DOCTRINAL STATEMENT
1] Biblical prophecy is a historical
and contemporary vehicle by which God demonstrates His power over the
events of human history. The primary function of predictive prophecy is
to show the sequence of events culminating in the return of Jesus Christ
and the establishment of the Kingdom of God on earth. The process by
which this comes about is outlined in many passages of the Old and New
Testaments.
DOCTRINAL OVERVIEW
2] Central
to the understanding of biblical prophecy is the recognition that God is
Governor and Supreme Ruler, not only of the nations on earth, but of the
times and seasons as well. God portrays Himself as the real author of
human experience, the one who has formulated a master plan that shall
culminate in the establishment of His government on earth and with the
vast majority of mankind qualifying to participate in it as spirit-born
sons of God.
3] One
aspect of prophecy is that it proves God's existence. No man or other
mortal could predict the future and then bring it to pass (Isaiah 41:22
ff). But one need not wait until the future to prove God's existence
through prophecy. He can look as well to the many Old Testament
prophecies telling of Christ's first coming-prophecies that have already
been completely fulfilled in their letter and intent. Looking further,
the numerous biblical prophecies pointing toward Jesus Christ's return
to earth as King of kings and Lord of lords are so powerful and so
specific that they shall forever eliminate agnosticism and skepticism,
once they have been fulfilled.
4] Prophecy
is history written in advance. It is in keeping with the principle,
"Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but He revealeth His secret unto
His servants the prophets" (Amos 3:7). Thus God has not left man totally
in the dark about the general course of future world events.
5] The term
"prophecy" is most often used today to mean "prediction of the future."
The original prophets of ancient Israel had a role somewhat different
from this. They did predict what would happen in the future, but this
was usually in the context of the sins of the nation and the penalties
their country would reap if their people did not turn from their evil
ways. Sometimes fairly specific sequences of future events were laid
down. Normally, however, prophecy was rather general, outlining where
the people had gone wrong and what would happen if they did not repent.
At various times prophecies or oracles were pronounced against some of
Israel's neighbors such as Assyria and Babylon. Prophecy and its
spokesmen (prophets) have played a significant role from virtually the
beginning of man's existence (Luke 1:70; Acts 3:21). This role has not
been solely to declare futuristic developments but to affect the
behavior of individuals and nations in respect to divine laws and God's
master plan.
6] This
relationship between prophecy and morality is clearly and consistently
interwoven throughout the old and New Testaments. As a matter of
biblical fact, Jeremiah records this relationship as affecting the
future of every nation on earth (Jeremiah. 18:7-10).
7] The vast
spectrum of biblical prophecy is varied in form. Some prophecies were
written down as a result of dreams or visions, others by direct
communication with heavenly beings. The prophetic words are at times
clear and to the point; in other instances the statements are vague and
ambiguous.
8] There are
several principles and keys (such as symbolism and duality) that govern
the right understanding of prophecy. These must be used consistently
with the right methods and proper understanding of the background to
arrive at the sought-for answers.
9] A
symbol is something used to represent something else. An example of
symbolism in the Bible is the use of the word "mountain" to mean large
nation (Micah. 4:14). The Bible in general interprets its own
symbols-although many times in verses somewhat removed from the symbolic
statement. Duality is the term used when a prophecy has more than
one fulfillment. An example of a dual prophecy would be Matthew
24:12-20, which describes both the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 and
events to occur just before the return of Jesus Christ. (The terms
"type" and "antitype" can also be used to describe the original reality
and the later understanding of biblical events, ceremonies, persons, or
the like.)
10] The
breadth and scope of prophecy has ranged from individuals to nations to
the entire earth and beyond. In some cases it is evident that prophecies
were announced and fulfilled and no longer have relevance in our day
except as examples and lessons. But most major prophecies are yet to be
fulfilled. And there is no doubt that this major part is focused on the
return of Jesus Christ. It is the one major thread that binds Old and
New Testament prophecy together.
11] In the
same way that the prophetic Kingdom of God is the focal point of the
gospel, so also is Christ Himself the focal point of all prophecy
throughout the Bible in both testaments. The Old Testament is the story
of Christ's genealogy, and the prophecies of His first and second
comings. Indeed the whole thrust of the Old Testament-including the
Levitical sacrificial system which included many symbolic acts typifying
Christ and His sacrifice to pay the penalty for humanity's sins. The New
Testament is the story of His life and teachings and the detailed
prophecies of His coming Kingdom.
