Articles>
End Times

June 17, 2006

Rev. Dr. Curtis I. Crenshaw

This is a very complicated subject, and American Christian
opinions on this are strong and varied. It is not my
desire to get into this in detail on this web site, but if
someone is interested, he can contact me personally (see
Contact Us on the left side of your screen). Only a few
comments can be made here.

First, it is a sad commentary on American Christianity that
we can sell 50 million copies (and counting) of an end time
series about the so-called antichrist, but we cannot sell
10 thousand copies of a book about Christ. What is wrong
with this picture?

Second, it is also disheartening that some Christians
identify the Christian faith with some particular view of
end times, not with the ancient creeds that all branches of
Christendom have embraced. In other words, some Christians
think that if one is not pre-tribulational and
pre-millennial that he/she is not a Christian at all, or at
best, a second class Christian. We don’t know what is
important anymore. (See Beliefs on the left side of your
screen to see what is important.)

Third, what most don’t know is that the end times frenzy
that so dominates some Christian circles in the USA is
unique to the USA. If one goes outside our borders, much
of these things do not exist. Moreover, if one moves back
in time from the early 1900s, such views are non-existent
in all branches of Christianity. Thus we are faced with a
serious problem: these views do not exist in 80% of today’s
Christian circles, and they do not exist in 100% of
yesterday’s Christian circles. Could something allegedly
so important miss the best theological minds for 2,000
years? Yet, we are not out to get anyone if they hold such
views, and we would ask the same respect.

Fourth, it is ironic that what so many Christians in the
USA think is the settled teaching of the Bible on
antichrist, the rapture, and the millennium is actually
changing in their own circles, but they are not aware of
it. There are three views of dispensationalism that have
been popularized by Dallas Theological Seminary (DTS), the
mecca of these end time views, and from which I graduated,
though I do not now share those views. The original view
was maintained by C. I. Scofield in his study Bible and
Lewis Sperry Chafer in his Systematic Theology, both of
whom were instrumental in founding Dallas Theological
Seminary, where I attended. Scofield and Chafer represent
classic dispensationalism, which clearly taught that Old
Testament saints were saved by their own works. Then when
I was at this seminary, dispensationalism was in its second
stage with such leaders as John Walvoord, J. Dwight
Pentecost, and Charles Ryrie, under whom I studied and the
latter now has his own study Bible. Let me add that I have
the deepest respect and affection for these three scholars
and learned much good from them. But they promoted
moderate dispensationalism. Now there is a third view
called progressive dispensationalism (their term) in which
the literal method of interpreting the Bible is adamantly
denied, maintaining that Christ is now ruling on David’s
throne (to some extent), that the Church partakes of
blessings of Israel to some extent, and so forth.

Indeed, I asked one of the long time professors at DTS in
the recent past about the current pre-tribulation view at
DTS. I stated that there is no passage in the Bible that
actually teaches it clearly (to which he agreed) but that
it was an inference based on the consistent distinction
between Israel and the Church as two separate peoples of
God (to which he also agreed). But if this third view of
dispensationalism was denying such a distinction, what
would happen to pre-tribulationalism? He stated that once
the old van guard died, it would not be a point of doctrine
anymore at DTS! But few people have kept up with the
writings of these scholars, who are godly men, and are
taking dispensationalism in a new direction. It will take
at least two or three generations for these newer (and I
would argue better) views to filter down from the seminary
to the pulpit to the pew.

Moreover, it is the popular writers who often carry the
day. What many do not know is that while I was a student
at DTS, one popular writer was invited to the 50th
anniversary of the seminary in 1974. His interpretations
of the Bible were so arbitrary, with helicopters in the
book of Revelation and other such things, that the
professors and administration said they would never have
him back again. As far as I know, he has never been back.
Though he was a graduate of DTS (not with a degree but with
a certificate), the professors thought that his popular
brand of dispensationalism was just too far off base. It
is the popular writers—not the dispensational scholars—who
have given Christianity such a bad name with their date
settings and unusual views of end times. They have
popularized such things to the point that many cannot
separate the essence of Christianity from such tangential
views.

