Hebrews Lesson 103
NKJ Romans
I didn’t realize I would be
off on dispensationalism quite this long.
But we have been looking at key elements in dispensationalism and
understanding the fact that there is this big shift that took place as a result
of what happened on the cross and the ascension and the whole cross event (let’s
say) which takes in the crucifixion, the resurrection and the ascension. It brings us to a point where Jesus Christ is
in a unique place right now at the right hand of the Father. We would say that He is in session. He is not ruling. He is seated at the right hand of the Father
serving and operating as High Priest. That’s an important thing to understand in
relationship to a lot of the differences between dispensational understanding of
Scripture and what you find in replacement theology and in covenant theology.
But at the root of everything
is this issue that drives so many things today - is hermeneutics or
interpretation – how you understand the Bible.
How do you go about interpreting not just the Scripture, but anything? Once you get into a relativized
culture – that just doesn’t apply to the
How in the world can you
define “the what”? (Now this is really
going to fry some brain cells.) How can
you define what something is or that something is (excuse me) - how can you
define that something is, if you don’t know what it is - if you don’t know the
attributes and characteristics that qualify God as God as a creative God that’s
over against and distinct from all creation.
If you don’t have any of the things that make up what He is, how do you
know that He is? I mean how do you know
that He is an independent, infinite creator God if you don’t know what He is? The only place that you know what He is, is going
to be starting from Scripture. There is
according to Romans 1 evidence from creation: but, it’s not defined in terms of
special revelation. It’s just general revelation, but it’s enough to hold man
accountable. But it’s not enough very
far in terms of specifics.
So all through history we’ve
had this relativistic culture. In the
last couple of weeks I’ve sort of gone through a history of interpretation how Greek
thought gave rise to allegorical interpretation which is certainly relativistic,
that what something means is determined by whoever reads is. Allegory can mean – something can mean any
number of different things to different people.
I kept coming back to the fact that in dispensationalism we believe in a
consistent (there is you key word consistent), plain, literal interpretation.
I threw this quote up there
the last four or five lessons from David L. Cooper. I’ve got to correct myself. I got corrected. I was always told David L.
Cooper was Arnold Fruchtenbaum’s pastor; but he really wasn’t. He was a mentor though.
Literal
interpretation is when the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, make no
other sense. Therefore take every word at its ordinary, usual,
literal meaning, unless the facts of the immediate context studied in the light
of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental truths indicates clearly
otherwise.
I want to point out something
there at the end. He says that the only
thing that would mitigate against taking a passage literally is the immediate
context studied in the light of related passages. What’s that?
That’s the broader context. If
you are doing a study of John 3:16, you have to study it and understand it
within the context of Jesus communication with Nicodemus there in John 3:1-15. But you have to understand that within the
context of the gospel of John. And you
understand that within the context of New Testament and that’s within the
context of the message of the Bible as a whole.
So you constantly have these concentric circles of context. That’s very, very important. The old adage is that if you take the text
out of its context you are left with a con.
That is so true. That is what
happens in too many things.
As things would have it in
the providential plan of God, we have an illustration of this r-i-p-p-e-d from
the headlines of today’s news. So, we
had every morning this week it seems like there is this news item related to a
statement made by Rush Limbaugh on one of his morning comments, his morning
update. Now let me say a couple of things
before we get into this. First of all, it
doesn’t really matter what you think of Rush whether you agree with his views
or you don’t agree with his views, whether you like his personality or dislike
his personality. The issue here is
merely an issue of understanding interpretation and hermeneutics. You have to have a solid consistent, literal,
hermeneutic to have stability in any culture.
This is a great example of why we have a lot of the problems that we have.
I think it was early last week, Rush did a morning update. He has these little 30 second blurbs that are
played out on various radio shows that host his show. They are played in the morning as teasers to
grab your attention and then his show comes on in the afternoon. This is a pretty simple straightforward
little comment. So I was able to put the
whole thing up here so you can read it in its context.
Now what everybody is all
upset about is the liberal Democrats get up in Congress both in the Senate and
the House and want to use the Senate to condemn Rush which is totally absurd in
and of itself. Why would you use
Congress to want to condemn a talk show host?
Okay?
