Dispensationalism is
THE most
destructive influential theological systems within the universal
church today.
It has deviated entirely from the
working model
that the "called out assembly" is to be built on, the foundational
principals found within the 6th chapter of Hebrews, written
specifically to both houses of Israel.
Largely unrecognized and subliminal, it has
increasingly shaped the presuppositions of the Universal church, as
well as fundamentalist
evangelical, Pentecostal and charismatic denominational thinking concerning Israel
and Palestine over the past one hundred and fifty years.
John Nelson Darby is regarded as the father of dispensationalism and its prodigy, Christian Zionism. It was Cyrus.
I. Scofield and D. L. Moody, however, who brought Darby’s sectarian
theology into mainstream evangelical circles. R. C. Sproul concedes
that dispensationalism is now ‘...a theological system that is the majority report among current American
evangelicals.’[1]
Most of the early popular American radio
preachers such as Donald Grey Barnhouse, Charles E. Fuller, and M.
R. De Haan were dispensationalists. Today, virtually ALL the
'televangelists' such as John Hagee, Joel Osteen, Jerry Falwell,
Jack Van Impe, Paul Crouch,
Pat Robertson, and Billy Graham are
dispensationalists.
Other leading dispensationalist writers include Charles
Ryrie, Dwight Pentecost, John Walvoord, Eric Sauer, Mike Bickel, Charles Dyer,
Tim LaHaye, Rick Joyner, Grant Jeffrey, Bob Jones, Constance Cumbey, Paul Cane, Hal Lindsey,
while the list goes on & on. Notable political
proponents include Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George 41 Bush &
MANY, many Republican Neoconservatives. Probably the
most significant Christian organizations to espouse dispensationalism have been the Moody Bible Institute, Dallas
Theological Seminary and the International Christian Embassy,
Jerusalem.
2. Dispensationalism Defined
The basic text upon which dispensationalism is based is
the Authorised translation of 2 Timothy 2:15, where the Apostle Paul
calls upon Timothy to ‘... rightly divide the word of truth.’
Scofield took this verse as the title for his first book which is a
defence of this way of ‘dividing’ Scripture into discrete
dispensations.[2]
In its classical form, Charles Ryrie insists the sine qua non of Dispensationalism to be:
1. A
dispensationalist keeps Israel and the Church distinct...
2. This
distinction between Israel and the church is born out of a system of
hermeneutics that is usually called literal interpretation...
3. A third
aspect... concerns the underlying purpose of God in the world...
namely, the glory of God... To the normative dispensationalist, the
soteriological, or saving, program of God is not the only program
but one of the means God is using in the total program of glorifying
Himself.[[3]]
2.1 The Seven Dispensations
Following Darby and Scofield,
dispensationalists claim to find in Scripture evidence of seven
distinct dispensations during which humanity has been tested in
respect of specific revelation as to the will of God. In each
dispensation, including the present sixth dispensation of the
Church, humanity has failed the test. These dispensations began with
creation and will culminate in an exclusive Jewish kingdom on earth.
Charles Ryrie offers the clearest outline of dispensationalism.[4]
The Dispensations
|
Name
|
Scripture
|
Responsibilities
|
Judgment(s)
|
|
Innocency
|
Genesis 1:3-3:6
|
Keep Garden...
|
Curses...
|
|
Conscience
|
Genesis 3:7-8:14
|
Do Good
|
Flood
|
|
Civil Government
|
Genesis 8:15-11:9
|
Fill earth...
|
Forced scattering..
|
|
Patriarchal Rule
|
Genesis 11:10-Exodus 18:27
|
Stay in Promised Land
|
Egyptian bondage..
|
|
Mosaic Law
|
Exodus 19:1 - John 14:30
|
Keep the Law...
|
Captivities
|
|
Grace
|
Acts 2:1- Revelation 19:21
|
Believe in Christ...
|
Death...
|
|
Millennium
|
Revelation 20:1-15
|
Believe & Obey...
|
Death...
|
These dispensations are
seen by proponents as literally 'providing us with a chronological
map to guide us'[[5]]
toward the seventh and final dispensation which will be inaugurated
by the imminent return of Jesus Christ and the climax to world
history.
2.2 A Distinction Between Israel and
the Church
Dispensationalists believe that God has two separate but
parallel means of working - one through the Church, the other
through Israel (the former being a parenthesis to the latter).[[6]]
Thus there is, and always will remain, a distinction, 'between
Israel, the Gentiles and the Church.'[[7]]
Darby was not the first to insist on a radical distinction between
Israel and the Church.
Marcion stressed the
radical nature of Christianity vis-a-vis Judaism. In his theology
there existed a total discontinuity between the OT and the NT,
between Israel and the church, and even between the god of the OT
and the Father of Jesus.[[8]]
It was, however, Darby who first
insisted that: ‘The Jewish nation is never to enter the Church.’[[9]]
Scofield developed this idea further:
Comparing
then, what is said in Scripture concerning Israel and the Church, we
find that in origin, calling, promise, worship, principles of
conduct and future destiny, all is contrast.[[10]]
Lewis Sperry Chafer, the founder of Dallas Theological Seminary and
a student of Scofield's, elaborated on this dichotomy between Israel
and the church:
The dispensationalist believes that
throughout the ages God is pursuing two distinct purposes: one
related to the earth with earthly people and earthly objectives
involved which is Judaism; while the other is related to heaven with
heavenly people and heavenly objectives involved, which is
Christianity.[[11]]
For Chafer, ‘Israel is an eternal nation, heir to an
eternal land, with an eternal kingdom, on which David rules from an
eternal throne,’[[12]]
that is, on earth and distinct from the church who will be in
heaven.
