Supersessionism Rising: Dispensationalism...? Part 2

Republished, with permission, from Voice magazine, Sept./Oct 2011.

Part 1 concluded with the observation that many young evangelicals in colleges and universities have decided eschatology is not very important and that many lay people share that opinion.

Scholarly embarrassment?

Furthermore, and perhaps this is in part the cause of the point just made, it is my impression that Christian scholars, even the biblical scholars and evangelical theologians, are not all that interested in pursuing issues related to eschatology or even in advocating a particular position on eschatology. This is becoming more pervasive among premillennial dispensationalists. This may be (and I think it is) caused by the embarrassment that many of them feel when rubbing elbows with the wider scholarly evangelical community. It is something of a long-standing fact of scholarly life (nearly a “tradition”) that when one enters the “serious academy,” matters of eschatology are relegated to relative insignificance.1

One could recount dozens of testimonies of scholars who grew up in or were saved in churches that regarded the New Scofield Reference Bible with the highest esteem, churches that held Prophecy Conferences regularly if not annually, churches whose libraries were well stocked with the books of Chafer, Walvoord, Ryrie, Pentecost, McClain, Feinberg and the other luminaries of classic dispensationalism. But when those young scholars went off to graduate school or seminary (even evangelical seminaries) they were disabused of those resources and enlightened to the profundities of Ladd, Dodd, Bruce, Barr, and Barth (!)…and these days James Dunn and N. T. Wright among others.

As an illustration I would offer the example of the book 20th Century Theology by Stanley J. Grenz and Roger E. Olsen.2 In many ways this is a fine piece of historical theology. And while no survey can cover everything, yet in that book none of the “old Dallas Seminary” authors are even mentioned and the subject of eschatology appears in only one index reference and that’s under the theology of Rudolph Bultmann! The message is clear: “scholarly theology” is simply not interested in the timing of the Rapture or the future of ethnic Israel.3

Resurgence of reformed theology

Also, there has recently been a resurgence of Reformed theology among a broader range of evangelicals. The rise of Reformed theology (Westminster Confession of Faith type of Reformed), especially among the so-called “young restless and reformed”4 has generally and in some cases specifically had a deleterious effect on the study of eschatology. And more to the point, it has contributed to a movement away from premillennial dispensationalism toward a murky amillennial covenantalism.5 Popular preachers in that mode like John Piper6 (not so young but very popular with the young, restless and reformed men), Mark Driscoll,7 Kevin DeYoung8 and others as well as Reformed bloggers like Tim Challies9 have been on record as discounting prophetic themes while pushing a Westminster Confession of Faith/Reformed point of view that is inherently supersessionist. My point is that many of our young people, influenced by the popularity of the preachers and bloggers noted above, are becoming supersessionist almost without thinking. And this is happening even if they will somewhere in their theology affirm a form of premillennialism.

Spiritual vision eschatology

Next is the pervasiveness of what Blaising himself calls a spiritual-vision eschatology. This he defines as a “traditional eschatology which sees eternal life as a timeless, changeless, spiritual existence consisting primarily in the human soul’s full knowledge of God…. This is the sum total of what eternal life is, and it defines what is meant by heaven.”10 In short, the sum total of the eschatology of many Christians is this simple phrase: “absent from the body, present with the Lord.” For many Christians (and many of them in our own churches) this simple formula entails all that one needs to know about eschatology. And this fits well with the vision of supersessionism.

According to this view, everything in this life is “a symbol of spiritual realities” so “Israel can only be a symbol of a spiritual people to come.”11 In this view, one can easily turn the Old Testament land promises to Abraham and his seed into “spiritual promises.” They fit into a spiritual-vision eschatology. But viewing the land promises as promises that are to be literally fulfilled seem less than credible (or even pertinent) to a simple eschatology defined as “going to be with the Lord” at one’s death and nothing more. The very earthly (to be fulfilled literally “on the very ground”) and temporal (in time and space) eschatology of dispensational premillennialism seems less credible to many believers than the vision of this pervasive “spiritual-vision” eschatology. The latter is simple and satisfying, the former (dispensational eschatology) seems complicated. And in the end, they ask “who’s going to care about the Antichrist when they are with Jesus?”