So he had this morning
comment and he talks about this one soldier whose name was Jesse MacBeth. The big
flap is all about the fact that he is being accused of calling any
First of all I want you to
pay attention to context. So when he
makes initial morning comment, this is what he said.
The
antiwar left has its celebrities and one of them was “army ranger Jesse MacBeth”. Now, what
made this 23 year old corporal a hero to the antiwar crowd was not his Purple
Heart or his being afflicted with posttraumatic stress disorder from tours in
“We
would burn their bodies; hang their bodies from the rafters in the mosque.”
He goes on to say:
Recently
Jesse MacBeth, the poster boy for the antiwar left,
had his day in court. He was sentenced
to 5 months in jail and 3 years probation for falsifying a Department of
Veteran’s Affairs claim, his Army Discharge Record too. Yes, Jesse MacBeth
was in the army for 44 days before he was washed out of boot camp. Macbeth is not an army ranger. He is not a corporal. He never won the Purple Heart. He was never in combat to witness the horrors
he claimed to have seen. He never went to
Notice nowhere in this
initial morning report do you hear the phrase “phony soldier”. Rush is simply commenting on the fact that
this guy has become a darling of the antiwar left and they touted him and
trotted him out and everything until it was revealed that the guy was a fraud
and he was indeed phony.
Now we have studied enough
about hermeneutics and interpretation the last few weeks to see 3 important
principles that relate to any kind of interpretation.
So you have to recognize that
there are three levels of context that anything has. It’s the immediate context, the surrounding paragraphs,
statements, explanations. That’s part of
the literary or oral context.
The second level of context
would be the broader context of the writer or the speaker. Any of us could say things publicly where we
misspeak. I have misspoken at times
where I have said one thing and I meant just the opposite. That can happen to
anybody who is on radio, television who is speaking frequently.
So you have to look and say, “Did
he really mean that?”
Well, look at the whole body
of evidence and say, “Well, that would contradict everything that person has
ever said so obviously they misspoke.”
So you have the broader
context of the writer or speaker or maybe the writer (like we find in Scripture
a lot of times) says something that conceivably could go this way or that way
and you have to interpret it in light of the broader context and say, “Well he
couldn’t have meant X because if he meant X it would go against everything else
he said. So obviously he must have meant
Y.”
Now let’s look and analyze
what Rush said. Now what happened in
terms of the context that day is later on his afternoon show somebody called in
and talked to Rush and complained about how the liberal left was using a lot of
phony soldiers like Jesse MacBeth.
They weren’t men or women who
had actually served in combat and been to
So within that context, Rush
then used the term which was first introduced by this guy who called into the
show; he used the term phony soldier.
But the night before in a piece done (this is where you get into the
broader historical context) on ABC News (and apparently several nights before
this ABC, NBC, and CBS had all done stories on Jesse MacBeth)
Charlie Gibson on ABC Evening News introduced the term “phony soldier”.
So just like when I exegete
through Scripture and I say we have to look at where this term came from because
it has an original context like the term Son of Man in Daniel 7. Same thing - where did “phony soldier” come
from? It came from Charlie Gibson, but
nobody is attacking Charlie Gibson. Nobody
is attacking anybody else on CBS or NBC.
So Rush picks up this term and in the broader context of let’s Rush’s
life. This man has unequivocally stood behind
the American military for at least 15 years.
I think Tommy Ice introduced
me to Rush Limbaugh about 1990 when we were driving to a pastor’s conference in
I saw on Fox and Friends yesterday
morning - they interviewed a Democratic senator and a Republican senator.
The Democratic senator said, “Well,
I’ve read the whole transcript of everything Rush Limbaugh said he condemned
all of the servicemen who are against the war.”
The other guy said, “Well, I
read everything and he didn’t do that.
You didn’t understand what he said.”
Now see the issue is
hermeneutics. The issue is
understanding. The issue is how can these
two men who claim to have read the transcript claim that it means opposite
things. Now a couple things we have to
remember are that the liberals who have misinterpreted this are the same
wonderful group of people who have brought you the whole concept of the Constitution
being a living document that can be reinterpreted in every generation. See it’s a whole mindset of postmodernism in
a relativistic thinking that shapes what they do. They look at something and read it and
they’ve got this filter, this relativistic filter there that between the paper
and their brain black is turned to white and right is turned to wrong because
of that worldview. That’s the power of
presuppositions in a worldview.
