Israel and the
Church*
by Jack Van Deventer
Modern
premillennialism teaches that God has not
one, but two separate peoples of God, Israel and the Church. This
teaching, known as dispensationalism, was developed in the 1830's by
J.N. Darby. Darby, seeking to legitimize his newly created rapture
theory and its two "second comings," divided up the Bible into passages
for Israel and the Church. [1]According to traditional
dispensationalism, Jesus came to deliver the kingdom to the Jews, but
the Jews rejected Him and caused Him to die on the cross. Thus,
Christ's death on the cross was not part of God's plan. [2] As a
result, the coming of the kingdom was postponed until the second coming
of Christ and is not present today except in "mystery form."
[3]Christ's rejection caused a "parenthesis" in time in which the
"prophetic clock" stopped ticking. [4] Because the Jews rejected the
Messiah, God created the Church as a Plan B that dispensationalists
claim was wholly unanticipated, even by the Old Testament prophets. [5]
The implications of dispensationalism as
historically put forth may surprise those who have been taught this
form of premillennialism. According to dispensationalism, the
millennium is fundamentally Jewish in nature such that the Jews will be
"exalted above the Gentiles." [6]The Gentiles will "be on the lowest
level" in Christ's rule. [7]In addition, despite Christ's ultimate
sacrifice as "the lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world,"
dispensationalism teaches that the sacrificial system will be
reinstituted! [8]
Regarding dispensationalism's distinctive doctrine
that Israel and the Church are two separate peoples of God, it should
first be noted that such teaching is a radical departure from historic
Christianity. According to Gerstner, "Historically speaking, this
dispensational denial of the unity of Israel and the church represents
a surprising novelty. From the earliest period of Christian theology
onward, the essential continuity of Israel and the church has been
maintained. This historic doctrine of the church is based on both the
clear implication of Old Testament texts and the clear teaching of the
New Testament." [9] For example, early Church fathers such as Papias,
Clement, Barnabas, Hermas, and Justin Martyr believed that the Church
inherited God's promises to Israel. [10]
Christ's death was not an unfortunate accident
brought on by the unanticipated rejection by the Jews. On the contrary,
speaking of the cross, Jesus said "But for this purpose I came to this
hour" (John 12:27). The Church is not a parenthesis lying between God's
two dealings with national Israel, but rather the Church is the body of
Christ and is therefore the "fullness of God" (Eph. 1:22,23). [11]
Rather than being entirely future, the kingdom is a present and growing
reality (Matt. 12:28; Col. 1:13). Contrary to dispensational claims,
the Church was very much a part of God's plan from the beginning.
Romans 9:22-26 (which cites Hosea 1:10) states that the children of
Israel, both Jews and Gentiles, will be as the sand of the sea, too
numerous to measure or number. That the Gentiles would be included
among God's people was God's plan even before the cross (see Amos 9:11
and Acts 15:16-17).
As Provan points out, the Bible uses the same terms
to describe both Israel and the Church, proving that those of the
household of faith are one and the same. Both are called the beloved of
God, the children of God, the field of God, the flock of God, the house
of God, the people of God, the vineyard of God, the wife of God, the
children of Abraham, the chosen people, and the circumcised. [12] This
presents a dilemma for the dispensationalists. Does God have two chosen
peoples? two flocks? two wives? The Bible is clear on this point,
"There is neither Jew nor Greek... for you are all one in Christ Jesus"
(Gal 3:28).
The fact that Jewish names such as "children of
Abraham" and "the circumcised" are used to describe the Church further
accentuates the reality of the church as spiritual Israel. Indeed,
Christians are called "the Israel of God" (Gal. 6:16). Whereas Israel
was to be "a kingdom of priests and a holy nation," now to the church
God says, "But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, His own special people, that you may proclaim the praises of
Him who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light; who once
were not a people but are now the people of God" (1 Pet. 2:9-10).
The Jews rejected Christ, shouting, "Away with Him,
away with Him! Crucify Him!" and "We have no king but Caesar!" (John
19:15). Anticipating this rejection, Jesus warned them in parable that
"the kingdom of God will be taken from you and given to a nation
bearing the fruits of it" (Matt. 21:43). In condemnation He warned that
upon them would "come all the righteous blood shed on the earth" (Matt.
23:35) and that this judgment would happen "upon this generation"
(Matt. 23:36). This prophecy was fulfilled in A.D. 70 when Jerusalem
was laid waste by armies under Roman command and the temple was
destroyed such that not one stone was left upon another (Matt. 24:2).
The rejection of the Jews will not be permanent,
however. As the gospel spreads and the nations are discipled, the Jews
will respond in faith when the "fullness of the Gentiles" takes place
(Romans 11:25). Genetic Israel will be converted to Christ and this
conversion will be a great blessing to the world (Romans 11:11-12, 15,
23-27).
Endnotes
1 Ernest R. Sandeen, British and American Millen-narianism1800-1930
(Chicago: The Univ. of Chic. Press, 1970), p. 63, 66.
2 Clarence Larkin, Rightly Dividing the Word (Philadelphia, PA: C.
Larkin, 1921).
3 John F. Walvoord, in Wesley R. Willis and John R. Master(General
Editors), Issues in Dispensationalism (Chicago, Moody Press,1994), p.
80.
4 Charles Caldwell Ryrie, The Basis of the PremillennialFaith (Neptune,
NJ: Loizeaux Bros, 1953) p. 136.
5 Lewis Sperry Chafer, Systematic Theology (Dallas,TX: Dallas Seminary
Press, 1948) Vol. 4, pp. 40-41.
6 John Walvoord, The Millennial Kingdom (Grand Rapids,MI: Zondervan,
1959), p. 136.
7 Herman Hoyt, "Dispensational Premillennialsim," in Robert G. Clouse,
The Meaning of the Millennium: Four Views(Downer's Grove, IL: Inter
Varsity Press, 1977), p. 81.
8 J. Dwight Pentecost, Things To Come (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1958), p. 525.
9 John H. Gerstner, Wrongly Dividing the Word of Truth(Brentwood, TN:
Wogemuth & Hyatt, 1991) p. 186. Dispensationalist AlanPatrick Boyd
agreed, stating "The majority of the writers/writings in thisperiod
completely identify Israel with the Church" (in "A Dispensational
Premillennial Analysis of the Eschatology of the Post-Apostolic Fathers
[Until the Death of Justin Martyr]," unpublished master's thesis,
Dallas Theological Seminary, 1977, p. 47).
10 Greg L. Bahnsen and Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr., House Divided, The
Break-Upof Dispensational Theology (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian
Economics,1989), p. 173, 174.
11 William E. Cox, An Examination of Dispensationalism, (Phillipsburg,
NJ: Presb. and Ref. Publ. Co.) p. 44.
12 Charles D. Provan, The Church is Israel Now (Vallecito, CA: Ross
House Books, 1987).
* Posted with the kind permission of the author.