12/26/14

'He Shall Have Dominion'-The Increase of the Kingdom of God




Redemption progressively triumphs in history over reprobation”-Gentry





'He Shall Have Dominion' is an amazing presentation of what is probably the right theological response to the Bible. I think it is probably not possible to overstate the magnitude of difference of practical effects of preferring Gentry's post-millennialist viewpoint over the amillennialist, premillennialist and/or dispensationalist.

Though salvation is not directly affected by the choice of one or the other, one's works may well be adversely impacted in addition to which, the wrong choice might produce bad missiological, sociological and even political effects Following is a quote from Gentry on the topic taken from page 186...

quote”Redemption progressively triumphs in history over reprobation. The resurrection of Christ was and remains more powerful than the Fall of Adam: not just judicially but also culturally. This understanding of the power of Christ's resurrection and His ascension to the right hand of God is denied by amillennialism. The amillennialist sees the fall of Adam as by far the more powerful force in mankind's cultural development. He sees Christ's redemption as "souls-only, Church-only, Christian families-only." He draws the line at culture, which is to say, he draws a judicial boundary around the transforming power of the Gospel. This is because he has already drawn an eschatological
boundary around the transforming power of the Gospel.”-end quote


The table of contents for 'He Shall Have Domnion' can serve also as an outline for the book.

PART I: INTRODUCTION
1. The Significance of Eschatology
2. The Purpose of This Treatise
3. The Pessimistic Millennial Views .
4. Introduction to Postmillennialism
PART II: INTERPRETATION
5. The Revelation of Truth
6. The Covenants of Redemption
7. The Righteousness of God
8. The Hermeneutic of Scripture
PART III: EXPOSITION
9. Creation
10. Anticipation
11. Realization
12. Expansion
13. Consummation
PART IV: SPECIFICATION
14. Time Frames
15. Features
16. Characters
17. Revelation . .
PART V: OBJECTIONS
18. Pragmatic Objections
19. Theological Objections
20. Biblical Objections
PART VI: CONCLUSION
Concluding Remarks .
Appendix A: Cultural Antinomianism
Appendix B: Postmillennialism and Suffering”


In the 600 plus page exposition of post-millennialism (He Shall Have Dominion) and opposition to it largely from pre-millenialists and dispensationalists Kenneth Gentry points out one objection such that post-millennialism is too much like evolution theory and/or that post-millennialism isn't doom oriented sufficiently in the short-term. Nothing apocalyptic and exciting like a rapture or 7-year tribulation is going to happen (it happened in the 7th decade of the first century).

The 'thousand years' of Christ's reign (Revelation 20:2-7)...
A somewhat naturalistic and literal value reading of The Revelation tends to return a futurist and pre-millennial point of view. The false prophet Mohammad appears to have had a pre-millennialist point of Christian scripture. His father had been Keeper of the Ka'aba do comparative religion ran in the family and development of a syncretist interpretation of Judeo-Christian concepts was natural. If Muhammad derived his eschatology from a naive literal reading of The Revelation he wasn't the first or the last to do so.

Gentry believes the term 'thousand years' simply means 'a long, long time', and that it began with Jesus' victory over sin and death on the cross. The thousand years is the period of historical time following His earthly work, death and resurrection during which the kingdom of God will increase generally, to eventually include a majority of existing people.

Ladd says (a quote taken from Gentry;s book page 52) quote; "We must recognize frankly that in all the verses cited thus far it would seem that the eschatological Kingdom will be inaugurated by a single complex event, consisting of the Day of the Lord, the coming of the Son of Man, the resurrection of the dead, and the final judgment. However, in the one book which is entirely devoted to this subject, the Revelation of John, this time scheme is modified.... The theology that is built on this passage is millennialism or chiliasm.... This is the most natural interpretation of the [Rev. 20] passage, and it is the view of the present author. One thing must be granted: this is the only place in Scripture which teaches a thousand-year reign of Christ.”-end quote

In the midst of a persecution, the persecution of Emperor Nero described well by Gentry in his book 'The Beast of The Revelation', the Apostle John might well have regarded a thousand years as a vast period of time. Even today a thousand years to the year 3015 seems difficult to imagine in a way. What changes could happen in that distant future are hard to foresee-maybe the U.S. federal debt will be a quadrillion to the nth power? Would John be given a quirky number or a round number meaning 'a long, long time from now'? U.S. administrations use that sort of budget date for repayment setting forecasting all the time.

Post-Millennialism and The Olivet Discourse

The post-millennial approach to the Olivet Discourse requires a kind of pedagogical sobriety rather uncommon in contemporary Christian church education working a little counter-current to a common synthetic-natural way of interpretation. Christians have commonly been indoctrinated with a pre-millennial futurist context for end-times fulfillment. When one picks up a Bible and reads about end times knowing that one exists oneself there is a natural assumption that the end times haven't happened yet. Thus the end times that Jesus describes must pertain to the future, the reader's future, yet how so? Yet the reader is given the troubling statement of Jesus that all the things mentioned will occur before 'this generation passes'.

So the reader is presented with what are a few dubious choices the least harmful of which appears to be that 'this generation' means something besides 40 years or whatever a generation is.

Instead... a generation could mean something like an issuance of humanity per se- homo sapiens (with an interpretation before the Obama administration redefined the term) in the age of the gentiles and so forth. The time extended to indefinite meaning of generation supports the futurist account. This is quite natural in naive readings where the reader must account for an indoctrinated futurist pre-millennial perspective of what Jesus said.

That brings one to the requirement of a sober pedagogy with knowledge of first century Christian and Jewish history-something that most Sunday school teachers and more than a few ministers may lack. Correlating first century events with preterist hermeneutic analysis is not something one usually learns in church. Here is a quote of part of what Gentry wrote in 'He Shall Have Dominion' about preterism, the Olivet Discourse and hermeneutics (pages 161- 163).

quote-”In Matthew 23, Jesus sorely rebukes the “scribes and Pharisees" of His own day (Matt. 23:2f1), urging them finally to "fill up then the measure of your fathers" who killed the prophets (23:31-32). Christ says that they are a "generation" of vipers (23:33) that will persecute and slay His disciples (23:34). He notes that upon them will come all the righteous blood shed on the earth (23:35). He then dogmatically asserts: "[V]erily I say unto you, all these things shall come upon this generation" (23:36).

Then, in Matthew 23:37-24:2, Jesus weeps over Jerusalem, and declares that its temple will be destroyed, stone-by-stone, despite His disciples' surprise. It is of these things that the disciples ask, "When shall these things be?" As a matter of
historical record we know the temple was destroyed, stone by stone, in August, A.D. 70.