I remember a professor I had
in seminary used to illustrate presuppositions this way. You have a man that is totally convinced that
he is dead. This guy is almost on the
verge or a psychotic break. He is
convinced that he is absolutely dead so he goes to a psychotherapist who works
with him for 3 or 4 years to try to convince him that dead people don’t
bleed. Finally this patient is
convinced that dead people don’t bleed. The psychiatrist goes on for some time until
he is absolutely convinced that this guy is firmly entrenched now in the idea
that dead men don’t bleed. When he gets
to that point, the guy comes in for his appointment. He whips out a needle and pokes him in the
arm and the patients starts to bleed.
The guy looks down at his
bleeding arm and goes, “How about that.
Dead men bleed after all.”
See presuppositions are often
not taken out of the closet, the cellar of our minds, and examined. We hold them to be so true and self-evident
that we never take them out into the light of day to evaluate them. So, when we read certain things we interpret
them within our grid and in light of our presuppositions and we’re not even
aware or self conscious of the fact that it’s exactly what we’re doing.
So when we look at these
liberals who are accusing Rush of this, there are several things we should
observe in hermeneutics.
First of all they have an
agenda, a worldview that causes them to call wrong, right and right,
wrong. It is that relativistic human
viewpoint worldview. It’s not a rational
issue; it is that there is something else going on.
Remember the unbeliever(the
unbelieving atheist) can look at the most intricate design in creation and say,
“Hum, that happened by chance.”
He can never see that it has
order and structure and therefore must have come from order and structure. Why?
Because there is a spiritual agenda at work that he is suppressing the
truth in unrighteousness. He knows in
his heart of hearts that if he acknowledges that there is a creator that gave
that order, then he has ultimately got to admit that he is a sinner. That’s why he is suppressing the truth in
unrighteousness. He can’t. In arrogance he doesn’t want to admit that he
is a sinner and that he is wrong. So
there is this hidden agenda, this worldview at work.
The second thing that happens
(And see that happens when you are talking with covenant theologians or
replacement theologians.) is they look at a passage in Scripture and it just –
all they see is allegory because of their presupposition.
The second thing with these
liberal democrats is they’re projecting their own patriotism on to Rush and
accusing him of the exactly the same things that they are doing. See people do that all the time. There is a book written by a guy who is
considered a world class theologian scholar has taught many years at a
respected seminary. Vern Poithrus wrote a critique of
dispensationalism and ripped everybody out of context and distorted everybody’s
words. We were just appalled when this
book came out. It is not even-handed or objective
at all. This flows out of the whole
agenda, worldview, and presupposition thing.
As I pointed out earlier, the
third thing we ought to note about these people is that they have this idea of
meaning that is fluid.
That’s why they go back and
say, “Meaning isn’t determined by the author; meaning is determined by the hearer.”
So if they hear one thing, it
doesn’t matter what the speaker said or what he says he said because they get
to interpret it the way they want to.
Okay? So that’s how all of this
works itself out. When you live in a relativistic culture, then
you are going to have these kinds of problems.
Let’s look at some things in
relation to the text.
Last time I went through some
historical background and looked at the fact that you had Alexandrian Jews living
in
Then it was at that same
location of Alexandria in North Africa that you had a man come up in the middle
2nd century or early 3rd century BC rather (81or 85 to
254) a man by the name of Origen. He was
very influenced by Platonic thought. He was
a brilliant man - many positive things that he contributed plus a boat load of
negative things. We could have well done
without Origen. But he taught that every
passage has three levels of meaning based on body, soul and spirit. The body is your literal meaning; soul is a
moral meaning; spirit is a spiritual meaning.
But what you have to remember it that the soul meaning doesn’t have
anything to do with the lexical meaning of the words or the grammar or the historical
context. Neither does the spiritual
meaning. It is just something that is
the imagination of the theologian to come up with that.
I was thinking this afternoon
that Origen actually began with a hyper-literalism. We are often accused as dispensationalists of
having a wooden literalism where we ignore figures of speech. I would call that a wooden literalism. It is not a true literal interpretation
because we believe that you take language at its basic meaning. Even though you have figures of speech they refer
to something literal and they have an assigned meaning within the lexicography of
the language.
