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Title: Unraveling the End A Biblical Synthesis of Competing Views


1
Unraveling the EndA Biblical Synthesis of
Competing Views
2
  • Few doctrines unite and separate Christians as
    much as eschatology...
  • ...One of the most divisive elements in recent
    Christian history.
  • Christianity Today February 6,
    1987 p-1-I

3
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4
The Gloria Patri
  • Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to
    the Holy Ghost.
  • As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall
    be.
  • World without end, Amen.

5
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6
Foundational Beliefs
  • Inspiration, Inerrancy Infallibility
  • Trinity
  • Deity of Christ
  • Test everything, hold on to the good
  • 1 Thess. 521
  • More noble character
  • Acts 1711

7
2 Guidelines
  • Sola Scriptura

8
MPC Core Values
  • TRUTHThe Bible is our ultimate guide
    and authority, the standard by which we live. Our
    world is filled with competing ideas and values,
    voices everywhere demanding attention and
    allegiance. Sometimes, it's easy to become
    confused. Are there absolutes? Is anything
    absolutely right-or absolutely wrong? How can I
    sort things out and make sense out of all the
    confusion? We believe the Bible is God's written
    word. It helps us understand our world and
    ourselves. From beginning to end, it reveals the
    heart of God and His way of life. The Bible
    introduces us to Jesus Christ, God's Living Word.
    The Bible explains God's love and His desire to
    be in a life-giving relationship with us.

9
2 Guidelines
  • Sola Scriptura
  • In Love

10
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11
Overview 13-Week Series
  • Lay out the divisive area of eschatology.
  • Explore 7 reasons why your view (or non-view) is
    so vital.
  • Contrast the essence of the end-time fiasco vs.
    divine perfection.
  • Present the four major views and their big
    problems.
  • Begin the unraveling process.
  • Offer a solution of synthesis.

12
What is eschatology?
  • Technical A subset/branch of Theology
  • Gr. Theos (God) Latin suffix- logy the
    study of God and his relations with man and
    the universe.
  • Eschatology Gr. Eschatos (last)
    logy the study of last things.
  • Practical
  • Eschatology the study of the
    completion of Gods plan of redemption
    (salvation).

13
Four Chief Moments (Events)
  1. The Return (Second Coming) of Christ
  2. The Judgment
  3. The Resurrection of the Dead
  4. The Consummation or end of the world
  5. The Afterlife

14
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
15
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  1. How much of the Bible is involved?

16
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  • How much of the Bible is involved?
  • It has been argued that no less than two
  • thirds of the content of the New Testament
  • is concerned directly or indirectly with
    eschatology.
  • R.C. Sproul, A Journey Back in Time,
    Tabletalk, January 1999, 5.

17
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  • How much of the Bible is involved?
  • an eschatological dimension to every aspect of
    Christian faith and reflection . . . . because it
    touches so many of the central themes of faith.
  • Brian E. Daley, The Hope of the Early Church
    (Cambridge, MA. Cambridge University Press,
    1991), 2.

18
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  • How much of the Bible is involved?
  • How much salvation do we currently have?

19
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  • How much of the Bible is involved?
  • How much salvation do we currently have?
  • How much of the kingdom do we currently have?

20
  • One dare not think he or she can properly
    interpret the Gospels without a clear
    understanding of the concept of the kingdom of
    God in the ministry of Jesus . . . . however
    the major hermeneutical difficulty. . . lies with
    understanding the kingdom of God.
  • Gordon D. Fee and Douglas Stuart, How to
    Read the Bible for All Its Worth (Grand
    Rapids, MI. Zondervan, 1981), 131, 113.

21
Supportive Quotes
  • "the great omission . . . why . . . today's
    church is so weak"
  • Dallas Willard, The Divine Conspiracy, 40f.
  • "reductionism of the gospel"
  • Darrell Guder, The Continuing Conversion of
    the Church, xiiif.  
  • the gospel we proclaim has been shrunk
  • Robert Lynn, Far as the curse is found in
    Breakpoint Worldview magazine, Oct. 06, 14.
  • we have settled for a little gospel, a
    miniaturized version that cannot address the
    robust problems of our world
  • Scot McKnight, The 8 Marks of a Robust
    Gospel in Christianity Today magazine, March
    2008, 36.

22
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  • How much of the Bible is involved?
  • How much salvation do we currently have?
  • How much of the kingdom do we currently have?
  • What do you do with the modern-day nation of
    Israel?

23
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  1. Its the focal point of the liberal-skeptic
    attack on the Bible and Deity of Christ.

