A Biblical Theology of Presence

Pentecost, Divine Dwelling, and the Covenant Life of God’s People

Today, the Church celebrates Pentecost.

For many Christians, Pentecost is often reduced to discussions surrounding spiritual gifts, tongues, empowerment, or the birth of the church. While each of these themes carries genuine theological significance, Pentecost ultimately represents something far deeper in the biblical imagination: the fulfillment of God’s long desire to dwell among His people. The rushing wind of Acts 2, the tongues of fire, and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit are not isolated phenomena disconnected from Israel’s story. Rather, Pentecost stands as the culmination of a divine movement that begins in Eden itself, revealing a God who has always sought covenantal nearness with humanity.¹

The story of Scripture is, in many ways, a story of presence. From the opening pages of Genesis to the closing vision of Revelation, the biblical narrative consistently portrays God not merely as sovereign ruler over creation, but as One who desires to dwell among His people. Unlike the distant deities of surrounding Ancient Near Eastern cultures, whose favor was often mediated through inaccessible sanctuaries or royal elites, Yahweh repeatedly moves toward His covenant people.²

He walks in gardens, descends upon mountains, fills tents and temples with glory, journeys with wandering tribes, clothes Himself in flesh, and ultimately pours His Spirit upon ordinary men and women gathered together in one place.

Pentecost, therefore, should not first be viewed merely as empowerment for ministry. Pentecost is the restoration of divine dwelling.

Yet throughout Scripture, divine presence never terminates on the individual. God dwells among a people. Presence in the biblical imagination is covenantal, communal, and relational. The God who repeatedly chooses to draw near simultaneously calls His people into faithful nearness with Him and with one another. In a modern age increasingly shaped by mobility, distraction, autonomy, and loosely connected spirituality, Scripture quietly presses an uncomfortable question upon us: What kind of life is formed when God dwells among His people?³

To answer that question rightly, one must begin not in Acts, but in Eden.

The biblical story begins not with distance, but proximity. Humanity is not created merely to obey God from afar, but to dwell with Him in sacred space. Genesis presents Eden not simply as an idyllic garden, but as the first sanctuary, a place where heaven and earth overlap and where divine presence is experienced without obstruction. Increasingly, Old Testament scholarship has recognized the temple-like features embedded within the garden narrative. Eden contains priestly vocation, sacred geography, eastward entrances, precious stones, rivers flowing outward, and cherubim guardianship—imagery that later reappears in Israel’s tabernacle and temple traditions.⁴

John Walton argues persuasively that Genesis presents Eden less as primitive geography and more as sacred cosmic space where divine order and divine presence uniquely reside.⁵ Likewise, Gordon Wenham notes significant literary parallels between Eden and Israel’s sanctuary structures, suggesting that humanity’s original vocation was priestly participation within sacred space.⁶ Humanity, in other words, was created for relational nearness with God.

Genesis 3:8 offers one of Scripture’s most striking portraits of divine intimacy:

“And they heard the sound of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day.”

The Hebrew verb translated “walking” is הָלַךְ (halak), a term frequently conveying movement, accompaniment, and relational nearness.⁷ God is not portrayed as distant or inaccessible. He walks among humanity.

This image becomes even more striking when read against its Ancient Near Eastern backdrop. In surrounding cultures, gods were often perceived as territorial, distant, or accessible only through elite mediation. Sacred presence remained largely confined to temples and priestly systems. Israel’s story begins differently. Yahweh walks among His image-bearers. The biblical God is relationally near.⁸ Humanity’s original calling likewise reflects priestly overtones. Genesis 2:15 describes Adam’s responsibility to “work” and “keep” the garden using the Hebrew terms עָבַד (abad) and שָׁמַר (shamar), language later used to describe priestly service within the tabernacle.⁹ Eden functions not merely as habitat, but sanctuary. Humanity’s purpose is covenant participation in the presence of God. The tragedy of Genesis 3, then, is not simply moral failure. It is rupture of presence. Humanity is driven eastward into exile, removed from sacred space and estranged from unhindered communion with God.¹⁰ Much of Scripture thereafter unfolds as the story of God restoring what was lost in Eden: a people dwelling faithfully in divine presence.

The Old Testament understanding of presence extends beyond abstract theological categories into deeply relational language. Perhaps no Hebrew term better captures this than פָּנִים (panim), most commonly translated “face,” yet frequently carrying the broader meaning of presence itself.¹¹ In modern thought, presence often implies simple proximity. One may occupy the same room while remaining emotionally or relationally absent. Hebrew thought presses further.