But when Origen was a young
man and he was dealing with a lot of hormonal rumblings, he read the passage in
the gospels that if your right eye offends you, pluck it out. So he emasculated himself. Origen went through the rest of his life
teaching theology like this. So at one time he had a literal
interpretation. See if he had just
waited until he developed his allegorical interpretation, he could have saved
himself a lot of pain and embarrassment.
So we had Origen and then Augustine sort of solidified and
institutionalized allegorical interpretation in the Middle Ages.
Now a couple of points to
what I added to what we did in the Middle Ages.
Number 1, I said in the Middle
Ages (the institutionalized church and theology) is dominated by
a-millennialism and allegorical interpretation.
So nobody is thinking outside of that box. Everybody who comes along from Anselm to Abelard
to Thomas Aquinas to Bonaventure to Hugo of St. Victor – all these guys that
are dominating the theology of the Middle Ages are all a-millennial and are allegorical
in their interpretation.
Now one of the things about
allegorical interpretation that developed in the Middle Ages was the idea that
every sentence of Scripture had to refer to Jesus – every passage of Scripture
had to refer to Jesus. They got this
from Luke 24:44. This is when Jesus is
on the road to Emmaus. This is after the
resurrection. Two of His disciples are
leaving
All of a sudden a stranger appears
to them. (That is where John Cross got
the title of the book Stranger on the Road to Emmaus.) Jesus has sort of veiled their eyes so they
don’t know who He is. He talks to them
and He goes through the prophets all the way through the Old Testament to show
that the Old Testament talked about Jesus. Then all of a sudden when He gets there they
realize who He is.
So Luke 24:44 says:
NKJ Luke 24:44 Then He said to them, "These are
the words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things
must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses and the Prophets
and the Psalms concerning Me."
Now an allegorical interpretation
took that to mean that everything in the Law and the Prophets and the Writings
(the three divisions of the Hebrew Old Testament) had to relate to Jesus. But the problem with that is you get into I
Chronicles 26:18 at the Parbar which is a river out west.
NKJ 1 Chronicles 26:18 As for the Parbar on the west, there
were four on the highway and two at the Parbar.
Now you have to make that
talk about Jesus. See the problem? So you really have to use a lot of
imagination and maybe some drugs, whatever it is to try to make these things
talk about Jesus. In the Reformation,
the Reformation was preceded by a return to a literal, grammatical
interpretation. Eventually all this
nonsense about postmodern interpretation and you can’t really know meaning…you
can’t really know truth. That’s what is
at the root of the whole emergent church movement. You
can’t really know truth. You can’t be
dogmatic about anything. So the only
thing we have in common is that we can come to church and sing emotion-driven
songs so that we can all just revel in our common religious experience that we
call Christianity. But let’s try not to
have any dogma or any doctrine or anything that’s right or anything that’s
wrong because we can’t really know those kinds of things.
This kind of stuff can’t work
in the real world. You can’t operate any
of your contracts that way. You can’t
run a legal system this way. It all
falls apart. So there is a return to
literal and grammatical interpretation before the Reformation – and the
original languages.
Then we have the
Reformation. Then you have statements
like this from Martin Luther.
The
literal sense of Scripture alone is the whole essence of faith and of Christian
theology.
… not Scripture plus the traditional
interpretation of the church, not Scripture plus your liver quiver, not
Scripture plus anything else; just Scripture alone.
Calvin also affirmed
this.
Calvin said, “It’s the first
business of an interpreter to let his author say what he does instead of attributing
to him what we think he ought to say.”
See it’s the author of
Scripture that determines the meaning of the passage. Ultimately that is the Lord.
Now what is interesting is to
study this period and see what happens hermeneutically and see how it parallels
what is happening today.
In 1965 (remember this date,
1965, if you remember back that far)… Many, many historians will say 1963 is
sort of the benchmark date when everything changed. Music changed; the culture changed, everything. Education changes. That’s the year that Kennedy is
assassinated. It is the year the Supreme
Court takes prayer out of the schools. A
number of other critical things happened in 1963.