2.3 A Literalist
Hermeneutic
Dispensationalism is based on the
hermeneutical principle that Scripture is always to be interpreted
literally. Darby’s approach might be summarized in one sentence in
which he admitted, ‘I prefer quoting many passages than enlarging
upon them.’[[13]]
Scofield, who popularised and
synthesised Darby's theology explains further,
Not one
instance exists of a 'spiritual' or figurative fulfilment of
prophecy... Jerusalem is always Jerusalem, Israel is always Israel,
Zion is always Zion... Prophecies may never be spiritualised, but
are always literal.[[14]]
Ryrie similarly asserts:
To be
sure, literal/historical/grammatical interpretation is not the sole
possession or practice of dispensationalists, but the consistent use
of it in all areas of biblical interpretation is.[[15]]
The logical deduction of a literalist
dispensational hermeneutic is, according to Dwight Pentecost,
another former member of the Dallas faculty, that:
Scripture
is unintelligible until one can distinguish clearly between God’s
program for his earthly people Israel and that for the Church.[[16]]
So Donald Grey Barnhouse, another leading
dispensationalist insists:
It was a
tragic hour when the reformation churches wrote the Ten Commandments
into their creeds and catechisms and sought to bring Gentile
believers into bondage to Jewish law, which was never intended
either for the Gentile nations or for the church.[[17]]
With breathtaking candour Chafer
insists:
[Dispensationalism]
has changed the Bible from being a mass of more or less
conflicting writings into a classified and easily assimilated
revelation of both the earthly and heavenly purposes of God, which
reach on into eternity to come.[[18]]
Ernest Sandeen
critically observes that dispensationalism has ‘a frozen biblical
text in which every word is supported by the same weight of divine
authority.’[[19]]
Based on this interpretative
principle, dispensationalists hold that the promises made to Abraham
and through him to the Jews, although postponed during this present
Church age, are nevertheless eternal and unconditional and therefore
await future realisation since they have never yet been literally
fulfilled. So, for example, it is an article of normative
dispensational belief that the boundaries of the land promised to
Abraham and his descendants from the Nile to the Euphrates will be
literally instituted and that Jesus Christ will return to a literal
and theocratic Jewish kingdom centred on a rebuilt temple in
Jerusalem. In such a scheme the Church on earth is relegated to the
status of a parenthesis,[[20]]
a ‘Plan B...’,[[21]]
and ‘...a sort of footnote or sidetrack in contrast to God’s main
mission to save ethnic, national Israel.’[[22]]
2.4 An Apocalyptic Eschatology
Crucial to
the dispensationalist reading of biblical prophecy is the conviction
that the period of tribulation is imminent along with the secret
rapture of the Church and the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple in
place of, or along side, the Dome of the Rock. This will signal the
return of the Lord to restore the Kingdom to Israel centred on
Jerusalem. This pivotal event is also seen as the trigger for the
start of the war of Armageddon in which most of the world's
population together with large numbers of Jews will suffer and die.[[23]]
Convinced that a
nuclear Armageddon is an inevitable event within the divine scheme
of things, many evangelical dispensationalists have committed
themselves to a course for Israel that, by their own admission, will
lead directly to a holocaust indescribably more savage and
widespread than any vision of carnage that could have been generated
in Adolf Hitler’s criminal mind.[[24]]
Clearly, the consequences of such views, whether promulgated by
academics from respectable theological institutions like Dallas
Theological Seminary and the Moody Bible Institute, or by Jewish
fanatics such as Baruch Ben-Yosef and the Temple Mount Yeshiva,[[25]]
can only be devastating, especially since dispensationalists have
considerable political influence through which they seek the
fulfilment of their apocalyptic vision of the future. That
dispensational vision is comparatively young in terms of church
history. It began in 1828 when Darby wrote his first tract against
the prevailing optimism of the established church.[[26]]
3. John Nelson Darby: The Father of
Dispensationalism
Darby is rightly regarded as the
first to espouse dispensationalism as a discrete theological system.
However, William Kelly and Edward Irving played no small part in the
restoration of premillennial speculations out of which Darby's
dispensationalism arose.[[27]]
Darby was not the first to use the term ‘dispensation’ to describe
periods of Biblical history, nor was his own scheme universally
accepted even within Brethren circles. It was Darby though who first
insisted these dispensations were irreversible and progressive,
speculating that the Church would soon be replaced on earth by a
revived national Israel.
Charles Ryrie attempts, unconvincingly, to show that
Darby's ideas were latent in previous writers such as the French
mystic Pierre Poiret (1646-1719), the amillennial Calvinist John
Edwards (1639-1716) and hymn writer Isaac Watts (1674-1748).[[28]]
He does concede however that it was Darby who systematised and
popularised the idea of dispensationalism.[[29]]
Darby was a charismatic figure and dominant personality,
a persuasive speaker and zealous missionary for his
dispensationalist beliefs. He personally founded Brethren churches
in Germany, Switzerland, France and the United States, which in turn
sent missionaries to Africa, the West Indies, Australia and New
Zealand. By the time of his death in 1885, around 1500 separatist
Brethren churches had been founded world-wide.
