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The Promise of His Coming by J. E. Leonard

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The Promise of His Coming gives a good synopsis of the covenantal past fulfillment view of eschatology.  While written in a reader friendly fashion, it presents in depth truths that would benefit any student of eschatology.

The Promise Of His Coming
R. C. Leonard and J. E. Leonard
© 1996 by Laudemont Press
Paperback - 223 pages
$9.75

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The Promise of His Coming
by J. E. Leonard

Introduction

Eschatology, the study of the "the end" or final things, continues to fascinate students of the Bible. New books regularly appear laying out a scenario for the return of Christ, or in some way reinforcing the expectation many Christians have that Jesus Christ will soon come to fulfill the hope of the kingdom of God.

This is understandable. After all, the central focus of the New Testament is the appearance of Jesus Christ on the human scene. Beginning with the accounts of his birth, baptism, and ministry in the Gospels, the story moves on to his death, resurrection, and ascension, and then to the anticipation of his reappearance in power and majesty.

For nearly two thousand years the Christian church has proclaimed the hope of the glorious advent of Jesus Christ. His coming is to right the wrongs in the world, bring a final destruction of evil, and initiate an eternity which believers will enjoy in his presence. The various branches of the church, and interpreters within each branch, differ on the details and timing of this great event, but virtually all Christians look forward to the end of the old creation and the introduction of the new heaven and new earth which John describes in his Revelation.

Among some Christian groups it seems that the first coming of Christ pales in comparison with the expectation surrounding his coming again. Jesus’ ministry fulfilled the prophets’ visions of a deliverer for Israel; it established a new covenant of salvation for all people and introduced true Light into a darkened world. Yet even while Jesus was with his disciples, they were asking questions about his eventual return. After he was taken up to heaven, interest in the parousia, the coming appearance of Christ, grew more intense. Indeed, the major theme of apostolic teaching from Peter’s sermon on the day of Pentecost to the Revelation of John seems to be the impending return of Jesus Christ.

It is not surprising that the pages of the New Testament pulse with excitement at such a prospect. This anticipation was no doubt fueled by Jesus’ own statement to the effect that the coming of the Son of Man would occur within the lifetime of at least some of the people to whom he preached. In talking with his disciples about the events which would accompany the end of the age and the coming of the Son of Man, Jesus declares, "Truly I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place" (Matt. 24:34; Luke 21:32). Subsequent New Testament teaching continues the theme of the imminent coming of the Lord. At least twenty-three of the twenty-seven New Testament books refer to the impending consummation.

But despite the first-century church’s fervent and consistent proclamation of Christ’s coming, years came and went without its apparent fulfillment. Already in the New Testament community there were those who began to doubt. "Where is the promise of his coming?" they asked (2 Pet. 3:4). Two millennia have passed since the question was first posed, and in all generations there are those, doubters and believers alike, who raise it again. Is it possible that the church has misunderstood the meaning of Christ’s coming?

For evangelical Christians, who subscribe to the inerrancy of the scriptural record, the New Testament’s affirmation of the imminent appearance of Christ and the end of the age presents a credibility problem. If it can be shown that all of the biblical writers and Jesus himself stated unequivocally that his coming and the end of the world were soon to occur, three possibilities present themselves: (1) they were mistaken, (2) they meant something other than what they appear to say, or (3) the end in fact occurred, just as they said it would.

Liberal interpreters, who have discarded the idea of an infallible Scripture, might accept the first option. Evangelicals, who believe the Bible does not make mistakes, could not. But this seems to force them to the position, however adroitly they may phrase it, that the New Testament writers gave a misleading impression to the people who first read their words and took them at face value. How else can one explain why a "coming" they said would take place in their own generation has yet to occur almost two millennia later?

But the third option remains. Perhaps Christ and the apostles meant exactly what they said, and they were correct. Perhaps the church has misunderstood what they meant by the coming of Christ and the end of the age. Did something indeed occur at the close of the New Testament era which was the very thing they predicted? A growing number of evangelical students of the Bible are receiving this third option, in one form or another. It is not a new viewpoint, but has historical precedent in Christian scholarship.

This study examines those statements of Jesus and the New Testament writers which relate, in particular, to the time of the parousia, and discusses the ways these time statements have been interpreted by students of eschatology along the lines of the three options described above. In drawing to a conclusion, the study further suggests a way to understand the coming of Christ in the ongoing life of the church, exploring possibilities expressed in the New Testament itself.

The authors are well aware that their study presents a conclusion which differs from the idea of the coming of Christ held by most evangelical Christians today. It is therefore appropriate to note that the authors’ views are their own, and do not necessarily reflect those of any educational institution, publisher or Christian ministry with which they may have been associated. Nevertheless, they join with Bible-believing Christians every where to affirm the historic faith in God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and in the authority and integrity of his Word. And they offer this study to the larger evangelical community in the conviction that this is a time not to erect walls, but to build bridges.

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