Last year, Biolaâs Board of Trustees released a new document, The Statement of Biblical Principles, to help articulate the universityâs Christian identity for our day. In the process of commissioning this statement, the board also re-affirmed Biolaâs historic position on eschatology as the official teaching position of the faculty. For some, such a move on something like eschatology raises questions about the place given this doctrine: Wait, isnât Eschatology a second (or third, or lower) order issue of Christian faith and practice? Havenât we moved beyond giving this doctrine such status? And following from these, How can Biola still require that some of its faculty must adhere to a certain eschatological view and that all of its faculty at least respect and donât teach against it?
In the brief space of this post, perhaps I can offer a response to these questions. It is, after all, the subject I teach most to grad theology students! But let me approach this on two levels. First, to the issue of eschatologyâs importance in general. Does this doctrine really matter? Itâs a question that lands with greater and greater frequency from students whoâve not heard much about it from their churches. Eschatology? Really? How does eschatology help me love Jesus or evangelize better? Isnât eschatology just speculation at best, or worse, fear-mongering about the end of the world that always comes out wrong? Donât we need more âKingdom Nowâ helping people in this world? Second, to the issue of Biolaâs affirmation of this doctrine. Beyond the universally received points of Christâs return, resurrection of the dead and judgment for Heaven or Hell, whatâs the big deal? Why should Biola âget into the weedsâ stipulating a particular position for its faculty? Weâll take these two in order, and as they both broadly address points Iâve made elsewhere in other blog posts, Iâll include references to those places as well should you care to read further.
Eschatology matters in general
1. Eschatology matters for knowing the Story, the Narrative, of which our life is a part.
Whatever Postmodernity isâand some today say weâre now beyond even thatâit has leveraged the power of Story. We love stories: we love to tell them and we love to hear them. Every movie we watch is a story, and every culture has its own Storyâtheyâre called cosmogonies. Brain science even now tells us that we are hardwired for Story. We naturally piece our experiences into a coherent expanding narrative that governs how we live. You might even say we need a Story. And eschatology, the doctrine of last things, is part of that Story we need, and that God has told us. But like all stories, the Bibleâs ending needs the other parts of the Story, too. Eschatology needsâand will take us toâall of the Bible. It is something that concerns far more than oneâs reading of a couple of chapters in the Gospels and Revelation! In fact, eschatology is a âkey dimension of every biblical themeâ as Brevard Childs says.[1] To think about eschatology as some confusing and disputed topics tacked on to the end of oneâs theological curriculum is naively reductionistic.
2. Eschatology matters for not falling for a false Story.
The next two go together. If Eschatology is about the Story that our Creator has written for us, both as individuals and part of the entire universe He governs, and we need a story to live by, then itâs important to have the right Story. From God, whose very nature is self-giving love, only His Story gives us the flourishing life we were created to have. And Satan, you can bet, aims to enslave us with false stories that kill and steal our life. His attempts in this are called the âworldâ in the New Testament, and we are duly warned of their appeal over and over. Jesusâ own warnings to his disciples about others calling themselves âchristsâ (Matt 24:23) is a profound example of such, as well as why God tells his people not to consult those pretending to offer a word about the future other than Him and His prophets. Thatâs right, no tarot cards, Ouija boards, psychics, astrologists or channelers for Godâs people (Deut 18:14â15). We must not tell a false story!
3. Eschatology matters for living our Story.
Knowledge of our Story, the one God told us in the Bible including how it all ends, provides us stability for life against the false Stories. It gives comfort when standing for whatâs right (1 Pet 2:23; Rev 2-3), strength for service when weâre weary (1 Cor. 15:58; 2 Cor. 5:10-11; 1 Pet. 5:4), grit to resist all thatâs unholy (1 Pet 1:13-17), and intentionality for following the Master with all our heart (Matt 16:24, 27). This world is not our home, and Christâs coming for His own marks the end of our alien condition. We must live every day in the light of this truth, but God alone knows the End. His Son said so (Mark 13:32).