Second, its express temporal indicators demand it. We must not miss the clear references to the contemporary expectation. Enclosing the relevant portion of the discourse, we have Christ's own time-element designation. In 23:36, he dogmatically asserts "all these things shall come upon this generation." He closes the relevant portion of the prophecy by repetition of the time frame: Matthew 24:34 says, "Verily I say unto you, this generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled." And just forty years later Jerusalem was destroyed! Contextually the "this generation" of Matthew 24:34 must speak of the same idea as that of Matthew 23:36.

In verse 34, the matter is solemnly affirmed by Christ. He is quite dogmatic when He begins a statement with: "verily." Thus, Christ emphatically draws the disciples' attention to what He is about to say, just as He did in 24:2, where He made the statement that led to the whole discourse.

In addition, the dogmatism of His statement is further underscored. He does not just tell them; He emphatically introduces what He is about to say by saying, "I tell you." He has not left the temporal expectation to them to figure out. Furthermore, the literal rendering of the Greek reads: "Truly I tell you that by no means passes away generation this until all these things happen." The "by no means" is a strong, double negative (ou me). Jesus places it early in His statement for added emphasis. He is staking His credibility, as it were, on the absolute certainty of this prophetic pronouncement. But what does He so dogmatically and carefully tell them?

Whatever the difficult apocalyptic imagery in some of the preceding verses (e.g., vv. 29-31) may indicate, Jesus dearly says that "all these things" will occur before "this generation" passes away. He employs the near demonstrative for the fulfillment of verses 2-34: these events will come upon "this generation:' He uses the far demonstrative in 24:36 to point to the Second Advent: "that day." The coming "tribulation" (24:21; cf. Rev. 1:9) was to come upon "this generation" (23:36; 24:34; cr. 1 Thess. 2:16) and was to be foreshadowed by certain signs (24:4-8). But the Second Advent was to be at "that" far day and hour, and was not to be preceded by particular signs of its nearness, for no man can know it (24:-36). Preterism is well-established in Matthew 24:3-34, as many early church fathers recognized.”-end quote

One should be familiar with Gentry's philosophical perspective on the Bible and God regarding ontology and not just his eschatological views. This I think may be accomplished briefly with a quote from He Shall Have Dominion ...

page 102 quote-”Since the universe is permeated by the very presence of God (1 Kgs. 7: 17; Jer. 23:23-24), the Christian world view necessitates that we live in an ultimately personal universe. On the Christian view the universe does not operate under its own internal power (naturally), but under the constant direction of the ever-present God (supernaturally). What scientists call "natural law" is actually "divine providence." God governs the ebb and flow of history and determines the purpose and the end of all things. He "works all things according to the counsel of His will" (Eph. 1: lIb). The universe and earth history exist for the glory of God and are being controlled to that end. The universe exists neither of itself nor for itself. God's omnipotence and omniscience guarantee that the ultimate outcome of the sum total of all the events of history will conform to His plan or counsel, despite the railings of man and resistance of Satan. God's will cannot be thwarted.”-end quote

I agree with the concept, and think that it is consistent with a spirit-creates-packets of-energy-quanta physics paradigm for quantum cosmology in a Leibnitzian monadology kind of way though not limited to that paradigm. Gentry takes the six days of creation as literal while I would say that God did not exist in days but created them as derivatives of setting the Universe, stars and world to evolve. I think God can evolve things according to His design and I would guess that a billion years to God might be like a day relativistically speaking where any given Universe is a wink in the eye of atemporal eternity.





The Cultural Mandate
The Cultural Mandate is an important concept in Gentry's post-millennialism. The cultural mandate is something like an equivalent weltanshauung to that of dispensationalism regarding how God interacts with people in history. And where Christian are now in history as far as what they ought to be doing and what they can expect in the future. It is a kind of applied teleology with its methods and purposes rather plain and drawn from Biblical exegesis.

I will quote Gentry on select exegetical elements of the Cultural Mandate expressed in the pre-Mosaic and early Mosaic years from pages 187-189...

quote;” The various features of the Noahic Covenant are found in Genesis 6: 17-22 and 8:20-9: 17. In this covenant, we have a clear reaffirmation of the Cultural Mandate, which is fundamental to the outworking of God's eschatological purpose through man. l We also have a continuance of God's gracious
1. Cf. the references to the birds, cattle, etc. (Gen. 6:20; 8: 17 with Gen. 1:24, 25), redemptive relation as the ongoing basis of the Cultural Mandate, which is likewise necessary to eschatology. This covenant is established with God's people: the family of Noah, who alone escaped the deluge by the grace of God.
Thus, this should not be deemed solely a common-grace covenant, for it was directly made with God's people (Noah's family), was established on the basis of grace and redemptive sacrifice (Gen. 6:8; 8:20-22), and is united with God's other redemptive covenants (cf. Hos. 2: 18 with Gen. 6:20; 8: 17; 9:9ff).

The Cultural Mandate, then, has an especial relevance to the function of God's people in the world: the Noahic reaffirmation of the Mandate is expressly made with God's people, the "you" of Genesis 9:1-12. On the basis of divine covenant, God's people are called to the forefront of cultural leadership, with the religious aspects of culture being primary.

In the Noahic covenantal episode, we also witness the objectivity of God's relationship with man: the world was judged in history for its sin. The rainbow, which signifies God's covenant mercy, is established with Noah and all that are with him, and their seed (Gen. 9:12).4 This indicates that the world will be protected from God's curse through the instrumentality of the Church (the people of God). This covenant is only made indirectly with unbelievers, who benefit from God's protection only as they are not opposed to God's people. Because of God's love for His people, He preserves the orderly universe (Gen. 8:20-22). His enemies serve His people: common grace (Gen. 9: lOb).

the command to "be fruitful and multiply" (Gen. 9:1, 7 with Gen. 1:28), and the dominion concept (d. Gen. 9:2 with Gen. 1:28). 2. O. Palmer Robertson, The Christ of the Covenants (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian & Reformed, 1980), p. 111. He refers to L. Dequeker, "Noah and Israel. The Everlasting Divine Covenant with Mankind," Questions disputees d'Ancien Testament, Metlwde et Theologie (Gembloux, 1974), p. 119. 3. James B. Jordan, "True Dominion," Biblical Horizons, Special Edition (Dec. 1990), p. 1. Cf. Robertson, Christ of the Covenants, p. 111. 4. It seems that the rainbow did not exist prior to this time. Apparently, the Flood was the first instance of rain (and the rainbow): Genesis 2:5-6.

