The End of Time by Kevin Beck, Jan 30, 2005

Similar documents
Israel's New Heaven and Earth by Max R. King, March 26, 2005

THE ORACALE OF DESTRUCTION: A GREAT PROPHECY FULFILLED By Lloyd Dale 1997

Insights In Prophecy

THE PAROUSIA ARGUMENTS (Review of Wayne Jackson s A.D. 7 0 Theory) by

The Seventy Sevens Scripture Text: Daniel 9:24 27

Reason 20: 70 Weeks of Daniel: The Timeline of Jesus over 500-years before his birth

By Rev. David Wallis. New Believer s Course Lesson Five

TRU Publications. The Most Astounding Prophecy in the Entire Bible! David Chapman

Learn to Read the Bible Effectively

Before the Flood The Flood Scattering of the People The Patriarchs The Exodus

Opening the Scriptures Luke 24:25-45 NIV

Your kingdom come. Your will be done On earth as it is in heaven. Matthew 6: Matthew 6:10

Understanding the Truth of GOD

The Gospel in the Old Testament

Insights In Prophecy

Blessing of Abraham Page 1. August 30, 2003 THE BLESSING OF GOD TO ABRAHAM

The story of the Bible: From Creation to New Creation Basic Bible Competency - Toolkit [1]

Who Are The Two Witnesses?

Attributes of God and Proof Texts

The Outpouring of the Spirit and the Salvation of Israel

Series Revelation. Scripture #32 Revelation 21:1-8

Prelude To Armageddon Revelation 15:1-8

6/16/2013 The New Covenant 1

The Great Tribulation = Jacob s Trouble

God s Purposes Do Not Fail

Lesson 46 Revelation 5 6; 19 22

We Believe in Jesus. Study Guide THE REDEEMER LESSON ONE. We Believe in Jesus by Third Millennium Ministries

Understanding The Bible

CHAPTER 17, THE KINGDOM S FALL TIMELESS TRUTH: LISTEN AND LIVE. CHAPTER SUMMARY Legacies are fragile things. Hezekiah had been King of Judah for

The Day of Pentecost: A Day in Eternity

Healing Scriptures. Read by Tim Dumas

A Brief Outline of Things to Come. Compiled by Theodore H. Epp Moody Bible Institute Chicago. Chapter Three -

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Lesson 1 Introduction to the Bible Lesson 2 How to Study the Bible Lesson 3 Who Was Jesus?... 39

B. the : Be made. A. The Key to : the

The Parable of the Fig Tree

Sunday School Curriculum Jeremiah 31:31-34 April 13, 2014

3. Jesus Christ Fulfilled the Word of Prophecy

What Does It Mean for All Israel to be Saved?

Temple and the Presence of God

The Tree of Life and River of Living Water

A TIME OF PREPARATION

Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1940

January. The Beginning Genesis. Chester ARP Church -- Growing In Christ, Witnessing to the World

HOLY SPIRIT: The Promise of the Holy Spirit, the Gift of the Holy Spirit, the Baptism of the Holy Spirit By Bob Young 1

THE LAST HALF OF DANIEL S 70 TH WEEK

Daniel s 70 Weeks By: Chad Knudson

The Book of Joshua. Study Guide by Third Millennium Ministries

Will there be a Tribulation? YES! Why? Because the Bible teaches us so.

The pre-tribulational Rapture

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BIBLE

The Answer to Daniel s Prayer

How to Study the Bible Book by Book

CHAPTER 22 THE RIVER OF LIFE

Revelation: The Church Triumphant Through Christ the Lamb of God

Study Notes For Ephesians

Jesus born MIRACLES MIRACLES MIRACLES MIRACLES MIRACLES MIRACLES MIRACL. the book of life of life.

ISRAEL S SECOND WANDERING IN THE WILDERNESS SAMUEL WHITEFIELD

The Old Testament Covenant Story

NEW COVENANT, NEW COMMANDMENT

God Reveals His Son through an Evil King Scripture Readings: Hosea 11:1-2; Jeremiah 31:15-17; Genesis 35:16-20 Matthew 2:13-23

Having A Basic Understanding of Some Old Testament Truths Part 316 Babylon Besieges Jerusalem Through Better Days (Jeremiah 32:1-44)

The Book of Hebrews. Lesson Guide by Third Millennium Ministries

Unit 1. Lessons 1 10 SCOPE & SEQUENCE OLD TESTAMENT (120 LESSONS) TO ORDER. Call AnswersBibleCurriculum.com.

