finally the promise of the
indwelling Spirit of God (Joel 2, Ezek 37). His "people" were Abraham, the people of Israel,
then the faithful remnant of Israel, and finally the promised
Messiah (Ps 2).
In the New
Testament, God's rule is exercised through Jesus Christ the
King, who is also the "temple" of God (John 2:19-21), over his
people the Church (of which Israel was a type). Salvation for all people in all times
is found by trusting (explicitly or implicitly) in Jesus. Thus,
Abraham, Moses, David, and all Christians today are saved by the
same faith. The Jews are regarded as special in God's plan (as in
Romans and Ephesians) and yet the Old Testament prophecies
regarding Israel find their fulfillment in Jesus and the Church
rather than in a literal restoration of Israel.[1]
Adherents: Held by reformed, evangelical Protestants (especially Sydney Anglicans), similar to the
covenantal theological view.
Approaches to Revelation: Usually idealist and amillennial. Revelation describes
what is happening throughout the Christian era, from Pentecost to
the second coming. This view acknowledges that
there may be valid preteristic connections (eg. the seven hills =
Rome) but the full understanding comes through an
idealistic-historicism (but without necessarily seeing the Roman
Catholic Church as the antichrist). The events of the book while
not to be tied to particular historical events, still describe the
sorts of things that will happen until Christ returns. The book of
Revelation is interpreted according to apocalyptic conventions
regarding numbers and colours (7 = perfection/completion, white =
victory) and the enormous number of allusions to the rest of
Scripture.[2][3]
Dispensational
Hermeneutics: Interpretation as the literal,
'plain meaning' implies (i.e. rejection of typological and allegorical methods). Biblical references to
Israel mean ancient
and modern Israel.
Overview: History is divided into (typically
seven) "dispensations" where God tests man's obedience differently.
The present Church dispensation concerns Christians
(mainly Gentiles) and is a
parenthesis to God's main plan of dealing with and blessing his
chosen people the Jews. Because of the Jews' rejection of
Jesus, Jewish sovereignty over the promised earthly kingdom of
Jerusalem and Palestine
was postponed from the time of Christ's first coming until prior to
or just after his Second Coming when most or all Jews will
embrace him. There will be a rapture of the Gentile church followed by a great tribulation of seven (or
three-and-a-half) years' duration during which Antichrist will
arise and Armageddon
will occur. Then Jesus will return visibly to earth and
re-establish the nation of Israel; the Jewish temple will be
rebuilt at Jerusalem and
the Temple mount, possibly in place of the Muslim Dome of the
Rock (see Christian Zionism). Christ and the
people of Israel will reign in Jerusalem for a thousand years,
followed by last judgment and a new heavens and new
earth.
Adherents: Held by groups who believe the
scriptures to be inerrant and often more Arminian
leaning. Held by many Protestant groups who take what they
believe is a more literal interpretation of the
Bible, including many, but not most, Pentecostal Charismatic and Baptist churches and Independent and 'Non-denominational' churches as well as a
few of the Presbyterian
Church and Wesleyan/Methodist churches. Also held by most
groups that are labelled Fundamentalists. The more
politically active sections within this eschatological view often
strongly support the Christian Zionism movement and the
associated political, military and economic support for Israel which comes from certain
groups within American politics and parts of the Christian
right. This view is also held in a modified form by groups such
as the Latter Day Saints, Christadelphians and Adventist splinter groups such as the Branch Davidians. One of the main tenets of
Dispensationalism is the strict dichotomy that dispensationalists
claim exists between Israel and the New Testament Church. This is
expressly denied by Covenant Theologians who claim the existence of
a relationship via “Spiritual Israel.” A dispensationalist would
claim that none of the prophecies pertaining to Israel are or will
be fulfilled in or by the New Testament Church. Covenant
Theologians would claim that some of the prophecies pertaining to
Israel are, will, or may be fulfilled in or by the New Testament
Church. see supersessionism.
Approaches to Revelation:
Judgements: Revelation Ch 1 - 19
- Dispensational Futurism as
opposed to Historic or Covenantal Futurism.
