[This is a continuation
of my previous blog post, “Dispensationalism (Part 1 of 2).” Please read Part 1
for complete context.]
Progressive
Revelation throughout the Dispensations:
As mentioned before,
progressive revelation is the concept that God reveals Himself progressively,
and in different ways, throughout time; or specifically regarding this study,
throughout the dispensations. He speaks to mankind in different ways during
different times. (1 Samuel 3:1, Hebrews 1:1-2) He chooses different people to
be His representatives. His written Word is recorded in stages. His overall
plan for humanity, and redemption of mankind and creation, is revealed
progressively. People are held accountable to respond to His revelation as it
unfolds.
In the age of
Innocence, mankind had direct access to God and had the ability to converse
directly with Him in the Garden. Theirs was an unspoiled relationship. Adam and
Eve experienced the "the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the
day." (Genesis 3:8, NKJV, NASB) There
was no need for an intermediary or a covering. There was no need for a written
Word. Mankind knew God through direct relationship.
In the
age of Conscience, we see that mankind still had some direct access to God in
the examples of Cain and Abel, Enoch, and Noah. We see God speak directly to
people like Cain, and Noah. But as mankind drifted away from God in their own
sin, God pulled away from mankind. Access started to fade. Mankind, with some
exceptions, had rejected God. But we still see some, perhaps limited (Cain and
Abel offered sacrifices), direct access to God.
In the
age of Human Government after the Flood, we don't see much interaction between
mankind and God at all. After Noah and his sons, it seems that mankind drifted
again from knowledge of, and relationship with, God. Their own sin was surely a
barrier. The Tower of Babel may have been mankind's attempt to reach God, but
on their own terms, not His. Again, we have little information from this period,
but it seems that access to God and revelation from God was very limited,
almost non-existent during this brief dispensation.
During
the age of Promise, God chose to reveal Himself through calling specific
individuals out of their circumstances and revealing Himself to them through
visions and Christophanies (pre-incarnate appearances of Christ, the second
Person of the Godhead/Trinity). We see the Angel of the Lord (a Christophany)
make appearances to certain individuals. We see God make promises, or covenants
with people like Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. We see God appear to, and speak
with, Moses in varying forms. During this dispensation, mankind’s access to God
was limited to His revelation of Himself to those whom He sovereignly chose.
There are some examples of others who worshipped Him, perhaps through knowledge
passed down from prior generations (such as Job).
During
the age of Law, God chose to reveal Himself through specific Prophets and
priests that He selected. We see God speak to people like Moses, and Joshua. He
also began to reveal Himself through the written Word as the Law and the Old
Testament were written. At times, His glory occupied the Holiest Place in the
Tabernacle or the Temple. At times He appeared as a Theophany (pillar of fire
or cloud) or a Christophany (the Angel of the Lord). In order to approach God
during this age, mankind was to follow prescribed methods of cleansing and
sacrifice contained in the Law. Access to knowledge about God came from the
Prophets, the priests, or the portions of the Word of God that were written.
During
the time of Christ's First Advent, God was revealed to mankind in the Person of
Jesus. Mankind again had direct access to God in the Person of Jesus. God
walked among men and spoke directly to them. The Word of God was being
delivered through Jesus.
During
the age of Grace (now), God reveals Himself through the written Word (both Old
and New Testaments), the working of the Holy Spirit, and the testimony of the
Church (Christians as Christ's representation on earth between His 1st and 2nd
Advents). Mankind has access to knowledge about God through the Bible, and
direct access to God through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit after
regeneration. This age is unique in that in previous ages (Promise, Law, etc.),
the Holy Spirit worked by coming upon (Greek word "epi") someone to
give them an ability, gift, inspiration, power, strength, etc., or by coming
alongside (Greek word "para") someone to educate, enlighten, guide,
protect, etc., but He did not indwell people. In the age of Grace we see a new
work of the Holy Spirit by indwelling (Greek word "en") those who are
reborn. He becomes the seal of God within the redeemed, and a deposit/down
payment of God's promise to glorify the Bride of Christ, the Church. The Holy
Spirit indwells us now (those who receive Him through faith in Christ), and as
such, there are different expectations, accordingly.