History of Redemption

Segment 15: Isaiah 63:7-65:16

Synopsis of Book. and his bride has made herself ready (Rev.19:7)

Israel and Today s News #6 Israel and Moses Prophecy

The Liberty Corner Presbyterian Church

Twenty-One Days of Fasting and Praying

Your Kingdom Come: The Doctrine of Eschatology

IS THE CHURCH THE NEW ISRAEL? Christ and the Israel of God

Right in God s Sight

Building Our Faith...By the Example of Moses

Before the Flood The Flood Scattering of the People The Patriarchs The Exodus

A Glorious Prophecy. Daily Devotional 62

FALL SEMINAR 1955 Examination

Our questions: 1. What is the Style of Writing of 2 Samuel 7?

Truth For These Times

(Our God is a Covenant God)

Doctrine of Sin Hamartiology Hamartiology: from Greek hamartia, missing the mark; and logia, the study of.

Ask now, and see, whether a man is ever in labor with child? So why do I see every man

The Blessings of Justification

OUTLINE OF THE BOOK OF REVELATION

Naturalism/Atheism- There is no ultimate meaning and purpose; life sucks and then you die

The LORD said to Abram, I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing.

The Return of the King Scripture Text: Zechariah 9:9 13

THE BETTER COVENANT (HEBREWS 8) WARREN WIERSBE

UNDERSTANDING THE BIBLE LESSON 4

The Book of Hebrews The Superiority of Christ

HEBREWS. not preclude, however, a good honest, and educated guess. This writer's theology of inspiration would demand that either

Doctrine of the New Covenant. 1. A serious debate rages in Christendom over the doctrine of the New Covenant.

Hebrews 8. (2013) The Bible not only reveals God s eternal plans purposes and promises. But also shows how you can know God for yourself.

The Primeval History

Sunday, November 12, Lesson: Jeremiah 31:27-34; Time of Action: 587 B.C.; Place of Action: Jerusalem

The Revelation of Jesus Christ

Solemnity Of The Ascension - C

Promised Land: Living in the Blessing of God Throughout the Scriptures from Genesis to Revelation the theme of Land is central to the drama of God s

Survey of the Bible Daniel 9: Weeks

The Wise and Foolish Virgins

Daily Bible Reading DECEMBER

Transcription:

The End of Time by Kevin Beck, Jan 30, 2005 Everything that has a beginning has an end. You might be tempted to think that this quotation comes from the Bible most likely from the Book of Revelation. However, if you re familiar with Neo, Morpheus, and The Oracle, you recognize the phrase from the movie The Matrix Revolutions. Everything that has a beginning has an end sounds as biblical as the old saying, God helps them that help themselves. But just because something sounds biblical doesn t mean that it is biblical. Popular theology and pop culture looks to the bible (as especially the Book of Revelation) to seek signs pointing to the end of time. The theory goes that time began in Genesis and will be wrapped up in Revelation. But the concept of the end of time simply is not biblical. It has been well documented that while the Bible never employs the phrase the end of time, it does refer to the time of the end. What s the difference? All the difference in the world. Consider this. The time can come for an event to end without time itself ending. The clock runs out during a football game. The school bell rings. A baby is born. The time for playing, studying, and gestating all reach an appointed climax, yet time itself continues. If we can determine, therefore, what the bible means when it discusses the time of the end, we might be able to conclude that the end-time can reach its goal without time itself ending. Let s take a whirlwind tour through the Bible and see how its writers spoke of the end. The End in the Law We can start with Moses. In his farewell address (Deuteronomy 28-32), Moses spoke to Israel as they were about to enter into the Promised Land. He instructed them on the importance of adhering to the covenant that they and God had made at Sinai, and he informed them of the consequences of breaking that covenant. As the nation s leader for a generation, Moses harbored no illusions of Israel s potential. They rebelled in his presence, how much more so after his death? Their defiance of the covenant and of God (particularly through idolatry) would result in their utter corruption. Subsequently, they would encounter trouble in the latter time (31:29). Moses called heaven and earth to witness his speech in which he contrasts God s faithfulness to the nation s infidelity. Their idolatry would end in disasters, pestilences, and destruction. Moses wept, hoping beyond hope, that the nation would consider what its end would be (32:29). Nevertheless, God would be merciful, redeem Israel, and open the way for the Gentiles to share in the covenantal blessings (32:43).