To stand “before the face” of another signifies attentiveness, relational encounter, covenant nearness, and shared communion.

This reality explains the repeated biblical emphasis on seeking God’s face: “You have said, ‘Seek my face.’ My heart says to you, ‘Your face, LORD, do I seek’” (Ps 27:8). The psalmist does not long for visual access to divine features. He longs for nearness. Seeking God’s face means seeking communion with God Himself.¹² Walter Brueggemann rightly observes that Israel’s faith consistently resisted detached religiosity and instead emphasized covenant relationship with the living God.¹³

Likewise, the priestly blessing frames divine favor in terms of presence: “The LORD make his face shine upon you” (Num 6:25). Blessing is relational before it is material. God’s shining face signifies divine attentiveness, covenant favor, and sustained nearness.¹⁴ Conversely, when Scripture speaks of God hiding His face, the imagery signals rupture, grief, judgment, or covenant distance.¹⁵

No figure illustrates this dynamic more profoundly than Moses. Following Israel’s rebellion with the golden calf, God declares that He will no longer go among the people lest His holiness consume them. Moses responds with one of the most theologically significant prayers in the Old Testament: “If your presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here” (Exod 33:15).

The Hebrew term translated “presence” literally reads פָּנֶיךָ (panecha)—“your face.”¹⁶ Moses understands something essential: Israel’s identity is not secured by military strength, geography, gifted leadership, or national success.

The distinguishing feature of God’s people is divine presence.

If Eden reveals humanity’s original experience of divine nearness, the tabernacle represents God’s redemptive movement toward restoring what sin fractured. Following Israel’s liberation from Egypt, God does not merely establish law or provide direction for national identity. Instead, one of His earliest commands concerns sacred space: “And let them make me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them” (Exod 25:8). The Hebrew verb translated “dwell” is שָׁכַן (shakan), a word carrying the sense of settling down, residing, or tabernacling among a people.¹⁷ The theological implications of this term are difficult to overstate. God’s intention is not simply to oversee Israel from a distance, but to reside in their midst. Unlike neighboring deities whose presence remained fixed within inaccessible sanctuaries or royal temples, Yahweh chooses proximity. The God of Israel desires to dwell among His people.

The grammar of Exodus 25:8 deserves careful attention. God does not first say, “Build me a sanctuary so that you may worship me there.” Rather, He says, “that I may dwell among them.” Divine initiative precedes human response. Covenant begins with God moving toward humanity. Presence is not earned through religious performance; it is given through grace.¹⁸ In some regard building sanctuaries may be the opposite of what God was intimately desiring – That is what ANE culture did for “the other gods.” Could building “MAGNIFICENT” sanctuaries have been offense to the LORD? Perhaps, but let’s consider what a simple tabernacle meant.

The tabernacle itself becomes a visible sign of restored Edenic communion. Increasingly, scholars have recognized significant literary and symbolic parallels between Eden and Israel’s sanctuary traditions. Gordon Wenham famously argued that the tabernacle functions as a kind of renewed Eden, sacred overlap between heaven and earth where God’s presence once again resides among humanity.¹⁹ Like Eden, access moves eastward. Cherubim guard sacred space. Gold and precious stones adorn the sanctuary. Priestly service echoes humanity’s original vocation to cultivate and guard holy ground.²⁰ But we also need to keep in mind that God created Eden as a sanctuary – it was not man made.

John Walton similarly notes that sacred space in the Old Testament functions not primarily as religious architecture but as the localized manifestation of divine presence.²¹ The tabernacle was never fundamentally about ritual performance or man’s ability to build. It was about nearness. This reality becomes unmistakable in Exodus 40: “Then the cloud covered the tent of meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle” (Exod 40:34). The imagery echoes Sinai while simultaneously moving beyond it. The God who descended upon the mountain now resides among His people in the wilderness. Israel carries not merely commandments but divine presence.

Later Jewish theology would describe this manifest indwelling through the concept of Shekinah, a term derived from the root shakan. Though the noun itself does not explicitly appear in Scripture, rabbinic tradition employed it to describe the dwelling glory of God among His covenant people.²² What matters biblically is not terminology but theological reality: covenant life in Israel was fundamentally shaped by God’s nearness.

This is why wilderness narratives repeatedly emphasize God’s movement with Israel: “By day the LORD went ahead of them in a pillar of cloud… and by night in a pillar of fire” (Exod 13:21). God journeys with His people. Presence accompanies wandering, uncertainty, fear, formation, and dependence. Israel learns that covenant life is not sustained through self-sufficiency but through continual nearness to God. Divine presence becomes the defining characteristic of covenant identity.