Thus we see the objective corporate sanction of God against sin in the Flood, which also serves as a type of Final Judgment (2 Pet. 3:4-6). We also see God's judicial sanctions in history in His ordaining of capital punishment (Gen. 9:6). God's objective judgment therefore finds civil expression in the affairs of man.
His grant of legitimate authority to the civil government to enforce capital punishment is based on a religious principle, namely, the image of God in man (Gen. 9:6), and is given to the world through the Church (ire., Noah's family).5 God ordains civil sanctions as a means for preserving the human race
for His redemptive purposes (cf. Rom. 13:1-4; 1 Pet. 2:13-14).”-end quote

Cultural Mandate in the Abrahamic Era
Gentry's exegetical insight is superior. I think perhaps that before was is overwhelmed by pre-millennial eschatology in popular society and church that it is possible that long-time familiarity with the Bible might instill a point of view in the reader closer to a post-millennial perspective, yet with so much time passed since the first century it is easy to understand how one may approach its historical material with an incorrect viewpoint. Pre-millennialists can consider the revelation as if it were a kind of entirely futurist magic book of prophecy-a book like that of Nostradamus that hasn't happened yet instead of a practical book of prophecy relevant to first century Christians especially. The prophecies were largely fulfilled confirming the veracity of the Apostle John as a prophet. The post-mill perspective also gives Jesus additional prophetic, prescient statement recognition with accuracy in sayings such as that from Matthew 24 about the carcase and eagles in reference to Jerusalem, the Temple and Roman eagle-bearing ensigns of the conquerors. 24:28 :For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together.”

Following is a lengthy quote from Gentry describing further the evolution or outline of the Cultural Mandate in history...

from pages 289-192... 
quote; “As the scarlet thread of redemption - a non-literal metaphor- is progressively woven more distinctively into the fabric of Scriptural revelation and history, the eschatological pattern of redemptive victory becomes more evident and more specific. The patriarchal and Mosaic eras demonstrate this. fact. Here I will survey a few of the more significant references in these eras
in order to illustrate this truth.

In Genesis, the Abrahamic Covenant continues the redemptive theme begun in Genesis 3:15 and traced through Genesis 6-9. The active redemptive restoration of the fundamental relationship of man with the God of the covenant is greatly intensified through God's establishing of His gracious covenant with Abra-
ham and his seed: "Now the LORD had said to Abram: 'Get out of your country, from your family and from your father's house, to a land that I will show you. I will make you a great nation; I will bless you and make your name great; and you
shall be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who curses you' " (Gen. 12:1-3a). Here we may discern three aspects of the promise: the promise

5. This does not mean that the institutional Church has the authority to execute
criminals.

applies to (1) a seed,6 (2) a land,? and (3) the nations. The land and seed promises are given prominence in Genesis 15:5 and 18: "Then He brought [Abram] outside and said, 'Look now toward heaven, and count the stars if you are able to number them.' And He said to him, 'So shall your descendants
be.' On the same day the LORD made a covenant with Abram, saying: 'To your descendants I have given this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the River Euphrates' " (Gen. 15: 18). This promise was covenantal, for it involved sanctions. The divine promise clearly involved temporal blessings for
Abraham, including a seed and a land. According to the emphatic declaration of the Scriptures, history witnesses the fulfillment of the national aspects of the temporal blessings of the seed 9 and the land 10 promises. ':Judah and Israel were as numerous as the sand by the sea in multitude.... So Solomon reigned over all kingdoms from the River to the land of the Philistines, as far as the border of Egypt" (1 Kgs. 4:20-21). "So the LORD gave to Israel all the land of which He had sworn to give to their fathers, and they took possession of it and dwelt in
it.... Not a word failed of any good thing which the LORD had spoken to the house of Israel" Josh. 21 :43, 45). "You also multiplied their children as the stars of heaven, and brought them into the land which You had told their fathers to go in
and possess" (Neh. 9:23). The dispensationalist argues for a future fulfillment based on the promise that God will give Abraham the land "forever"
(Gen. 13:15), as an "everlasting" possession (Gen. 17:8). 32:12.7.8.Gen.
12:2; 13:16; 15:5; 16:10; 17:2-6; 18:18; 22:17;cf. Gen.20:4; 28:4, 14;
Gen. 12:2,7; 13:15,17; 15:7, 18; 24:7; cf. Gen. 28:4.Gen. 12:3; 18:18; 22:18; d. Gen. 26:4; 28:14. See also the prophetic and New Testament era development of this universal theme. 9. Exo. 12:37; Num. 22:11; Deut. 1:10; 10:22; 1 Kgs. 4:20; 1 Chr. 27:23; 2 Chr. 1:9; Heb. 11 :12. Notice that Christ is the special seed, John 8:56. 10. 1 Kgs. 4:21; 8:65-66; 2 Chr. 9:26.

This argument is not persuasive, however. In the first place, there is a common use of olam ("forever/everlasting") where it is employed of long-term temporal situations. l l Secondly, it is evident that God's covenants and promises are conditioned upon ethical obedience, even when this is not specifically stated: no conditions-no covenant. "It is the conditional nature of all prophecy that
makes the outcome contingent on the ethical decisions of men.,,12 For instance, Jonah was clearly told that Nineveh would be overthrown in forty days Jon. 3:4), yet God "repented" of His determination Jon. 3: 10),13

The Abrahamic Covenant was conditioned on the ethical obligation to "keep the way of the Lord" (Gen. 18:17-19).14 This is why it was accompanied by circumcision. Israel's forfeiture of the Land promised in the Abrahamic Covenant was clearly possible, as God's Word makes abundantly clear. Consequently, we must understand the biblical view of the land. The land of Israel is "His holy Land" (Lev. 25:23; Psa. 78:54). It depended on His favor upon Israel (Hos. 9:3; Jer. 2:7) and His dwelling therein (Num. 35:34; Lev. 26), which continued as long as Israel was obedient to Him (Deut. 4:40; Isa. 1:19; Jer. 15:13-14; 17:1-4). When Israel is rejected by God, the promise of the Land is rejected by God: sanctions.
11. Exo. 12:14; 40:15; Num. 25:13; 2 Chr. 7:16.