Don Wagner makes the point that:
During his lifetime, Darby wrote more hymns
than the Wesleys, travelled further than the Apostle Paul, and was a
Greek and Hebrew scholar. His writings filled forty volumes... If
Brightman was the father of Christian Zionism, then Darby was its
greatest apostle and missionary...
[[30]]
In 1908, Harry Ironside, a dispensationalist and former pastor of
Moody Memorial Church in Chicago, claimed Darby had rediscovered the
apostolic teaching lost to the church:
Until brought to the fore through the
writings and preaching and teaching of a distinguished ex-clergyman,
Mr J. N. Darby, in the early part of the last century, it is
scarcely to be found in a single book or sermon through a period of
sixteen hundred years.[[31]]
The clearest expression of Darby’s thinking is
to be found in ‘The Apostasy of the Successive Dispensations.’
In this work it is noticeable, however, that Darby's views are
vague and embryonic compared with later attempts by Scofield and
Ryrie to systematise seven discrete dispensations. Ryrie’s
interpretation of Darby’s dispensations is significantly at variance
with Darby’s own writings but more consistent with, and probably
reliant upon, Scofield. It is an understatement when Ryrie claims
Darby’s scheme is, ‘not always easily discerned from his writings’.[[32]]
Ryrie appears to have read back into Darby’s writings, a scheme that
suited his own purposes. From Darby’s own works it is possible to
reconstruct his dispensational chronology and compare it with
Ryrie’s interpretation, together with Scofield’s 1909 version,
itself modified in a subsequent revision made by Schuyler English in
the New Scofield Reference Bible in 1967.
|
Darby’s Dispensations[[33]] |
Ryrie’s Version of
Darby[[34]] |
Scofield’s
Dispensations[[35]] |
|
|
1. Paradisaical state |
1. Innocency (Genesis 1:28) |
|
1. Noah
(Government)
|
2. Noah |
2. Conscience (Genesis 3:23) |
|
|
3. Abraham |
3. Human Government
(Genesis 8:20) |
|
2. Moses (Law)
3. Aaron
(Priesthood)
4. Kingly
(Manasseh) |
4. Israel-
under law
under priesthood
under kings |
4. Promise (Genesis 12:1)
5. Law (Exodus 19:8)
|
|
5. Spirit (Gentile) |
5. Gentiles |
6. Grace (John 1:17) |
|
|
6. Spirit |
|
|
|
7. Millennium |
7. Kingdom (Ephesians 1:10) |
Darby defended his dispensational
interpretation on two grounds. First, he claimed others had not
studied the Scriptures correctly.
The covenant is a word common in the
language of a large class of Christian professors... but in its
development and detail, as to its unfolded principles, much
obscurity appears to me to have arisen from a want of simple
attention to Scripture.[[36]]
Second, Darby believed the Lord had revealed
it to him personally.
For my part, if I were bound to receive all
that has been said by the Millenarians, I would reject the whole
system, but their views and statements weigh with me not one
feather. But this does not hinder me from enquiring by the teaching
of the same spirit... what God has with infinite graciousness
revealed to me concerning His dealing with the Church.[[37]]
Even Roy Coad, in his otherwise sympathetic
history of the Brethren Movement, admits that 'For the
traditional view of Revelation, another was substituted.'[[38]]
James Barr is less charitable arguing that dispensationalism was
'...individually invented by J. N. Darby... [and] ...concocted
in complete contradiction to all main Christian traditions...'[[39]]
Darby's was convinced that the visible Church
of his day was apostate. This assumption appears to have shaped his
emerging belief that the Church era was therefore merely a
'parenthesis' to the Last Days. Darby regarded the Church as simply
one more dispensation that had failed and was under God's judgement.
Just as Israel had been cut off, so the Church would be. Just as
only a small remnant of Israel had been saved, so would only a small
remnant of the church. And naturally, of course, the remnant taken
from the ruins of the Church were his own followers, the Brethren.
The Church has sought to settle itself
here, but it has no place on the earth... [Though] making a most
constructive parenthesis, it forms no part of the regular order of
God's earthly plans, but is merely an interruption of them to give a
fuller character and meaning to them [the Jews].[[40]]
Darby believed that the covenantal
relationship between God and Abraham was binding for ever and that
the promises pertaining to the nation of Israel, as yet unfulfilled,
would find their consummation in the reign of Jesus Christ on earth
during the millennium. Speaking of the imminent return of the Jews
to Palestine, Darby predicted,
The first thing, then, which the Lord will
do will be to purify His land (the land which belongs to the Jews)
of the Tyrians, the Philistines, the Sidonians; of Edom and Moab,
and Ammon - of all the wicked, in short from the Nile to the
Euphrates. It will be done by the power of Christ in favour of His
people re-established by His goodness. The people are put into
security in the land, and then will those of them who remain till
that time among the nations be gathered together.[[41]]
Darby was as dismissive of the Jews as he was
of Arabs. He not only taught that God would 'purify' the Arabs from
between the Nile and the Euphrates and give it all to the Jews, but
also believed the majority of Jews would eventually identify with
the Antichrist.