Leviticus deepens this theological vision: “I will walk among you and will be your God, and you shall be my people” (Lev 26:12). The language intentionally echoes Eden. Once again, God “walks among” humanity. Redemption is portrayed not merely as forgiveness of sins or moral improvement, but restoration of fellowship.²³ The goal of covenant is communion. Yet Israel repeatedly struggled with what might be described as religious proximity without relational presence. The people often maintained sacrifice while abandoning covenant faithfulness.

Worship continued while hearts drifted. Ritual persisted while devotion weakened. The prophets relentlessly expose this fracture.

Isaiah famously rebukes Israel: “These people draw near with their mouth and honor me with their lips, while their hearts are far from me” (Isa 29:13). The problem was not external participation alone. Israel remained physically present within worship structures while relationally absent from God Himself. Scripture repeatedly refuses to separate covenant participation from genuine relational devotion.²⁴ Presence in the biblical imagination is never reduced to mere proximity. This tension reaches its most devastating moment in Ezekiel’s vision of divine departure. In Ezekiel 10–11, the prophet witnesses the gradual withdrawal of God’s glory from the temple. The imagery is profoundly tragic. The God who desired to dwell among His people slowly departs because covenant rebellion has made sacred space inhospitable to communion.²⁵

For Israel, exile represented far more than political defeat. It was the grief of absence. Temple destruction symbolized disrupted nearness, covenant fracture, and longing for restored communion. Much of Israel’s lament literature emerges from this ache: “My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and appear before God?” (Ps 42:2). Yet even amid judgment, the prophets refuse despair. Again and again, restoration is framed through the language of renewed presence.

Ezekiel proclaims: “My dwelling place shall be with them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people” (Ezek 37:27). Once more, the language of dwelling dominates redemption. God’s answer to exile is not merely moral correction or national restoration. It is renewed presence.²⁶ Joel likewise anticipates a day when God will pour out His Spirit upon all flesh (Joel 2:28–29), signaling something extraordinary: divine nearness will no longer remain concentrated within temple structures, prophets, priests, or kings. The presence of God will expand outward into the gathered people themselves.²⁷ By the close of the Old Testament, this longing remains unresolved. Israel possesses worship, memory, and covenant expectation, yet the fullness of divine dwelling still feels incomplete. The question lingers quietly over the biblical narrative:

How will God once again fully dwell among His people?

The answer arrives not first in wind or fire, but in flesh.

The New Testament opens with language saturated in Old Testament expectation. Matthew introduces Jesus as Emmanuel, “God with us” (Matt 1:23), immediately signaling that the story unfolding in Christ cannot be separated from Israel’s centuries-long longing for restored presence. Yet it is John’s Gospel that develops the theological implications most fully.

John writes: “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory…” (John 1:14). The Greek verb translated “dwelt” is ἐσκήνωσεν (eskēnōsen), literally meaning “to tabernacle” or “pitch a tent.”²⁸ John intentionally evokes Exodus imagery. Just as Yahweh once dwelled among Israel through tabernacle presence, God has now chosen to dwell among humanity in the person of Jesus Christ. This wording is profoundly deliberate. John could have chosen a more generic term for residence. Instead, he employs language saturated with covenant memory. Jesus becomes the fulfillment of tabernacle theology itself. Sacred space is no longer confined to architecture. Divine presence now resides within a person.²⁹

Even the reference to glory deepens the connection. When John writes, “we have seen his glory,” readers familiar with Israel’s Scriptures would immediately recall the cloud of divine glory filling tabernacle and temple (Exod 40:34–35; 1 Kings 8:10–11). Jesus is presented not merely as a messenger from God but as the embodied return of divine presence among humanity.³⁰

By the time the reader arrives at Acts 2, the biblical story has already established a profound theological expectation. God walked with humanity in Eden, dwelled among Israel through tabernacle and temple, departed amid covenant rebellion, and returned in the person of Christ. Yet Jesus Himself repeatedly spoke of a coming reality that would intensify divine nearness even further. During the Farewell Discourse, He comforts His disciples with language rooted in covenant continuity: “And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Helper, to be with you forever… He dwells with you and will be in you” (John 14:16–17).