So in 1965 a woman medieval
scholar by the name of Beryl Smalley wrote a book entitled The Bible in the
Middle Ages, a Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages. She makes several interesting comments. She said first of all that in medieval
scholarship (she says), they subordinated scholarship meanwhile to mysticism
and to propaganda. They subordinated
scholarship. That is instead of looking
at what the text said, it had to be subordinated to mysticism. So you all remember I often use these four
stages of knowledge chart I put up – empiricism, rationalism, mysticism and
revelation. What happens in every human
viewpoint system is that revelation is placed under and gets evaluated by either
mysticism, rationalism or empiricism; whereas the biblical viewpoint is that
revelation tells you how to evaluate. It
provides the safeguards, the governor, the controls for reason and feelings and
empiricism.
She goes on to say:
Again
the crisis in the Middle Ages was reflected in biblical studies. The speculation of Joachim of Fiore.
If you don’t know who he was,
he was a mystic that came up about the year 1000. He came up with this whole new revelatory
scheme. If you read the book The Name
of the Rose, he is mentioned in there quite a bit because there is
this apocalyptic guy that is always quoting fire and brimstone and everything
else. It constantly referred to Joachim
of Fiore which most American readers would have no knowledge of. You really had to have a PhD in Latin and Medieval
theology and philosophy to understand The Name of the Rose. But most people thought it had a good story
when Sean Connery was in it. But that’s
what he was. He used this mystical
hermeneutic system to generate this whole apocalyptic interpretation of
Revelation and end times. Since it was the
Millennium - you think things got wild here with Y2K, well you should have been
at Y1K with Joachim of Fiore. Everybody
was expecting Revelation - the beast and everything else to pop out of the
ground after listening to him. But it gives
this whole new rise of mysticism that comes to play in the later Middle
Ages.
Now she also said:
Revolution
and uncertainty have discouraged biblical scholarship in the past…
That is talking about the
Middle Ages.
…and
stimulated more subjective modes of interpretation. So when you live in a period of change…
We had a revolution in 1963
whether you realized it or not. The 60’s
were a major revolution in Western Civilization.
Revolution
and uncertainty have discouraged biblical scholarship in the past. They did it in the 60’s and they have
stimulated more subjective modes of interpretation,, i.e. mysticism.
In 1959 you have the beginning
of the second wave of the Holy Spirit in the 20th century according
to charismatics which is the modern charismatic movement when Dennis Bennett
who was the rector of the Episcopal Church in Van Nuys, California at St. Marks
stands up and speaks in tongues in church and doesn’t leave the
denomination. So you have the
charismatic movement that became mainstream in most denominations.
And then she makes a very
telling observation. This is in
1964. She said:
Conditions
today are giving rise to a certain sympathy with the allegorists. We have a spate of studies on medieval
spirituality. Medieval spirituality is
becoming the norm in evangelicalism today.
I remember in 1999 there was
a grace evangelical society meeting in
“But, oh yeah, this is great
spirituality now.”
Why? Because, we have gone into relativism and we’ve
gone into mysticism. So I just thought
these quotes from Beryl Smalley were quite insightful as to what’s
happened. So this sets the stage for
relativistic thinking.
Now another problem that we
have that comes into play between dispensationalism and covenant theology and
replacement theology is how to interpret the Old Testament when it is used in
the New Testament. This is usually
classified under the saying, “How is the Old Testament used in the New
Testament? Remember I pointed out that in covenant
theology and replacement theology, they usually believe that the real meaning
of the Old Testament is determined by the New Testament. There’s a very important passage that’s at the
crux of a lot of this. That’s in Acts
2. So turn in your Bibles with me to
Acts 2.
Now Acts 1 is where we have
the ascension of Christ in the first part of the chapter in the first 11
verses. Then the disciples go into the
upper room and they draw straws to see who got the spiritual gift of
apostleship so they could replace Judas.
That was unauthorized. People
don’t decide who has the spiritual gift; God does. I don’t think Matthias was a legitimate
choice. You don’t hear about him
again. I don’t think he was a genuine apostle. But, they meet. Let’s pick up the context a little bit since
I am pointing out that context is important.
They have this meeting and
they select Matthias in verse 26. Now
remember there weren’t any chapter breaks or verse breaks in the original.
