Aug
5
2009
or Daniel’s 70th Week Postponed
“The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light: they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined.” Isaiah 9:2
A great deal of time has been spent on the chronology concerning Daniel’s seventy sevens. Quite frankly, chronology is not my strong point [1], but perhaps the solution for this enigmatic problem is not chronological but theological.
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4 comments | tags: Aaron, AD70, Daniel, Eli, Gehenna, Herd, Herod, Pentecost | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Aug
3
2009
or Judaism is a Testimony to the End of the World
There is a patisserie in the Blue Mountains that bakes traditional German sourdoughs. Originally the mother culture for their sourdoughs was brought to Australia in a phial by the owner’s father from a bakery near Stutgart. The culture is 500 years old and has been given the name, “Corey”. This is a fantastic picture of what leaven symbolises in the Bible. It is not a symbol of sin. It is a symbol of historic continuity.
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Comments Off | tags: Church History, Circumcision, Communion, Gary North, Passover, Pharaoh, Postmillennialism, Roman Catholicism | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Quotes, The Last Days
Aug
1
2009
Or Rich Jewish Rulers made Poor, Blind and Naked
Or The Bible Teaches Replacement Theology
According to James Jordan, there’s nothing much in Revelation that isn’t also elsewhere in the New Testament. We just don’t get Revelation because we don’t speak the language of the Old Testament with any confidence. Accordingly, his interpretation of the Apocalypse interprets the seven Seals as the release of the gospel. The Trumpets are the warnings of the Apostles to the Jews until the beginning of the Roman siege. [1]
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Comments Off | tags: Acts, Dominion Theology, James Jordan, Passover, Paul, Replacement Theology, Revelation | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Aug
1
2009
“For as the new heavens and the new earth [Land] which I will make shall remain before Me,” says the LORD, “So shall your descendants and your name remain.” Isaiah 66:22
If you’ve been around preterism for a little while, you will know that this phrase is Covenantal. It refers to a new firmament (blood covering) and new mediators (on the Land); a new crystal sea government (Laver) and a restored four-cornered Israel (Bronze Altar).
So, Isaiah’s and Peter’s references to a new heaven and a new earth refer to looming Covenantal events, events which were contemporary to the respective authors. Isaiah spoke of the Restoration of Israel from Babylon. Peter spoke of the full inauguration of the kingdom in AD70.[1]
But extreme preterists want to divorce the term from physical reality altogether. I do follow them up to a point, but I think the solution is that, yes, all Creation is Covenantal, but it began with the physical world and will end with a restored physical world:
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, Covenant Theology, David Chilton, Preterism, Tabernacle | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Jul
30
2009
“And the angel of God said unto him, Take the flesh and the unleavened cakes, and lay them upon this rock, and pour out the broth. And he did so.” Judges 6:20
“And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” Matthew 16:18
NOTE: THIS POST HAS BEEN REMIXED AND INCLUDED IN GOD’S KITCHEN.
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Comments Off | tags: Amalek, Gideon, Jacob, Pentecost, Sheol | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Jul
27
2009
Eli’s corrupt priesthood came to an end when the Ark was taken by the Philistines. Saul’s corrupt kingdom came to a full end when the Ark returned (hence Michal’s barrenness). The last of Eli’s priesthood (Abiathar) was exiled when Solomon’s government began. Solomon’s kingdom was a new firmament (1 Kings 10:19). Isaiah, however, saw it being rolled up like a scroll (Is. 34:4).
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Comments Off | tags: Abiathar, AD70, Ark of the Covenant, Caiaphas, Cyrus, David, Eli, Feasts, High Priest, Literary Structure, Saul, Solomon, Systematic typology, Zechariah | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Jul
27
2009
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“…preterism is not merely a way of interpreting New Testament prophecy but also provides a framework for understanding New Testament theology as a whole.”
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The Bible was written for us, not to us. This includes the New Testament. We have evangelicals who take both Old and New Testament prophecies concerning Israel and mistakenly apply them to modern Jews (dispensationalism). But then we also have evangelicals who think that the imminent predictions of judgment throughout the New Testament are still somehow “imminent.” This includes most conservative Christian theologians (even smart guys like D. A. Carson), who treat the epistles as though they were written to us. They make the same error as the dispensationalists, albeit on a smaller scale. This misreads the New Testament. It replaces interpretation with application, and unwittingly makes many verses unnecessarily mysterious to modern Christians. Continue reading
2 comments | tags: Dispensationalism, Hermeneutics, Old Testament, Peter Leithart, Revelation | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Jul
27
2009
or Jesus and the Stickybeaks
John Barach writes:
In Mark 13:32, Jesus says, “Of that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” (cf. Matt. 24:36). That’s somewhat puzzling. Is it a limitation on Jesus’ omniscience, as if God the Father knows things that God the Son doesn’t? That can’t be. So is it saying that Jesus as a man doesn’t know things that God the Son knows? Even so, that’s still puzzling.
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1 comment | tags: Dispensationalism, John Barach | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Jul
21
2009
or Cutting Off the Generations of the Wicked
O daughter of Babylon, who are to be destroyed, Happy the one who repays you as you have served us! Happy the one who takes and dashes your little ones against the rock!
(Psalm 137:8-9)
A further comment on Psalm 137 (following Church and State and Liturgy as Prophecy):
The church has the power to excommunicate, but the state alone has the power to execute. In Joshua’s and David’s time, church and state were one, thus Israel’s army slaughtered God’s enemies judicially. In Mordecai’s time, the slaughter of Haman’s followers by the Jews occurred only after church and state became one under Mordecai’s new executive power.
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As an advisor to the state, the church gives the word, and offers the sacraments, but it is always the state that carries out the judgment — government. The state is the “outer court” into which the living sword-water flows. Some taste life and others taste death. [1]
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, Babylon, Joshua, Mordecai, Nebuchadnezzar, Psalms, Zedekiah | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, The Restoration Era, Totus Christus
Jul
17
2009
or Global Warning
An important tenet of James Jordan’s interpretation of the Revelation is that it shows the Old Covenant angelic government vacating the premises and a human government moving in as a new administration – in AD70. This sounds strange to our ears, but I have found that it does play out in many ways, which it should if it is the correct interpretation.
Now, this handover of heavenly government was a gradual process in the first century, but consummated at the marriage feast of the Lamb. But its outworking in history is gradual. Interesting stuff. Here’s some thoughts.
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, Angels, Demons, Nazirite, Peter Leithart, Revelation | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, Quotes, The Last Days