Millennium: Revelation Ch 20
Allegorical or Mythical
Hermeneutics: The Bible may or may not be
factually accurate but is designed to teach spiritual lessons
through allegory and myth. The Bible is more
literary than historical. Typically, this stance is taken by
churches and individuals who do not place significant emphasis upon
eschatology at all.
Adherents: Held by the majority of Christians,
including groups ranging from those who are Biblically
inerrant to those who do not believe in Biblical
inerrancy, including liberal
scholars who mostly belong to mainline
Protestant denominations. Supporters of this position also
include high church
Anglo-Catholic, Catholic-leaning Lutherans,
Eastern Orthodox churches, and traditional
Roman Catholic groups. Belief in the
allegorical nature of the Bible does not exclude belief in
praxeological or literal hermeneutics: for example, Roman Catholic hermeneutics holds that
there are many senses in which the Bible is true in addition to
literal truth.
The Catholic Apostolic Church
believed that the Bible should be interpreted allegorical. [4] Some
descendants of the Catholic Apostolic Church
also known as Irvingism, such as Apostelamt Jesu Christi,
Apostelamt Juda, Herstelde Apostolische Zendingkerk in Nederland
[5] and the
Old
Apostolic Church [6] [7]also
believes in the allegorical interpretation of the Bible.
Approaches to Revelation:
Judgements: Revelation Ch 1 - 19
Millennium: Revelation Ch 20
See also
Notes
- ^
Graeme Goldsworthy. Gospel and
Kingdom: A Christian Guide of the Old Testament. Paternoster
Press, Exeter, 1981. ISBN
0-85364-218-4.
- ^
Goldsworthy, G. "The Gospel in Revelation -
Gospel and Apocalypse", Paternoster Press, 1994, ISBN
0-85364-630-9.
- ^
Tattersall, L. "Letters from heaven - Bible
talks from the book of Revelation", Perspective Vol. 10 No.
3&4, 2003.
- ^
Flegg.C.G, Gathered under Apostles. Oxford University Press.
Oxford. 1992 :p 207 : ISBN 978-0198263357
- ^
Berkhof, A. De steen scheeuwt uit de muur. Uitgeverij de Kandelaar.
1994. :ISBN 9080725919
- ^
Cathechism of the Old Apostolic Church
- ^
Pienaar, K. Die openbaring van die dwaalleer van die Ou
Apostelkerk. Volhard Verspreiders BK. 2002. :ISBN 0 620 27993
1
Further
reading
- Darrell L. Bock, Jr. (ed), Three views on the Millennium
and Beyond. (1999, Grand Rapids: Zondervan) ISBN
0-310-20143-8
- Stanley J. Grenz, The Millennial Maze: Sorting Out
Evangelical Options. Downer's Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press,
1992 ISBN 0-8308-1757-3
- C. Marvin Pate (ed), Four views on the Book of
Revelation. (1998, Grand Rapids: Zondervan) ISBN
0-310-21080-1
- Steve Gregg (ed), Revelation, Four views: A parallel
commentary. (1997, Nashville: Thomas Nelson) ISBN
0-8407-2128-5
Amillennial
- Beale, G.K..
1998. The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the Greek
Text. ISBN 978-0802821744 Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans
Publishing
- Goldsworthy, Graeme. 2001. "The Gospel in Revelation", In
The Goldsworthy Trilogy, Paternoster, ISBN
1-8422-7036-2.
- Hendriksen, William. 1998. More Than Conquerors: An
Interpretation of the Book of Revelation. ISBN 0-8010-5792-2
Grand Rapids: Baker Book House Publishing.
- Hill, Craig C. 2002 In God's Time: The Bible and the
Future ISBN 0-8028-6090-7 Eerdmans.
- Riddlebarger, Kim. 2003. A Case for Amillennialism:
Understanding the End Times. (ISBN 0-8010-6435-X Paperback:
1903-02-20) Baker Book House.
- Poythress,
Vern S. 2000. The Returning King: A
Guide to the Book of Revelation. (ISBN 0-87552-462-1) P
& R Publishing.
- Sungenis, Robert. "The Apocalypse of St.
John" - an amillenialist interpretation of the Apocalypse
- Travis, Stephen. 2004. Christ Will Come Again: Hope for the
Second Coming of Jesus. ISBN 1-8946-6733-6 Toronto: Clements
Publishing.