The language marks a dramatic theological shift. Under the old covenant, divine presence often rested selectively upon prophets, kings, judges, priests, sanctuary, or temple. Soon, Jesus says, the Spirit will not merely remain beside God’s people but within them. The trajectory of Scripture presses steadily closer. God moves from walking beside humanity in Eden, to dwelling among Israel in sacred space, to tabernacling in flesh through Christ, and now toward inhabiting the gathered people of God themselves.³¹

Luke’s account of Pentecost deliberately presents Acts 2 not as an isolated spiritual event but as the culmination of centuries of covenant longing. The narrative opens with a detail often overlooked: “When the day of Pentecost arrived, they were all together in one place” (Acts 2:1).

The gatheredness matters.

Throughout Scripture, divine presence repeatedly manifests within assembled covenant contexts. Israel gathered at Sinai. The tabernacle stood in the midst of the camp. Temple worship centered around communal rhythms of sacrifice, prayer, pilgrimage, and feasting. God forms a people before He commissions a mission. Presence in Scripture consistently possesses a communal dimension.³²

Luke then describes: “Suddenly there came from heaven a sound like a mighty rushing wind…” (Acts 2:2).

The imagery immediately evokes Old Testament categories. The Hebrew word רוּחַ (ruach) simultaneously means spirit, breath, and wind. The biblical imagination consistently associates divine breath with life, renewal, and creative activity. The Spirit of God hovers over creation in Genesis 1:2. Divine breath restores dry bones in Ezekiel 37. Wind and Spirit become theological symbols of God moving toward chaos to bring life.³³ Pentecost therefore signals not simply empowerment but new creation.

The imagery of fire deepens the Old Testament resonance: “Divided tongues as of fire appeared to them and rested on each one of them” (Acts 2:3). Fire throughout Scripture regularly signifies divine presence. Yahweh appears to Moses in the burning bush (Exod 3). Sinai trembles beneath divine fire (Exod 19:18). God’s glory fills tabernacle and temple through visible manifestation (Exod 40:34–38; 2 Chron 7:1–3). Jewish readers would not have perceived Pentecost as disconnected supernatural spectacle. They would have recognized familiar covenant imagery. The God who once descended upon mountain and sanctuary now descends upon ordinary men and women gathered together in one place.³⁴

Perhaps the most remarkable feature of Pentecost lies in the democratization of divine presence. In the Old Testament, the Spirit often rested upon select individuals for specific purposes. Kings received empowerment for leadership. Prophets proclaimed divine words. Priests mediated sacred worship. Yet Joel had anticipated a future day when God would radically expand covenant participation: “I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh” (Joel 2:28).

Peter explicitly identifies Pentecost as the fulfillment of this prophetic hope (Acts 2:16–18). Divine nearness is no longer restricted by sacred geography, priestly mediation, or social status. Sons and daughters, young and old, servants and free alike become participants in divine indwelling.³⁵ The presence of God has moved outward. This theological movement carries enormous implications for the church. Under the old covenant, God dwelled among His people through sacred structures. At Pentecost, God begins dwelling within His people collectively. Paul later makes this explicit: “Do you not know that you are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit dwells in you?” (1 Cor 3:16).

Importantly, Paul’s pronouns are plural. The emphasis is communal rather than merely individual. The gathered church becomes sacred space. The people themselves become the dwelling place of God.³⁶ Again, God doesn’t seem to be looking for people to build any sort of elaborate buildings, He is merely seeking presence. To build a building could actually be contrary to what God is asking. It once again would seem to be people doing what people want to do in their own eyes rather than faithfully following exactly what the Lord is asking of them.

The Greek term Paul employs for temple, ναός (naos), refers not simply to outer temple courts but to the inner sanctuary where divine presence uniquely dwelled. The implications are staggering. Under the old covenant, the naos represented sacred space inaccessible to most people. Through the Spirit, gathered believers now collectively become the place where heaven and earth overlap.³⁷ Acts itself immediately demonstrates that divine indwelling generates embodied devotion. Following Pentecost, Luke writes: “And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers” (Acts 2:42).

The verb translated “devoted” is προσκαρτερέω (proskartereō), conveying steadfastness, constancy, and persistent participation.³⁸ The early church did not imagine covenant life as occasional attendance or loosely connected spirituality. Shared rhythms of worship, teaching, meals, generosity, and prayer formed the ordinary fabric of Christian existence. This should not surprise us. Throughout Scripture, divine presence consistently creates relational presence. God’s nearness never produces detached spirituality or isolated faith. Rather, covenant life becomes increasingly embodied, mutual, and communal. Presence generates participation. And again, (take note) no building is seen in the recipe.