12] No
prophecy is an end to itself. Any prophecy only has lasting importance
in the final analysis, because it adds to our knowledge of Christ, His
family, His way of life, His return, His coming Kingdom, and the
circumstances leading up to and surrounding the setting up of that
Kingdom. If one forgets this simple truth, he may find himself wandering
from obscure prophecy to obscure prophecy, restricted to learning about
relatively unimportant technicalities while missing the overall thrust
and importance of the basic prophecies of Christ's second coming.
13] It is
paradoxical that often the more uncertain points of prophecy tend to
receive the most attention. It sometimes seems that these
hard-to-decipher prophecies attract interest in direct proportion to how
little about them is overtly stated in the Bible. There is
nothing wrong with the study of obscure prophecies-indeed, it is quite
understandable -so long as the relative importance of prophecies is kept
clear, and the prophecies about Jesus Christ are kept clearest. God
designed the human mind to enjoy the intellectual "high" which the
probing of prophetic secrets affords. "It is the glory of God to conceal
things: but the glory of kings to search things out" (Proverbs 25:2).
14] But
there is a definite reason why God inspired the clear and obvious
prophecies of the Bible to be clear and obvious. He wanted no one to
miss the primary point of all prophecy: that Jesus Christ is to return
and set up His Kingdom on earth. For one properly to understand
prophecy, he must realize that all future prophecies must relate to
Christ and His Kingdom, and that for any specific prophecy to be
properly understood, it must be seen against the context of Christ's
second coming.
15] Most of
the prophecies of the Bible focus on the "end time" (either primarily or
dualistically), a time period of colossal, momentous worldwide problems
culminating in total human destruction if Christ would not intervene to
stop it. This present age is the best candidate for the "time of the
end" that history has ever seen. No other previous time has paralleled
the present capacity for man to wipe all human life from the earth. The
multiple possible methods of human self-annihilation now extant-whether
quickly through nuclear, chemical or biological warfare, or more slowly
through famine, pollution or disease-fit the biblical pattern.
Certainly, the key scripture of Matthew 24:22, "no human being would be
saved" (RSV); "not a mortal could survive" (Berkeley); "not a
soul would be saved alive" (Moffatt) could only be literally
possible in the age of thermonuclear overkill and global megaproblems.
16] The
commission to the Church of God is to preach the gospel of the coming
Kingdom of God to all nations (Matthew 24:14). In addition to the message of
Christ's death, forgiveness and salvation, the message Christ preached
is both a warning and a witness-a warning about mankind's plunge
toward annihilation and a witness about what God will do to stop
it. This message is a prophetic announcement of Christ's second
coming and the government He will set up at His return, and it is indeed
the primary reason for the Church's existence at this time.
17] As
stated, the focal point of all but a few specific historical prophecies
is the "end time," culminating in the return of Jesus Christ. In a
number of instances the end time is specifically tied into historical
prophecies which have already been fulfilled in a certain degree or
type, for example, the long and intricate prophecy of Daniel 11 and 12
leaves known past history at a certain point and definitely envisions
the resurrection and the establishment of the Kingdom of God. Similarly,
Matthew 24 describes the fall of Jerusalem in a way which did not differ
from its fall in A.D. 70, yet these scriptures also project forward to
the "consummation of the age. "
18] Thus
there is often a duality in prophecy. Events of past history will
be paralleled by events immediately preceding the time of the end. Yet
the general outline of end time events is repeated from prophecy to
prophecy with little deviation in basic structure. These may be
summarized as follows:
19]
Immediately preceding the intervention of Jesus Christ is a time of
unprecedented worldwide trouble. This is expressed in various ways by
language which is both literal and metaphorical. However, a consistent
theme is "a time such as never has been nor ever shall be," a time when
"no flesh shall be saved" from destruction if God did not put a stop to
the calamitous course of human events.