NKJ Acts
Who does the “they” refer
to? It refers to all 120 people in the
room. Every place else in the passage
the “they” the third person plural pronoun always refers to the Twelve. But it this one place it refers to the
immediate antecedent in verse 25. They
cast their lots. The lot fell on
Matthias.
And he was
numbered with the eleven apostles.
NKJ Acts 2:1 When the Day of Pentecost had fully
come, they were all with one accord in one place.
Now where does the “they”
begin in verse 1? I just read right into
chapter 2. I took the last verse of
chapter 1 and I didn’t stop reading because there was no break in the original. Okay, let me do it again. I want you to pay attention to who the “they’s” are.
Who does the “they” refer to
in 2:1? This is your Bible study quiz
for the day – pop quiz. Can you
read? Can you interpret? To whom does the “they” refer to in 2:1? The Apostles.
It doesn’t refer to the 120; yet you go up to any place that has
religious art They will have 120 people standing on the steps of the Temple in
Jerusalem getting the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost. But, the “they” there only refers to the
Twelve. You are not going to have 120
people sit around in one of those 12 by 16 rooms for 40 days. They wouldn’t let men and women sleep
together like that for one thing. And,
it is going to get a little bit stuffy in there for another thing. So several days later when the Day of
Pentecost arrives, they’re all of one accord in one place. That is the eleven. They were still called the Twelve even though
they had lost one. That had become a
title for them.
NKJ Acts 2:2 And suddenly there came a sound from
heaven, as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled the whole house where they
were sitting.
NKJ Acts 2:3 Then there appeared to them divided
tongues, as of fire, and one sat upon each of them.
NKJ Acts 2:4 And they
Who des the “they” refer
to? The Apostles.
were all filled with the Holy Spirit
and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance.
(No “other” in the original.)
NKJ Acts 2:5 And there were dwelling in Jerusalem
Jews, devout men, from every nation under heaven.
Josephus tells us that about 150,000
extra people showed up in
NKJ Acts 2:6 And when this sound occurred, the
multitude came together, and were confused, because everyone heard them speak
in his own language.
Who is the “them”? The eleven apostles.
NKJ Acts 2:7 Then they were all amazed and
marveled, saying to one another, "Look, are not all these who speak
Galileans?
See the 120 wouldn’t all be Galileans.
So that just reinforces the idea that it’s
only the apostles that are speaking in tongues or speaking in languages. It goes on and lists the various places where
all these people came from and their language groups.
It is an important study to
figure out how many language groups were actually here.
I think it could be as few as
7. I’ve had others tell me that it was
11. But I think some of these areas had
been under Greek control for so long. Greek or Aramaic where the lingua franca of
those areas and some of them had been 300 years. But maybe the ancient languages still
survived. But it’s not a lot of
languages. I’m not diminishing the
miracle, but let’s be honest. It was
probably somewhere between 7 and 11 languages. That fits the number of apostles. So it is just the apostles who initially
receive the filling of the Holy Spirit.
That’s so important in understanding the whole charismatic thing.
Then they’re accused of being
drunk. Then Peter stands up. Now we have context.
NKJ Acts 2:14 But Peter, standing up with the
eleven, raised his voice and said to them, "Men of Judea and all who dwell
in Jerusalem, let this be known to you, and heed my words.
NKJ Acts
It is only the third hour. It
is
NKJ Acts
This is really
important. This is a crux passage.
Peter says, “This is what
Joel talked about.”
What did Peter mean when he
said that this is what Joel talked about?
What did he mean? Did he mean
that Joel prophesied this specific event?
He then quotes Joel. This is
directly out of Joel 2.
NKJ Acts 2:17 'And it shall come to pass in the
last days, says God, That I will pour out of My Spirit on all flesh; Your sons
and your daughters shall prophesy,
Now stop. In what we read (that is why I read all of
that) did their sons and daughters prophecy?
No.
Your young
men shall see visions,
Any young men seeing visions
in Acts 2? No.
Your old
men shall dream dreams.
Any old men dreaming dreams
in Acts 2? No.
NKJ Acts
Any prophecy going on here? The Holy Spirit has come upon them, but there
is no prophecy.