The government of the fourth monarchy will
be still in existence, but under the influence and direction of the
Antichrist; and the Jews will unite themselves to him, in a state of
rebellion, to make war with the Lamb... Satan will then be
displayed, who will unite the Jews with this apostate prince against
heaven... a remnant of the Jews is delivered and Antichrist
destroyed.[[42]]
Clarence Bass summarises the novel nature of
Darby’s emerging theological position.
It is not that exegetes prior to his time
did not see a covenant between God and Israel, or a future relation
of Israel to the millennial reign, but they always viewed the church
as a continuation of God's single program of redemption begun in
Israel. It is dispensationalism's rigid insistence on a distinct
cleavage between Israel and the church, and its belief in a later
unconditional fulfilment of the Abrahamic covenant, that sets it off
from the historic faith of the church.[[43]]
Darby's dispensational views, like those of
Edward Irving, would probably have remained the exotic preserve of
sectarian Brethren assemblies were it not for the energetic efforts
of individuals like William Blackstone and D. L. Moody. Above all,
however, they were propagated by Cyrus. I. Scofield who, through his
Scofield Reference Bible, introduced them to a wider audience
in America and the English-speaking world.
4. Cyrus I Scofield: The Author of the
Scofield Reference Bible
The publication of the
Scofield Reference Bible in 1909 by the Oxford University
Press was something of a literary coup. For the first time,
explicit dispensational notes were added to the pages of the
biblical text. While such a systematic chronology was largely
unknown prior to Darby and Scofield, the Scofield Reference Bible
became the leading Bible used by American Evangelicals and
Fundamentalists for the next sixty years.[[44]]
By 1945 more than 2 million copies had been
published in the United States alone. Between 1967 and 1979 a
further 1 million copies were sold.[[45]]
In a move to make Scofield’s work more accessible, in 1984 a new
edition based on the New International Version was published
followed by a CD Rom electronic version.
Scofield's notes relied heavily on
Darby's writings. Gerstner notes that the resemblance between
Scofield and Darby ‘is deep and systematic.’[[46]]
It is significant, however, that neither in the introduction nor in
any of the accompanying notes does Scofield acknowledge his
indebtedness to Darby.
In the Introduction to the Scofield
Reference Bible, he claims it is the 'remarkable results of the
modern study of the Prophets, in recovering to the church... a clear
and coherent harmony of the predictive portions...' Scofield
defined his dispensations as periods of time, '...during which man
is tested in respect of obedience to some specific revelation of the
will of God...'[[47]]
The Dispensations are distinguished,
exhibiting the majestic, progressive order of the divine dealings of
God with humanity, the 'increasing purpose' which runs through and
links together the ages, from the beginning of the life of man to
the end in eternity. Augustine said: 'Distinguish the ages, and the
Scriptures harmonize.'[[48]]
Whether Augustine understood 'ages' in terms of Scofield's
dispensations is extremely unlikely. Nevertheless, Scofield believed
that his scheme of seven was natural and self evident in Scripture,
...there is a beautiful system in this
gradualness of unfolding. The past is seen to fall into periods,
marked off by distinct limits, and distinguishable period from
period by something peculiar to each. Thus it comes to be understood
that there is a doctrine of Ages or Dispensations in the Bible.[[49]]
Scofield's rigid adherence to these
dispensations required him to make some novel assertions to ensure
consistency. So, for example, in describing the transition between
his fourth dispensation of promise to his fifth dispensation of law,
Scofield claims,
The descendants of Abraham had but to abide
in their own land to inherit every blessing... The Dispensation of
Promise ended when Israel rashly accepted the law (Ex. 19. 8).
Grace had prepared a deliverer [Moses], provided a sacrifice for the
guilty, and by divine power brought them out of bondage (Ex. 19. 4);
but at Sinai they exchanged grace for law.[[50]]
Similarly, in his introduction to the Gospels,
Scofield imposes stark divisions before and after Calvary which lead
him to the following assertions:
The mission of Jesus was, primarily, to the
Jews... The Sermon on the Mount is law, not grace... The doctrines
of Grace are to be sought in the Epistles not in the Gospels.[[51]]
Strangely, Scofield ignored the one division
that is self-evident - that between the Old and New Covenants. Mark
1:1 categorically states, ‘The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus
Christ’ and Matthew 11:13 reads, ‘for all the Prophets and the Law
prophesied until John.' Yet Scofield places the life and ministry of
Jesus within the dispensation of law, along with John the Baptist
and the Old Testament prophets. He argues that the sixth
dispensation of grace only ‘begins with the death and resurrection
of Christ’.[[52]]
For Scofield, the Lord’s Prayer, and in particular the petition,
‘Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors’ (Matt.
6:12) are not applicable to the church, since it is ‘legal ground’.[[53]]
Scofield taught that salvation by works had been possible during the
dispensation of the law and that the apostasy of the Church will
signal the end of the dispensation of grace:
As a dispensation, grace begins with the
death and resurrection of Christ (Rom. 3. 24-26; 4. 24, 25). The
point of testing is no longer legal obedience as the condition of
salvation, but acceptance or rejection of Christ... The predicted
end of the testing of man under grace is the apostasy of the
professing church...[[54]]
Scofield believed the Gospels were essentially
for the Jews and therefore not relevant for the Church. In a
footnote to Ephesians 3, for example, he claims, ‘In his [Paul’s]
writings alone we find the doctrine, position, walk, and destiny of
the Church.’[[55]]
Similarly, in perpetuating the distinction between Israel and the
Church, Scofield claimed, that Israel is the earthly wife of God and
the Church is the heavenly bride of Christ.
