The Coming Kingdom - Part 35
� 2015 Andy Woods
We began scrutinizing New Testament texts that
"kingdom now" theologians employ in an attempt to argue that the
kingdom is a present reality in order to show that none of these passages teach
a present form of the kingdom. We have examined the typical texts from the
Gospels, Acts, Paul's letters, the general epistles, and Revelation used by
"kingdom now" theologians. At this point, we largely find ourselves
in agreement with the following statement by E.R. Craven. Concerning "the
passages which have been referred to as proving the doctrine of a present
establishment" and "those passages which, it is alleged, logically
imply a present establishment of the Basileia," Craven notes, "There
is no critically undisputed passage in the Scriptures which declares, or
necessarily implies, even a partial
establishment in New Testament times."[1]
In this and the next installment, we will begin to take a look at some other
miscellaneous arguments used by "kingdom now" theologians.
Since the biblical text itself fails to positively teach
or convey the notion of a present spiritual establishment of the messianic
kingdom of God, it is common for "kingdom now" theologians to appeal
to an argument from silence. According to this line of thought, since the New
Testament fails to mention or emphasize a future earthly kingdom, then the
promise of a future terrestrial rule of Christ has somehow been cancelled.
Since this promise of a future earthly reign of Christ is cancelled, due to
this alleged silence, the Bible's kingdom promises are being fulfilled now in
the present Church Age. Amillennialist and "Kingdom Now" and
Replacement Theologian Bruce Waltke makes this common argument:
Not one clear New Testament passage mentions the restoration
of Israel as a political nation or predicts an earthly reign of Christ before
His final appearing. None depicts the consummate glory of Christ as an earthly
king ruling over the restored nation of Israel. The silence is deafening.[2]
Knox Seminary resorts to the same argument. According to a
document entitled "The Knox Seminary Open Letter to Evangelicals":
Instructively, this same Simon Peter, the Apostle to the
Circumcision, says nothing about the restoration of the kingdom to Israel in
the land of Palestine...No New Testament writer foresees a regathering of
ethnic Israel in the land, as did the prophets of the Old Testament after the
destruction of the first temple in 586 B.C.[3]
Regarding "Kingdom Now" theologians (or
Christian anti-Zionists), Bruce Scott observes how they:
...use a fallacious argument from silence to prove their
point. They falsely assume their position on the holy land is true simply
because the New Testament writers spoke so infrequently of God's land promises
to Israel and Israel's restoration to its land. On one occasion, when
confronted about his argument from silence, Gary Burge countered, "It is
such a loud silence."[4]�
For the sake of discussion, let us assume that Bruce
Waltke, Knox Seminary, and Gary Burge are all correct in their assessment that
the New Testament is silent on the matter of Christ's future earthly rule. Is
it true that subsequent silence on a prior subject is the same thing as a
cancellation of it? Such thinking represents a logical fallacy known as an
"argument from silence" where it is incorrectly assumed that silence
on a matter is the same thing as a cancellation of it. For example, suppose I,
as a professor, inform my students on the course syllabus of the date of the
final exam. If I fail to mention the final exam's date again throughout the
course of the semester, would my students be justified in concluding that the
final exam has now been cancelled? In other words, is subsequent verbal silence
about the final exam throughout the course of the semester the same thing as
canceling what the original syllabus indicates concerning the final? Of course
not. The syllabus says what it says and is to be followed unless I as the
professor expressly alter it verbally in the presence of my students. In the
same way, it cannot be presupposed that New Testament silence somehow cancels
Old Testament predictions and promises.
If the New Testament somewhere expressly canceled the Old
Testament earthly kingdom promises, then "kingdom now" theology would
be valid. However, the great problem for the "kingdom now" theologian
is that there is nothing overt in the New Testament that cancels these future
kingdom promises, thereby forcing the "kingdom now" theologian to
rely upon alleged New Testament silence or its lack of emphasis on the topic.
Arnold Fruchtenbaum makes this very point in his critique of Replacement Theologian
Stephen Sizer:
Furthermore, the New Testament does not have to mention
something specific from the Old Testament to maintain that the Old Testament
promise is ongoing. What the author needs is a clear statement that says all
the Land Promises have been fulfilled in at least a spiritual way, but this
does not exist in the New Testament.[5]
Paul Feinberg further explains:
Why should something that is clearly a matter of Old
Testament revelation have to be repeated in the New Testament for it to
have continuing validity? Should not the very opposite be the case? Should not
the promises of the Old Testament be regarded as still in effect unless the
New Testament states otherwise?[6]
Thus, it is incorrect to assume that God must declare
something twice, both in the Old and New Testaments, for it to be valid. God
need only articulate something once for it to be valid. If God declares His
earthly kingdom promises in the Old Testament alone, that is enough to
establish their validity. This is especially true considering that is
impossible for God to lie (Num. 23:19; Titus 1:2; Heb. 6:18).