20] A
specific sequence of tumultuous geopolitical developments shall focus on
the Middle East, and Jerusalem shall be the central spot in and around
which these major prophetic events shall take place. The major and minor
prophetic books are replete with descriptions about, and admonitions to,
Jerusalem in the end time. Great international contention is seen
brewing over Jerusalem, which shall move the city even further onto the
center stage, as world events rush toward their climax. Indeed two of
the key signs that Christ gave to His disciples was that the fulfillment
of all biblical prophecy and the subsequent establishment of the Kingdom
of God would be at hand "when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies" (Luke
21:20) and when you "shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of
by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place" (Matthew
24:15; Mark 13:14).
Furthermore, the two witnesses of Revelation 11, who shall preach and
prophesy against the entire earth, shall apparently center their
activities near the site of the temple in Jerusalem.
21] God
said He would make Jerusalem "a burdensome stone for all people: all
that burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces, though all the
people of the earth be gathered together against it" (Zechariah 12:3).
Though treacherous times are yet ahead for Jerusalem (e.g., Zechariah 14:2),
God states that He shall go forth into battle against, and shall utterly
destroy, all those nations that shall have gathered against Jerusalem (ch.
14:3, 12; 12:9), "and the Lord also shall save the tents of Judah first"
(Zechariah 12:7) when Jesus Christ returns. In these incredible (and
forthcoming) days, God shall greatly strengthen the inhabitants of
Jerusalem (Zechariah 12:8); He shall pour out His spirit of grace and
supplication on them (v. 10); He shall change the geography of the city
when Christ's feet shall stand on the Mount of Olives (Zechariah 14:4), and
when living waters shall flow forth from Jerusalem nourishing the whole
earth (Zechariah 14:8). "In those days ten men from the nations of every
tongue shall take hold of the robe of a Jew, saying, Let us go with you,
for we have heard that God is with you" (Zechariah 8:23). "Strong nations
shall come to seek the Lord of hosts in Jerusalem and pray before the
Lord" (Zechariah 8:22), "and Jerusalem shall be called a city of truth; and
the mountain of the Lord of hosts the holy mountain" (Zechariah 8:3). (Much
uncertainly remains, however, even about that which seems sure, as there
is difficulty determining the precise time frame of many verses.
Zephaniah 2:7, for example, has been applied to both the modern state of
Israel in the Middle East and to the future millennial state: "And the
coast shall be for the remnant of the house of Judah; they shall feed
thereupon: ... for the Lord their God shall visit them, and turn away
their captivity.")
22] A
pivotal set of verses regarding the crucial geopolitical sequence of
events in the Middle East is Daniel 11:40 ff. These verses describe a
"king of the north" who, in response to being "pushed at" by the "king
of the south" shall come against the king of the south "like a
whirlwind, with chariots, and with horsemen, and with many ships; and he
shall enter into the countries, and shall overflow and pass over." Verse
41 goes on to add that "He [the king of the north] shall enter also into
the glorious land [holy land], and many countries shall be overthrown."
The specific delineation of nations-the Holy Land, Egypt, Edom, Moab,
Ammon, Libya, Ethiopia-leads to fascinating speculations as one watches
the international scene.
23] Daniel
2, together with Revelation 13 and 17, expands our understanding of this
"king of the north." This kingdom shall be a composite or union of "ten
kings" (states or groups of states), which shall constitute a
resurrection of the Roman Empire in an economic, political, military and
religious confederation that shall figure prominently in the various end
time prophetic geopolitical encounters.
24] It is
clear that the political union of Revelation 13 and 17 is described in
terms which people of the first century Mediterranean world would have
recognized. Readers would have seen a scantily veiled representation of
the Roman Empire with its military might, its political intrigues and
its rule over much of the known world. Indeed, the harlot of chapter 17
is called "the great city which has dominion over the kings of the
earth" (v. 18), a reference which many would have immediately taken as
meaning Rome itself.
25] This
illustrates that prophecy is often given in symbols which would have
been directly meaningful to the time and situation in which the prophecy
was originally given. This makes the interpretation of prophecy that
much more easy and difficult at the same time. The end time "Babylon" or
"Roman Empire" will certainly have characteristics in common with its
ancient counterpart. On the other hand, it will also have differences
which prevent an exact correspondence with the historical "type" or
symbol. Thus, while one may look at the contemporary scene and make
identifications which seem plausible, there is no guarantee that one's
speculations are perfectly on target. After all, many of the "prophecy
charts," time schemes, reconstructions and the like of the past two
millennia have been internally consistent and externally cogent. There
was only one real flaw: they were wrong. So. the only worthwhile test of
any prophetic presentation is ultimately quite obvious-will it, or will
it not, actually occur in reality?