During
the Tribulation, the Church will have been removed, as will (I strongly
believe) the indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit. Mankind will have access
to the knowledge of God through the written Word (although it might be hard to
come by) and through other people who are His witnesses. The Holy Spirit will
still work upon and alongside, but will no longer indwell. There will be two
Witnesses (Prophets perhaps; Moses and Elijah perhaps) witnessing to the world,
but only for part of the seven years. (Revelation 11:3-12) Things will be
tough, but I believe many individuals will be saved, and ultimately the Nation
of Israel will collectively accept their Messiah. As strange as it may sound,
during the Tribulation, God will also reveal Himself, in part, through His
judgements.
During
the Millennial Kingdom, God will reveal Himself, first and foremost, again
through the Person of Jesus, who will physically rule the earth from Jerusalem
for 1000 years. He will also be revealed again through the written Word (the
Bible), and through His saints of previous ages in resurrected form. I suspect
we'll see some angelic activity as well. Mankind will again have direct access
to God through the Person of Jesus, who will again walk and talk with mankind
in physical presence.
During the New Heavens
and New Earth (eternity future, if I may be permitted to use a not entirely accurate
term), the redeemed of all ages will dwell eternally in the presence of God
with unrestricted access and revelation from the source.
The Distinctiveness
of Israel and the Church:
Now
for one of my favorite topics: the distinctions between Israel and the Church.
This is one of the key points of Dispensationalism. Contrast this concept with
Replacement Theology, which I strongly believe is a heretical doctrine. Israel
and the Church are two distinct groups of people, and the Bible clearly
delineates between the two. Israel, the nation, not the man (Jacob) or the land
(Canaan), was born during the dispensation of Promise and received its calling
during the dispensation of Law. Israel are the Chosen People, God's Chosen
People, the Apple of God's Eye. They are in a covenant relationship with Him;
first the Abrahamic, then the Mosaic, and now the New (which replaced the
Mosaic; not the same as Replacement Theology).
Let me
clarify some points: Replacement Theology asserts that the Church has replaced
Israel as God's chosen people and that all the promises of God made to Israel
now belong to the Church. This is a false teaching. The New Covenant has
replaced the Mosaic (Old) Covenant. This is Biblical. They are not the same
thing. Israel still has its own place and its own destiny in God's prophetic
program. Let me clarify some additional points: the Mosaic and the New Covenant
both stem/originate from the Abrahamic Covenant. It is the source, the
foundational promise of God, upon which we Christians build our faith. In the
Abrahamic Covenant, God promised that a blessing would come from Abraham's loins
(descendants) that would be a blessing for all the nations. (Genesis 12:3,
Genesis 18:18, Genesis 22:18) This is the promise of Messiah; our Lord and
Savior, Jesus the Christ. That is why Paul says that the Church is grafted into
the vine of Abraham. (Romans 11:17-18) It isn't because the Church or the
Gentiles have replaced Israel, but because the promise of the Messiah, and the
actual Messiah Himself (through whom we Christians, Jews and Gentiles alike,
receive salvation), came from Abraham. Israel has access to the New Covenant,
as do all people. One day, according to Biblical prophecy, corporate Israel
will accept the New Covenant. (Zechariah 12:10, Zechariah 13:9, Matthew 23:39,
Acts 3:19-21, Romans 11:25-26)
Israel,
during the dispensation of Law, was called to be a nation set apart for God.
They were called to be His light to the world. As you know from the Bible, they
didn't always follow that calling. Israel has a specific part to play in God's
plan; past, present, and future. Israel was prophesied to be dispersed and
Jerusalem leveled (Daniel 9:26, Matthew 24:2, Mark 13:2, Luke 19:41-44), and then
prophesied to be regathered in the land (Ezekiel 34:13, 36:24, 37:21;
Deuteronomy 30:3; Isaiah 11:11-16, 43:6; Jeremiah 16:15, 23:3, 23:8, 29:14, 30:3,
30:18, 31:8-10, 32:37, 33:7; Amos 9:14-15), and we know from modern history
that the regathering is happening. The Tribulation has a two-fold purpose in my
mind: 1. To pour out God's judgment upon a world that has rejected Him and
revels in its sin. 2. To bring the Nation of Israel to repentance and lead it
to accept its Messiah.
Israel will one day
(Millennial Kingdom) be the nation from which Jesus rules all nations, and
Jerusalem will be His capital city. God made a promise to Abraham (and Isaac,
and Jacob, and Moses, and David), and God keeps His promises. So
the destiny for Israel is for the Kingdom to be restored under the Messiah that
it finally accepts.