Dispensational
- "The Invisible War" by Donald Grey Barnhouse ©1965; Zondervan
Publishing House (Ministry Resources Library).
- "Number in Scripture" by Ethelbert W. Bullinger, D.D.; ©1967;
Kregel Publications, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49501 Library of
Congress Catalog Card No. 67-26498; ISBN 0-8254-2204-3
- "Hidden Prophecies in the Psalms" by J.R. Church; ©1986;
Prophecy Publications, Oklahoma City, OK 73153; ISBN
0-941241-00-9
- "Daniel and Revelation" subtitled "A Study of Two Extraordinary
Visions" by James M. Efird ©1978; Judson Press, Valley Forge, PA
19481 ISBN 0-8170-0797-0
- "Daniel's Prophecy of the 70 Weeks" by Alva J. McClain 1940,
©1969; Academie Books/Zondervan House
- "The Man The False Prophet and The Harlot", subtitled "The Name
of the Antichrist Finally Revealed" by Dr. Anthony M. Giliberti
©1991; Published by "This Is The Generation" Library of Congress
Catalog Number 90-93451 ISBN 0-9628419-0-0
- "Global Peace and the Rise of Antichrist" by Dave Hunt ©1990;
Harvest House Publishers Library of Congress Cataloging in
Publishing Data; ISBN 0-89081-831-2
- "Peace, Prosperity, and the Coming Holocaust" by Dave Hunt
©1983; Harvest House Publishers. Dated, but a very interesting read
for those who are interested in Biblical Prophecy.
- "How Close Are We?" by Dave Hunt ©1993 Harvest House
Publishers.
- "A Cup of Trembling" by Dave Hunt ©1995; Harvest House
Publishers, Eugene, Oregon 97402; ISBN 1-56507-334-7
- "Not Wrath but Rapture!" by H.A. Ironside NO DATE; published by
Loizeaux Brothers, Inc.
- "The Late Great Planet Earth" by Hal Lindsey with C.C. Carlson
©1970; Zondervan House.
- "Satan is Alive and Well on Planet Earth" by Hal Lindsey with
C.C. Carlson ©1972; Zondervan House.
- "There's a New World Coming" by Hal Lindsey ©1973; Vision
House.
- "The Liberation of Planet Earth" by Hal Lindsey ©1974; The
Zondervan Corporation.
- "The Terminal Generation" by Hal Lindsey with C.C. Carlson
©1976; Fleming Revell.
- "The Rapture" by Hal Lindsey ©1983; The Aorist Corporation
Bantam Books.
- "The Revelation Record" by Henry M. Morris ©1985; Tyndale House
Inc. and Creation Life Publishers.
- "Things to Come" by J. Dwight Pentecost ©1958; Zondervan
Publishing House, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506; ISBN 0310308909 and
ISBN 9780310308904.
- "Dispensationalism Today" by Charles C. Ryrie ©1965; The Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.
- "Armageddon, Oil and the Middle East Crisis" Revised, by John
F. Walvoord ©1974, 1976, 1990; Zondervan Publishing House, 1415
Lake Drive, S.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506; ISBN
0-310-53921-8
- "The Return of the Lord" by John F. Walvoord ©1955; Zondervan
Publishing House Library of Congress Cat. #77-106423.
- "Israel In Prophecy" by John F. Walvoord ©1962; Zondervan
Publishing House.
- "The Church in Prophecy" by John F. Walvoord ©1964; Zondervan
Publishing House.
- "The Nations in Prophecy" by John F. Walvoord ©1967; Zondervan
Publishing House. NOTE: Books 73 through 75 may have been combined
into one new volume).
- "The Millennial Kingdom" by John F. Walvoord ©1959; by Dunham
Publishing Co. Academie Books published by Zondervan Publishing
House, 1415 Lake Drive. S.E., Grand Rapids Michigan 49506.
- "The Rapture Question" by John F. Walvoord (Revised &
Enlarged) ©1974; The Zondervan Corporation.
General
- "The Truth About Armageddon" by William Sanford Lasor ©1982;
Harper & Row Publishers.