26]
Whatever the prophetic specifics in fact turn
out to be, the outlines are now surely clear: There shall be swirling
currents of international alliances and confederations vying for world
power through economic, political, military and religious control; and
the focus of their attention shall be the Middle East in general and
Jerusalem in particular.
27] As the
intertwined tangle of world events hurtle toward their awesome
conclusion, a complex series of seals, woes, trumpet blasts and plagues
are unveiled with ever-increasing regularity, tension and fury. (The
book of Revelation describes these futuristic events in first century
language.) At the climax of everything, with mankind literally on the
brink of total self-annihilation, Jesus Christ shall return to the
earth, accompanied by a spectacular series of heavenly signs (Joel 2:31;
Matthew 24:29-31; Revelation 12-17). At His return, the dead in Christ shall be
resurrected, and the elect still living shall be changed to spirit to
rule with Christ.
28] "For
this we declare to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive,
who are left until the coming of the Lord, shall not precede those who
have fallen asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a
cry of command, with the archangel's call and with the sound of the
trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first; then we who are
alive, who are left, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds
to meet the Lord in the air; and so we shall always be with the Lord" (I
Thessalonians 4:15-17).
29] This
shall be the most majestic moment in universal history, the focal point
of the Bible, the time to which prophecy has primarily projected.
30] "When
the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on
immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: Death
is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy victory? O death,
where is thy sting? The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is
the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord
Jesus Christ" (I Corinthians 15:54-57).
31] Christ
and the saints shall be opposed initially by a system called "Babylon,"
and leaders referred to as "the Beast" and the "antichrist. " These
shall all have characteristics of persons and institutions of past
history, even though they shall have a unique existence at the end time.
They shall be destroyed and Satan, who has incited the rebellion against
Christ, shall be cast into a place of spiritual restraint (Revelation 20:1-3).
32] Then
begins the millennial rule of Christ and the saints over the earth.
After some continuing confrontations and battles (described in Ezekiel 38
and 39), God's Kingdom shall be set up over all peoples; and Jesus
Christ shall teach them God's laws, the way of happiness and eventually
of eternal salvation. This 1,000-year period shall be followed by the
Great White Throne Judgment and finally the new heaven and the new
earth, both of which are descriptively hazy, as the Bible does not
reveal much information about either.
33]
Whenever God has chosen to intervene in human history, major current
events were always involved: the course of nations, the role of
governments, the fate of kings, and the destinies of peoples. God's
direct interaction with, and control over, the kings and governments of
Babylon and Persia (Nebuchadnezzar and Cyrus) are two prominent Old
Testament cases where the nations so involved were the world rulers at
the time. The prophecies against Egypt and Assyria are two other
examples.
34] We know
of at least one biblical prophecy that "failed" not because God erred,
but because the people fully responded en masse to God's warning
and unitedly repented. Jonah was sent to Nineveh to predict its fall in
forty days. This was a prophecy of God; it did not take place. This
example illustrates the fact that much specific prophecy is
contingent upon the actions of the parties involved (Ezekiel 33:7-16). The
implications for today are obvious; the responsibilities of God's
"watchmen" are enormous.
35] Bible
prophecy has a continuing and critical relevance to the course of modern
nations and to the destinies of contemporary peoples. The identity of
certain 21st century nations in terms of their ancient names is
important in the understanding of current and future events. Some
nations such as Egypt retain their exact original names. Other names,
though somewhat changed, are easily traceable; for example, Judah (or
the House of Judah) represents the Jewish people in the modern state of
Israel, and Moab and Ammon would seem to represent the Arab peoples in
the modern area of Jordan.