The point: Moses concept of the end referred to the end of Israel under the Old Covenant made at Sinai not the end of time. After the end, peoples of all ethnicities (Jews and Gentiles alike) would rejoice thanks to the forgiveness God extended. The End in Daniel In Daniel where we find no less than eight references to the time of the end (two in chapter 8, three in chapter 11, and three in chapter 12). In each case, nothing suggests the end of time is the topic in question. In fact, when Daniel writes of the end, we may rightly ask, The end of what? In Daniel 9:24-27, the text speaks of a symbolic seventy weeks time period for Israel and her holy city. At the pinnacle of the seventy weeks, Israel s transgression would be finished, and her sin would come to an end. At that same occasion, the city would be destroyed and the sanctuary would cease along with sacrifice and offering. Here Daniel envisioned the end of the Old Covenant system and Israel s covenantal trespass under that system that could not be removed by the temple s sacrificial practices. Daniel echoes Jeremiah s expectation of the arrival of a New Covenant (see Daniel 9:1 and Jeremiah 31). The New Covenant would usher in an era of fulfilled grace and broad forgiveness. After those days, says the LORD: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. (Jeremiah 31:33). Notice that Jeremiah (like Moses in Deuteronomy) envisioned a time after the end, a time in which God would dwell within humanity. This would be a time when people would exist and know God from the least of them to the greatest for I will forgive their iniquity, and remember their sin no more. (Jeremiah 31:34). Both prophets foresaw the end of Old Covenant transgression and the end of separation from God s presence. Now, in Daniel 12, Daniel is told that his vision would be sealed until the time of the end. Daniel then witnessed two men speaking, and one asked, How long shall it be until the end of these wonders? Daniel is told the end would be marked when the shattering of the power of the holy people comes to an end, all these things would be accomplished ( accomplished is the same Hebrew word as end ). Confused, Daniel asks, My lord, what shall be the outcome [same Hebrew word as end ] of these things? The angelic messenger advises Daniel that it would all be revealed at the time of the end. Daniel, then, receives coded information concerning large symbolic numbers of days. Nevertheless, he should go his way until he received his inheritance at the end of the days. An overview of Daniel 12 reveals that the end relates to the fulfillment of Daniel s vision, which would occur when the holy people s power would be broken. At the end of the symbolic time period, Daniel would receive his reward. The end, therefore, correlates to the realization of Daniel s revelation, the end of Israel s brokenness, and the consummation of the symbolic stretch of time not the finality of time itself.

Jesus and the End Jesus as a Second Temple Jew was steeped in the Law and the prophets. Jesus knew both Moses and Daniel, and Jesus employed their end language by applying it to his own day. Shortly before the crucifixion, Jesus disciples admired the Jerusalem temple. Jesus warned them that the temple would eventually be torn down. Curious, the disciples asked Jesus when this would happen as they linked this event to the end of the age. This is the same age-ending time that Moses and Daniel looked toward. Jesus instructed his disciples that they would hear of all sorts of wars, yet the end was not yet. Persecution would increase and so would Law breaking. Yet those who persevered until the end would receive their reward. At the same time, the kingdom message would spread amongst the gentiles permitting them to be blessed too (just as Moses predicted). At this point, the end will come. Jesus specifically quoted Daniel (in 24:15) to alert his original audience to the arrival of the end. As the ancient Judeans observed certain events, they were to head for the hills literally. Jesus pronounced to his original audience that they would be the ones witnessing the end, Truly I tell you, this generation will not pass away until all these things have taken place (fulfilled, ended) (24:34). From there, Jesus again echoed Daniel. He told the disciples on the Mount of Olives that the end would be similar to what Noah experienced. Daniel used this language when discussing the demolition of the city and the sanctuary, Its end shall come with a flood (Daniel 9:26). To summarize, Jesus anticipated an end that would come within the lifetime of his original disciples. It included the fall of Jerusalem and the flattening of the temple. To escape the devastation that would accompany the end, those living in the environs of Jerusalem were to hide in the nearby mountains. This end, therefore, is not the end of time. It was the end of the Old Covenant arrangement that was housed in the Jerusalem temple. This end reached its acme in the Roman-Jewish War. The End in Peter and Jude The apostle Peter stood on the Mount of Olives listening as Jesus spoke about the end. Peter took that information and communicated it in both of his New Testament letters. In 1Peter 1:20, he said that Jesus was destined before the foundation of the world, but was revealed at the end of the ages for your sake. Here Peter equates the work of Jesus as occurring during the end time (we ll see this again in the Book of Revelation). Later in that same letter, Peter became more specific about the arrival of the end. In 1Peter 4:7, he wrote, The end of all things is near. If Peter believed that the end of time was at hand 2,000 years ago, he was patently mistaken. However, if Peter looked forward to the imminent end of the Old Covenant system, the temple, and the city of Jerusalem, then he was correct anticipating the immediacy of the consummation of all things.

