Understanding the New Testament and the End Times, Second Edition. Rob Dalrymple

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Understanding the New Testament and the End Times, Second Edition - Rob Dalrymple

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remained strong. Throughout my youth I read dozens of books on the end times and earnestly strove to determine the meaning of the book of Revelation and the end times according to the New Testament (NT). I even spent hours in the local library one day to determine the number of earthquakes and other such “signs” that had occurred in the last generation, with the conviction that this data would confirm that the return of Christ was indeed near.

      As a product of a well-intentioned, evangelical, fundamentalist upbringing, I was taught that the Bible was to be interpreted in a particular manner—with a wooden literalism—and in accord with a well-delineated evangelical worldview. I was convinced that this was the only true way to interpret the Bible. In fact, I was confident that Jesus, Paul, and for that matter Moses, David, and the rest, must also have thought and reasoned like me. Furthermore, I was also convinced that all other interpretations were the result of liberal assertions, which were intended to undermine the truth of God, Christ, the Bible, and ultimately Christianity itself.

      Now, in all of this I was very well intentioned. I was a sincere and genuine follower of Christ. I read the Bible as a moral guidebook. It told me what was right and what was wrong. It told me that if I believed in Jesus then I should do what was right. The Bible was merely a handbook of dos and don’ts, which I was attempting to follow. I worked hard at being a good Christian.

      When it came to the study of the end times, I was taught that things were fairly well spelled out. We were to look for certain events that were precursors to the return of Jesus, including the rebuilding of the temple in Jerusalem and the rise of an anti-Christ, who will rise to power in a restored Roman Empire and will impose a one-world, end-times government.

      Now, the Lord has a way of being quite humorous. For, by the early 1990s, in the midst of my disillusionment with the book of Revelation and the study of the end times, I was blessed with the opportunity to teach New Testament studies at a Christian college. Immediately I was confronted with a problem. How could one teach an “Introduction to the New Testament” course and omit the book of Revelation? For I truly wanted to omit it. After all, I certainly did not know what it meant.

      I decided to prepare by consulting some commentaries on the book of Revelation. Now, in my studies of the New Testament I had gained much insight from several series of standard evangelical commentaries. As I read through these standard, scholarly, evangelical commentaries on the book of Revelation, I began to realize several things. First, there was a significant amount of agreement among scholars as to what the book of Revelation was saying. Secondly, the book of Revelation made great sense when approached carefully through the lens of the Old Testament (OT) and Jesus’ fulfillment of it. Thirdly, the message of the book is incredible! As a result, I began to fall in love again with the book of Revelation and the study of the end times!

      Over the next few years I immersed myself in the study of the end times and apocalyptic literature. I soon discovered that the message of the NT must be understood from within an eschatological (“end times”) context; and that God’s eschatological plan was not only fulfilled in Christ, but was continuing to unfold through his people, and that all of this climaxes in the New Jerusalem.

      As I continued to examine the Scriptures I became aware that the message of the NT is that God has called us—his people—to participate now in the building of his kingdom! The kingdom that Jesus began is the same kingdom that God has prepared for us to build. Eschatology is missional! That is, understanding the end times, and that they have begun in Christ, provides us with the framework for understanding the work of God in the present: namely, his bringing about the New Creation!

      This all came to a climax for me during the years of my graduate and doctoral work. For, it was then that I came to fully grasp that the manner of interpretation of the Scriptures that I had followed, and its accompanying worldview, was not the approach/worldview of Jesus, Paul, Moses, David, or anyone in the biblical world. When I initially came to an awareness of this fact, I was somewhat okay with it. For how and why should I suppose that anyone in the ancient world thought like me (even though I had been raised to think that they did!)? But, I was also uncertain how to proceed—for I knew that I could not go back. What I was learning was true. For Paul thought like a first-century Jew, Luke was well at home in the Roman world, and Moses’ writings make perfect sense when read from within an Ancient Near Eastern (ANE) perspective.

      At the same time, I found myself in awe of the beauty and depth of the Scriptures as I was now beginning to see them. They were not merely a simplistic manual on right and wrong and how to be a good Christian until I go to heaven. The Scriptures were far grander, much richer, and more magnificent than I had ever thought! They exhibited a depth and beauty beyond anything I had ever imagined. I was beginning to see that God and his plan were far more majestic than I could possibly conceive! Throughout this time I was continuously stimulated by the new found riches revealed in Scripture.

      But I was also fearful. On the one hand, I was beginning to see that Scripture contained so much more for me to discover. It was as though I had stumbled into Narnia and there before me was a whole new world to explore beyond the wardrobe! But, on the other hand, I was nervous. My prior convictions had been the bedrock of my faith. If this bedrock was nothing more than sand, then upon what would I now stand? If my preconceptions in all these areas were unfounded, then might my whole faith implode? For months, and even years, as I continued to grapple with this newfound understanding of God and Scripture, I struggled with these constantly mixed emotions: excitement over newly discovered riches, and concern over a quickly eroding foundation. For, if this foundation were removed, then with what would it be replaced? How was I now to read the Bible?

      This new perspective (new for me of course, but one that I soon found out was commonplace among most scholars today and the church historically) radically influenced my understanding of the overall nature and purpose of Scripture. Suddenly, the overall story of the Bible—the person, nature, and mission of God; the person of Christ and his fulfillment of God’s mission; and the calling of God on people to be the means by which he continues to build his kingdom—have all come into a much sharper focus. Now I see that Scripture relays for us a dynamic story in which God has guided and moved history in a tremendously fascinating and complex manner: the grand plan of God’s cosmic design unfolds throughout the narrative of Genesis to Revelation. God’s sovereign plan,

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