4. Eschatology matters for knowing the God of our Story.
That brings us to the final piece of this first part of our discussion. Biblical eschatology is the means by which God distinguishes himself from all other gods or storytellers. Who else can say, âTruly I am God, I have no peer; I am God, and there is none like me, who announces the end from the beginning and reveals beforehand what has not yet occurredâŠâ (Is 46:9â10)? For Israel and us, fulfilled prophecy confirms and validates the Author of the Story as well as the Story he is telling. It does the same for his messengers, the prophets. See Deuteronomy 18:12â22 and then Jeremiah 28:1â17 for strong words about not sanctioning your own words with Godâs name! Clearly, itâs one thing to offer a false Story; itâs another to do so in the name of the Living God (not recommended)!
Future Israel Eschatology matters
As mentioned earlier, șÚĘźÊÓÆ” was founded with a confessional belief that eschatology matters, and, furthermore, that a particular eschatology matters. In this section, we want to briefly consider the second part of that statement. Why was eschatology considered important at the founding of șÚĘźÊÓÆ”, and does Biola continue to view it as important today? Drawing the lines of difference most succinctly, Iâll call Biolaâs view a Future Israel eschatology. By this, Biola advocates the view that the nation of Israel (land, people, polis, god, language[2]) are still important in Godâs narrative of salvation for the world.[3] The opposite view, also held by conservative evangelical Christians, goes by many namesâCovenant Theology, Amillennialism, Historic Premillennialism, Progressive Covenantalismâbut will deny the need of a restored nation of Israel for Godâs Story. In this alternate view, Jesus Christ himself is the final piece of the divine Narrative script. His coming and establishing His church fulfills everything in Godâs World-Story.
So why contend for one view over the other, like Biola does? In some of the points that follow, you will see that we expand upon the topics of the first section. And that gets in large part to the answers to our question. Namely, without a Future Israel eschatology the benefits of eschatology in general are impoverished. That is, without a restored nation of Israel and the period of time after Christâs return when that restoration happensâtypically called the millenniumâthe Story and the Scriptures that support it are adversely affected. Without a Future Israel eschatology our view of the God of this Story is adversely affected. Without a Future Israel eschatology our view of our own human and Church identity is adversely affected. And finally, without a Future Israel eschatology our view of Godâs salvation mission, including our role in it, is adversely affected. Bold words, I know, but eschatology matters, and Future Israel eschatology matters, too!
1. Future Israel eschatology matters for how we read the Bible.
What do we do with the scores of texts in the largest section of the Bible, the Prophets (about one in eight verses by Walter Kaiserâs reckoning), where God swears by His name that He will remember His covenant with Abraham, regather this people to their land in safety and security, pour out His Spirit on them, bring them to their Messiah, and use them to bring His culture of justice, peace, and prosperity to the nations of the world? And thatâs just the Prophets! From Abrahamâs covenant in Genesis 12:1â3 through Moses in Deuteronomy 30:1â10, a Future Israel eschatology is the consensus message of the Old Testament.[4]
And when we come to the New Testament writers, they give every indication they are still following that Old Testament script. Peter launches the Church in Acts 3, citing the âtimes of refreshingâ that are still ahead when âall things are restored as God declared through his holy prophetsâ (3:20â21). Paul cautions the Roman church against being arrogant and in thinking their efforts in witness would even come close to what the prophets have declared a Future Israel would bring to the world (Rom 11:12â15). The covenants, the promises and the people God has foreknown in them are moving âirrevocablyâ to fulfilment (Rom 11:2, 29). For John, it is Psalm 2 that places the Old Testament script behind the whole book of Revelation. The reward promised to the Thyatiran church for when they will get to co-rule the world with the Messiah before the Heavens and Earth are made new (Rev 2:26â27; Rev 20:1â7; cf. Ps 2:8â9).[5] And Jesus encourages his countrymen with the promises of Psalm 37 for sovereignty in their homeland when they will have a repentant heart (Matt 5:5).[6] All as the prophets said.