"Figuratively also the term is applied to objects of impressive stability and long duration, as mountains, hills (e.g. Gen 49:26; Hab 3:6)." James Orr, "Everlasting," The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. James Orr, ed., 5 vols. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, [1929] 1956),2:1041. 12. Gary North, Millennialism and Social Theory (Tyler, 'IX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1990), p. 120. B. B. Warfield, "The Prophcies of St. Paul" (1886), Biblical and Theological Studies (Philadelphia: Presbyterian & Reformed, 1952), pp. 470ff. Sidney Greidanus, The Modem Preacher and the Ancient Text: Interpreting and Preaching Biblical Literature (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988), pp. 232ff. 13. Cf. also 1 Sam. 2:30; Isa. 38:1-6; Jer. 26:13-19; Joel 2:13-14. See: Kenneth Jones, ''An Amill Reply to Peters," Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 24:4 (Dec. 1981) 333-341. 14. Cf. Gen. 17:9-14; 22:18; 26:5; Heb. 11:8. 15. Exo. 19:5; Deut. 28:15ff; 30:5-19; Lev. 26:14ff; Josh. 8:34; 24:20 1 Kgs. 2:3,4; 9:2-9; 11:11; 2 Kgs. 21:8; 1 Chr. 28:76; 2 Chr. 7:19-22; Jer. 18.192

Furthermore, the Promised Land served as a type of the whole earth (which is the Lord's, Psa. 24:1). It is, as it were, a tithe to the Lord of the entire earth. As such, it pictured the rest brought by Christ's kingdom, which shall cover the earth (see Hebrews 3-4). "Hebrews 11 :8-16 shows that although Abraham received the physical land of Canaan, he was looking forward to the eternal city and Kingdom of God. Canaan is a type of the new heavens and earth that began with the first advent of Christ, in seed form (Gal. 4:26; Heb. 12:22-29)."16 In Psalm 37: 11, the psalmist speaks of God's promise to His people: "But the meek shall inherit the land." But Jesus takes this promise and extends it over the entire earth in Matthew 5:5! Abraham apparently understood the land promise as a down payment
representing the inheriting of the world (Rom. 4:13). Paul expands the Land promises to extend across all the earth, when he draws them into the New Testament (Eph. 6:3). In several divine covenants, we can trace the expansion of these Land promises: Adam was given a garden (Gen. 2:8); Abraham's seed
was given a nation (Josh. 1); the New Covenant Church was given the world (Matt. 28:18-20),17 But the fundamental blessedness of the Abrahamic Covenant, like that of the Adamic Covenant before it, was essentially redemptive rather than political. The seed line was primarily designed to produce the Savior; the Land promise was typological of the Savior's universal dominion.

The Abrahamic Covenant involved a right relationship with God, as indicated in
Genesis 17:7: "And I will establish My covenant between Me and you and your descendants after you in their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and your descendants after you." That which is most important in the plan of God is the spiritual relation, rather than the relation of blood
(John 16. W. Gary Crampton, "Canaan and the Kingdom of God - Conclusion,"
Journey 6 (Jan./March 1991) 19. 17. See my The Greatness of the Great Commission: The Christian Enterprise in a Fallen World (Tyler, 'IX: Institute for Christian Economics. 1990). 1938:44, cf. Matt. 12:47,50).

As Paul says, so it was even in the Old Testament era: "[H]e is not a Jew who is one outwardly, nor is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh; but he is a Jew who is one inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart, in the Spirit, and not in the letter" (Rom. 2:28-29).18

Now let us consider the postmillennial victory expectations inherent in the Abrahamic Covenant. The redemptive line is here narrowed from "the seed of the woman" to the family of Abraham. It will continue to narrow until it issues forth in the singular seed, Christ (Gal. 3:16; John 8:56; cr. Luke 3:23-38).
Nevertheless, the redemptive promise ultimately would include"all the families of the earth."19 The Hebrew word for "families" here is mispachah, which includes nations. 20 Thus, the Abrahamic Covenant will include the nations beyond Israel.

The ultimate purpose of the Abrahamic Covenant, in keeping with the
Adamic Covenant earlier, is nothing less than world conversion
(as we shall point out more particularly in our next section), rather than Jewish exaltation, as per dispensationalism. 21 This should be expected since the Lord is King of the whole earth and desires the world to know Him.”-end quote

He Shall Have Dominion goes beyond eschatology or as Gentry says, what shall be. It also describes ethics and especially Christian ethics. As a particular Biblical hermaneutic may develop a particular world view, and I like the idea of explanation drawn from John 10:9 asking if Jesus is a literal door or has a literal pasture inside, a world view may pre-determine ethics. Gentry presents “three models for Christian world view” on page 123. These are the identificationist, transformationist and separatist.

Gentry places a Christianity and Bible desalted with cultural relativism within the identificationist camp. Churches might use something like an adaptive social gospel and is quite worldly. The separatists I would guess tend to be pre-millenialists and retreatists from worldly affairs in an ostrich kind of way awaiting the Lord to deliver them even as the withdrawal from cultural constructions throws accelerants onto the growing social fires of temporal hell.

Transformationists fit within the post-millennial camp and assent to theonomy. Gentry believes that the tri-une unity who is God in three persons has a covenant-based relation to mankind and that fundamentally Christians are to work to make the world a better and Christian place in accord with the will of God. Obviously this is an excellent theology for missiology endeavors and I think would work fine with a more egalitarian priesthood of believers ecclesiastical reform movement.

Gentry's description on page 128 of an ethical continuum from God within which Christians need to cohere comprises a meta-ethical context or selection. It excludes even non-Christian theistic ethics as having value in respect of the right theonomous ethical ensemble. I agree though I note that non-Christians ethics do matter to secular society and that they are not to be entirely discounted. Gentry believes that Christians of the reformed, post—millennial kind ought to be transformers of society from bad to good and that would make the inference easy that encouraging better ethics for the lost might be useful as an intermediate step in the road to progress for a fallen world beyond the kingdom of God.

As heroin addicts are sometimes encouraged to use methadone to wean themselves off of the addicting narcotic, a Christian seeking to transform the life of a heroine addict might support that intermediate methadone ethical choice though it is outside of a Christian ethic perhaps. It might be difficult to transform the doper directly to sanctified redemption with faith in God and the Lord instantly in a road-to-Damascus kind of way though not impossible. Working to transform the social environment closer unto God may mean improving the basic ethical, material and environmental conditions for mankind such that pervasive conditions of squalor, starvation, oppression, persecution, amorality and unethical conduct are reduced. It may be easier for people to be saved with fewer of the sharp edges of life cutting them up demographically speaking. After being saved if a priesthood of believers structure exists as a peer group to reinforce their new-found Christian ethical understanding the minions of Sodom and Gomorrah outside trading stocks and lives on Wall Street with the support of a new imperial Caesar like populist advocating rapacious corporate capitalism as the highest good may not have such a withering effect upon theonomous moral development phenomenally. The puritans had some that were post-millenialists and it was thus tested in-the-wilderness.