NKJ Acts
Any blood, fire vapor or
smoke going on here? No.
NKJ Acts
Any moon blood or sun
darkness here? No, nothing.
NKJ Acts
Okay what did happen on the
Day of Pentecost? They spoke in languages that they hadn’t previously learned. Is that mentioned in Joel 2? No.
Okay, so what happened on the Day of Pentecost isn’t mentioned in Joel
2. What is mentioned in Joel 2 doesn’t happen
at all. None of those things happened in
Acts 2. But Peter says this is what the prophet Joel was saying.
So now we have to ask the question
– hum, what did Peter mean when he said that?
You and I come in with our Western European Greek oriented frame of
reference and want to make that say that this is a fulfillment of
prophecy.
Now if you are an
a-millennialist or post-millenialist or a progressive dispensationalist at Dallas
Seminary, then you are going to say, “Hum there is a level of fulfillment here
because that is what Peter said. So
therefore we must be in some form of the kingdom because these events that Joel
talked about happened just as the kingdom comes in.”
So if we are in some form of
the kingdom, that is what a-millenialists said.
There is no literal 1,000 year kingdom.
Christ is now reigning in your hearts and He is sitting on David’s
throne at the right hand of God in heaven and ruling from heaven. Progressive dispensationalists say the same
thing. They still believe in a future
literal millennium, but they say that Jesus is sitting on David’s throne at the
Father’s right hand. He is not just in session;
He is seated on David’s throne because this passage is saying that that was
fulfilled. Right? Hum.
How are we going to understand this?
This is a big issue.
Okay. I am not shy. I
got all of this from
You get the examples in
Matthew 2. This is phenomenal. I
remember sitting down with Tommy Ice when we were at Dallas Seminary going over
this I don’t know how many years ago. It
is like a blinding flash of truth hits you. It has helped me in understanding all
these kinds of Old Testament, New Testament passages through the years. Tommy has written at least I don’t know how
many articles on hermeneutics and prophecy and he always goes to this.
We are going to our first
example. How does the New Testament
quote the Old Testament? Remember the
writers in the New Testament are Jews.
So they are citing things in a typical way that Jews would quote
things. When they say “this” is “that”
it doesn’t mean the same thing it would mean to a Greek speaker.
1. The first example is where the Old Testament
is a literal prophecy. It is a literal
prophecy foretelling a future event and the New Testament passage is simply saying
this is how that prophecy has been literally fulfilled. So we will go to Matthew 2:5-6. This is when the Magi show up with King Herod
wondering where the King of the Jews is.
Since he is king of the Jews, paranoid Herod wasn’t liking what he was
hearing because the Magi were Parthian king makers.
So he asked them, “Where is
this king supposed to be born?”
Actually he called in his advisers and said, “Where is
the king supposed to be born?” His
advisors said
NKJ Matthew 2:5 So they said to him, "In Bethlehem
of Judea, for thus it is written by the prophet:
NKJ Matthew 2:6 'But you, Bethlehem, in the
land of Judah, Are not the least among the rulers of Judah; For out of you
shall come a Ruler Who will shepherd My people Israel.' "
Now this is a quote from
Micah 5:2.
NKJ Micah 5:2 " But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah,
Though you are little among the thousands of Judah, Yet out of
you shall come forth to Me The One to be Ruler in Israel, Whose goings forth are
from of old, From everlasting."
That is
See it is a literal
prophecy. The Messiah is going to be
born in
2. The next example still comes out of
Matthew. I think
Typology is when the writer
of Scripture uses some person or some concrete object in the Old Testament to
foreshadow or picture something about the person or work of Jesus Christ or
some future event.
In Matthew
NKJ Matthew
This is after the Magi have
gone to – remember the Magi went to
NKJ Matthew
Now this is a quote from
Hosea 11:1.
NKJ Hosea 11:1 "When
So Hosea was a prophet. So anything the prophet writes is technically
a prophecy. But it is really just a historical
statement. It is a reference to a real
historical event, the Exodus out of
When Hosea says, “Out of
Then we come to the third use
which comes in the next couple of verses, Matthew 2:17-18. This is related to the death of the
infants.