These and myriad more show us how these thoroughly Israelite authors of the New Testament do not âreworkâ the prophetic record by redefining terms like âkingdom,â âIsraelâ and ânation.â They donât invert the order of prophetic events, or shave the prophetic details of Godâs holy word down to some reduced âsymbolic coreâ so they can fit the Church. Itâs even a little bracing to suppose they would even try! They also donât cast doubt on the faithfulness of the God who first elects this people in the Old Testament and then unelects them in the New Testament![7]The Church and Israel is not an Either-Or fulfillment/replacement proposition. Itâs a glorious Both-And of Church and Israel both bearing witness around successive comings of the Lordâs Messiah. Future Israel eschatology is just a better reading of the canonical record.
2. Future Israel eschatology matters for understanding our humanity.
What does it mean to be human? Who are we? What are we made and called to do? Future Israel eschatology helps us in a couple ways with these questions about our nature in the image of God.
First, human life is nationed life. By this I mean that to be human is to be a member of an ethnic group and to be identified with a homeland. Space doesnât allow much development here, but our ethnicity is part of the beauty of the unified diversity of Godâs design and what God has always intended for us in our charge to fill the earth as His images.[8] Our ethnic/family identity will be ours for eternity just like all the other features of Godâs image that define usâJesus is still an Israelite (see Rev 22:16)âand that identity is what Scripture knows as the basis of our organization as nations. The Bible is consistent in its account of our nationed-ness and the importance of its restoration in Godâs redemptive plan (more in point 3 below). And it is in this biblical context that âIsraelâ functions in Future Israel eschatology always as a particular national people with common territory, culture, and Godâthe features that mark nations that we noted earlier. Even in the New Testament, this Israel still clearly existsâthere is never a ânew Israel,â which is what one would expect if the Church were Israelâs replacement.[9] But when other eschatologies positively make âIsraelâ mean just anyone who believes in Jesus, and even in some cases, make the Church a transcendent, nationless âNew Manâ from Ephesians 2:14â15 (and Gal 3:28).[10] We have taken a step back from something important about ourselves and the ethnic beauty of Godâs creation.[11] We have also opened the door to far more unsavory effects, as recent research on Americaâs troubled ethnic history shows.[12]
Second, human life is to rule over and subdue evil. This is part of the functional aspect of the image of God in Genesis chapter one (vs 26â28). Adam and Eveâs people were to advance Godâs rule to the ends of the earth. And this is a glorious and beautiful calling, for Godâs culture is a culture of justice, peace and flourishing. However, as is clear in Genesis, this is an advance against a hostile foeâ âsubdueâ always means this in the Old Testament.[13] Human life is intended by God to combat, overwhelm and subdue all that opposes Godâs agenda. And such a calling undergirds the entire redemptive storyline: our fall into sin was a fall from this task, and our redemption is a renewal of it. But when do we ever get to beat sin? We all know of the battle (and failure) against sin. When do we get to fulfill the longing of every heart to create Godâs beautiful culture of justice, prosperity and peace in the world? A Future Israel eschatology says we get to fulfill our calling against evil in Christâs millennial kingdom where we will rule evil, bring justice, peace, generosity and prosperity to the nations of the world. Without such a kingdom narrative for this world, other eschatologies are left trying to answer this human heart cry either in this Ageâan epic Non-Starter against the increasing accounts of Christian martyrdomâor with some insipid picture of a rule in or from Heaven. This world becomes a loss, and even though we have âvictoryâ in our hearts and can enjoy little âforetastesâ of Godâs intention for the world, we continue to watch as evil ravages our culture and crushes our souls. But still we sing, âHe rules the world with truth and grace.â Really? Some ruleâŠ[14]
Forgive the sarcasm, but like you, I long for justice, peace and prosperity in this world and I long to be part of bringing it. Effectively, and finally, bringing it. Iâm sick of evilâs deceit and de-humanizing rot, and it is this passion for beauty and good that drives social-justice warriors of all stripes (see more in point 4 below). Itâs the beautiful picture God made us for and that we all know deep down. And I submit that a Future Israel eschatology satisfies this call to our hearts better than its opposite. Philosophers call this the Beauty Test of Truth where we knowâI mean really know in the depth of our beingâthe truth of something by its intrinsic beauty, how it âconnectsâ and orders with other realities synced deep in our souls. I know it sounds ridiculously subjective, but the Beauty Test is important. Future Israel eschatology is Godâs beautiful Story for the world.