Premillennialism is comparable to stock market forecasters predicting a vast stock market crash followed by a 7-year tribulation where the anti-Christ rules or maybe his beast. Then the world as we know it ends with the Second Coming of Christ who sorts things out positively. Though the 2008 Wall Street meltdown is a loose scaled-down model of some aspects of pre-mill visions history provided innumerable other examples of boom and bust socio-economic cycles with corrupt leaders and corrupt morals. Post-millennialists are somewhat more optimistic.

Post-millennialists (remaining in the stock market metaphor) are like investors who believe the market's long term trend is upward though there may be occasional crashes. All of the worst doom of tribulation occurred in the 1929 crash and the stage was set for-long term increase. When the market has fulfilled its role serving humanity the Lord will appear to take things farther (and reward the lost with their abode in hell and outer darkness maybe gnashing teeth).

The market trend metaphor for long-term increase of people being saved and a Christian social environment prevailing could be fulfilled on or off world. Perhaps for a time amoral evolutionism woos those desiring change to such an extent that a reprobate planetary environment becomes normal. Maybe networks of plutocrats will crush free expression and wars and rumors of wars will become televised or live entertainment on the Internet or smart phones however in the long-term Christianity will increase and at the real end time the tares of anti-Christian sewn in the midst of the temporal association of the kingdom of God will be gathered and burned. For post-millennialists Jesus will return physically at the end of days yet he is already here living spiritually in the hearts and souls of those that have been born again in the spirit.

Gentry quote page 128-”Man's sanctification (moral restoration) is definitive, progressive, and final. One God, one covenant law: through time and across borders. The successive covenants of Scripture really record for us a gradual historical unfolding of one overarching covenant, rather than the successive, compartmental establishing of distinctively different capsule covenants. This is clearly expected in the initial covenant directive of God for history that flows out of the Genesis 3:15 curse, which mentions only one basic struggle between two seeds, the Satanic and the Messianic. This also is clearly asserted in Paul's argument in Ephesians, chapter 2. In this passage, Paul speaks not of the establishing of a new and distinct community separate from Israel, but of God's
annexing of additional people - the Gentiles - into His one people.
He speaks in verse 12 of "the covenants of the promise" (Greek), which defined His singular purpose. In verses 14-16, he speaks of the removal of the dividing wall between Jew and Gentile, so that the Gentiles might be included in God's one redemptive purpose. In verses 19-22, he speaks of the merging of these two peoples into one, indivisible temple. Thus, the very unity of God's covenantal dealings with man flows out of the unitary being of God, as well as the explicitly revealed plan of God. These truths should predispose us to assume continuity, as opposed to discontinuity, in the ethical dictates of God.”-end quote

Life is important to the lost as well as to the saved. A right theonomous meta-ethic is actualized with a de facto dual ethical operating system-even a pagan and doomed one, existent outside the kingdom of God. Christians must be as wise as serpents and gentiles as doves in understanding that a transformational ethics needs to work simultaneously in two realms-that of the actualizing City of God and the contemporaneous City of Man. Secular ethics like secular food products have various degrees of quality and it is worth while understanding that like the difference between a modern transportation system with super-conductors and Geo-thermal energy that does not require roads or automobiles and creating zero pollution is better than a seashore of granular automobiles belching exhaust over invasive roads destroying the ecospheric health some secular ethical practices are better than others.

For instance it is better to have a democracy than a tyranny or corporatist oligarchy generally though none are associated with Christian theonomy. It is better for Ebola to be medically combated in West Africa than to be indifferent. A Christian may have the power to support secular ethical positions pro or con in some cases without a relationship to a theonomous choice. If there is an element of theonomous ethic in the choice it might be that the Christian would seek for the good and that phenomenon is given through grace. Besides the Christian theonomous ethical choice and ideas that arise that seem rather evident the intellectual element of selections in-the-world between material policy directives that a Christian makes will perhaps be directed toward the good. One might hypothesize that though God is the autonomous good, Christians pursuing actualization of the good might seek after human health, human liberty, human reason, intellectual development and ecosphere health in order to support a sustainable platform whereat any soul may have an uncoerced opportunity to seek after the ways of God and find the Lord.

Gentry notes the importance of covenants between God and man in placing a context for human existence and end times. He pointed out where in the Old Testament those covenants are made, quote from page 109- “history-structuring divine covenants of epochal significance in Scripture are those established with Adam (Hos. 6:7), Noah (Gen. 6:18),9 Abraham (Gen. 15:18),10 Israel (Exo. 24:8), and David (Psa. 89:3). Off in the future from the Old Testament
perspective lay the glorious, final, consummative "New Covenant" Ger. 31:31-34)”-end quote.

In the social gospel apparently the idea of progress of the Universe through evolution or change (change to American Democrats seems to mean 'gay') is associated with all things secular and materialist rather than spiritual; so in some way an interpretive paradigm of the Revelation and Christian eschatology that is comparatively optimistic is by pre-mil default regarded as of the Darwinian condo.

One readily discerns that issues of evolution and eschatology are not simply of ecclesiastical or academic interest. The Presbyterian Church U.S.A.'s June 2014 vote to doctrinally approve homosexual marriage demonstrates slippage into apostasy that can occur with socially natural causality. Corrupting politicians and persons may reduce social morals to a compote useful for scientific manipulation by elites bereft of moral concerns.

I should say that I view the 2nd law of thermodynamics and various interpretive time literals for the physical cosmos as packed with subjectivism and preponderantly de trop for finding the truth about a schedule of eschatological events that aren't as knowable prima facie as the date of the 2030 Super Bowl.

Space-time and Einstein's General and Special theory parameters cohere within a theistic absolute space that is timeless yet there may be contingent meta-time structures or even contingent dimensional space-times within which a given Universe may exist. Finding which one is most suitable for associating with a given interpretation of a correct version of Genesis to discover or infer facts about physical cosmology seems a poetic endeavor yet a journey fun enough to make. Rosenberg's view of Genesis and it's construction and meaning differs from others. I would think that most pre-mill believers do not regard Genesis as arising from a prevalent residual pre-history of the Persian Gulf region's catastrophic flood of a proto-civilization that was also told in the tale of Gilgamesh and perhaps elsewhere. Naive secularists with Biblical replacement therapy policy tend to assume the Bible implicitly has pre-mill and Usherian construction.

