©Dr. Jack L. Arnold
Equipping Pastors International, Inc.
Eschatological Systems
Part—Views of Prophecy
THE
HERMENEUTICS OF PROPHECY
Hermeneutics
is the Biblical science of the basic laws of the interpretation of the
scripture. Hermeneutics deals with ÒhowÓ a person interprets scripture not
ÒwhatÓ he concludes. The ÒhowÓ, of course, will directly affect the ÒwhatÓ of
interpretation.
GENERAL RULES OF HERMENEUTICS
Interpret
Grammatically: A study of the basic meaning of a word,
for a word is a vehicle of thought.
Interpret
According to Context: A word study must be placed into the
context of a sentence, a sentence into the context of a paragraph and a
paragraph into the context of a chapter and a chapter into the context of a
book. The purpose of the writing, the people addressed and the general theme of
the book are all important factors to take into consideration in interpretation
of scripture.
Compare
Scripture with Scripture: The writing of one author should be compared
with the writing of the same author in another book of scripture, and then
compared with the scripture of other authors.
Interpret
Unclear Passages by Clear Passages: It is best not to build a doctrine on
an unclear passage; rather the clear passages should be used to throw light on
the unclear passages.
THE ISSUE IN THE HERMENEUTICS OF PROPHECY
The
real issue between amils and premils is over hermeneutics. How does one
interpret prophecy? Does he interpret Old Testament prophecy literally or does
he interpret it spiritually as all fulfilled in the church age? The question is
whether one interprets the New Testament by the Old Testament or the Old
Testament by the New Testament, recognizing progressive revelation (revelation
in stages as that the New Testament is higher and clearer revelation than the
Old Testament.).
Premils
claim that they use one method of hermeneutics for the interpretation of both
the Old Testament and New Testament. They use the grammatic-historical method,
which is the literal method. They admit that the Bible at times has many
symbols and much figurative language; yet, they claim that all symbols and
figurative language connotes a literal meaning. In actuality, premils use a
seemingly more literal approach to prophecy. Dispensationalists and historic
premils disagree over the degree of literalness that should be used in the
interpretation of prophecy.
Amils
claim that the Bible is its own interpreter of prophecy and that the New
Testament spiritualizes Old Testament prophecy and applies it to the church age
or the gospel age. All the promises made to Israel in the Old Testament are
fulfilled in the church because the church is spiritual Israel. Except in a few
places such as the time, extent and nature of an earthly kingdom, postmils
agree with amils in their basic interpretation.
Interpret
Literally Whenever Possible: The same
rule of interpretation should be used for prophecy as for all other
scripture. This makes the Old Testament basic for an interpretation of the New
Testament. For instance, the Old
Testament speaks of a worldwide future kingdom on earth (Num. 14:21; Isa. 40:5;
49:6; Psa. 86:9; 22;27; Isa. 2:2-3), the reign of Messiah on His earthly throne
(2 Sam. 7:12-16; Psa. 89:3-4, 34-36; Jer. 23:5-8; 33:20-26; Ezk. 34:23-25;
37:23-24; Mic. 4:7-8). Israel will
be converted (Jer. 31:31-34; Ezk. 11:18-20, Rom. 11:26-29).
Dispensationalists
and most historic premils believe that Israel will be returned to the land
(Isa. 10:21-22; Ezk. 34:24,30,31; Zech. 13:9; Mal. 3:16-18). A Premil says
these prophecies must find literal fulfillment or GodÕs word and promises are
weak or not kept. GodÕs very character is at stake.
These promises will find
fulfillment in a yet future earthly millennium.
A
premil attempts to explain most everything in his system even if some things do
not fit logically into his system. It is better to stay with a literal
interpretation and have some apparent contradictions then to spiritualize Old
Testament scripture.
Law
of Fulfillment: In the interpretation of unfulfilled
prophecy, fulfilled prophecy forms the pattern. Hundreds of prophecies
concerning ChristÕs first advent were fulfilled literally. Why not, then, a
fulfillment literally of prophesies surrounding the LordÕs second advent?
Amils
and premils all agree that Zech. 9:9 was fulfilled literally in ChristÕs first
advent. Amils would say that Zech. 14:16,17 must be taken figuratively and
applied generally to the future blessing of the church. However, premils say
this must be taken quite literally and refer to a future earthly kingdom. Amils
agree that Christ is coming again (Zech. 14:1-3) but this language is figurative
(Zech. 14:4,5). Can we divide a literal second coming from a literal placing of
His feet on the Mount of Olives? Premils say Òno!Ó
Give
Figurative Language a Literal Meaning:
The Old Testament abounds in figurative language in the area of prophecy, but
all figurative or symbolic language conveys a literal truth.
Compare
Prophecy with Prophecy: Each prophecy should be checked with
other prophecies for all prophecy is part of GodÕs overall plan.