3. Future Israel eschatology matters for understanding salvation.
The previous two points set up most of what follows, and so these next points can run more quickly. In this case, the point is that a Future Israel eschatology offers a more compelling account of salvation. If sin has ravaged every dimension of our identity, including our national and familied identity and our Calling to rule over sin, then Godâs salvation must restore this, too. But as we have tried to show already, only a Future Israel eschatology offers a real account of a salvation of this scope. In Christ we get to finish our Calling for this world, shine the glory of His Truth for every dimension of human life, and take that Truth into the very halls of our nationsâ governments. Salvation doesnât get watered down to just getting right with God, learning how to suffer âbetterâ in the world, or fighting your own flesh. No, it is salvation deep and wideâa full-throated, all-encompassing, and compelling picture of overwhelming and ruling sin in every dimension of human life. And itâs the meaning of Jesusâ statement, that salvation is from the Jews (John 4:22), for this peopleâs narrative history in the Old and New Testaments claims us all, and it claims us all for our flourishing.
4. Future Israel eschatology matters for understanding the Churchâs mission in the world.
The salvation of human life up to its very national echelons that takes place on this earth after Christâs return in a Future Israel narrative keeps clear the Churchâs evangelistic mission for the present period. But if the present period is the only period left for this earth before Heaven, then the national, political and social dimensions of salvation begin to confuse the mission in two ways. First, we can think that our social action establishes the kingdom of God and will transform entire cultures and nations before Christ comes (the postmillennial error), or secondâand less optimistic but just as ardentlyâwe can think that our work in service of a âculture commissionâ to redeem and transform society now is âjust as bindingâ for the Church in the present age as the Great Commission.[15] Into such confusion a Future Israel eschatology will never go. Thatâs because it keeps separate the way the Church and Israel are a âlight to the nations.â While witness is the role of both (see Is 49:6 and Acts 13:47), Israelâs witness will achieve the just and prosperous peace we long for, but the Churchâs will not. Israelâs witness will come from the power of coercive force of the Lordâs Son who will bring the nations to heel with a rod of iron (Ps 2:8â9), but the Church conducts its witness from the upside-down power of cruciform suffering (Col 1:24).[16] Israel will witness through the model of an entire nation where every institution of society shines forth the ways of the Living God, but the Church will never show the world a nation whose military and legislative agendas serve the true God. For reasons like these and others, Miroslav Volf is correct when he says âwe search in vain in the New Testament for a cultural mandate.â[17] Biolaâs eschatology keeps us clear of this confusion of missions.
But this does not mean that the Churchâs Great Commission mandate is devoid of social action either. Far from it. It just means that the Churchâs social action in this age will always be rightly ordered to the service of proclamation evangelism. This is what a Future Israel eschatology enforces, and it is why in a day when many claim that universities exist for the sake of social justice, șÚĘźÊÓÆ” will always be able to say that social justice exists for the sake of evangelism.
5. Future Israel Eschatology matters for understanding world events.
What is it with the nation of Israel? Why does that piece of real estate seem to upset the world year after year after year? In such times as we now live, a Future Israel eschatology at least allows you not to fall in with an aggressive pro-Palestinian theology and claim that Jews in that land have nothing to do with the Bible. Political and religious Zionism is a complex issue to be sure, but a Future Israel eschatology will never fund Jew-hatred and anti-Semitism.
In fact, it might well be that the opposite is the case. With the rise of the modern State of Israel, it may well be that God is again gathering his people to their ancient lands. The apologetic value of such a scenario was not lost on Karl Barth for whom the establishment of modern Israel in 1948 was proof of Scriptureâs authority. Years ago, Barth, who is renown as the most influential theologian of the 20th century, was asked by a journalist why he believed the Bible. Apparently, this poor man couldnât imagine why someone of Barthâs intellect and stature would spend his life with such a pre-scientific compendium of fairytales. Barth gave the answer in two wordsâDie Juden! (the Jews!). The history of this ancient people, contrary to countless other such peoples, continues to be written just as the prophets said it would. It was compelling for Barth, anyway.
