The Wellspring. No.57b
June
8th 2007
“Understanding is a Wellspring of
Life to him that has it.” (Proverbs. 16:22)
Occasional papers by Arthur &
Rosalind Eedle
Before He Comes
No.2. The Millennium
Frequently these days I receive papers, or read articles, which fight shy of accepting the thousand-year reign of Christ, as stated in Revelation 20. It is as though a new consensus of opinion is gaining ground amongst evangelicals and charismatics, whereby it is now in vogue to spiritualise the words of Rev.20, so that the "thousand years" can mean any length of time, as long as it's not 1,000 years. In this article I wish to give my reasons for maintaining a belief in a literal Millennium. The reason for this may be seen as a first necessity in our study of the days "before He comes."
I am
aware of the fact that the Book of Revelation contains vast amounts of
figurative material. Of this there cannot be any doubt. But expositors very
often adopt extreme positions. Some are prone to take everything figuratively,
whilst others try their best to take everything literally. One
prominent writer in the USA has recently pronounced his opinion quite
vigorously in favour of total spiritualization, thereby getting himself into
knots from the outset, because one simply cannot spiritualise Jesus, God, the
throne of God, and various other factors that require no effort of the
imagination to require alternative meanings. On the other hand, another
well-known writer has tried his level best to engender fear and terror in the
minds of his readers by presenting "apocalyptic nightmares" of colossal magnitude. I would suggest that neither of
these extremes are worthy of further thought. A balanced approach is needed
when reading the Revelation. Some of John's visions are figurative, but many
statements that read in a simple straightforward manner can be left as literal.
So let's
investigate the subject of the Millennium. Is it literal or figurative? First
of all, here are the actual references, on which the assessment has to be made.
20:2 The Devil is bound for a thousand years.
20.3 At the end of the thousand years the Devil is released.
20:4 The faithful overcomers reign with Christ for a
thousand years, in resurrection.
20:5 The rest of the dead have to wait for
resurrection until the thousand years is over.
20:6 The faithful overcomers will act as priests and
kings in their thousand-year reign with Christ.
20:7 When the thousand years expires, Satan will be
released from his prison.
Here is a
period of time which has a beginning and an end.
To assume otherwise would be to create nonsense out of these words of
Scripture. Furthermore, we are given no less than six items to ponder, which
reduce to three theological statements, namely
1. The Devil is imprisoned for 1,000 years, and thereafter released.
2. The faithful overcomers reign with Christ during this period of 1,000 years.
3. The rest of the dead have to wait until the 1,000 years is over before
attaining resurrection status.
We, as
human beings, have no certain knowledge of future dates. We cannot specify when
this period of time will begin. And it is doubtful whether anyone will be able
to pin-point the starting date even after it
has started. Ultra-literalists would then be unable to calculate the terminal
date. We must avoid this type of exercise.
However,
in the mind of God, there is both a beginning and an end to this period of
time, and it remains in His authority both to begin and to end the period. If
this were not so, then words would have no meaning.
On this
basis, to assume the necessity of spiritualising the time period becomes
questionable, to say the least. What valid reason can anyone have for saying
that 1,000 years does not mean 1,000 years but some other (often unspecified)
time interval? What better contender for rational thought can arise by saying
that 1,000 years means 500 years, 10 days, or 10,206 years? If we have
authority to change a simple statement to mean something "better" in
our own estimation, then we are taking a dangerous liberty. Without very cogent
reasons to the contrary, simple statements of Scripture should be allowed to
mean what they say. To do otherwise would be to adopt the position of the
Serpent in the Garden, - "Can it really be that God should have said . .
.?"
There are
other reasons for considering the Millennium to be 1,000 years.
1. At the
beginning of Revelation, John said that he was "in the spirit on
the Lord's day." I know there has
been a lot of speculation about the meaning of "the Lord's day", but
I find it passing strange to think that John merely meant Sunday (the usual
interpretation). In fact there is much to be said for "the Lord's
day" being Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath. But even this is without very
much clout. I think Dr. Bullinger had the correct view when he declared that
John was in the spirit in "the Day of the Lord," that
period of time specified by Old Testament prophets, which equates exactly with
the contents of the subsequent visions in Revelation.
This
being so, it suggests that there is a hidden symbolism within the plan of
the "week" in Genesis. Each of the "days" is prophetic of
1,000 years, the seventh period being that of the Sabbath, which is called "the
Day of the Lord," and referred to as Rest (a
Sabbatism) in Hebrews 4.
2. In
ancient times there were many Hebrew scholars who espoused this concept, and
became known as Chiliasts, a word deriving from the Greek for 'one thousand.'