Eschatology to many means a prophetic vision of the end times of either the world or its people. Alternatively it may refer to the end of a civilization or even the Universe. Traditionally eschatology has been regarded as something more of a religious field -although in the early times of mankind before vast right-wing polysyllabic words arose that could describe with a sociological objectivity human areas of belief such as might be regarded as religious end times eschatology could also be said to have included a unified field of primitive religio-philosophic-physical speculations about the nature of the experienced world-environment. Thus Ragnarök and Brahma along with the plain of Tilmun were out there with Janus the Door goddess and the vast turtle of labor carrying the world upon its back. At least like Aristarchus the idea of a rotation of the Earth or land was a primary element of the explanation.

The 2nd law of thermo dynamics has a highly order initial configuration of the Universe perhaps at a singularity expanding-releasing its initial endowment of energy and order in a dispersion that produced particles, stars, molecules and eventually life and even sentient life. If one thinks about that somewhat philosophically it seems easy to realize that it would be easier to configure living beings in an environment whereat there is a fixed initial endowment of energy that disperses yet may cluster and cohere to build more complex and temporally stable physical structures. If the opposite environment prevailed where new energy was flowing into a Universe continually from one or all possible locations that energy might tend to break-up or radiate out existing forms making life and coherent structure more unlikely. God might choose to configure a given environment with a particular quantitative endowment and let it proceed. Of course the nature of mass and energy perhaps is ultimately spiritual so in some senses there is a continuing presence of God through the history of the Universe though the Universe has a given material pattern. There are limits to what a human can know directly or even through inference of the Universe.

Humanity never developed a comprehensive explanation for the reason that the Universe exist nor did it find an exhaustive, unimpeachable description of the physical boundaries. Instead it learned that time is an implicit characteristic of matter that is itself convertible to energy explaining rather nicely I suppose that energy can present a time aspect when it becomes matter and loses it inversely as it converts to energy. Cosmologists can speculate perhaps if time was included in finite quantity at an initial singularity with alpha and omega being equal or if energy existed at singularity or mass and if it was a finite quantity and is so, why? Why did an initial denouement of energy or mass filling the singularity cut off at a particular place without having exhausted the initial supply?

Gentry wrote on page 440 of 'He Shall Have Dominion'-Historically, this alleged association of evolutionary thought with post-millennial theology has ignored the fact that both a developed post-millennialism (e.g., the Puritans), as well as nascent post-millennialism (e.g., Athanasius), arose well before scientific evolutionism, which is generally dated from the publication of Darwin's Origin of Species (1859). Historically, it may more forcibly be argued that the evolutionist stole from the post-millennial idea of progress rather than vice versa.

Christian eschatology has three fundamental fields on the reformed side of things. One is a premillennialist belief that John's Book of Revelation described future events that mostly haven't yet happened. That viewpoint has some logical difficulties. One is that for the saved Jesus lives in a real sense in their spirit in some mysterious way. That indwelling spirit is the being born again belief and is the first resurrection post-mills believe. Logically it might be absent from the pre-millennialist paradigm wherein Jesus won't appear until the end time. There is something of a different criteria for the kingdom of God existing in part right now on Earth too.

Post-millennialists believe along the lines wherein Jesus said that the Kingdom of God is within you,that the kingdom of God is drawing in new believers and that the world will gradually increase the number of Christians until the real end times that could be soon or way down the road even unto the distant future (when the time of the gentiles is fulfilled). Christians in the post-mill scenario are a dampening of the doom that results from a pagan or atheistic world that is always seeking to increase its power. Christians should eventually become a majoritarian polity though evil still does exist in-the-world.

One might regard the fact that it requires just a small minority of Bolsheviks or terrorists to throw a wrench into social stability or establishment even when the establishment is a corrupt or oppressive minority itself; evil minorities are historically not uncommon ruling political powers seeking to expropriate the private property and economic independence empirically in order to establish networking collectives dominated by oligarchy, plutonomy, aristocracy or dictatorship. Annihilating marriage designed to protect the poor and middle-class interests in order to theoretically reconfigure society to a spineless white meat boneless product increasing profits for the rich is a usual method for turning the clock back to the year zero socially speaking so that the timer may begin all over again to the drummer bought and paid for by the sponsors. When these sorts of things happen believers may look for one coming in the clouds to change the changlings back to a less politically antipathetic form.

End times paradigms exist thus in many contexts. Some require active human participation, others have a deterministic fatalism such that it is all pre-determined clockwork ticking along like a wave of bombs biding there time until explosion. Some are of a Universal and physical kind-a third kind one might say, without a plain end-somewhat silly for an end-times theory I will note.

Cosmologists with humble and uncertain origins of the singularity that started the big band or inflaton or collision of symbolic membranes such as occurs in the 1812 Overture may consider the end of the Universe as a very distant future event that would be the conclusion of the highly organized energy at the start of the Universe that expanded losing its organizational coherence in the time-process and ran down to a cold and low energy state with matter perhaps as energy dispersed in powerless isolation as basic elements. Whatever it is that make up quarks-perhaps one-dimension brains-would be equally spaced away from each other perhaps a few trillion miles and that could be said to be an uncertain yet probable end time.

Except that evolution as a process of degradation of organization materially speaking could evolve not more complex forms on the way to the cold dead end, it could evolve non-existence at any time too. There is no guarantee that evolution could not move molecules or quarks to some mysterious presently yet pre-determined configuration that poofs mass and energy into coherence again with a return to the One singularity. Coherence is sort of an odd word as physicists use it for cosmology and quantum affairs. They regard mass as a kind of entanglement of energy quanta in a field that decohered from the field to take the form of mass (matter) as if it were a sacrificial lamb found by Abraham in a bush to take the place of a son for a sacrifice, or better-a cosmology theory to sacrifice.

I am not very comfortable with the idea of energy quanta existing decohered from a meta-Higgs field yet still going through the hoops of a singularity and expansion as degrading organization with some life formation from complex, expensive molecule on the way-it seems a little like having two different theories in one that makes one or the other so contingent that it is hard to be fashionably cool. If one knows that a particular cosmology theory is something of a joke-or at least a little Buddhist illusion resembling yet still real, it is challenging to take it as seriously as if it were a ninja turtle carrying the world on its back.

Energetic particles of quanta have existing forces such as the strong force that keeps quarks together. It is hard to imagine how they would break down. In a Higgs and meta-Higgs field however all things are possible for the imagination at least.