Beyond this, why should we expect the New Testament to
repeat exactly what was already revealed in the Old Testament? Would not such
an expectation be an exercise in redundancy? If the New Testament simply
repeated the very kingdom promises found in the Old Testament, why would we
need a New Testament, or even an Old Testament for that matter?� Moreover, there is a very good reason why the
earthly kingdom promises do not receive the same expansive coverage that they
have already received in the Old Testament. This reason has to do with the fact
that in the New Testament, the Church is the center of salvation history and
God's redemptive program. In the New Testament, God is not using Israel, as He
did in Old Testament times and as He will use Israel again in the Tribulation
period and millennial kingdom. Rather, in the New Testament age, the Church has
become His vehicle to reach a lost and dying world. Since the Church is a
mystery (Eph. 3:3, 9), or unrevealed in the prior age (Rom. 16:25-26; Col.
1:26), it would stand to reason that the New Testament authors would spend the
bulk of their writings explaining this new spiritual organism rather than
merely repeating what the Old Testament had already revealed concerning
national Israel. Price explains:�
However, there are good reasons why the promise of Israel's
national restoration, so often stated in the Old Testament, would not be
repeated in the New Testament. First, the Old Testament, as the Bible of the
early church, already contained sufficient instruction on the subject, and New
Testament authors would have assumed this doctrine and expected their audiences
to understand it from the Old Testament text. The frequent citations and
allusions to the Old Testament by New Testament authors demonstrate that the
Old Testament had priority as the first authoritative revelation of God
containing everything necessary to understand the divine program, which had its
fulfillment in Christ...The New Testament was not written to replace the Old
Testament, but to add new revelation that attended to the coming Messiah and
the formation of the church. Therefore, the New Testament does not need to
repeat Old Testament revelation concerning national Israel, but builds upon it
by explaining the relationship between Israel and the church....While the New
Testament does not change the original intent of its authors, who wrote about
Israel's future restoration in the land, neither does it feel compelled to
repeat what was already taught and understood in Scripture...Second, the New
Testament does not put Israel in a central position, as does the Old Testament,
because the church has become the central position in salvation history. The
New Testament epistles are written for the instruction of the church, and
therefore should not be expected to include discussions about Israel's
restoration.[7]
Furthermore, the "kingdom now" theologian is
wrong in assuming that the New Testament is completely silent on the subject of
the restoration of Israel's terrestrial kingdom promises. While not emphasizing
this truth to the same degree as is found in the pages of the Old Testament,
the New Testament still affirms this truth in several places.� For example, Luke 21:24 says,
"...Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles are
fulfilled" (italics added). The mere existence of the preposition
"until" (achri) implies a
time when Gentile dominion over Jerusalem will come to an end and Israel will
be restored to her rightful place of rulership over the nations. Other verses
revealing a fture earthly kingdom will be highlighted in our next installment.
�(To Be Continued...)
[1] E.R. Craven, "Excursus on the Basileia," in Revelation of John, ed. J. P. Lange(New York: Scribner, 1874), 95.
[2] Bruce K. Waltke, "Kingdom Promises as Spiritual," in Continuity and Discontinuity: Prespectives
on the Relationship between the Old and New Testaments, ed. John S.
Feinberg(Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 1988), 273.
[4] Bruce Scott, "Christian Anti-Zionism: On the Wrong Side of History,
Justice, and the Bible," Israel My
GloryJanuary/February 2014, 33.
[5] Arnold
Fruchtenbaum, �Israel's Right to
the Holy Land,� online: http://www.pre-trib.org/articles/view/israels-right-to-promised-land,
accessed 4 February 2015, p. 21.
[6] Paul D. Feinberg, "Hermeneutics of Discontinuity," in Continuity and Discontinuity: Perspectives
on the Relationship between the Old and New Testaments, ed. John S.
Feinberg (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 1988), 124.
[7] J. Randall Price, The Temple and
Bible Prophecy: A Definitive Look at Its Past, Present, and Future (Eugene,
OR: Harvest, 2005), 596.
(Source: SpiritAndTruth.org)