- "A Survey of Bible Prophecy" by R. Ludwigson ©1951; (1973,
1975; The Zondervan Corporation).
- "City of Revelation" subtitled "A Book of Forgotten Wisdom" by
John Michell ©1972; Ballantine Books (first printing: 11/73 Library
of Congress Cat. No. 72-88116 SBN 345-23607-6-150. (NOTE: Possibly
only one copy of this book available. Contains information on
Gematria, a mathematical science.)
- "The Secret Book of Revelation" (subtitled: "The Last Book of
the Bible") ©1979; by Gilles Quispel Collins St. James Place,
Comdon, 1979.
- "Computers and The Beast of Revelation" by David Webber &
Noah Hutchings ©1986; Huntington House Publishers.
- "Spiritual Survival in the Last Days" by Greg Laurie ©1982;
Harvest House Publishers.
Preterist
- Adams, Jay. The
Time is at Hand (1966, Phillipsburg, New Jersey: Presbyterian
and Reformed Publishing)
- Chilton, David. The Days of Vengeance: An Exposition of the
Book of Revelation (1987, Ft. Worth, Texas: Dominion
Press)
- Gentry,
Kenneth, Before Jerusalem Fell: The dating of the Book of
Revelation (1989, Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian
Economics)
Postmillennial
- Bahnsen, Greg.
1999. Victory in Jesus: The Bright Hope of
Postmillennialism (ISBN 0-9678317-1-7) Texarkana, AR: Covenant
Media Press.
- Bock, Darrell. 1999. Three Views of the Millennium and
Beyond. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing.
- Boettner,
Loraine. 1984. The Millennium. Philipsburg, NJ:
P&R Publishing. (ISBN 0-87552-113-4)
- Davis, John Jefferson. 1996. The Victory of Christ's
Kingdom: An Introduction to Postmillennialism. Moscow, ID:
Canon Press.
- Gentry, Kenneth. 1992. He Shall Have Dominion: A
Postmillennial Eschatology. Tyler, Tx: Institute For Christian
Economics.
- Gentry, Kenneth. 2003. Thine is the Kingdom: A Study of the
Postmillennial Hope. Vallecito, CA: Chalcedon
Foundation.\
- Mathison, Keith A. 1999. Postmillenialism. An Eschatology
of Hope. Philipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing. (ISBN
0-87552-389-7) - Good one volume over-view of Postmillennialism.
Written by a proponent.
- Murray, Iain. 1971. The Puritan Hope: A Study in Revival
and the Interpretation of Prophecy. London, UK: Banner
of Truth Trust.
- North, Gary. 1990.
Millennialism and Social Theory. Tyler, Tx: Institute For
Christian Economics.
Historic Premillennialism, Post-Tribulation and Partial Rapture
Viewpoints
- The Blessed Hope: A Biblical Study of the Second
Advent by George Eldon Ladd. Eerdmans, 1956. Reprint, 1980.
ISBN 0-8028-1111-6
- The Church and the Tribulation: A Biblical Examination of
Post-tribulationism. by Robert H. Gundry. Zondervan,
1973.
- "The Tribulation People" by Arthur Katterjohn with Mark Faculer
©1975; Creation House NOTE: Dated; Post-Tribulation school of
thought.
- "Lord, When?" by Arthur Katterjohn with Mark Faculer ©1976;
Creation House (Can be used independently or in conjunction with
"The Tribulation People" by the same authors. NOTE:
Post-Tribulation school of thought.
- "Send This Message to My Church: Christ's Words to the Seven
Churches of Revelation" by Terence Kelshaw ©1984; Thomas Nelson
Publishers.
- "The Incredible Cover-Up" by Dave MacPherson ©1975; Logos
Internation (NOTE: Dated; Post-Tribulation doctrine).
- "Christians Will Go Through the Tribulation" by Jim McKeever
©1978; Alpha Omega Publishing Company (NOTE: Dated;
Post-Tribulation doctrine).
- "Now You Can Understand the Book of Revelation" by Jim McKeever
©1980; Omega Publications
- "The Pre-Wrath Rapture of The Church" by Marvin Rosenthal
©1990; Thomas Nelson, Inc. ISBN 0-8407-3160-4 (This is a
partial-rapture theory book).