The lack in our pulpits

Finally, it seems to me that behind much of the uncertainty of dispensationalism in the pew and the classroom stems from the fact that doctrine in general and eschatology in particular is not being taught in the churches or preached from the pulpits. I realize this may seem a wild generalization. But the penchant for relevance in preaching and the cry for practical instruction in the church has pushed doctrinal study to the periphery in many churches. I see it in the incoming students even in Bible college. Doctrine is often viewed as dry and unrelated to life; and that seems especial ly so when the doctrine concerns matters like the tribulation and the millennial kingdom. Besides, these matters are controversial and seem to generate more heat than light and the post-modern student looking for cultural and practical relevance and the entrepreneurial pastor seeking to grow his church soon learn to avoid such matters.12

Implications of all this

All in all, I may be wrong on this and I deeply hope I am. But I’m afraid that premillennial dispensationalism is on the wane, and not because there are better arguments for other millennial views, or for supersessionism. I think this is because the scholars have decided there have been enough arguments over eschatology and that one’s view of the millennium is, well, inconsequential and that to advocate a particular view is in poor scholarly taste. And students are looking for cultural acceptance more than theological precision because they think this is a better way to reach the world with the gospel. The effect of such trends, I fear, is simply to cede ground to views that are by default supersessionist.

Why does this matter? For one consequential matter is Jewish evangelism. It is much more likely for those who believe Scripture teaches a future for nation al Israel will be involved in ministries devoted to Jewish evangelism. It should be a concern for all of us who understand the Scriptural priority of Jewish evangelism to see that the theological tradition that has nurtured much of the impetuous for Jewish evangelism is healthy. One author made the telling observation that there are few staunchly Reformed organizations devoted to reaching the Jewish people.

But even more widely, we should be concerned because the truth we affirm from the Scriptures is in danger of being lost not in the rigors of theological debate and a progressively clearer understanding of the program and plan of God revealed in His Word. It is in danger of being marginalized by those who dismiss it while at the same time it wanes from lack of affirmation, advocacy and teaching by those who formally affirm it. It is one thing for our churches and students to be drawn away by advocates of other eschatological viewpoints. But it is another thing to allow them to drift away by our relative neglect. At the present time both developments are taking place.

Conclusion

Perhaps the optimists are right and supersessionism will not overtake the more Scriptural view that God indeed has a future for ethnic, national Israel. But even if they are right, it is appropriate for us to consider the challenges I have mentioned carefully and to address them boldly and confidently.

How then must we respond? The prescription is, I think very simple to state but will take some determined effort if there is to be a reversal of these trends.

Those who are undecided and on the fence regarding eschatological matters need to get off the fence! Study and show yourself approved! I’m confident that a serious of study of eschatology, looking at both sides and reading both covenant theologians and dispensational authors (such as those books mentioned above) will lead you to a firm conviction of dispensational eschatology.

Also, we educators need to teach this to our students and we pastors need to preach this to our flocks. The trends noted have not risen over night and will not be easily reversed—but they are reversible. If IFCA International does not stand for dispensational theology, who will?

Notes

1 See for instance (and this is only one) the testimony of Richard S. Hess, in his chapter, “The Future Written in the Past: The Old Testament and the Millennium,” in Blomberg and Chung, eds., A Case For Historic Premillennialism (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2009), pp. 23-24. Hess writes, “Several experiences in my life moved me away from this fascination with, and focus on, the details of Christ’s return.” “The ensuing years occupied me with the study of the Hebrew Bible in its original context and kept me safely away from the prophecy wars in evangelicalism.” The message is clear: serious scholars are not interested in the details of prophecy—they have “matured” beyond such a “fascination.”

2 Stanley J. Grenz and Roger E. Olsen, 20th Century Theology (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1992)

3 Another indication of the lack of scholarly interest in these matters is the rather lack-luster attendance at the Dispensational Study Group at the annual meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society. This is purely anecdotal but it has appeared to me that while overall attendance at the ETS meeting has grown over the last few years, attendance at the meetings of the Dispensational Study Group has dwindled.