Law
of Time Relationship: Two future
events may be so closely mingled together on the horizon of prophecy as to
appear like mountains in a range of mountains, the valleys being hidden. Two
prophetic events placed side by side do not necessarily have to happen
simultaneously or even in immediate succession (Isa. 9:6-8; 61:1-2).
Law
of Double Reference: While not all
premils hold to this law (cf. J. Barton Payne, Encyclopedia of Biblical Prophecy, p. 121ff), it is generally held
that a prophecy may have a double
fulfillment, one being in the immediate circumstances and another in the
distant future.
There
are many references in the Psalms that speak immediately of a situation
particular to David but have a future fulfillment in the person of Jesus Christ
(Psa. 41:9; John 13:18).
Perhaps
Babylon is a good illustration of the law of double references. The rise and
fall of Babylon has a near and afar
view because the near view was never completely
fulfilled (Isa. 13:19-22; Jer. 50:3a, 13 cf. Jer. 31:13 with Rev. 17:1; Jer.
51:7 with Rev. 17:4, etc.).
The Old Testament Must be
Interpreted by the New Testament
Augustine
coined the phrase, ÒThe Old is by
the New revealed; the New is in the Old concealed.Ó This has been an Amil
hermeneutical principle since Augustine and before. An amil believes that what
Christ taught by His Holy Spirit through the Apostles is final, authoritative
and infallible. The key to prophecy is how the ApostleÕs interpreted
Old Testament scripture. The Apostles do spiritualize the Old Testament and
give a progressive revelation to Old Testament revelation. For example, the Old
Testament speaks of a highway for preparation for the King of Israel (Isa.
40:3) and speaks of Elijah the prophet coming before the Day of the LORD (Mal.
4:5), but the New Testament says that Elijah is John the Baptist (Matt.
11:12-14; 17:16; Mark 9:11-13).
The
premil answers the question of Elijah and John the Baptist by stating that John
the Baptist denied he was Elijah (John 1:21) and Luke 1:17 says that John the
Baptist came in the Òpower and spiritÓ of Elijah. It is also a Jewish custom to
liken one person to another if there are certain characteristics we wish to
emphasize, much like we say, ÒHe is a Daniel.Ó
The Old Testament Is
Typical and the New Testament Is the
Fulfillment of the Type
The Old Testament types foreshadowed the reality of the Gospel Age in
the New Testament. The whole of the Old
Testament, not just the ceremonial aspects of
the Mosaic Law, pointed forward to Christ and the Gospel Age (Heb. 10:1 cf.;
Heb. 3:5; Col. 2:17).
The
Old Covenant Has Passed Away
The Old Covenant (Mosaic economy) was temporary and
everything connected with it has vanished away and is never to be restored
(Heb. 8:13). The New Covenant replaces the Old Covenant; therefore,
Christianity transcends, supercedes and fulfills Judaism (Gal. 3:19; Heb. 9:
6-10).
When
Christ finally came, the dispensation of Law (Moses or the Old Covenant) had
fulfilled its function in history. The blood of animals, feast days, the Jewish
temple, Jerusalem and the Òholy landÓ had fulfilled their functions and any
return to those things now is a denial of the reality brought to us by Jesus
Christ.
Divine
revelation is progressive. ÒBut the path of the just is as a shining light,
that shineth more and more unto the perfect dayÓ (Prov. 4:18). There is no
going back, but always a going forward to something more glorious. There will
never be a restoration of the Òdivers washings,Ó Òcarnal ordinancesÓ beggarly
elements,Ó and Òworldly sanctuary,Ó with its sacrifices and Levitical
Priesthood, and the Òmiddle wall of partitionÓ between Jew and Gentile (Heb.
9:1-10; Gal. 4:9; Eph. 2:14). That has gone and gone forever; those who assert
otherwise preach a revived Judaism and ancient Rabbinism and not the message of
the New Testament. (G.B. Fletcher, Predictive
Prophecy, ÒSeven Principles of
InterpretationÓ)
The
Symbolic Must Be Interpreted by the Didactic
We
should not try to build a theory on passages that are written in a symbolical
context. Doctrinal positions, even in prophecy must be by straightforward
teaching (didactic) passages. For instance, many passages on the second coming
of Christ are not clear, but a very clear passage is 2 Peter 3:1-14. The
context is about the second advent of Christ and there is a chronological time
sequence: Christ will come suddenly and unexpectedly (v. 10), the present earth
will be destroyed by fire (vs. 10, 12) and then will come the Ònew heavens
and new earthÓ or the eternal state (v. 13).
CONCLUSION
It
seems as though a safe basic principle in the hermeneutics of prophecy would
be: take every passage literally unless there is some compelling reason
to take it otherwise. This compelling reason will normally be a plain
didactic passage in the New Testament
We should keep control over our
hermeneutical system by letting the literal control the typological. Therefore,
we should interpret prophecy literally unless the implicit or explicit teaching
of the New Testament suggests typological (spiritual) interpretation.