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A 40-Year Millennium?
[Response To Gentry's Analysis of the Full Preterist
View...]
[GENTRY] Tenth, if A.D. 70 ends the Messianic reign of Christ (cf.
hyper-preterist view of 1 Cor. 15:24, 28), then the glorious Messianic era prophesied
throughout the Old Testament is reduced to a forty year inter-regnum. Whereas by all
accounts it is a lengthy, glorious era. A problem with premillennialism is that it reduces
Christ's reign to 1000 literal years; hyper-preterism reduces it further to forty years!
The prophetical expressions of the kingdom tend to speak of an enormous period of time,
even employing terms that are frequently used of eternity. Does Christ's kingdom parallel
David's so that it only lasts for the same time frame?
Tenth Gentry is confusing the millennial period (a transitional building and
establishing phase) with the finished eternal kingdom period. And, he again shows he
misunderstands the full preterist view of 1 Cor. 15:24-28 when he alleges we believe
A.D. 70 ends the Messianic reign of Christ and that the glorious
Messianic era prophesied throughout the Old Testament is nothing more than a mere
forty year inter-regnum. He says the full preterist view reduces
[Christ's glorious Messianic reign] to forty years. He admits too much when he says
that the prophetical expressions of the kingdom [in the OT] tend to speak of an
enormous period of time, even employing terms that are frequently used of eternity.
Gentry has given the farm away by that admission. That is exactly what we believe. The
reason the full preterist view is so confusing to Gentry and many others on this point is
because they have not taken the already, but not yet idea fully into account.
The NT speaks of an earnest, pledge and seal of their full
inheritance. They did not have the fullness yet. That 40-year period between Pentecost and
Holocaust was just a transition phase between this age and the
age about to come. It is the age about to come that was to be the
eternal one. We have several examples of 40-year transitional periods in the OT
(wilderness wandering, Davids reign, etc.). According to Moses and the prophets the
transition between the two ages was not supposed to be eternal, nor even a long protracted
period. Gentry has missed the significance of the transition period, and confused the
passages about the transition period with those about the eternal kingdom.
It is this transition period that the rabbis discussed frequently in their Messianic
debates. They labeled that period the days of the Messiah. It was a period of
travail and difficulty in which the Messiah would have enemies to defeat before His reign
was established and His kingdom consolidated. The rabbis differed as to how long that
period would last. Some spoke of it as a thousand or more years. Most agreed it would
probably be about 40 years, like the transitional period of wandering in the wilderness
and the 40-year preparatory reign of David before his son Solomon (the prince of peace)
built the Temple. This transition period would see the consummation of all redemptive
things and the bringing in of the victorious and full eternal kingdom reign of Christ (not
the ending of that reign).
Jesus told the parable about a nobleman who went to a far country to receive a kingdom,
then returned to begin His rule (Lk. 19:12-27). His citizens hated him and sent a
delegation asking that he not be allowed to reign over them. What did he do to those folks
when he came back to his country to rule? He put the rebels to the sword. The point of the
parable is that this Nobleman (Christ) did not begin ruling over His people until He
returned from the far country (heaven). Was He reigning in the mean time? He had
received the kingdom (Lk. 19:15), but His right to rule was being challenged
by the citizens of His country. He had to put the enemies down first before His
kingdom was fully established. There was an already, but not yet aspect to His
rule. When He returned and crushed His enemies, He began His eternal reign at the right
hand of His Father. The Messiahs enemies had to be put down, and His eternal reign
at His Fathers side was then permanently established. And this implies that if
Christs eternal reign has begun, He must have already returned from the far
country.
Notice 1 Cor. 15:24-28 doesnt shut out the idea of Christ reigning eternally with
the Father. If we took Gentrys approach, however, we would have to say this text
denies an eternal reign of Christ after His parousia. If Gentry believes the parousia
mentioned in 1 Cor. 15:23 is still future, then he would have to believe that when Christ
returns He will quit reigning. Is that what Gentry believes this passage is saying? Of
course not, and neither do full preterists. We both believe Christ continues to reign
eternally after His parousia (regardless of whether we put the parousia in the past, as
preterists do, or in the future, as futurists do). If Gentry puts the parousia mentioned
in vs. 23 at AD 70, then he has established full preterism, simply because the resurrection
and end occur in conjunction with it. And if the parousia, resurrection and
judgment all occurred at AD 70, full preterism is true.
Heres the question begged by this text: Can Gentry show any context in the NT
where an inspired writer differentiates between two different parousias of Christ
separated by thousands of years? Did Jesus speak of two different parousias of the
Son of Man separated by thousands of years? (cf. Matt. 24:3,27,37,39 where the Greek word
parousia is used four times in the Olivet Discourse) Where does the Bible tell of a
parousia after the one in AD 70? Take a peek at Gentrys own interpretation of
Matthew 24 (BJF, pp. 123, 242, and HSHD, pp. 160-161, 343-349), where he
applies two of the four parousia passages (Mt. 24:3,27) to the AD 70
destruction of Jerusalem, and even indicates that the coming (Gr. ercomenon)
mentioned in Mt. 24:30 is the same AD 70 coming in clouds of judgment (BJF,
p. 123).