NKJ Matthew
NKJ Matthew 2:18 "A voice was heard in Ramah,
Lamentation, weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her
children, Refusing to be comforted, Because they are no more."
Ramah is just down by
Now what in the world is that
talking about? Well, that is a quote
from Jeremiah 31:15 where the Lord says:
NKJ Jeremiah 31:15 Thus says the LORD: "A voice
was heard in Ramah, Lamentation and bitter weeping, Rachel weeping for
her children, Refusing to be comforted for her children, Because they are no
more."
Rachel is not literally
Rachel. Rachel has been dead for 1,000
years or more. Rachel is the mother of
What is happening in Jeremiah
31:15? Well, it is 586 BC. Those of you who are coming on Tuesday night,
what happened in 586 BC? Nebuchadnezzar
came in and wiped out the Southern Kingdom of Judah. He destroys
But here it is being applied not
typologically, but is being applied in the same way that the mothers of
But what Peter is doing is
quoting that whole passage to say that what you have just witnessed is a
falling of the Holy Spirit upon people and producing miraculous phenomenon. That’s just like what Joel said was going to
happen at the end of the tribulation period during the Day of the Lord. The Holy Spirit will fall upon God’s people
and miraculous things are going to take place.
That’s the only point of comparison.
What you see here since we are in Hebrews, what you see there in Acts 2 (and
I think this was typical of the way Jews quoted Scripture), he doesn’t just
quote the little technical section or phrase he wants to apply, he quotes the
whole 5 or 6 verses (17-18-19-20-21-22.) He quotes 5 verses. When we get into Hebrews 8, the writer of
Hebrews is going to do the same kind of thing.
He is going to quote the whole section in Jeremiah 31 on a New
Covenant.
And then at the end he is
going to say, “See New Covenant implies that the Old Covenant had to be
temporary because it was going to be replaced by a New Covenant. He doesn’t exegete or expound or comment on
anything else in any of those verses other than the phrase “New Covenant.”
In our way of thinking we
would not have quoted the other 7 ½ verses.
We would have only quoted the phrase.
See it was called the New Covenant and New Covenant the Old
Covenant. But he quotes the whole
thing.
So that’s typical of Jewish
quoting. They will quote a whole passage
only to focus on one little microscopic detail in there. So that’s what’s really happening. When Peter says this is what the prophet Joel
spoke about, he is really saying “this is like” in the same way that Matthew in
Matthew 2:17-18 was saying that the same kind of thing is happening now that
happened in 586 BC. The mothers of
Now the last use which is
really a fun use. This is one of those
things that you just love to learn about is in Matthew
NKJ Matthew
See this is what Matthew says.
"He shall be called a
Nazarene."
Where in the Old Testament
does it say He shall be called a Nazarene?
Nowhere - not one place. Wait a
minute! The Bible says the prophets said
He will be called a Nazarene. But it
doesn’t even say that anywhere in the Old Testament. Not one place. So what is going on here?
Well, in New Testament times,
Nazarenes were sort of like – when I was up in
Later on down in the Mid
Atlantic states I learned that if you go to
That’s why they said about
Jesus.
“Can anything good come out
of
No. Why would God come out of
Now what the writer is doing
is summarizing. The basic picture the prophets
present is that the Messiah is going to be rejected and ridiculed and they
won’t have nay respect for Him. So
that’s what he is doing.
He is sort of saying, “In
summary, if I want to just paraphrase and pull together the general thinking of
what the prophets say about the Messiah is that He is not going to be
respected.”
But, he put it in their
idiom. He says He is going to be called
a Nazarene. It is not politically
correct. Somebody back then probably should
have brought him up on charges for hate speech, but you know that’s the way the
world runs.
Okay. So there are four different ways in which the
Old Testament is quoted in the New Testament.
So then when we come to Acts
2 we realize that Peter isn’t saying that this descent of the Holy Spirit is
bringing in the kingdom in any way, shape or form. He is just saying that this event by the Holy
Spirit is like what was prophesied in Joel 2.
So we are convinced that this is a work of God and that this is done by
God the Holy Spirit. That is all that he
is saying. We are not in the
kingdom. Jesus is not on the throne of
David. Jesus is seated at the right hand
as our High Priest. That’s what is
significant for the writer of Hebrews.
Let’s pray.