That Israel is the wife of Jehovah (see vs.
16-23), now disowned but yet to be restored, is the clear teaching
of the passages. This relationship is not to be confounded with
that of the Church to Christ (John 3.29, refs.). In the mystery of
the Divine tri-unity both are true. The N.T. speaks of the Church
as a virgin espoused to one husband (2 Cor. 11.1,2); which could
never be said of an adulterous wife, restored in grace. Israel is,
then, to be the restored and forgiven wife of Jehovah, the Church
the virgin wife of the Lamb (John 3.29; Rev. 19.6-8); Israel
Jehovah's earthly wife (Hos. 2.23); the Church the Lamb's heavenly
bride (Rev. 19.7)[[56]]
In many ways Scofield was representative of,
but at the same time became a focus for, the growing prophetic and
millennial fundamentalist movement in North America influenced by
the Brethren. The views later popularised by Scofield, were shaped
by a series of Bible and Prophetic Conferences held across North
America beginning in 1868 which followed the pattern established by
Darby and Irving at Albury and Powerscourt from the 1830's.
Both the method of 'Bible readings' and the
topics of the conferences strongly suggest that the gatherings were
a result of J. N. Darby's travels in the United States and the
influence of the Plymouth Brethren.[[57]]
One of the resolutions adopted by the 1878
Niagara Conference gives clear evidence of the influence of Darby's
dispensationalism.
We believe that the world will not be
converted during the present dispensation, but is fast ripening for
judgment, while there will be fearful apostasy in the professing
Christian body; and hence that the Lord Jesus will come in person to
introduce the millennial age, when Israel shall be restored to their
own land, and the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord;
and that this personal and premillennial advent is the blessed hope
set before us in the Gospel for which we should be constantly
looking.[[58]]
In 1974, William E. Cox, a former
dispensationalist and subsequent critic offered this appraisal
Scofield’s abiding legacy.
Scofield’s footnotes and his systematized
schemes of hermeneutics have been memorized by many as religiously
as have verses of the Bible. It is not at all uncommon to hear
devout men recite these footnotes prefaced by the words, ‘The Bible
says...’ Many a pastor has lost all influence with members of his
congregation and has been branded a liberal for no other reason than
failure to concur with all the footnotes of Dr. Scofield. Even many
ministers use the teachings of Scofield as tests of orthodoxy!
[[59]]
Craig Blaising, professor of Systematic
Theology at Dallas Theological Seminary, agrees.
The Scofield Reference Bible became the
Bible of fundamentalism, and the theology of the notes approached
confessional status in many Bible schools, institutes and seminaries
established in the early decades of this century.[[60]]
In 1890 Scofield began his Comprehensive
Bible Correspondence Course through which tens of thousands of
students around the world were introduced to his dispensational
teaching about a failing Church and a future Israel. Scofield
directed the course until 1914 when it was taken over by the Moody
Bible Institute. In the 1890's, during Scofield's pastorate in
Dallas, he was also principal of the Southwestern School of the
Bible. This was the forerunner to Dallas Theological Seminary, which
was founded in 1924 by another of his students, Lewis Sperry Chafer,
who became one of Scofield’s most influential exponents.
Chafer has, in the history of American
Dispensationalism, a double distinction. First, he established and
led Dispensationalism’s most scholarly institution through the
formative years of its existence. Second, he produced the first full
and definitive systematic theology of Dispensationalism. This
massive eight-volume work is a full articulation of the standard
Scofieldian variety of dispensational thought, constantly related to
the Biblical texts and data on which it claims to rest. Its
influence appears to have been great on all dispensationalist
teachers since its first publication, though it is fading today.
All of Chafer’s work and career was openly
and obviously in the Scofieldian tradition. A few years before his
death, Chafer, faithful to his mentor to the last, was to say of his
greatest academic achievement, ‘It goes on record that the Dallas
Theological Seminary uses, recommends, and defends the Scofield
Bible.’ The major line of dispensational orthodoxy is clear and
unbroken from Darby to Scofield to Chafer to Dallas.[[61]]
It is perhaps therefore not surprising that
the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago and Dallas Theological Seminary
have since then continued to be the foremost apologists for
Scofield's dispensational views, and Christian Zionism in
particular.
5. Hal Lindsey: The Father of
Apocalyptic Dispensational Zionism
Hal Lindsey,
himself a former Dallas student, is undoubtedly the most influential
contemporary dispensationalist. Lindsey has been described by
Time as ‘The Jeremiah for this Generation’, and by the New
York Times as ‘the best selling author of the decade.’[[62]]
The author of over twenty books, his latest publisher describes him
as ‘The Father of the Modern-Day Bible Prophecy Movement,’[[63]]
and, ‘the best known prophecy teacher in the world.’[[64]]
Lindsey's most famous book, The Late Great Planet Earth has
been described by the New York Times as the '#1 Non-fiction
Bestseller of the Decade.'[[65]]
It has gone through more than 108 printings with sales of more than
18 million copies in English, with between 18-20 million further
copies in 54 foreign language editions.[[66]]
Lindsey’s popularity may be attributed to a combination of factors:
his readable and journalistic style of writing; his imaginative, if
dogmatic, insistence that contemporary geo-political events are the
fulfilment of biblical prophecy; and, above all, his categorical
assertions that the end of the world is imminent. Like Darby and
Scofield, Lindsey confidently asserts that his interpretation of the
Bible uniquely shows what will happen in the future.
