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Our Comments
Kelly Varner has been gifted to write, and this gifting especially comes out
in Whose Right It Is. Though he still holds to a futurist view of eschatology,
he does teach covenant theology. This book does an excellent job of
handling Daniel's 70 weeks from a covenantal perspective. In this
covenantal spirit, Varner lays out the biblical basis for victorious living
today by understanding what God has accomplished through His
covenant with Jesus Christ.
Book Information
Whose Right It Is
Kelley Varner
© 1995 by Kelley Varner
Paperback - 305 pages
$10.00

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WHOSE RIGHT IT IS
A Handbook of Covenantal Theology
by Kelley Varner

Table of Contents
Foreword
Preface
Introduction
Part One
The Warfare Is Accomplished
Chapter Two Satan Is Defeated 21
Chapter Three Jesus Is Lord 41
Part Two
The Earth Is the Lord's
Chapter Four Jesus Is the Seed of Abraham 59
Chapter Five Jesus Is the Seed of David 85
Part Three
The Dragon Still Has a Mouth
Chapter Six Eschatological Perspectives and
Terminology 109
Chapter Seven A Fresh Historical Look at
Dispensationalism 135
Chapter Eight A Fresh Biblical Look at
Dispensationalism 155
Chapter Nine The Meeting in the Air 207
Chapter Ten Daniel's Prophecy of Seventy Weeks 241
Chapter Eleven Epilogue 291
Appendix A Scripture Versions 299
Appendix B Recommended Reading 301
Appendix C Books & Tapes by Kelley Varner 304
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"…whose right it is…."
Ezekiel 21:27
Whose Right It Is: A Handbook of Covenantal Theology
is a fresh apostolic admonition to the Body of Christ, especially God’s
people in America. Brethren, we must return to sound orthodoxy, the
expository preaching and teaching of the Scriptures. Jesus is the Word (Jn.
1:1). Preach the Word… preach Jesus!
Holding to and building on our evangelical and Pentecostal
heritage, we are being apprehended for the upward calling to the Feast of
Tabernacles (Deut. 16:16; Phil. 3:12-14). The Mosaic "pattern"
(Ex. 25:40) with its three dimensions—Outer Court, Holy Place, and Most
Holy Place—reveals our growth in grace, the development of the New
Testament Christian as a babe, youth, and full-grown man (I Jn. 2:12-14).
In the initial experience of regeneration (Jn. 3:7),
expressed in the Feast of Passover, the emphasis is completely on man.
This is followed by the firstfruits Feast of Pentecost, the earnest of our
inheritance (Rom. 8:23; Ephe. 1:13-14)—an outrageous, adolescent mixture
of God and man.
Beyond the veil, where men seek His face (nature) not His
hand (works), the total focus is on God. There, in the depths, His
footsteps are not known (Ps. 77:19). The uncharted territory of the Feast
of Tabernacles is the path that the vulture’s eye has not seen (Job
28:7). There, in unapproachable light, is no darkness at all (I Tim. 6:16;
I Jn. 1:5), no jungle and no lion, no devil…there (Is. 35:9; I Pet.
5:8).
While we hold the vision of the third feast and the
maturity of the Church before us, we are experientially Pentecostal—youthful
in our understanding, living in an in-part realm marked by duality or
double-mindedness (Jas. 1:8). This is evidenced by the current emphasis
upon Jesus and the devil, the new man and the old man.
To see is to understand (Eph. 1:18). We become what we
behold in worship (2 Cor. 3:18). Our vision—our focus and emphasis—must
be adjusted away from the devil and placed back upon Jesus. The time has
come for the Church to unmask our adversary and put him under our feet
(Rom. 13:11-14; 16:20).
Heb. 12:2, NIV
Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter
of our faith….
Not Wrong, Just Incomplete
The information that men have received to date with regard
to the devil and the endtimes is not necessarily wrong, just incomplete.
Acts 18:24, KJV
And a certain Jew named Apollos, born at
Alexandria, an elequent man, and mighty in the scriptures, came to
Ephesus.
The Living Bible says that Apollos was "a wonderful
Bible teacher and preacher." Like this powerful man, many today are
fluent orators, skilled in literature and the arts. Apollos had stores of
learning and could use it convincingly; he was "mighty" or
"capable" in the Word.
Acts 18:25, KJV
This man was instructed in the way of the Lord; and
being fervent in the spirit, he spake and taught diligently the things
of the Lord, knowing only the baptism of John.
Acts 18:25, TLB
…but that is all he knew. He had never heard the rest
of the story!
The word describing Apollos’ indoctrination is
katecheo (compare the English chatechism). This earnest
Christian leader was on fire, ministering the Scriptures he knew with
exactness and accuracy (Lk. 1:3). But he knew only the baptism of John—the
dynamics of a previous order.
Acts 18:26, KJV
And he began to speak boldly in the synagogue: whom
when Aquila and Priscilla had heard, they took him unto them, and
expounded unto him the way of God more perfectly.
Apollos preached frankly, confident in spirit and
demeanor. The pastoral team of Aquila and Priscilla "expounded"
or "exposed" the way of God more perfectly to this teachable
man. The information that Apollos had received was incomplete, therefore
inaccurate. He needed to hear the rest of the story.
No one has ever graduated from the school of the Holy
Spirit. If one’s theology or eschatology is ever challenged by new
considerations, he should maintain a right spirit and respond with
flexibility and openness. When it comes to picking between God’s Word
and man’s tradition, there is no choice.
Whose Right It Is
Ezek. 21:25-27, KJV
And thou, profane wicked prince of Israel, whose day
is come, when iniquity shall have an end,
Thus saith the Lord God; Remove the diadem, and take
off the crown: this shall not be the same: exalt him that is low, and
abase him that is high.