I'll mention some passages that support this. First of all,
in the apocryphal Epistle of Barnabas, where we find the following. (Chapter 12.) "At the beginning of creation
God makes mention of the Sabbath . . . Consider what that signifies, He
finished them [i.e. works] in six days, that is in six
thousand years the Lord will bring all things to an end. For 'one
day with Him is as a thousand years', . . . And what
means it, 'He rested on the seventh day'? The
Son shall come and abolish the season of the wicked one .
. and shall gloriously rest in that seventh day. . . .
When resting from all things He shall begin the eighth day, the beginning
of the other world, for which we observe the eighth day with gladness, in which
Jesus rose from the dead."
Barnabas mentioned the verse in Psalm 90, quoted by Peter in one his
epistles, that "one day with the Lord is as a thousand years, and a
thousand years as one day."
Then we have the Feast of Tabernacles, the time of rejoicing after
harvest gathering. It was a seven-day feast, followed by an eighth day, "the
last day, the great day of the feast."
This caused Martha to say to Jesus, concerning Lazarus, "I know he
shall rise again in the resurrection on the last day." She
believed, along with many in Israel at that time, that the "general
resurrection" would be after the 7,000 years were over, corresponding
to the eighth thousand years. John, in Rev.20, stated that "the
rest of the dead" would have to wait until the 1,000 years expired. This
was confirmed to the Hebrew mind by circumcision, the 'putting away of the
flesh, 'being required on the eighth day.
3. Chronologists who try to assess the time interval from Adam to Christ find
their calculations more or less agreeing with Archbishop Ussher, in other words
approximately 4,000 years. (I am aware of the many who
prefer the longer period deduced from the Septuagint, but after doing some
extensive research on this subject, I found that there were many flaws in the
LXX chronology.) I believe the 4,000 years was shown in type by the days of
Passover. The Lamb was chosen on the 10th day, and slain on the 14th day. (The
four days representing 4,000 years) Our Lord was "chosen from
before the foundation of the world", but only appeared "in
the fullness of the times," 4,000 years later. And if Scripture
gives warrant to there being eight "days", then the Crucifixion occurred exactly midway in history.
4. Using the same system of interpretation, we find the prophet Hosea saying, (Chapter 5:15-6:2) "I will go and return to my place, till they have borne their guilt, and seek my face. In their affliction they will seek me earnestly, saying, Come, let us return to the Lord, for He has torn and He will heal us; He has stricken, and He will bind us up. After two days He will revive us, on the third day He will raise us up that we may live before Him." Have these "two days" represented the 2,000 years from Calvary until now? Possibly Hosea had some other more local interpretation in mind when God spoke to him, but as is frequent in prophecy, multiple fulfilments are possible, because prophecy is not the same as prediction. A prediction is fulfilled as soon as it occurs, but prophecy is an expression of God's mind, and He uses His words over and over again as occasion demands.
5. The
life of Noah is full of typological meaning. His name means "Rest."
He lived 600 years before the flood, and therefore his seventh century was on
the renewed earth, after passing unscathed through the judgment of the flood.
If his 600 years symbolise the 6,000 years of millennial history, then at the
end of 6,000 years we may expect a time of judgment, followed by a different
order in the world. This is exactly what the prophets tell us.
6. The "Cluster
effect." This is the name I give to significant events
that cluster round Millennial boundaries. God told
Adam that he would die "in the day that you eat" from
the tree of knowledge. In point of fact he died twice, first of all
when he "fell", and finally when he died at 930 years of age. Some 57
years later (in 987) Enoch was translated, and in 1056 Noah was born. These
three important events "cluster" around the first millennial
boundary.
The second millennial boundary finds Abram born at 1948, and Noah dying at
2006.
The third millennial boundary is marked by the building of Solomon's Temple at
approximately 3,000 (i.e. BC 1,000)
The fourth millennial boundary has the Lord being born BC2 and dying AD33.
Israel ceased as a nation in AD70.
The fifth is uneventful, but the sixth millennial boundary is noted for the
re-establishment of the Nation of Israel in AD1948, and the capture of
Jerusalem in AD 1967.
As a result of this study, it is clear that no major event actually clicks on
millennial boundaries, but the presence of "clusters" show us the
importance of millennial typology. It leaves us with the high probability of
the Lord establishing His Millennial Rest sometime soon. We are now living approximately
6,000 years from Adam. Nobody can produce a reliable date, however much
research they do, but we can be sure of the approximate duration. Hence we are
living in exciting times. The Millennial Rest could begin at any
time and there is therefore an added urgency for serious-minded believers
to be much before the Lord, to act like the wise virgins who were ready for any
eventuality, because "they knew not the hour". The foolish virgins thought
they knew, and therefore restricted their oil supply accordingly.