36] The
modern identification of the "House of Israel" as the United States and
British Commonwealth is an important part of the Church's prophetic
understanding. While the United States is said to be specifically
represented as "Manasseh" and the British Commonwealth as "Ephraim," the
identity of the remainder of the original Israelite tribes is uncertain
(though some evaluations have been made, such as equating France with
Reuben.) The identification of the United States and British
Commonwealth as the House of Israel leads to serious and momentous
prophetic implications for the future. The time of the end is also
called "the time of Jacob's trouble" (Jeremiah 30:7), because the modern
descendants of the House of Israel shall be taken captive by "strangers"
and severely oppressed. It shall take the return of Jesus Christ to free
modern descendants of the patriarch Jacob, from national humiliation and
restore them to the knowledge of God. This event shall be of such
enormous magnitude that Israel's original exodus from Egypt shall be
forgotten by comparison (Jeremiah 23:7-8).
37] God has
given us a general overview of the Church itself in prophecy, with its
main commission being to prepare the way for Christ's return by
preaching the gospel of the Kingdom of God to the world as a witness
(Matthew 24:14). The admonition to the "watchman" of Ezekiel 33 applies as
well:
"...if the watchman sees the sword coming and
does not blow the trumpet, so that the people are not warned,
and the sword comes, and takes any one of them; that man is
taken away in his iniquity, but his blood I will require at the
watchman's hand" (Ezekiel 33:6).
38]
Although enormous numbers of incredibly detailed prophetic schemes have
been deduced from the Bible, the success record of correctly predicting
future events and dates has been rather meager. Hindsight has always
been more successful than foresight in determining the reality of
prophecy. Certainly the injunction to "watch at all times" (Luke 21:36)
must be heeded, but the Bible does not give any major examples of people
acquiring specific predictive knowledge of the future from the written
prophecies alone. Yet, as mankind's history approaches "the time of the
end," a generation when "many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall
be increased," prophecy in general and the book of Daniel in particular
shall become progressively more understandable (Daniel 12:4).
39] Shall
there come a time when God will directly inspire some of His servants to
literally prophesy about imminent world events? Biblical indications and
precedents would suggest so. Joel 2:28, "I will pour out my spirit upon
all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men
shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions"-was applied by
Peter on the Day of Pentecost in Acts 2. But the context of Joel 2 is
clearly just "before the great and terrible day of the Lord" (v. 30-31),
indicating that the primary fulfillment of Joel 2:28 is yet ahead.
40] What is
abundantly clear from the Bible is that the absolute fact of the return
of Jesus Christ to this earth to set up the world-ruling government of
God shall be in a time of great human turmoil and disaster. Also
emphasized in the Bible is the sequence of events immediately
surrounding Christ's return (primarily before, but after as well), not
the long history of centuries between New Testament times and the end
time.
41] But
nowhere does the Bible encourage speculation to the point of predicting
specific dates when a prophecy is to be fulfilled, and then predicating
one's life around what is supposed to happen on or by such a date. To
the contrary, we are told, "But of that day and hour no one knows" (Matthew
24:36). We are admonished that "the faithful and wise servant" shall be
aggressively and persistently doing God's work at the return of Christ,
and shall not have shrunk back from life's responsibilities because of
his (real or imagined) interpretations of prophecy (Matthew 24:36 ff).
42] Though
prophecy has always been intriguing and exciting to human beings who
have constantly sought to know the future, Paul's strong admonition is
that "if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all
knowledge, but have not love, I am nothing" (I Corinthians 13:2). Love,
then, is the essential characteristic of the Christian-It is the
clearest stamp of God's Spirit in action. Interestingly enough, Paul
continues his contrast of love and prophecy in this chapter. "Love never
ends; as for prophecies, they will pass away (fail, KJV) ....For our
knowledge is imperfect and our prophecy is imperfect; but when the
perfect comes, the imperfect will pass away" (I Corinthians 13:8-10).
43] The
study of prophecy can be an interesting and rewarding experience. It is
indeed placed in scripture to be analyzed and appreciated in a
Christian's relationship to God. However, it is yet unfolding and we
must be careful to let events in the real world guide our understanding
of the times and seasons, rather than leaping ahead with speculations
not grounded on events. As we draw nearer to the climax of mankind's
civilization, we will see the convergence of major prophetic
developments. They shall no doubt take sharper focus and point us more
precisely to the surest and most important prophecy of all-the return of
Jesus Christ. |