4 Cf. Colin Hansen, “Young, Restless and Reformed,” Christianity Today, September 22, 2006; http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2006/september/42.32.html; accessed march 22, 2011; see also Colin Hansen, “Reflections on Young Restless and Reformed,” Reformation 21, February 2009 http://www.reformation21.org/articles/reflections-on-young-restless-and-reformed.php accessed March 22, 2011.

5 A popular website resource for the “young, restless and reformed” is http://www.monergism.com/; this site is decidedly anti-dispensational and pro-covenant theology. However, it has many good and useful sources for other aspects of Bible and theological study.

6 See http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/articles/what-does-john-piper-believe-about-dispensationalism- covenant-theology-and-new-covenant-theology; this page indicates that Piper “is probably the furthest away from dispensationalism, although he does agree with dispensationalism that there will be a millennium.” I would conclude that Piper holds to a form of “historic premillenialism.”

7 http://www.marshillchurch.org/markdriscoll

8 http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/kevindeyoung/about/; DeYoung’s tag line is “DeYoung, Restless and Reformed.”

9 http://www.challies.com/; Challies clearly does not accept dispensationalism but periodically it comes up on his blog and he is a fair critic.

10 Blaising, “The Future of Israel,” 119. 25.

11 Blaising, “The Future of Israel,” 119.

12 For more on this point see John MacArthur, Ashamed of the Gospel, (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 3rd edition, 2010).


Dr. Kevin D. Zuber is Professor of Theology at Moodly Bible Institute and Pastor of Grace Bible Church Northwest.

Discussion

[James K] Steve, what did I say that is beyond Scripture? I don’t believe 25% of the Bible was written so that we could be agnostic and uncaring about it. Maybe you do.

By the way, people can and do say your exact objection against the doctrines of Christ and the Church.

They aren’t liars because they don’t hold to my interpretation. They make God to be a liar by saying that He goes against His word.

I hope that helps.
Maybe I do what? Am I agnostic and uncaring about 25% of the Bible? Are you serious? People can say anything but you ascribe this in such a general way as to make your charge meaningless. Does someone make God a liar if they do not hold to a pre-trib rapture or restoration of Israel? That’s what I understand you saying. Correct me if I’m wrong. It does sound like disagreeing with you and with God in these areas are the same.

Jesus is coming again as He promised. He will reign forever and ever in a new heaven and new earth. Whether His coming is in two phases or pre, mid, or post-trib, whether there is an ingathering of Israel at that time or if Jewish people are being added to God’s people now, whether the eternal reign is preceded by an initial 1000 year reign - these are interesting questions and worthy of discussion and can be answered with conviction to some extent. But different interpretations held by Christians about future events do not make God a liar. As I understand Scripture our views in these areas are not slam dunk to the point of contending for them contentiously.

We will all be corrected in time.

Steve Davis

Maybe I do what? Am I agnostic and uncaring about 25% of the Bible? Are you serious? People can say anything but you ascribe this in such a general way as to make your charge meaningless. Does someone make God a liar if they do not hold to a pre-trib rapture or restoration of Israel? That’s what I understand you saying. Correct me if I’m wrong. It does sound like disagreeing with you and with God in these areas are the same.

Jesus is coming again as He promised. He will reign forever and ever in a new heaven and new earth. Whether His coming is in two phases or pre, mid, or post-trib, whether there is an ingathering of Israel at that time or if Jewish people are being added to God’s people now, whether the eternal reign is preceded by an initial 1000 year reign - these are interesting questions and worthy of discussion and can be answered with conviction to some extent. But different interpretations held by Christians about future events do not make God a liar. As I understand Scripture our views in these areas are not slam dunk to the point of contending for them contentiously.

We will all be corrected in time.
Well said!

@dmicha

1. Sorry for mistaking
but many of the YRR/CE/YF crowd just don’t care about the precise details of Jesus’ return
as meaning that it was unimportant. [sarcasm] I was obviously mistaken that caring about details is what made something important.[/sarcasm]

2. Why would you not care about details when God filled both testaments with so many? This goes back to my first point. Eschatological agnosticism is just laziness.

