Tuesday 8 November 2016

Questions For Amillenialists.


In my youth I was a wind tossed wave – blown about by all sorts of doctrines insisted upon me by people I thought of as “super Christians” - for more than twenty years. Finally God placed on my heart a burden to know the truth and to seek it out. I wanted to know all sorts of things –Is Calvinism correct? How old is the universe? What was the extent of the flood? Will there be a rapture? Should we be speaking tongues today? Etc… People gave me confident assertive answers for opposing views and I began to see that I needed to study hermeneutics and scripture and pray for guidance. I say all this because I did not come from a background in doctrine, which I had to overcome (I was not raised in a Christian family), but rather found myself arriving at doctrine through study and prayer. One issue that has become clear to me is that the scripture teaches premillennialism (that the church will be raptured out of the world and sometime later a terrible time of seven years of tribulation will occur followed by a glorious earthly reign of Christ for 1000 years and after that the eternal state of the new Heaven and Earth). I did not come to this view lightly! I know many fine Christians – many of them elders in my own church – who hold to an amillenial viewpoint (that the 1000 years in Revelation 20 is figurative for the church age we are now living in and that the next event will be the second coming of the Lord Jesus and then Heaven in eternity).  If anyone with an amillenial viewpoint wants to change my mind they will have to very clearly and patiently and scripturally answer the following questions:


1) Revelation 20 mentions the millennium - 1000 years - six times! When the Holy Spirit says 1000 years six times does He not mean 1000 years? Wherein scripture does 1ever mean two? Surely we must be careful not to allegorise what need not be allegorical?

2) Is Satan bound in the bottomless pit right now? And if he is how come he can also walk about like a roaring lion (1 Peter5:8) and be the god of this world (2 Corinthians 4:4)? The cross defeated Satan but where does it ever say that he does not fight the church? Surely history proves otherwise. If Satan has been 'bound’ and falling into the pit for the past two thousand years then being bound and falling into the pit are pretty meaningless images aren't they? As a wag once said: “If Satan was bound at the Cross, then he was bound with a very long chain, because he is always gnawing on my leg!” In a sense Satan has always been bound to God’s will but has been free to move between heaven and earth. But in Revelation we find Satan finally cast out of heaven onto earth (Rev 12). Revelation 20:3 says Satan will be so bound that he will no longer “deceive the nations”. How can anyone argue that the nations are not deceived today? As John 16:11 states Satan is still the “ruler of this world”. Right? (see also 1 John 5:19 and explain it)

3) The Scripture says during the Millennium: “the earth will be flooded with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea” (Isaiah 11:9; Habakkuk 2:14). But instead we see the rise of Islam, the great creeping apostasy in the evangelical church and the swell of atheism. Does this current world really strike you as Christ soaked (like water covers the sea)? Scripture says that during the Millennium the nations will all be in subjection to the Lord and glorify His name (Psalm 22:27-31). But are they now (Russia isn’t, Canada isn’t, Sweden isn’t, the middle east isn’t)? Is Christ ruling from Jerusalem right now? Was he ruling from Jerusalem during the Muslim occupation in history, literally or even figuratively?

4) Isaiah says that when the Lord reigns, the world will be characterized by peace, righteousness, and justice (Isaiah 9:7). Is this what we see today of anytime in the last 2000 years? Even within the church itself? Really? Is there international peace, justice, righteousness and loving kindness as clearly described in Hosea 2:18-20?

5) Has the change to the world described Isaiah 35:1-2 ever happened (see also 11:6-9, 29:18, 65:20-22)? If not, is it not likely that a world is yet to come where this will literally be the case? Can we take God's promises at face value or must we spiritualise and allegorise them to try to hammer a perfect 1000 year satanless future kingdom into the satan filled 2000 year past age? Are God’s promises so watery?

6) Where are the two resurrections? Acts 24:15 says there will be two resurrections, one of the just and another of the unjust and Revelation 20:5-6 shows that these two resurrections will be separated by a thousand years. The amillennial view has only one resurrection. Does a single resurrection of just and unjust at the end of the church age match up with this scripture? Look very carefully at the chronology of Revelation 20:4-6!

7) Are the Jews abandoned by God – never to fulfil their role, never to receive the many specific promises God made to them – promises quite distinct and separate from those he makes to all the nations of the World?  Can we trust the promises of the amillenial God which are so specific but turn into replacement theology? In Romans 3:1-4 Paul asks, “Has the unfaithfulness of the Jews nullified God’s faithfulness to them?” What does Paul say? His answer is, “May it never be!” Replacement theology is an abomination! Again in Romans 11:1 Paul asks, “Has God rejected His people?” Again he cries: “May it never be! God has not rejected His people whom He foreknew” (Romans 11:2). Next read Romans 9:27; 11:25-32 and ask yourself if this indicates that a remnant of Jews will play a role in the end times (the 144000 of Revelation for a start – mentions even the specific tribes they will come from)?

8) It is no surprise that Israelites are still with us today because, though God has allowed them to stumble until the fullness of the gentiles come in,  after the rapture of the church the Jews will look on him they have pierced (Zechariah 12: 10) and then when one of them goes up to Jerusalem gentiles will want to go with them to learn of the Lord (Zechariah 8:23). Their time will come! Is the role of Israel only to produce the messiah? Or does God tell them they will be his ambassadors to the world (a role they only partially fulfilled until today)?

9) Does Isaiah 49:16 suggest God would replace the Jews? Abandon them? Transfer his promise to others? Really? Does Jeremiah 31:35-37 supports this view?

10) Romans 11:29 was written after the cross and yet in straightforward terms Paul says that the “gifts and calling of God are irrevocable.” And in Romans 9:1-5 he speaks of promises to the Jews that God will fulfil. Are God’s promises ironclad? How could he keep these in the amillenial view?

11) When will Ezekiel’s temple be built if not in the millennium? See the very detailed description and promises about that temple in the latter half of Ezekiel. This included memorial sacrifices in great detail. None of this has ever yet happened. Was God wasting His time giving these specifics to Ezekiel?

12) When will there be a time of extreme longevity (Isaiah 65:20cf) if not in the millennium? Death will still happen during the reign but these scriptures suggest preflood life expectancies, right? This has not been ever been true of the last 2000 years? When someone dies at age 100 in this, the church age now, receive pity because we considered them to be a child in years?

13) When will Zechariah 14:4, 9 occur if not at the start of the 1000 literal year reign? Has the geological upheaval described actually happened yet?

14) Where does Daniel 7:13-14, 27 say the kingdom will be? Does this not show that it will be literal and earthly?

15) Who do the saints rule over (Rev 20:4 and 6)? Who are we to be priests to? How does the Lord put us in charge of one or two or more cities (Matthew 25:23) – if saints are all that there are in Heaven? But in the millennium there will still be unregenerate people who will be ruled from Jerusalem through a Christ world government administered by the perfected saints. Nothing else makes sense does it? Who else would we govern over? Each other? Angels?

16) Related to this last question – prove that all people everywhere will be dead at the end of Revelation 19. Does the scripture teach that all will die?

17) If the prophecies of Christ's first coming were all fulfilled literally why spiritualise or allegorise the prophecies concerning his second coming? Why say 1000 years is actually more than 2000 years? Why say satan's binding is at the cross when there are so many warnings to the church about him and his minions? etc...

18) Therefore is it not true that amillennialism fails in that it uses inconsistent hermeneutics? That it interprets unfulfilled prophecy differently from fulfilled prophecy?


If I am wrong please correct me.

Iron sharpens iron

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