Now think about Gentrys inconsistency here. He divides Matthew 24 into two
sections, saying the first (vss. 4-34) was fulfilled at AD 70, and the second (vss. 36ff)
is yet to be fulfilled at Christs glorious Second Advent (HSHD,
p. 343). Please stop right here and go to Appendix I and study the Matthew 24
Luke 17 chart. It shows clearly why Matthew 24 is not dealing with two different
widely separated events. The main difficulty with Gentrys idea of dividing Matthew
24 is that the second section of Matt. 24 contains coming passages (using both
parousia and ercomai) that are worded exactly the same as the coming
passages in the first section. We have listed them below for easy comparison to see
if there is any clear indication that Jesus was talking about two totally different
comings of the Son of Man separated by thousands of years. Please read them
for yourself. Check the Greek.
1. First Section (Matt. 24:4-34) AD 70 Coming
Gr. parousia, parousia Mt. 24:3, 27
Gr. ercomai, erchomai Mt. 24:30
2. Second Section (Matt. 24:36ff) Alleged Future Coming (acc. to Gentry)
Gr. parousia, parousia Mt. 24:37,39
Gr. ercomai, erchomai Mt. 24:42,44,46,50
We have already noted that Gentry applies all three of the coming passages
in the first section to AD 70, and that he is forced to assign the coming passages in the
second section to a future glorious Second Advent. Do you see the problem
here? Is there any indication in the text that Jesus (and the gospel writers) are even
remotely aware of two different comings separated by thousands of years? Were they
confused or mistaken? Gentrys arbitrary distinction between two different comings
gives critics (e.g. Bertrand Russell and Albert Schweitzer) license to charge Jesus with
an even greater mistake than they already have. Taking the chapter as one unit, they would
say Jesus failed in His prediction of His parousia in that generation. But if we divide
the chapter into two different comings (as Gentry does), those same critics would
howl not only about the failure of the first sections parousia to come to pass in
that generation, but charge Jesus with arbitrarily and ambiguously changing subjects
without modifying His terminology. This would make Jesus not only a false prophet, but a
deceiver. In other words, Gentry has Jesus speaking about two totally different
parousias separated by thousands of years (compare Mt. 24:27 versus 24:37,39) using
not just similar, but exactly the same language (coming of the Son of
Man). Deliberate deception, as well as false prophecy, if it did not occur in that
generation. The skeptics and liberal critics of Jesus would have a party over this. There
is no room for a split interpretation of this chapter, since the word parousia is used in
both sections, and the events mentioned in each section are connected inseparably with the
parousia of the Son of Man. Either we have to say it is all future (and make
Jesus a liar for saying any of it would occur in that generation), or make it all
fulfilled at AD 70 (and preserve Jesus' integrity). Gentry is inconsistent on this. Full
preterists are the only ones with a consistent solution to this dilemma which still
preserves the integrity of Christ and the NT writers.
Gentry says he only feels comfortable assigning an AD 70 application to a text if it
has clear time indicators in the context. Well, Matthew 24 has several time
indicators in its context. But, I suppose he would say that there really are two
completely different contexts in Matt. 24. The burden of proof rests on him to prove that,
since the traditional position of the church was to take this whole chapter as a unit.
This same parousia is mentioned in 1 Cor. 15:23 in connection with
Christs deliverance of the kingdom back to the Father (1 Cor. 15:24-28). To be
consistent, Gentry has to apply this 1 Cor. 15:23-28 context to AD 70, or else give up his
application of Matt. 24:4-34 to AD 70. They both use the Greek word parousia, and there is
no indication in Pauls or Jesus teaching that they knew of two different
parousias separated by thousands of years.
1 Cor. 15:25 speaks of Christ reigning in some sense at that very time until He puts
down His enemies and returns the kingdom to the Father at whose side He will co-reign
eternally. Rev. 20 speaks of Christ reigning until the millennium is over. Then He comes
in wrath upon Gog and Magog to crush His final enemies (Death and Hades) and usher in the
New Heaven and Earth, the New Jerusalem and the New Temple where He reigns with the Father
eternally. So, 1 Cor. 15:23-28 is speaking about Christs millennial reign during
that 40-year transition period, followed by His eternal reign with the Father after AD 70.
So, A.D. 70 does not end the Messianic reign of Christ, as Gentry has charged.
What is 1 Cor. 15:24ff talking about when it says that Christ delivers up the
kingdom to the Father, if it is not talking about an end to Christs reign?
Glad you asked! In 2 Samuel, the Psalms and the OT prophets, David is told that His
descendants will enjoy living in an eternal kingdom under a Son of David. The Jews
rejected Gods reign over them and insisted on having an earthly king. They picked
Saul. He was not Gods choice. David was the man after Gods heart, and David
(through his descendant) was prophesied to be the one who would bring the kingdom back to
God. Jesus parables talk about taking the kingdom away from the Jews and renting it
out to a new nation that would produce the fruit of it. (Matt. 21:33-46)
The 40-year transition period was a period of already, but not yet. When
Christ returned at AD 70 He finished crushing the enemies of His Fathers reign, took
the kingdom away from them, gave it back to the Father to whom it belonged, then sat down
at His side to rule eternally with Him. I suspect Gentry believes the same, except for the
timing of it. He might put some kind of parousia still in the future, while
full preterists understand that Christ has already crushed His enemies and begun to reign
at His Fathers side eternally.
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