Peter had this same end in mind as he wrote 2Peter. In 3:1-2, he stated that his letter was intended to remind his original readers what the prophets (including Daniel), Jesus (in the gospels), and the apostles (including himself) had already taught. He referred to scoffers whose presence indicated arrival of the end time. Then he (like Daniel and Jesus) spoke of the end s arrival in terms of a flood. Poetically, Peter foretold of the end of one world and the beginning of another not of the space-time universe, but of two contrasting covenantal orders. Peter concluded his letter by advising his original audience to look for and hasten the arrival of the end. Jude s pithy letter resembles Peter s. Like Peter, Jude reminded his readers of the teachings of Jesus and the apostles concerning the presence of mockers. These scoffers served to prove that Jude and his audience were living in the end time 2,000 years ago. Both Peter and Jude follow in the footsteps of Moses, Daniel, and Jesus in picturing the end as covenantal transformation the old heaven and earth were currently passing, and the new would soon arrive. Additionally, they both considered themselves to be living in the generation that would witness the end not the end of time, but the end of the Old Covenant. The End in John John, like Peter, listened to Jesus on the Mount of Olives elucidate about the end. And John, too, wrote about the end in his New Testament letters. In 1John 2:18, he proclaimed, It is the last hour! John believed in the palpable imminence of the end. It was not to be a drawn-out ordeal covering two millennia. It was right around the corner. Also like Peter and Jude, John pointed to the active opposition he was facing as proof positive of the proximity of the end. John expected that he and his readers would see the end s arrival (3:2-3). As the author of the Book of Revelation, John spoke of the end. In writing to the church in Thyatira, John encouraged them to remain steadfast until the end. He expected this group of people to witness the end. As the Book of Revelation develops, we read of war, plague, and death (just as Moses had said). It reaches a point where people cry out to the rocks and mountains to cover them (6:15-16). This particular incident comes directly from Jesus statement on his way to the cross in Luke 23:28-31. Here, Jesus advised the Daughters of Jerusalem not to weep over his death, but to wail for themselves and their children the current generation. They would face a disaster so terrible that they would cry for the mountains to hide them. Such a disaster befell Jerusalem during the Roman-Jewish War. The Book of Revelation concludes with the old heaven and earth fleeing away from the one sitting on the throne and the new heaven and earth arriving in their fullness. This

image reverberates with images from Moses who called heaven and earth to witness his covenant affirmation. It also rings of Daniel 7 where the Ancient of Days brings the old order of things to an end and inaugurates a new arrangement one in which the people of God would partake in the kingdom of God. This new order hearkens back to what Moses spoke of, The home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them as their God; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them (Revelation 21:3). Time itself has not ceased in this new arrangement. Instead, God and humanity live in a reconciled state where the nations receive healing and the servants of God serve him. Additionally, John personalizes the end in the Book of Revelation. Three times, John quotes Jesus, I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End (Revelation 1:8; 21:6; 22:13). For John (like Peter), Jesus work framed the end time. Indeed, Jesus was the end (the goal) of all things; he was God s fulfillment of the covenantal promises to usher in forgiveness, redemption, and reconciliation. Summary Everything that has a beginning has an end. While the proverb may come from The Matrix, the sentiment is biblical. The Old Covenant had a beginning (Sinai), and it had an end. Outwardly, the end came in the fall of Jerusalem. On a deeper level, the end reached its terminus in Jesus Christ. Will time ever end? Only time will tell because the bible does not.