Today,
almost before I finish explaining a developing trend - it’s already
an accomplished fact.[[67]]
On the back
cover of The Final Battle we read,
This book
describes in more detail and explicitness than any other just what
will happen to humanity and to the Earth, not a thousand years from
now, but in our lifetime-indeed in this very generation.[[68]]
Similarly, on
the cover of The Apocalypse Code, Lindsey’s publisher writes,
In this
riveting non-fiction book, the father of modern-day Bible prophecy
cracks the "Apocalypse Code" and deciphers long-hidden messages
about man's future and the fate of the earth.[[69]]
In Planet
Earth, the Final Chapter, we are promised,
Hal will
be your guide on a chilling tour of the world's future battlefields
as the Great Tribulation, foretold more than two thousand years ago
by Old and New Testament prophets, begins to unfold. You'll meet the
world leaders who will bring man to the very edge of extinction and
examine the causes of the current global situation - what it all
means, what will shortly come to pass, and how it will all turn out.[[70]]
Like Darby, Lindsey also claims his interpretations were revealed
personally to him by God.
I believe
that the Spirit of God gave me a special insight, not only into how
John described what he actually experienced, but also into how this
whole phenomenon encoded the prophecies so that they could be fully
understood only when their fulfilment drew near... I prayerfully
sought for a confirmation for my apocalypse code theory...[[71]]
Lindsey may also be a popular writer because his tends to revise his
predictions in the light of changing world events. Without carefully
comparing each of his books, one would not necessarily realise that
The Final Battle (1994) is a revision of The Late
Great Planet Earth (1970); Apocalypse Code (1997) is a
revision of There’s a New World Coming (1973); and Planet
Earth 2000 A.D. (1994, & 1996) are both revisions of The
1980’s Countdown to Armageddon (1980). Planet Earth: The
Final Chapter (1998) is the latest, but probably not the final,
version in the ‘Planet Earth’ series.
A
good example of Lindsey's prophetic revisionism concerns the future
of the United States. In Planet Earth 2000 A.D. (1994)
Lindsey specifically draws attention to a prophecy made in The
Late Great Planet Earth (1970) as evidence of his prophetic
accuracy. A comparison, however, shows that he has edited out his
prediction of Communist subversion which did not occur.
|
The Late Great Planet Earth
|
Planet Earth 2000
A. D.
|
|
The
United States will not hold its present position of leadership
in the western world; financially, the future leader will be
Western Europe. Internal political chaos caused by student
rebellion and Communist subversion will begin to erode the
economy of our nation. Lack of moral principle by citizens and
leaders will so weaken law and order that a state of anarchy
will finally result. The military capability of the United
States, though it is at present the most powerful in the world,
has already been neutralized because no one has the courage to
use it decisively. When the economy collapses so will the
military.[[72]]
|
"The
United States will not hold its present position of leadership
in the western world," I wrote in The Late Great Planet Earth.
"Lack of
moral principle by citizens and leaders will so weaken law and
order that a state of anarchy will finally result. The military
capability of the United States, though it is at present the
most powerful in the world, has already been neutralized because
no one has the courage to use it decisively. When the economy
collapses so will the military." Remember folks, these words
were written in 1969, not the 1990's![[73]]
|
Lindsey's particular
kind of reading of history, coloured by an imaginative exegesis of
selected biblical scriptures, is dogmatic, dualistic and highly
speculative. The titles of Lindsey’s books show an increasingly
exaggerated and almost pathological emphasis on the apocalyptic, on
death and suffering.[[74]]
In each Lindsey insists that biblical prophecy
is being fulfilled, uniquely, in this generation and signals the
imminent destruction of the world.
We are the generation the prophets were
talking about. We have witnessed biblical prophecies come true. The
birth of Israel. The decline in American power and morality. The
rise of Russian and Chinese might. The threat of war in the Middle
East. The increase of earthquakes, volcanoes, famine and drought.
The Bible foretells the signs that precede Armageddon... We are the
generation that will see the end times ...and the return of Jesus.[[75]]
Lindsey's last but one book, The Final
Battle, includes the statement on the cover:
"Never
before, in one book, has there been such a complete and detailed
look at the events leading up to 'The Battle of Armageddon.'"[[76]]
Lindsey claims that the world is
degenerating and that the forces of evil manifest in godless
Communism and militant Islam are the real enemies of Israel. He
describes in detail the events leading to the great battle at
Megiddo between the massive Russian, Chinese and African armies that
will attempt but fail to destroy Israel. He offers illustrated plans
showing future military movements of armies and naval convoys
leading up to the battle of Armageddon.[[77]]
These will merely hasten the return of Jesus Christ as King of the
Jews who will rule over the nations from the rebuilt Jewish temple
in Jerusalem.[[78]]
Obstacle
or no obstacle, it is certain that the Temple will be rebuilt.