In the end of the universe isolated quanta would still exist in a meta-field and might be regarded as the final phase of decoherence before returning unto the one true field of fields. Maybe only only in complete end times isolation could an energetic quanta be so relativistically dissociated from other particles that it could be considered to be matter-as-energy for-itself. Energy however seems like an event instead of a thing. Energy must be some sort of intrusion through micro-entanglement into the space of nothingness that humans regard as the Universe. So when it is really run down that field fluctuation return generally produces nothing for observers entangled in the field to observe nor any observers either. It makes philosophical writers wonder what is happening on the other side of the field that yielded the entangled state of energy that seems to be the matter of this Universe,-or perhaps, what is happening all the time 'up there' in the heaven beyond the quanta entangled in a steady state form that seems to be this Universe?

The answer to what a sponsoring field is like isn't that of a myriad Universes. A myriad Universes could be produced simultaneously or in an order and progressive profusion however that would be beside the point in question such that one wonders if the field progenitor of Universes with an abundance of energy sufficient to light up a infinite number of Universe into being has much of a concern about how much time it takes (just kidding).

There are some controversies about all of the various forms and potentials for end times scenarios synthetic and given by Revelation. There are those who trust a particular theory and desire the extinction of any sort of rival theory of course however with the all things must pass thought in mind the astute interpreter of end times theories may find that though some seem to have more merit than others none are entirely comprehensive nor even necessarily mutually exclusive and exhaustive as the very interpretive terms and literal values of rival theories may be in error or inaccurately understood. That amazes one considering how God could keep track of all of the various theories of end-times for-Himself.

Jesus Christ as the way to renormalize the spirit unto a form acceptable with God transcends the time whorls and relativistic networks of space-time and potential space-time that are circumstantial formations of the physical cosmos. Reason overcomes evolution in a sense always transcending and surpassing its deterministic parameters in some senses yet remains within it as a product or quality of the field-entanglement itself. Quantum uncertainty within the field and within the mind of an individual may be enabling conditions that let the soul or living identity of an individual in-the-field become within the transcending kingdom-of-God even while remaining within the steady state decoherence of the Universe-field quanta. When the worldly existence of an individual or of the species will end is difficult to know exactly yet be assured that there are a number of elements working to bring that situation to exist if unintentionally through economically fueled mass extinctions and global warming gas emissions. One never knows though perhaps 'we shall overcome'.

Exploring Consequences of Eschatological Point of View to Global Warming Response

Three basic paradigms for interpreting end times an apocalypse for world civilization exist in protestant Christian eschatology. I wonder how each might interact with the best present empirical end-times inducer: Global Warming? Not only must scientists and the shade tree mech. measure the parts per million of greenhouse gases and oceanographers the temperature of the oceans; social scientists and theologians, philosophers and politicians must consider how to measure the body politics's attitudes toward global warming, its relationship to economics, theology and their willingness to change or even to understand the public domain issues and ways the end of days* could effect them.

Those Christians-largely evangelicals that believe the apocalypse is yet ahead and will occur when and anti-Christ appears and a great tribulation occurs at the start of which Christians will be raptured into the sky and away from the world's doom like kids in a movie theater transported to the snack bar during the scary scene perhaps have a fatalist vision of greenhouse gas emission comparable to that of people that log old growth forest and destroy ecosystems; indifference because the world is doomed anyway and God will make a new world later anyway.

Amillenialists tend to view some of the events of the Revelation prophecy as having already happened yet not entirely. Generally amillennialists are opposed to post-millennialists who have the view that the events of the first century during the reign of Nero unto the destruction of the Temple in a.d. 70 largely yet nit entirely fulfilled the prophecy. Post-millennialists believe the world should now be in an indeterminate time of Christian evangelization, peace, harmony and working together to make the world a better place. Amillennialists generally dissent with that and are somewhat more of a recurrent doom point of view with perennial struggle for Christians against forces of evil.

Because amillennialists have something of a culture-kampf perspective they are perhaps too concerned with a dualistic viewpoint of good and evil to take a side on something like global warming that is largely a secular issue. Amillennialists like pre-millenialists tend to discredit empirical reality in a Buddhist like manner-it is contingent being and not too worthy of regard. One might expect millennialism however to combat evil more so than the rather defeatist premillennialist camp. The trouble with amillenialists is that there view of evil is perhaps largely based upon issues coinciding with social politics and matters of how one treats Christian amillennialists financially. Fortune 500 descendants of Presbyterians may treat the amillenialists rather well while Godless evolutionists of the left don't. The left has adroitly expropriated the anti-global warming issue for themselves from the corporate producers that manufactured it and have thus a solid political advantage regarding populist support. This latter fact isn't good for Christian evangelization.

I believe that part of the difficulty amillennialists have with the post-millennialism viewpoint is based on over-reliance upon tradition as well as misunderstanding of tradition and the history of Christian thought in the church throughout history. Amillennialists tend to use false alternative or straw man arguments about post-millennialist beliefs in order to change meanings and to create logical inconsistencies. Perhaps 90% of the prophecies of John were fulfilled in the first century A.D. largely by 70 a.d., yet there will be a second coming of the Lord down the road someday, and there will be a decisive removal of anti-Christian elements from the world. It doesn't mean though that the period before the end times must either be entirely Utopian with a Christian accent or that Christians won't have any struggles or persecutions-for assuredly we do (meaning us Christians inclusive of the persecuted Chinese Church if Christ).

Post-millennialist eschatological viewpoint's may be somewhat more adaptable to modern times and yet also more accurate in analysis of the Revelation and additional eschatological references such as those found in Matthew. They may also be consistent with the viewpoints of reformers such as John Calvin generally, though none should rely upon non—Biblical sources as infallibly correct. The reformed faith is about discovering truth rather than obfuscating it. Martin Luther said that the Revelation had a lot of straw; that expresses his feeling that his understanding f it wasn't right or that it differed from other New Testament books in percent of amorphous content. Of course it did. The Revelation referred largely to first century events that were fulfilled and largely forgotten after the 2nd century a.d. It is remarkable that the common sense interpretation of the Revelation was lost to history as first century historical viewpoints were lost to history.

In northwest Alaska on the Chukchi Sea Arctic coast a little village that formerly was protected by fall storm wave surges by virtue of that fact that the sea water was frozen now suffers the storm ravages because the sea doesn't freeze over until much later in the season. One might take the little village of Kivalina as a global warming index; If the premillennialists are right, even as an end-times index for predicting when the Lord will return (as the sea level rises and temperate regions become deserts wars and social catastrophes will ensue and things on the radical left side of the doom index will flourish hastening the Lord's rescue and wrap it up mission).

Of the fifteen hottest years of global average temperatures fourteen have occurred since the year 2000. The world is getting hotter though there are local variations. The world oceans are warming too. Cristian post-millennialists can take an active role in working to moderate or halt global warming as good neighborliness and common sense while premillennialists can only wring there hands and look to the sky in hope that there deliverer draweth nie. Amillennialists might think its a temporal recurrence of the doom of immoral humanity and that a closer relation to corporatism would end the problem if one exists outside the minds of the leftist global conspiracy.