3.
different doctrines carry greater weight of impact on our thinking as it relates to other doctrines and Christian life.
Of course that is true. The church in Thessalonica had Paul for about 3 weeks. During that time, he got into the rapture and later wrote about their behavior based on that teaching. Is it important for the here and now? Only if you think Paul had a good idea about church planting and teaching.

4.
it’s the blatant error of this insistence by some, including yourself, that to not be dispensational or raise eschatology like a flag to be vigorously waved, is to be theologically inaccurate.
When the apostles were living, did they adopt a your attitude or did they insist upon the one true interpretation of future events?

5.
Somehow if i don’t agree with your interpretative notions, i’ve given no thought to the scriptures and made the NT irrelevant.
No, you did that all to yourself because of your disinterest in those pesky details God chose to incorporate into the Bible.

6.
and as to me “making God a liar”…..really?
This has to do with what the original article was about, supersessionism. If you do not believe in a future restoration of political Israel, you have made God to be a liar. That isn’t my opinion, that is what the Bible says. It takes effort to not see that.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.

@Steve

1.
Am I agnostic and uncaring about 25% of the Bible? Are you serious?
Yes I am serious. 25% of the Bible is prophetic details.

2.
Does someone make God a liar if they do not hold to a pre-trib rapture or restoration of Israel?
The article is about supersessionism, which is the replacement of Israel with anything else. I am not talking about the timing of the rapture as not all dispensationalists are pretrib. Dispensationalism isn’t an eschatological position as much as it is a hermeneutic.

3.
It does sound like disagreeing with you and with God in these areas are the same.
Jesus claimed He is the only way. If I repeat that He is the only way and someone says that they can disagree with me on that point and still agree with Jesus, then he has only deceived himself. I did not invent the idea that God would restore Israel. He said it so many times in both testaments that it takes effort and determination to disagree with God.

4.
As I understand Scripture our views in these areas are not slam dunk to the point of contending for them contentiously.
Would Paul have adopted your position on this when he charged Timothy to make sure the churches did not preach any false doctrine? You just don’t see how postmodern in your thinking you really are on this.

I have seen some of your other works. I know you are a supersessionist yourself. That explains so much in your objections. I have seen you falsely try to convince nonJews that promises not made to them apply to them thereby heaping confusion on them.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.

Andrew, that isn’t a dispensationalist problem. That some people do that isn’t because they are dispensationalists. There are also many dispensationalists who rightly do say that he is our father.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.

[James K]

3.
It does sound like disagreeing with you and with God in these areas are the same.
Jesus claimed He is the only way. If I repeat that He is the only way and someone says that they can disagree with me on that point and still agree with Jesus, then he has only deceived himself. I did not invent the idea that God would restore Israel. He said it so many times in both testaments that it takes effort and determination to disagree with God.

4.
As I understand Scripture our views in these areas are not slam dunk to the point of contending for them contentiously.
Would Paul have adopted your position on this when he charged Timothy to make sure the churches did not preach any false doctrine? You just don’t see how postmodern in your thinking you really are on this.

I have seen some of your other works. I know you are a supersessionist yourself. That explains so much in your objections. I have seen you falsely try to convince nonJews that promises not made to them apply to them thereby heaping confusion on them.
So you really find certitudinal parity with “Jesus claimed He is the only way” with “the idea that God will restore Israel”?

Actually I lean toward historic premillennialism. Interesting how you see how postmodern my thinking is. Does that make yours modern with assured results achieved by human reason? I have no idea what you mean by your statement that you “have seen [me] falsely try to convince nonJews that promises not made to them apply to them thereby heaping confusion on them.” If by that you mean the promises of the New Covenant, the church as a New Humanity, and heirs with the one people of God in which ethnic distinctions no longer matter, now or future, then yes I stand guilty.

As I understand Scripture there may be a great ingathering of Jewish people at some future date. However for those who suggest an essentially Jewish millennium, rebuilt Temple, restored sacrifices, etc. I fail to see this except as a wooden reading of the text that ignores the New Testament contribution to our understanding. I may be wrong and may stand corrected in the future. Until then I would suggest a dose of epistemic humility.

Steve

epistemic humility
That is the cry of the emergents.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.

