thomas15
Well-Known Member
What bothers me more as a pre-miller more than what you stated above is exactly "how" some of these people supposedly "held" to their former position of dispensationalism in the first place. When I dig deeper, I sometimes find out that they really had no hermeneutical foundation for it at all. They had just read "books". Swayed by whatever "winds" were blowing behind them from reading those "books", they accumulate teachers who match their currently favored pre-suppositions. Of course, the same can be said of others who hold other eschatological positions also.
Agreeded. An example is my good friend Dr. Riddlebarger who argues that the dispensationalist say that Matthew 24 is the rapture, which is not the case. Of course it is possible to dredge some who does but this is not a dispensationalist position. He, Dr. Riddlebarger, should know this, this is why I say he is writing to those who are already in his camp. And being swayed by the winds is exactly what I'm trying to avoid in my theology.
It wasn't this way with me. My foundational hermeneutics were founded and grounded as pre-mill from the starting gate over 35 years ago. To me it was simple (as God says He uses to confound the world). There was an Israel in the Old Testament who were given Promises. God is either done with them or He isn't. He will either fulfill those promises to that "Israel" or He won't. For me, adhering to the literal/historical/grammatical method of interpretation and contexts founded on that hermeneutic have never failed me. Anything else associated with pre-mil (dispensationalism, "rapture" timing, etc.) is a matter of constant testing and revisiting by me and will continue to be so.
You sound like you are seeking that "peace" like I was. I hope you find it. I have.![]()
Thank you, my thoughts exactly. As I study the covanent position, the "already-not yet", shaddows of the future, the OT in light of the NT, the application of scriptures intended for Israel being applied to the Church, on and on. the fact that the covanent system has to tie themselves up in knots to make sense of their theology only reinforces my position that the dispensational system while not perfect is the best one.
Not to add my own "bamm" to this dicsussion, but when I was saved and for the first 6 years of my walk I was under the covanent teaching in a Presbyterian setting. However, interesting to me is that it wasn't until I moved and found myself in a dispensational setting that the study of systematic theology and not just end times was presented to me as something good to study. I never looked at any of this in a critical light as a covanent believer. Of course this isn't everyone elses experience but it was mine and hence the only experience I can draw on.
I am forcing myself to learn and understand the covanent position. I would hope that if an even application of the scriptures shows that my beliefs are wrong, then I would have the humility to correct and recalculate my beliefs, not the other way around. Not that Chafer is perfect or Riddlebarger totally wrong, but it is a struggle to keep from pulling the little bit of hair I have left out by the roots when reading Riddlebarger. So AnotherBaptist, thanks for the encouraging words.
Tom