The last few weeks of Westminster Confession of Faith classes (WCFC) left me feeling a little bit like Hulk Hogan at a press conference…
We’ve changed the order somewhat due to the absence of our venerated leader, who for some reason decided that stuff about end times would be less controversial than stuff about the sacraments.
He was wrong. The chapters on the state of men after death and the resurrection and the one on the Last Judgment ended up being pretty heated.
The judgment study got bogged down in the question of whether Christians go through the process of judgment to be found innocent – or if we skip the process altogether.
It was a case of the one proof text verse the many proof texts – and both sides of the debate walked away thinking they’d won and the other side were idiots.
Our group features some John Macarthur fanboys (surely a breed as rabid as my posse of Mark Driscoll fanboys), who are very rigidly stuck on the idea that dispensational premillennialism is the only way to understand end times.
I’m not one of them. They told me I don’t understand Revelation. Or the Bible. I told them that Calvin was an amillenialist. It got a little ugly.
For some reason they also hold Revelation to be the most important book of the Bible. It’s like a trump card that can be played to render all perspicuous passages of Scripture relating to the same topic unclear at the sake of a fringe interpretation of a complex book.
The millennium sure is a curious little issue to think about – but at the end of the day it’s not a salvation issue. And we have freedom to disagree.
I think it matters though – because it’s the vocal fringe that brand Christianity as a bunch of crazies – and if you have a look at Christian cults – you’ll find that most of them subscribe to a premillennial eschatology. This may or may not be a strawman.
I just think they’re wrong. My thinking, like Dave’s about Christianity, comes from my parents. Check out dad’s most excellent sermon series on Revelation to see what I think about the millennium and the book of Revelation spelled out…
I think we get into trouble when we disregard the style a book is written in when we’re looking to it for meaning. That’s part of looking at context.
I got angry when I read this list of reasons Superman is better than Jesus because the guy took a verse (Luke 19:27) from a parable about a king out of context and applied it to Jesus.
Revelation 1 – “Witness Protection” – MP3
Revelation 2-3 – “To Him Who Overcomes” – MP3
Revelation 4-5 – “Who is Worthy?” – MP3
Revelation 6-7 – “When are we going to get there?” – MP3
Revelation 12 – “Defeating the Accuser” – MP3
Revelation 13-14 – “The Power – or the Passion?” – MP3
Revelation 15-16 – “Exodus Again” – MP3
Revelation 17-18 – “The End of the Scarlet Harlot” – MP3
Revelation 19 – “Onward Christian Soldiers?” – MP3
Revelation 20 – “Pit Stop” – MP3
Revelation 21-22 “Coming Home” – MP3
One of the things that Willows Pressy doesn’t do that MPC does really nicely is the sermon outline and pithy title. I like the structure a sermon outline provides for my listening – even if it’s just so I know how long the guy up the front will keep talking for – I assume listeners to my sermons feel the same way…
Comments
[…] my post on the Millennium last week I found this veritable treasure trove of articles on the millennial […]
I think sermon outlines have to do with the preacher. Bill Lutton used them all the time. I think they can be helpful but also don't think they're terribly important.
Title I can take or leave. Who really cares – it doesn't add anything.