The
Church is also a people group of God. It is the Body of Christ. It is the Bride
of Christ. It doesn't need to purified, its members are already redeemed and
declared righteous. It doesn't need to be led to repentance, its members have
already repented and been reborn. It doesn't need to accept the Messiah, its
members already have; that's how they become a part of the Church. Understand,
I'm not talking about individual assemblies, or churches; I'm talking about the
Church, the universal fellowship of the redeemed (true believers). There are
plenty of people sitting in church buildings that need to repent and accept
Jesus, but those people are not yet part of the Church (and may never be). This
is part of why I do not believe that the Church goes through the tribulation.
What would be the point? It isn't for them. Would you want your bride to go
through such an event? I don't think Christ does either.
The
Church, like Israel, is a group of people who are called out by God to be
separate. The members of the Church, like Abraham and his descendants, are
elected by God; we, like him and his children, did nothing to merit God's
favor. We, like him (Abraham), simply responded to God's election by faith
(which He gave us, by the way). Understanding sovereign election is a humbling
thing. The Church is made up of people from all nations (Jews and Gentiles),
unlike Israel which consisted specifically of Abraham’s descendants/lineage.
The
Church technically originated at the beginning of the dispensation of Grace,
although Jesus was laying the foundation during His first advent. The mission
of the Church, similar to that of Israel, is to be God's light to the world.
The Church is designed to be unique and peculiar from a secular perspective, as
was Israel. Unlike Israel, the members of the Church are Christ's
ambassadors/representatives until He returns. The Mosaic sacrifices were a
foreshadowing of Christ's sacrifice. The Church is the representation of
Christ. The Church was a mystery in the Old Testament, only hinted at but not
really spoken of directly. (Ephesians 3:1-12, Ephesians 5:32) As I mentioned
before, the Church is the only group of people that has the indwelling of the
Holy Spirit.
The
destiny of the Church is to rule and reign with Christ. We are called kings and
priests in the Bible. Israel had separate lines for kings and priests; the two
were not to mix roles. The only other people in the Bible who are called kings
and priests are Jesus and Melchizedek (and many believe Melchizedek was a
Christophany).
Matthew
22:1-14 contains the parable of the wedding feast. Many scholars see the groom
as a representation of Jesus, the bride as the Church, and the guests who
rejected the invitation as the Jews. The Church could also be represented by
the guests who came, since the bride isn't specifically mentioned.
Revelation
19:6-9 contains the prophecy of the marriage supper of the Lamb. I have no
doubt in this case that the groom is Christ and the bride is His Church. This
is a corresponding picture to the parable and gives interpretive support. I
suspect the guests at this wedding could be saints of other ages (OT saints,
possibly Tribulation saints, etc.). Those could also be the guests who attend
in the aforementioned passage (the parable).
Now,
one final point of clarification; and this is where many people get confused so
I will try to explain it clearly. There are people who are saved by grace
through faith from all the different dispensations. The term saints can be used
of all these people (and in fact the Bible uses it this way). A
"saint" is simply a person who is justified by God; one who is
declared righteous, or redeemed. Here's the (potentially) tricky part. God
doesn't change. His method for salvation doesn't change. But the saints from
different dispensations fall into different categories in regards to certain
aspects of their calling, missions, roles in prophecy, etc. I have mentioned
this in my other writings. There are different stages of progressive revelation
throughout the different dispensations. As a result, there are varying degrees
of knowledge regarding God and His plan available to the different
groups of saints during the different dispensations. Likewise,
God interacted differently with mankind during the different dispensations. For
example, in the ages of Innocence, Conscience, Human Government, Promise, and
to some extent Law, God appears to have spoken audibly to certain human beings.
He doesn't do so now, but the Holy Spirit indwells saints of the Grace age,
which He didn't do in previous dispensations. Likewise, it wasn't until the
Grace age that the canon of Scripture was completed.
The
Church is prophesied to return with Christ and reign with Him. The Tribulation
saints (at least the martyrs) are prophesied to surround God's throne praising
Him day and night. (Revelation 7:9-15) So there are different destinies for the
saints of different ages, but we are all destined to be resurrected in new,
perfect bodies, and be free from the presence of sin, and be with God and each
other in the New Heavens and New Earth for eternity.
That
concludes my brief description of Dispensationalism.
Thanks
for reading. Grace and peace to you.
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