[James K]
epistemic humility
That is the cry of the emergents.
If it is then maybe that’s something positive we can learn from them. However I have the suspicion that the Bible calls us to humility at least a few times. At least consider the possibility that you don’t have the details nailed down. Then you can relax among those with whom you disagree.

Steve, how about if you tell me which doctrines Christians should be dogmatic about and which we should show “humility” about. I know the Bible doesn’t say to do any such ideas, but I will show humility toward you and defer to your wisdom on this. Those doctrines that require humility should probably not ever be taught for fear of getting it wrong. Teachers are after all held to a higher standard. I wait with great anticipation for your list.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.

…that says: “God, I know what You said, but I am just not sure what You mean. After all, the _______________ (theologians, scientists, academics, etc.) don’t think You meant what You said…” – ???

Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry

[James K] Steve, how about if you tell me which doctrines Christians should be dogmatic about and which we should show “humility” about. I know the Bible doesn’t say to do any such ideas, but I will show humility toward you and defer to your wisdom on this. Those doctrines that require humility should probably not ever be taught for fear of getting it wrong. Teachers are after all held to a higher standard. I wait with great anticipation for your list.
Briefly, I am dogmatic on those doctrines which are the essence of what it means to be Christian- the fundamentals of the faith, the Apostles’ Creed, for example. I would have strong convictions and yet enjoy fellowship with brothers who differ with me on eschatology and church ordinances. I hold to and practice believer’s baptism but enjoy fellowship with my pedobaptist brethren. When it comes to eschatology neither I nor our church take a position on the timing of the Second Coming (pre, mid, post) or on the millennial question (a, pre, post). Among the leadership we hold different views and have interesting and animated discussions. Our views are not a test of fellowship or obedience and members do not need to subscribe to an official position. Humility is more becoming for those things which have not yet transpired and over which Christians have debated for 2000 years.

Steve

[Paul J. Scharf]…that says: “God, I know what You said, but I am just not sure what You mean. After all, the _______________ (theologians, scientists, academics, etc.) don’t think You meant what You said…” – ???
God certainly means what He said. The problem is that we may try to put words in God’s mouth and we don’t yet understand everything He said. Some men seem to understand some things better than I do (or at least make that claim) and that’s okay. They are more assured of their results of study let’s say in the area of eschatology and present their views as “thus saith the Lord.” I’m not there yet.

I’ve kind of mulled this end-times topic over from time to time. The part of it that I don’t like is that the dispensational teaching focuses mostly on this time-line chart of events. That really bothers me now because I think it takes us away from other main, helpful instruction Jesus gave us.

For one thing, someone mentioned the disciples (and other Jews) in the time of Jesus who had their own traditional ideas of what Jesus’ coming was to look like—the literal kingdom, etc. And they were so wrong about what God was doing at that time. So, I try to be very “humble” about these future prophesies and keep my eyes open for details that are not taught in our dispensational teaching.

Like this: recently, we as a youth group read Matthew 24 and we took note of very specific keys that Jesus gives us—if we are here during this time, we need to be aware of these things:

1. Many will say they are Christ

2. They will do miracles—they want to trick the elect even

3. Many will fall away, betray others

4. Many false prophets will come

5. People will try to get us to go and see “Christ” but don’t believe them! Don’t go.

6. Christ’s coming will be like lightening.

7. No one knows the day or the hour (Harold Camping, anyone?)

So, anyway, I don’t like the chart/timing emphasis in dispensational teaching.

And generally, I don’t like that we think a whole lot more about Christmas than we ever do about Jesus’ return and being ready for that every day. (And maybe that we argue more about the timing and stuff than analyzing what it means to be a ready steward.)

Anne, the “tradition” the disciples held to was 40 days of Jesus (post resurrection) teaching on the kingdom. It wasn’t their own traditional ideas at all. Please note in Acts 1 that Jesus did not correct them. He only concerned himself with the timing of the kingdom being restored.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.

Consider this:

Paul taught the thessalonians a specific position on the Lord’s return. The failure on the part of some of them caused them to get into sin. Some of their sin was serious enough that Paul advocated separation from those who would not repent. It doesn’t say they had bad doctrine about Christ and the church. Their bad doctrine was eschatology.

1 Kings 8:60 - so that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no other.