I will overturn, overturn, overturn, it: and it shall
be nor more, until He come whose right it is; and I will give it Him.
Ezek. 21:27, NIV
…until He comes to whom it rightfully belongs….
Ezek. 21:27, TLB
…until the Man appears who has a right to it. And I
will give it all to Him.
Our primary text is prophetically addressed to wicked King
Zedekiah and the evil spirit who energized him—satan, the god and prince
of this world. The devil’s day is about to end. Up till now, it appears
that he has been free to roam loose while the Church has been in
captivity. But the Day of the Lord is a day of reversals (Ps. 126); the
wicked one will be bound and the people of God released!
In its historical context, Ezekiel 21:25-27 addresses
Zedekiah, who was king of Judah from 597-586 B.C. (see 2 Kings 24:17-20;
25:1-7; Jer. 37:1-2; 2 Chron. 36:12). The last of 21 monarches in the
Davidic line, this evil man eventually fell under Jehovah’s rod of
correction, King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon (2 Kings 25:7).
"Until He come…." This specific prophecy
heralds the arrival of the Messiah. The Lord Jesus Christ is the one
"whose right it is…." Moses, centuries before, bore witness to
the Advent of Judah’s Ruler and Zion’s King.
Gen. 49:10, NIV
The scepter will not depart from Judah, nor the ruler’s
staff from between his feet, until He comes to whom it belongs and the
obedience of the nations is His.
Whose Day Is Come
2 Cor. 2:11, KJV
Lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are
not ignorant of his devices.
The Greek word for "devices" means
"perception, purpose," and is translated in the King James
Version as "device, mind, thought." The strategies and schemes
concocted in the gates of hell will not overcome the true Church (Mt.
16:18). The prophet Ezekiel details Zedekiah’s demise, reflecting satan’s
undoing.
Ezek. 21:25, KJV
And thou, profane wicked prince of Israel, whose day
is come, when iniquity shall have an end.
Ezek. 21:25, NIV
…whose time of punishment has reached its climax.
Ezek. 21:25, TLB
O King Zedekiah, evil prince of Israel, your final day
of reckoning is here.
As with Zedekiah, the devil, the wicked prince of this
world system (Jn. 12:31; Eph. 2:2), is "profane." This Hebrew
word means "pierced (especially to death); figuratively,
polluted." Translated over 30 times in the Book of Ezekiel as
"slain," it comes from a primitive root meaning "to bore,
to wound, to dissolve." It points to satan’s day of reckoning at
Golgotha, where Jesus "pierced" him through at the cross (Col.
2:15). On that awful day when the true Passover Lamb was sacrificed for
us, Jesus bruised the king of darkness and dismantled his kingdom.
Like the courageous Jael who bored the workman’s hammer
through the head of Sisera (Judg. 4:18-21; 5:24-27), Jesus mortally
wounded our adversary at the place of the skull (Hab. 3:13). In that
historic moment, iniquity and perversity came to an end; it was literally
"chopped off." This latter noun in Ezekiel 21:25 is used to
denote the end of a person or a "death" (Gen. 6:13). The day has
come, the seventh day from Adam and the third day from Jesus (Hos. 6:1-3;
2 Pet. 3:8), to fully understand and appropriate those spoils of His
eternal triumph!
Remove the Diadem and Take Off the Crown
Ezek. 21:26, KJV
Thus saith the Lord God; Remove the diadem, and take
off the crown: this shall not be the same: exalt him that is low, and
abase him that is high.
Ezek. 21:26, NIV
…Take off the turban, remove the crown. It will not
be as it was….
Ezek. 21:26, TLB
…The old order changes….
The word for "diadem" in our root text means
"a tiara, the official turban (of a king or high priest)," and
it is translated in the King James Version as "diadem, mitre."
It reveals the office of the High Priest (see Ex. 28:4,37,39; 29:6; 39:28,
31; Lev. 8:9; 16:4). The "crown" speaks of the office of king.
Together, they point to the Messiah, Jesus Christ, our great King-Priest
after the order of Melchisedec (Heb. 5:1-8:6).
The power and authority of the Kingdom was taken from
Zedekiah and retained by the heavenly Father until the day He sent His
Son, made of a woman, made under the law (Gal. 4:4). The prophet Zechariah
foresaw the time when Messiah would come, the one "whose right it
is," who mingles the office of priest and king, rightly attired with
both mitre and crown (Zech. 6:12-13; Heb. 2:9). Jesus would build the true
temple, the Church of the New Covenant (Mt. 6:18).
"This [this government, administration, authority,
way of things] shall not be the same" (Ezek. 21:26). In the coming of
the promised Messiah, the order of the Old Testament would change. The Law
and priesthood would never be the same (Heb. 7:12). Sin and death was
swallowed up by the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus. Levi was superceded by
Melchisedec.
Having prophesied these things, Ezekiel then sets forth
the governing principle of the Messianic Kingdom, the criterion for being
a king-priest, the key that unlocks all true spiritual authority (Mk.
10:44-45).
Ezek. 21:26, KJV
…exalt him that is low, and abase him that is high.
This word for "exalt" means "to soar, be
lofty." "Low" comes from a root meaning "to depress or
sink, to humiliate," the same word translated in this verse as
"abase." The word for "high" means "elevated,
powerful, arrogant."
The excessive, unreasonable focus upon the devil must be
abated. Jesus must be lifted up and exalted (Jn. 12:32). Just as ungodly
King Zedekiah was publicly stripped, humiliated, and his crown removed, so
the unwarranted attention given to satan must be severed from him and
given to Him "whose right it is."