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CT and Dispensationalism are two different interpretive frameworks upon which Bible interpretation is built. These two frameworks determine how one interprets the whole of Scripture, and particularily how one interprets the OT. CT brings a unity of progression from creation to consummation within the whole (OT and NT); Dispensationalism creates a sharp divide between the two Testaments. We will look at how and why.
In classical dispensationalism the dispensations are distinct periods of time where God interacts with humanity in a particular way. These dispensations represents God's progressive revelation and testing of mankind throughout history.
The dispensations are as follows:
1. Innocence: creation to the Fall (Gen 1-3)
Human responsibility to obey God's command.
Failure and fall into sin.
Judgement and expulsion from Eden and a curse on creation.
2. Conscience: Fall to the flood (Gen 4-8)
Human responsibility to follow the inner moral compass and offer acceptable worship
Failure, increasing wickedness
Judgement: the flood
3. Human Government: post-flood to Babel (Gen 9-11)
Human responsibility: Govern righteously and scatter across the earth
Failure: Rebellion at Babel, attempt to build centralized tower
Judgment: Confusion of languages and scattering.
4. Promise (Patriarchal Rule) Abraham to Exodus (Gen 12-Exodus 19)
Human responsibility: Live by faith in God's promises
Failure: Slavery in Egypt due to reliance of Egypt and other compromises
Judgement: Egyptian bondage
5. Law: Sinai to the Cross (Exodus 20-John 19)
Human responsibility : Obey the Mosaic Law
Failure: Repeated national disobedience, idolatry
Judgment: Exile, destruction of the temple, and eventually, rejection of the Messiah
6. Grace (Church Age) Pentecost to the Rapture (Acts 2- the present)
Human responsibility: Salvation by grace through faith in Christ; live by the Spirit
Failure: Apostasy, lukewarmness, moral compromise (e.g., 2 Tim 3)
Judgment: Tribulation period
7. Kingdom (Millennial Reign) Second Coming to the end of the Millennium
Human responsibility : Obey Christ's reign
Failure: Rebellion by some at the end of the 1,000 years (Rev 20:7-10)
Judgment: Final defeat of Satan and Great White Throne Judgment
(The above information is from ChatGPT)
It is true that the above from Chat is not comprehensive, and may to some, not be totally accurate, but even so we can see that dispensations 6 and 7 have a premillennial Rapture a specific time period of tribulation as the judgement on Christ's church (and at the same time claims the church won't be here, having been raptured from the earth), and a literal thousand year reign of Christ on earth as his second coming, superimposed into its dispensational interpretive view. And it has geo/political Israel as the Kingdom of God during this thousand years.
Here are the contradictions to Scripture and to itself that produces.
It has the church age as the only age of grace when everything that God gives is grace. (And in my opinion, the covenant framework makes that same mistake, at least in the way they are wording things and making distinctions. More on that later).
A human responsibility is added to grace (Point 6).
It is the church that is said to be judged by the tribulation. (Christ says the gates of hell will not prevail against the church.)
It claims a pre-trib rapture of the church before the Tribulation.
It has Christ returning to reign for a thousand years in Jerusalem.
Who are these people he is ruling over? Those who survived God's judgement of the tribulation? The Jews who converted during it?
It has Jesus as a king ruling over people who rebel against his reign. (Rev 20)
A second judgement and the final defeat of Satan which he was apparently not able to do simply by appearing.
It is possible that ChatGPT has misrepresented some of the dispensations in its brevity (and corrections are welcome and we can deal with them here. There are variations in how dispensations are described.) But one thing is clear. The Kingdom of God has been divided into two kingdoms. If the Church is the Kingdom of God, and Israel on earth during this 1000 years is the kingdom, his kingdom is divided until such time as the church is returned.
According to the Chat depiction of the seventh dispensation, where are those raptured saints during that thousand years and when do they return?