Prophecy demands it... With the Jewish nation reborn in the land of
Palestine, ancient Jerusalem once again under total Jewish control
for the first time in 2600 years, and talk of rebuilding the great
Temple, the most important sign of Jesus Christ’s soon coming is
before us... It is like the key piece of a jigsaw puzzle being
found... For all those who trust in Jesus Christ, it is a time of
electrifying excitement.[[79]]
Acknowledging that the Islamic
world will not tolerate such a scenario, Lindsey graphically
predicts the effect of a world-wide nuclear holocaust centred on
Jerusalem, with the 200 mile valley from the Sea of Galilee to Eilat
flowing with irradiated blood several feet deep.[[80]]
...only a
tiny fraction of the world’s population will be left. Only a remnant
will have survived. Many of the Jews would have been killed.[[81]]
In The
Final Battle, Lindsey claims, "The Jewish state will be brought
to the brink of destruction."[[82]]
The land of Israel and the surrounding area
will certainly be targeted for nuclear attack. Iran and all the
Muslim nations around Israel have already been targeted with Israeli
nukes... Zechariah gives an unusual, detailed account of how
hundreds of thousands of soldiers in the Israel battle zone will
die. Their flesh will be consumed from their bones, their eyes from
their sockets, and their tongues from their mouths while they stand
on their feet (Zechariah 14:12)... But God's power is certainly
stronger than any nuclear bomb... We do know God will supernaturally
strengthen and protect the believing Israelites so that they will
survive the worst holocaust the world will ever see. Amen.[[83]]
Lindsey’s most controversial book
is undoubtedly Road to Holocaust. In it, like Darby, he
makes eschatology a test of orthodoxy.[[84]]
He accuses those who refuse to accept dispensationalism’s
distinction between the Church and Israel of encouraging
anti-Semitism since they apparently deny any future role for the
State of Israel within the purposes of God. This is, he claims,
...the same error that founded the legacy
of contempt for the Jews and ultimately led to the Holocaust of Nazi
Germany.[[85]]
The purpose of this book is to warn about a
rapidly expanding new movement in the Church that is subtly
introducing the same errors that eventually and inevitably led to
centuries of atrocities against the Jews and culminated in the
Holocaust of the Third Reich... They are setting up a philosophical
system that will result in anti-Semitism.[[86]]
Through his many books, his International Intelligence Briefing[[87]],
a monthly Middle East political journal, together with weekly
television Prophecy Watch programmes, Lindsey has encouraged
evangelicals and fundamentalists to support Israel's right-wing
Zionist agenda. Yet there is great irony here for Lindsey claims to
support Israel and to refute anti-Semitism yet his ‘'Armageddon’
style theology’[[88]]
may actually be a self-fulfilling prophecy - leading to the very
holocaust which he abhors yet repeatedly predicts.
6. The International Christian Embassy,
Jerusalem
From its
foundation in 1980 the charter of the ICEJ has been to ‘comfort’
Israel. This has been defined as encouraging and facilitating the
restoration of the Jews to Eretz Israel although the geographical
extent of greater Israel is not always made clear.
The
embassy believes that God wants us to stimulate, encourage, and
inspire Christians amongst the many nations concerning their role
and task in the restoration of Israel. The Bible says that the
destiny of nations, Christians, and even that of the church is
linked to the way in which these groups respond to this restoration.[[89]]
Those who founded the ICEJ were drawn from Western evangelical,
fundamentalist and charismatic circles. According to Don Wagner,
virtually the entire ICEJ leadership are dispensationalists, who,
like Darby, Scofield and Lindsey, believe that the restoration of
the Jews to Israel and the contemporary State of Israel is the
fulfilment of biblical prophecy.[[90]]
In 1985, Johann Luckoff, the director of ICEJ wrote,
The return
to Zion from exile a second time (Isa. 11:11) is a living testimony
to God’s faithfulness and his enduring covenant with the Jewish
people.[[91]]
With an
international staff of 50 and representatives in over 80 countries,
the ICEJ has gained significant status within Jewish political
circles for its lobbying of foreign governments on behalf of Israel.
Based on its dispensational convictions, the ICEJ sponsors an annual
Feast of Tabernacles celebration attended by around 5,000 Christian
Zionists from over 70 nations. Every Israeli Prime Minister since
1980 has attended and addressed their celebration. They proudly
record the testimonials of many Jewish political and religious
leaders. For example, Yitzhak Rabin said:
Allow me
to tell you how much I, and Israel, appreciate your [presence] here
in Jerusalem, especially during these difficult days. Israel has
experienced through her existence many difficulties. Therefore,
whenever we see people that care, that are involved, and who show
this by deeds, and by words - we appreciate this.[[92]]
ICEJ claim
that their Feast of Tabernacle celebration is the largest single
annual tourist event in Israel. In 1996, in rebutting criticism of
their theological position, the ICEJ repudiated those who refused to
acknowledge the central place of Israel within God’s continuing
purposes:
While Gentile believers have been grafted
into that household of faith which is of Abraham (the commonwealth
of Israel), replacement theology within the Christian faith, which
does not recognize the ongoing biblical purposes for Israel and the
Jewish People, is doctrinal error.[[93]]
The ICEJ
emphasises that contemporary events are the fulfilment of Old
Testament prophecy concerning Israel. They distinguish the Church
from Israel, speaking in 1993 of “the former and latter rains”[[94]].
