
(Taken from the January 2002 edition or our Hidden Manna magazine.)
“Surely we must be living in the last days…with the attacks
on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, the constant alarm of further
terrorism on the home front, the bioterrorism realities of anthrax and
threat of smallpox. The signs of the times are
everywhere; it must be the beginning of the end times…” So say many
sincere Christian leaders, pastors, writers, and scholars. The recent
tragic events in America have once again fueled another round of
“prophetic” interpretations and calculations that identify us as “the
terminal generation,” who will see the end of the world. Other
negative historical events of the last century—such as WW II and Adolf
Hitler, the Cold War with Russia and the threat of nuclear war, Middle
Eastern oil shortages, and the Gulf War and Saddam Hussein—have generated
similar rhetoric. “But,” say the apocalyptic prophets, “it’s different
this time. Our predictions are correct. The end of time is
surely upon us!” Maybe their predictions would be right if it wasn’t for
the fact that nowhere in the Scriptures is there a reference to the “end
of the world” or the “end of time”! As a matter of fact, the Bible gives
evidence of just the opposite:
…from the beginning of the world…throughout all
ages, world without end…(Eph. 3:9,21 KJV).
One generation passes away, and another generation
comes; but the earth abides forever…(Eccl. 1:4)
If the scriptural references to the “end times” do not
refer to the end of time, and the references to the “last days” do
not refer to the end of the world, what are they referring to? A careful
study reveals that the Holy Spirit inspired the writers of Scripture to
speak of the time of the end rather than the end of time. The time
of the end of what? The end of all that God’s covenant people of that hour
had ever known—the passing away of the Old Covenant Judaic system of
animal sacrifices with the temple worship.

God…has in these last days spoken to us by His Son…(Heb.
1:1-2).
…but now, once at the end of the ages, He has
appeared…(Heb. 9:26).
He…was manifest in these last times for you…(1
Pet. 1:20).
But the end of all things is at hand…(1 Pet.
4:7).
Apostle Peter and the writer to the Hebrews were
writing the above messages to their current generation, as was Jesus when
He told His disciples:
Assuredly, I say to you, all these things will come
upon this generation (Matt. 23:36).
Assuredly, I say to you, this generation will by no
means pass away till all these things take place (Matt. 24:34).
Also, the Revelation given to Apostle John by Jesus
Christ speaks to John’s contemporaries living in the time of the end (Rev.
1:1,3; 22:6-7). In the final chapter of Revelation, John writes, “Do
not seal the words of the prophecy of this book, for the time is at hand”
(22:10). As John was addressing the seven churches in Revelation Chapters
2 and 3, he was speaking to his own churches in Asia Minor, and all seven
prophecies have passages that infer the tumultuous ending of Old Covenant
Judaism. John encouraged his church members to overcome in Christ during
their troublesome times. Likewise, where the Old Covenant prophets refer
to “the end” (including Daniel’s seventy weeks and Daniel’s time of
the end), these passages are referring to the time of the end of Old
Covenant Judaism rather than the end of the world. The New Covenant
scriptures are filled with the same.
Since the Scriptures do not speak of the world coming
to an end, our current troublesome events in America are not foretelling
the end of the world. This is truly good news (the gospel) for modern-day
believers. Empowered by the Holy Spirit, we can live victoriously and
overcome all negative circumstances, as did the early New Covenant
believers that the Apostle John wrote to in the book of Revelation:
And have made us kings and priests to our God; and
we shall reign on the earth (Rev. 5:10).
Jonathan Clark is an elder
of Abundant Life Covenant
Church
and a physician in Springfield, Missouri.
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