Conclusion
Time to draw this excessively-long post to a close with a couple of reminders. First is that, yes, eschatology is not a first-order question of the Christian faith. Oneâs eternal salvation does not hinge on a view about Future Israel or not Future Israel. But second, as we have seen, eschatology probably matters more than we might think for how we will attend to vast portions of Scripture and therefore live the Christian life. Kind of like a computerâs operating system always working in the background, the narrative of how the world is going to go that we all own in some way or another informs our everyday choices and values, what we pursue and what we donât. It informs what we think the Church is here to do, how we view the scope of salvation and the human Calling to rule and subdue evil, when that Calling is completed or not, which Story is beautiful and satisfying to our hearts and worthy of our God and which one is less worthy. Whether this effort has been sufficient to make eschatologyâs stock value rise for you, I leave for you to decide. But perhaps I have given you enough to convince you that eschatology is not the complete non-issue that some claim it to be. Eschatology impacts our understanding of God, his Story for the world in the Bible, our humanity, salvation, the Churchâs mission and how we see world events. Eschatology matters.
Notes
- Brevard Childs, Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testaments [Fortress, 2011], 93 [authorâs emphasis]).
- The five principal features of a ânationâ (Heb. ȔÎČâ) in Scripture, according to Daniel Block (âNations,â The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, ed. Geoffrey W. Bromiley et al. [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1986], 2: 492â494).
- Biolaâs eschatology statement reads:
âIn fulfillment of Godâs historical purpose for humanity to rule and establish Godâs kingdom on earth (Gen. 1:28; Ps. 8:4-8; Matt. 6:10; Heb. 2:6-9), the Scriptures teach a millennial reign of Christ with His saints on earth following His literal return. The nation of Israel, having been redeemed, will play a central role in bringing the blessings of salvation to all nations during the millennium in fulfillment of biblical prophecies (e.g., Is. 2:1-4; 11:1-12; Jer. 23:5-6; Ezek. 37; Amos 9:9-15; Zech. 14; Matt. 19:28; Acts 1:6; 3:19-21; Rev. 20:4-6). Following the millennium, this kingdom will be merged into the eternal kingdom (I Cor. 15:22-28).
âBefore these millennial events, the believers will be caught up to meet the Lord in the air (I Thess. 4:13-17). The time of this âraptureâ is unknown, and thus believers are to live constantly watchful and ready.â
- Is. 2:1-4; 11:1-12; Jer. 23:5-6; Ezek. 37; 39:21â29; Amos 9:9-15; Zech. 12, 14, just for starters, and there is no disagreement among interpreters that this is what the hope of Israel was at the end of the OT (see Donald E. Gowen, The Eschatology of the Old Testament [Philadelphia: Fortress, 1986], 2). The pouring out of the Spirit that changes Israelâs view of messiah (Zech 12:10; cf. Ezek 39:29) and their dwelling securely in their own land âwith no one to make them afraidâ (Ezek 39:26) make it difficult to see this hope as having been fulfilled by any prior return of exiles to the land of Judea, including what happened in 1948. Jews have never considered any of these returns as the answer to what the prophets predict!
- The millennium passage of Revelation 20:1â7 is not a âone-offâ proof text for Future Israel eschatology that is often claimed by opponents. The role of Psalm 2 in the book shows, as Allan McNicol notes, that the millennium is in fact the bookâs goal for tribulations of this world: âRevelation 20.4â6 is a victory celebration. A straightforward reading would indicate that integral to the victory celebration of those who refused to bear the mark of the beast is their assumption of power over the nations. Psalm 2, a paradigmatic text for the Apocalypse, is now fulfilled (1.5 - 6; 2.26 - 27; 3.21; 5:10; 12.5 and 19.18). The Lamb (Godâs son) is now the evident ruler over the kings of the earth. The martyrs (6.9 - 11) now have the answer to their prayersâ (Allan J. McNicol, The Conversion of the Nations in Revelation [LNTS 438; T & T Clark, 2011], 66).