Whereas the New Testament emphasises in Ephesians 2:14 that Jesus
Christ has “made the two one” so that, according to Galatians 3:28,
in Christ there is now “neither Jew nor Greek”, the ICEJ insist on
maintaining a distinction and superior status for those of Jewish
ethnic descent who remain, even apart from faith in Jesus Christ,
the chosen people, “His Jewish sons and daughters.”[[95]]
In 1993 they claimed:
In no
uncertain terms God has made known His intention to regather the
scattered Jewish people and to plant them in the land with His
“whole heart and soul” (Jeremiah 32:41). We believe that in the
present massive wave of Soviet Jewish immigration to Israel (almost
400,000 since September 1989), the world is witnessing one of the
most startling prophetic fulfilments of our time - one that should
deeply touch the heart of every Bible-believing Christian and
provoke him to action. Since its inception in 1980 the vision for
the release of Soviet Jewry has been a vital aspect of the work of
the ICEJ. Along with a growing number of Christians internationally,
we have seen the Soviet Jewry issue as pivotal in God’s unfolding
plan for Israel and the nations... It is an amazing fact that God,
through His prophets, long ago ordained that He would use Gentiles
to bring back His Jewish sons and daughters.[[96]]
The ICEJ have taken their religio-political
hermeneutic somewhat further than most dispensationalists and
effectively reinterpreted the Great Commission. In place of
proclaiming the message of Jesus Christ which is according to Romans
1:16 and 2:9-10, ‘to the Jew first’, they have substituted a social
gospel serving the expansionist political agenda of the modern state
of Israel.
In the
same sense that the first apostles were commissioned by the Lord to
be his witnesses from Jerusalem to the uttermost parts of the earth,
we also feel compelled to proclaim the word of Israel’s restoration,
and the Christian’s response to it, to every country and in every
place where there are believers.[[97]]
The ICEJ has repeatedly identified
uncritically and unconditionally with the position of the right wing
of the Likud party, using the Bible to defend Israel’s military
settlement and colonisation of Syria’s Golan Heights and the
Occupied Territories despite international criticism. The ICEJ has
also remained implacably opposed to the aspirations of the
Palestinians for political autonomy, a shared Jerusalem, or the
right of return for refugees who have lost their property and land
through war or confiscation.
Not surprisingly, the ICEJ is
repudiated by the indigenous Christian Palestinian community, its
theology regarded as nothing less than apostasy,[[98]]
and “an anachronistic return to the Judaizing tendency the early
church rejected at the first ecumenical council, recorded in Acts
15.”[[99]]
7. Diversity and Contradiction within Contemporary Dispensationalism
A new generation of
younger dispensationalists among the faculty of Dallas Theological
Seminary have attempted to redefine their movement as 'progressive
dispensationalism'.[[100]]
Perhaps sensitive to criticisms of classical dispensationalism, they
distance themselves from what they regard as the 'naïveté' of the
founder's vision,[[101]]
distinguishing the classical dispensationalism of Chafer and Ryrie[[102]]
from 'Scofieldism',[[103]]
as well as from 'the popular 'apocalyptism' of Lindseyism'.[[104]]
They regard themselves as 'less land centred' and less 'future
centred'.[[105]]
Classical
dispensationalism, however, remains strong within conservative
circles. Ryrie is sceptical of these recent developments, and their
attempt at any revisionism. He describes the position of
theologians such as Blaising and Bock as 'neo-dispensationalist' and
holding to what he terms a 'slippery' hermeneutic.[[106]]
Ryrie also
distinguishes what he terms 'normative' dispensationalism from 'Ultradispensationalism'.
This latter tendency is rooted in the teaching of Ethelbert W.
Bullinger (1837-1913) and his successor Charles H. Welch, who,
according to Ryrie, have merely carried dispensationalism to its
'logical extremes'. Ultradispensationalists hold for instance, that
the Church did not begin at Pentecost but in Acts 28 when Israel was
set aside; the Great Commission of Matthew and Mark is Jewish and
therefore not for the Church; the Gospels and Acts describe the
dispensation of the law; only the Pauline prison epistles, that is
Ephesians, Philippians and Colossians, relate to the Church age;
water baptism is not for the Church age; and Israel, not the Church,
is the Bride of Christ.[[107]]
Their teachings are perpetuated today by the Berean Bible
Society, Berean Expositor and Berean Publishing Trust.[[108]]
Like Hal
Lindsey, other contemporary dispensationalist writers appear to
compete with one another to present the most accurate and timely
interpretation of contemporary events as they unfold. We close by
noting five key writers in this vein.
Billy Graham's father-in-law,
Nelson Bell, the editor of the prestigious and authoritative
mouthpiece of conservative Evangelicalism, Christianity Today,
appeared to express the sentiments of many American Evangelicals
when, in an editorial in 1967 he wrote:
That for
the first time in more than 2,000 years Jerusalem is now completely
in the hands of the Jews gives a student of the Bible a thrill and a
renewed faith in the accuracy and validity of the Bible.[[109]]
Charles Dyer, professor of Bible
exposition at Dallas Theological Seminary, in his book, The Rise
of Babylon, includes photographs allegedly showing Saddam
Hussein’s reconstruction of Babylon to the same specifications and
splendour as Nebuchadnezzar.[[110]]
Dyer warns that this is evidence that Hussein plans to repeat
Nebuchadnezzar's conquest of Israel, the only Arab ever to have done
so. 'The Middle East is the world's time bomb, and Babylon is the
fuse that will ignite the events of the end times.'[[111]]
John Walvoord, professor Emeritus
of Systematic Theology and Chancellor of Dallas Theological
Seminary, as well as the author of the million copy best-seller,
Armageddon, Oil and the Middle East Crisis,[[112]]