Some may claim that these popularizes do not date set, but
such is really not true. I’ve personally heard one popular
writer in the past say that the Jews got their land back in
1948, that a generation is 40 years in Scripture, thus the
Lord should return in 1988. Sometimes he masks his
comments with statements like, “Well, this may not be the
end, but it looks very interesting.” And what do most
hear? “This is the end.” And who remembers the unstable
soul who published millions of copies of the book 88
Reasons for the Rapture in 1988, and then when he was wrong
89 Reasons for the Rapture in 1989? The secular media
cannot separate the dispensational scholars from the myth
makers, and condemn all Christians. But dispensational
scholar John Walvoord stated in chapel when I was in
seminary that we should not think that this is necessarily
the prophesied return of the Jews to their land in 1948,
for we just do not know. He went on to caution that they
may be removed only to come back again later. But the
media hear all these predictions from the popularizes and
wrongly conclude that all Christians hold the same views.
There is real harm done to the cause of Christ with such
teaching when one thinks he knows who the antichrist is or
when Christ will return. (And He will return!)

Of course, the whole Church for 2,000 years has not agreed
that there are two separate peoples of God, Israel and the
Church, but one people of God, Israel that became the
Church, and has not agreed that the land of Palestine is
theirs, but that such was a type of the whole world. The
Church has not been Marcion—the ancient teacher who taught
that the two testaments had nothing to do with one
another—but has rejected and condemned him. The Church has
not taught that Christ has two brides, Israel and then the
Church, but one bride, the people of God; the Lord is not a
bigamist. To put this another way, the Abrahamic covenant
promised at least four things: (1) the blessing of
forgiveness of sins in covenant with God, (2) land, (3)
seed, and (4) sacrifice. All of these were fulfilled in
Christ: His blood is our forgiveness of sins in the new
covenant, Christ was His seed and now we also are Abraham’s
seed by faith in Christ (Gal 3:29), there was the
tabernacle and then the temple for sacrifices but now we
have the once for all sacrifice of Christ (Heb 9-10), who
is our temple (John 2:13-22) and we—the Church—are now the
temple (Eph 2:11-12, 19-22), and the land promise is also
now the whole world (Matt 5:5; 28:18-20; Rom 4:13; 1 Cor
15:22-26, etc). In other words, it was promised to Abraham
that he would be a blessing to all nations (plural), not
just to one nation, Israel. The Gentiles were thus
prophesied to come into the covenant. In each case we have
continuity (something that is the same) and escalation
(something that is greater in fulfillment than the type).
The blessing of forgiveness is now ours in Christ; the
world that originally was given to man in the garden,
promised to Abraham only as Palestine, is once again the
world; the seed is not just one nation but now all nations;
and the sacrifices of the Old Testament are now once for
all by the blood of Christ. This is the heart and soul of
the Gospel.

Whether one agrees with my statements in the preceding
paragraph or not is not the point. I just wanted to
express what the Church has held. My only plea here is for
balance, not to identify a particular end time view with
the faith, but to realize what the faith is: the Holy
Trinity, the Incarnation (see Incarnation under Beliefs on
the left side of your screen), forgiveness of sins by
Christ alone and by faith alone, and so on. These are the
important matters, and given the state of our society, we
need to be preaching Christ, not antichrist. It is time
that we Christians unite around the basics against the
world and stop fighting among ourselves about matters that
do not make up the essence of the faith. We at St. Francis
and in the Reformed Episcopal Church will give the right
hand of fellowship to anyone who can accept the basic
truths of Christianity, regardless of what his/her end time
perception may be. We would ask for the same
charitableness.

Here is out motto: In essentials, unity; in non-essentials,
liberty; and in all things, love.

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