I will address the Covenant view in Part 2 and put the pieces together. I would like to make a point here as to the direction I intend this thread to go. It is in the Apologetics forum for a reason. Even though it naturally touches of end times eschatology, it is posted in Aploogetics to encourage thoughtful discussion on these theological frameworks rather than to rehash common debate over Revelation's details.
In classical dispensationalism the dispensations are distinct periods of time where God interacts with humanity in a particular way. These dispensations represents God's progressive revelation and testing of mankind throughout history.
The dispensations are as follows:
1. Innocence: creation to the Fall (Gen 1-3)
Human responsibility to obey God's command.
Failure and fall into sin.
Judgement and expulsion from Eden and a curse on creation.
2. Conscience: Fall to the flood (Gen 4-8)
Human responsibility to follow the inner moral compass and offer acceptable worship
Failure, increasing wickedness
Judgement: the flood
3. Human Government: post-flood to Babel (Gen 9-11)
Human responsibility: Govern righteously and scatter across the earth
Failure: Rebellion at Babel, attempt to build centralized tower
Judgment: Confusion of languages and scattering.
4. Promise (Patriarchal Rule) Abraham to Exodus (Gen 12-Exodus 19)
Human responsibility: Live by faith in God's promises
Failure: Slavery in Egypt due to reliance of Egypt and other compromises
Judgement: Egyptian bondage
5. Law: Sinai to the Cross (Exodus 20-John 19)
Human responsibility : Obey the Mosaic Law
Failure: Repeated national disobedience, idolatry
Judgment: Exile, destruction of the temple, and eventually, rejection of the Messiah
6. Grace (Church Age) Pentecost to the Rapture (Acts 2- the present)
Human responsibility: Salvation by grace through faith in Christ; live by the Spirit
Failure: Apostasy, lukewarmness, moral compromise (e.g., 2 Tim 3)
Judgment: Tribulation period
7. Kingdom (Millennial Reign) Second Coming to the end of the Millennium
Human responsibility : Obey Christ's reign
Failure: Rebellion by some at the end of the 1,000 years (Rev 20:7-10)
Judgment: Final defeat of Satan and Great White Throne Judgment
(The above information is from ChatGPT)
It is true that the above from Chat is not comprehensive, and may to some, not be totally accurate, but even so we can see that dispensations 6 and 7 have a premillennial Rapture a specific time period of tribulation as the judgement on Christ's church (and at the same time claims the church won't be here, having been raptured from the earth), and a literal thousand year reign of Christ on earth as his second coming, superimposed into its dispensational interpretive view. And it has geo/political Israel as the Kingdom of God during this thousand years.
Here are the contradictions to Scripture and to itself that produces.
It has the church age as the only age of grace when everything that God gives is grace. (And in my opinion, the covenant framework makes that same mistake, at least in the way they are wording things and making distinctions. More on that later).
A human responsibility is added to grace (Point 6).
It is the church that is said to be judged by the tribulation. (Christ says the gates of hell will not prevail against the church.)
It claims a pre-trib rapture of the church before the Tribulation.
It has Christ returning to reign for a thousand years in Jerusalem.
Who are these people he is ruling over? Those who survived God's judgement of the tribulation? The Jews who converted during it?
It has Jesus as a king ruling over people who rebel against his reign. (Rev 20)
A second judgement and the final defeat of Satan which he was apparently not able to do simply by appearing.
It is possible that ChatGPT has misrepresented some of the dispensations in its brevity (and corrections are welcome and we can deal with them here. There are variations in how dispensations are described.) But one thing is clear. The Kingdom of God has been divided into two kingdoms. If the Church is the Kingdom of God, and Israel on earth during this 1000 years is the kingdom, his kingdom is divided until such time as the church is returned.
According to the Chat depiction of the seventh dispensation, where are those raptured saints during that thousand years and when do they return?
I will address the Covenant view in Part 2 and put the pieces together. I would like to make a point here as to the direction I intend this thread to go. It is in the Apologetics forum for a reason. Even though it naturally touches of end times eschatology, it is posted in Aploogetics to encourage thoughtful discussion on these theological frameworks rather than to rehash common debate over Revelation's details.