At Kivalina the first people's descendants -who were actually the last to arrive in America from Sibir and raced across the continent in record time with dogs and dog-sleds -must cross their lagoon to escape the warm-water storms. They want a road built to a mine 60 miles away for safety instead of relocating the village beyond the Lagoon with the seacoast frontage becoming something like Cape Hatteras resort village for subsistence people. Yet putting more global warming gases from SUVs at high latitudes is a way to enhance global warming. Building one crisis highway becomes a herring bone of new sprout roads with roadhouses, trucks and accelerated global warming contribution.

Post-millennialists might search to find a way to solve the storm and housing security issues of Kivalina yet probably not pre-mills or amills. So one can make something of a global warming index and measuring device from the seashore village of Kivalina politically and empirically perhaps. The human solutions to repairing damage they have caused themselves is to make more damage. Even the churches that have sanctified gay marriages have repeated the lie that the Apostle Paul mentioned in reproof in the book of Romans. Jesus was the founder and sponsor of the Christian efforts to make the social environment a better and Godly place. It is true that humanity cannot do that without the Lord, yet it does seem that some of the saved cannot work toward that purpose even with.

Grammatico-historical hermeneutic-
Gentry writes (on page 173) that quote- “Post-millennialists follow the general evangelical approach to Scripture known as the grammatico-historical hermeneutic. This view is shared with evangelical premillennialists and amillennialists.”-end quote.

He goes on to say explain that he has differentiate post-millennial use of hermeneutic from that of dispensationalists with quote-three critical issues in order to illustrate the reasonableness of the postmillennial use of hermeneutics. Those issues were literalism in kingdom prophecy, preterism regarding certain judgment passages,and the function of Israel in Scripture.”-end quote

I am glad he clarified the issues. In the third part of the book Gentry makes a positive exposition of the post-millennial hermeneutic. Here in the city where I am living this year I believe that all of the churches are either pre-mill, dispensationalist, apostate (Presbyterian Church USA), odd (Mormons, 7th Day Adventists (pre-mill I think) or Catholic. That presents practical difficulties in attending a church service that has something that resembles consistently valid doctrine emanating from the pulpit. Well, I have a decent digital camera to take pictures of the mountains and of eagles, ravens and even a couple of swans flying about when I walk about making the difficult choice of what church building to go in on Sunday to hear the result of inaccurate hermeneutic and that at least is helpful.

The Cultural Mandate
Gentry views the cultural mandate given before the fall in the Garden of Eden to mankind from God as continuing to exist in the present. The Cultural Mandate was given to Adam to name all the animals of the world and to have dominion over them. Mankind was made to act-as a 'vice-regent' of God over the Earth-not to be sovereign upon it-for that is God's role. Sin and the fall did not change the Cultural Mandate. In fact is the redemptive work of Jesus Christ that allows those born again to implement the Cultural Mandate in a proper way today. Gentry writes (paraphrasing) that where mankind errs and wreaks cultural destruction that is an effect of failing to implement the cultural mandate righteously.

So human society instead of being challenged by the problems of multi-culturalism that disestablishes existing culture ought to be concerned about developing the one Cultural mandate of God acting through the redemptive power of Jesus Christ.

Human culture should become Christian culture working toward compassion, ecospherically rational economic policy, shepherding the wild biota to remain wild, free, plentiful and synergetically partnering with human life on Earth and possibly beyond to exo-habitats, full-employment, optimal use of human opportunities to exist, contemplate, research God's creation and learn the nature of God etc.

It is fine to study science and create technology, yet it would violate the cultural mandate to become all spacey about it ethically and existentially develop an atheistic tendency toward neurotic meaninglessness with the ethical pitfalls that presents making the harmlessness of mass destruction a viable choice if it does not violate the principles of personal egoism, comfort and happiness. With the supervening Cultural Mandate humanity should be aware that it is not a distant echo of conscientiousness restraining latent impulses to consolidate world power unto themselves as a collective or individual-the right of rule actually belongs to God and the Cultural Mandate is to develop along God's ethical parameters preparing the world for the kingdom of God.

Gentry write on page 182- quote -“The optimistic expectations of postmillennialism comport well with God's creational purpose as evidenced in the Cultural Mandate. They highlight the divine expectation of the true, created nature of man qua man. Postmillennialism expects the world as a system (kosmos)to be brought under submission to God's rule by the active, sanctified agency of redeemed man, who has been renewed in the image of God (Col. 3: 10; Eph. 4:24). In other words, postmillennial eschatology expects in history what God originally intended for history. It sees His plan as maintained and moving toward its original goal, but now on the new basis of God's sovereign and gracious redemption. Hanko's objection to postmillennialism's employment of the Cultural Mandate is rooted in a very deep sense of the genuine fearsome power of sin. The postmillennialist, however, sees God's continuance of the Cultural Mandate, but upon a new principle: the very real and even greater power of redemption in Christ.”-end quote

A Consequence of Dispensationalism and Pre-millennial Weltanshauung

Gentry quotes Norman Shepherd on page 523 in writing in a chapter on cultural antinomianism. Shepherd succinctly describes the consequences of the pessimistic Biblical exegesis that is in error...

quote;“One of the most insidious weapons which Satan has been able to wield against the advancement of the Kingdom of God is the inculcation of the belief that though the Kingdom must be proclaimed throughout the world, the church really cannot expect that such proclamation will meet with any significant degree of success. One prominent writer in the field of inter-national missions has given expression to the commonly held expectation in this way: "The New Testament clearly predicts that in spite of great victories of the Gospel amongst all nations the resistance of Satan will continue. Towards the end it will even increase so much that Satan, incarnated in the human person of Antichrist, will assume once more an almost total control over disobedient mankind (II Thess. 2:3-12; Rev. 13)."

These words really constitute a confession of faith. More accurately they are a confession of anti-faith - anti-faith in anti-Christ. If we were to find them in the anti-confession of a modern Satanist cult, they would not surprise us. At least we cannot conceive of a Satanist solemnly confessing that toward the end of
human history, the Son of God, incarnate in the person of Jesus Christ, will assume an almost total control over obedient mankind.

Why are we as Christians so much more confident with respect to the victory of anti-Christ than we are with respect to the triumph of Jesus Christ? Is the worldwide dominion of Satan toward the end of history so much more obviously and unambiguously a revealed truth of Scripture than is the worldwide dominion of Jesus Christ?”-end quote

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