- The English âlandâ and âearthâ are the same Greek word. It is a theological assumption that makes Jesusâ citation of Psalm 37:11 to Jews be about the earth and not their homeland as the Psalm originally meant (Nelson Hsieh, âMatthew 5:5 and the Old Testament Land Promises: An Inheritance of the Earth or the Land of Israel?â MSJ 28 [2017], 42, n. 4).
- Jacob Joczâ statement in this regard is classic: âTheologically [the replacement of Israelâs election by the Church is an impossible position for it calls in question not only Godâs wisdom and power, but his faithfulness. Thus the very meaning of covenant in the biblical sense is annulled. In the context of prophetic revelation berit invariably means Godâs âunswerving loyalty to Israelâ and stands as a sign and token for âthe faithfulness of the unchanging God.â Israel, therefore, must remain the am Yahweh not because he deserves it, but because the God of Israel is a Covenant-keeping God.â (J. Jocz âThe Connection Between the Old and the New Testament,â Judaica 16 [1960]: 142â143).
- The Table of Nations in Gen 10 is the fulfilment of the commission to be fruitful, multiply and fill the earth in Genesis 1:28 (Victor Hamilton, The Book of Genesis:1â17. NICOT [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1990], 347).
- There are only two possible and disputed exceptions (Rom 9:6 and Gal 6:16), but even if granted here, âIsraelâ still means the OT nation nearly 70 times in the NT.
- There is neither Jew nor Greek (Gal 3:28) is not a statement against ethnic identity in the Church. It is a statement against weaponizing ethnicity for advantage before God.
- William Campbellâs work on Paulâs understanding of Christian identity makes clear that Paul is against the abuse of ethnicity, not it status in the Church (Campbell, Paul and the Creation of Christian Identity. New York: T. & T. Clark, 2008; and Ibid., âDifferentiation and Discrimination in Paulâs Ethnic Discourse,â Transformation 30/3 [2013]: 157â68).
- If Carter Kameronâs theological account of Black slavery in America is accurate, then the denationalizing/universalizing of the Church stands behind this human atrocity as well. Kameron argues that whiteness was the result of non-Future Israel eschatology when âWestern, mainly Gentile, Christians no longer had to interpret their existence inside another storyâIsraelâs⊠Stated differently, whiteness is the accomplishment of interpreting the self simply by reference to oneself, and in this respect, it is the uniquely ââChristianââ accomplishment of no longer having to understand Christian identity as unfolding within another reality, the reality of Israelâs covenantal story with YHWHâ (Carter J. Kameron, Race: A Theological Account [Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008], 261â262).
- John N. Oswalt, Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament (Chicago: Moody, 1980), 1: 430.
- This is not a claim against Godâs sovereignty but only a note that now He sovereignly turns and uses evil on this earth. But this is not the final chapter of the world in a Future Israel eschatology that will see God sovereignly put down and rule evil through his people on this earth. Such a scenario registers a stark contrast with amillennial/Covenant theology narrative such as Andy Crouchâs. In his book, Culture Making: Recovering Our Creative Calling (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity, 2008), the title of chapter eight, âWhy We Cannot Change the Worldâ is telling. For a Future Israel eschatology, such is not the title of this worldâs last chapter.
- Citations from Charles Colsonâs comments in Christianity Today (âWhat Are We Doing Here?â CT 43/11 [October 4, 1999]; ), who represents an amillennial/Covenant theology viewpoint.
- Moyer Hubbard writes that Paulâs âweakness is strengthâ in 2 Cor 12:9 is âwhat Paul considers to be Godâs primary modus operandi in human affairs⊠Through human weakness and frailty, Godâs power is revealed to be utterly hisâŠâ (Moyer Hubbard, â2 Corinthians,â in A Biblical Theology of the Holy Spirit, eds. Trevor J. Burke and Keith Warrington [London, UK: SPCK, 2014], 172â173).
- Miroslav Volf, Work in the Spirit: Toward a Theology of Work (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1991), 93.