24
  • In seminary I was exposed daily to critical
    theories espoused by my professors regarding the
    Scriptures. What stands out in my memory of
    those days is the heavy emphasis on biblical
    texts regarding the return of Christ, which were
    constantly cited as examples of errors in the New
    Testament and proof that the text had been edited
    to accommodate the crisis in the early church
    caused by the so-called parousia-delay of Jesus.
    . . .
  • It is my fear that evangelicals today tend to
    underplay the significance of the problems . . .
    . .
  • R.C. Sproul, The Last Days According to Jesus
  • (Grand Rapids Baker Books, 1998), 14-15, 17.

25
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26
  • the phenomenon of disconfirmed expectation . .
    . .
  • not particular to Marxian thought or limited
    to modern political structures . . . .
  • back much further in time and thought to the
    early centuries of Christianity when various
    Christian communities struggled to come to terms
    with the failure of the parousia . . . .
  • gave rise to the need for interpretation of the
    traditions so as to justify them in light of what
    had not happened.
  • Robert P. Carroll, When Prophecies Failed
    (New York A Crossroads Book, 1979), 2.

27
  • it was the definite conviction not only of
    Paul, but of all Christians of that time, that
    they themselves would experience the return of
    the Lord. . . .
  • around the middle of the second century . . .
    the Shepherd of Hermas thinks he has found a
    solution . . . the Parousiathe Lords returnhas
    been postponed for the sake of Christians
    themselves . . . .
  • At first, people looked at it as only a brief
    postponement, as the Shephard of Hermas clearly
    expresses. . . . But soon . . . it was conceived
    of as a longer and longer period, until
    finallythis is todays situation . . . .
  • Kurt Aland, A History of Christianity
    (Philadelphia Fortress Press, 1980), 87,
  • 91-92.

28
  • by-product of failed eschatological hope a
    way of coping intellectually with the
    non-fulfillment of first-century apocalyptic
    fantasies.
  • the fulfillment of their early hopes was surely
    delayed, it required a reorientation of
    the time-line of its eschatological hope.
  • Brian E. Daley, The Hope of the Early Church
    (Cambridge, MA. Cambridge University Press,
    1991), 3.

29
  • When the consummation was postponed, this
    necessitated the reinterpretation of biblical
    passages that had carried eschatological
    connotation . . . toward a more complex
    description of the life of faith . . . in the
    development of Christian eschatology.
  • Jaroslav Pelikan, The Christian Tradition A
    History of Development of Doctrine (Chicago
    The University of Chicago Press, 1971), Vol.
    1, The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition,
    123-124.

30
  • I am concerned with Christ as He appears in the
    Gospels . . . there one does find some things
    that do not seem to be very wise. . . . For one
    thing, He certainly thought that His second
    coming would occur in clouds of glory before the
    death of all the people who were living at the
    time. There are a great many texts that prove
    that. . . . He believed that His coming would
    happen during the lifetime of many then living.
    That was the belief of his earlier followers, and
    it was the basis of a good deal of his moral
    teaching.
  • Bertrand Russell, Why I Am Not A Christian
    (New York A Touchtone Book by Simon
    Schuster, 1957), 16.

31
  • The whole history of Christianity down to the
    present day . . . is based on the delay of the
    Parousia, the nonoccurrence of the Parousia, the
    abandonment of eschatology, the process and
    completion of the de-eschatologizing of
    religion which has been connected therewith.
  • Albert Schweiterzer, The Quest of the
    Historical Jesus (New York The Macmillan
    Company, eighth printing, 1973), 360.

32
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  1. Its the focal point of the liberal-skeptic
    attack on the Bible and Deity of Christ.
  2. It makes a difference in your worldview.

33
  • If we think we are facing an irresistible
    cosmic force of evil, it will invariably lead to
    giving in and giving up - usually with very
    little resistance. If you can convince yourself
    that you are helpless, you can then stop
    struggling and just "let it happen." That will
    seem a great relief - for a while...But then you
    will have to deal with the consequences. And for
    normal human beings those are very severe.
  • Dallas Willard, The Divine Conspiracy (San
    Francisco, CA. HarperSanFranciso, 1997), 343.

34
7 Reasons Why Your E/T View (or Non View) Is So
Vital
  1. Its the focal point of the liberal-skeptic
    attack on the Bible and Deity of Christ.
  2. It makes a difference in your worldview.
  3. It makes a difference in your life and family.

35
SUMMARY 7 Reasons Why Vital
  1. How much of the Bible is involved?
  2. How much salvation do we currently have?
  3. How much of the kingdom do we currently have?
  4. What do you do with the modern-day nation of
    Israel?
  5. Its the focal point of the liberal-skeptic
    attack on the Bible and Deity of Christ.
  6. It makes a difference in your worldview
  7. It makes a difference in your life and family

36
  • Unraveling the EndA Biblical Synthesis of
    Competing Views

37
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