Jesus Himself anticipated this dynamic through the language of abiding. In John 15, Christ repeatedly uses the Greek term μένω (menō), meaning to remain, continue, or abide: “Abide in me, and I in you” (John 15:4). Abiding language carries covenantal permanence. Relationship with God is not envisioned as sporadic encounter or momentary enthusiasm but sustained relational nearness. Significantly, Jesus employs vine imagery that is profoundly communal. Branches remain connected not only to the vine but to one another through shared participation in divine life. Fruitfulness emerges through constancy.³⁹

Likewise, Paul’s body imagery resists fragmented spirituality: “For just as the body is one and has many members… so it is with Christ” (1 Cor 12:12). Believers are not portrayed as autonomous spiritual consumers orbiting around religious experiences in a building. They become members of one another. Gifts exist for mutual edification. Weakness is shared. Joy is shared. Suffering is shared. Presence matters because covenant formation occurs in proximity.⁴⁰

The writer of Hebrews reinforces this reality: “And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together…” (Heb 10:24–25). The concern is not institutional attendance for attendance’s sake. The writer understands something far deeper:

perseverance requires presence. Encouragement requires nearness. Spiritual formation happens within rhythms of gathered devotion. Covenant life cannot flourish from a distance.⁴¹

Modern Christianity frequently places overwhelming emphasis upon personal spirituality in buildings, often reducing faith to private devotion, theological agreement, or individualized worship experiences or a need to independently “SERVE.”. Yet the biblical witness consistently pushes against isolated spirituality. God does not merely redeem individuals. He forms a people.

From Eden onward, covenant life has always been communal. Israel gathered for feasts, worship, prayer, sacrifice, lament, and celebration. The early church gathered around tables in homes and rented spaces (often gathering in the wilderness areas), prayers, shared resources, teaching, and mutual encouragement. Scripture consistently assumes that formation occurs through repeated rhythms of embodied presence.⁴² Paul’s repeated use of familial language is telling. Believers are not merely attendees or acquaintances sharing theological interests. They are described as: “members of the household of God” (Eph 2:19). (but the household here is eternal not physical.)

Households are built through constancy. Trust deepens through repeated presence. Burdens are carried through proximity. Formation occurs not merely through extraordinary moments but through ordinary rhythms of shared life.⁴³

This helps explain why the New Testament repeatedly commands practices impossible to sustain from a distance: bearing one another’s burdens (Gal 6:2), confessing sins to one another (James 5:16), encouraging one another daily (Heb 3:13), devoting oneself to fellowship (Acts 2:42), stirring one another toward love and good works (Heb 10:24). Such commands presume nearness. Covenant life assumes a deep sense of presence.

The biblical story consistently moves toward this reality. God walks with humanity in Eden, dwells among Israel, tabernacles in Christ, and fills His people through the Spirit. Divine presence moves ever closer, ever deeper, ever more relational. The question Scripture quietly leaves before us is not simply whether God is present to His people. The more searching question is whether God’s people are learning to be truly present—to Him, and to one another.

Before bringing this to a close, there is one final observation worth considering because it quietly reshapes how we think about church, gathering, and what it actually means to dwell with God. If the biblical story truly moves from Eden, to tabernacle, to temple, to Christ, and ultimately to Spirit-indwelt people, then one of the clearest theological movements in Scripture is this: sacred space gradually shifts from buildings to people.

This is not to suggest that buildings are bad, unnecessary, or somehow opposed to ministry. Spaces can serve beautiful purposes. They can create places for worship, hospitality, teaching, discipleship, prayer, and community. Yet when we turn to the New Testament, it is striking how little emphasis is placed upon buildings themselves. Jesus spends remarkably little time discussing sacred architecture, and the apostles devote virtually no energy to constructing elaborate worship environments or institutional structures. Instead, the overwhelming focus becomes people, devotion, fellowship, prayer, generosity, and shared life together in the Spirit.

Even within the Old Testament, there are hints of tension surrounding sacred buildings. While Solomon’s temple stood as a magnificent expression of worship and national identity, Scripture quietly warns against confusing grandeur with presence. Solomon himself, standing before the completed temple, offers a profound acknowledgment: “But will God indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you, how much less this house that I have built” (1 Kings 8:27).

In other words, even at the dedication of Israel’s most extravagant sacred structure, there remained an awareness that God could never be contained by architecture. The prophets later sharpen this warning, repeatedly confronting Israel for placing confidence in the temple while neglecting covenant faithfulness. Jeremiah famously rebukes those who trusted in the words, “The temple of the LORD,” as though proximity to a sacred building somehow guaranteed nearness to God (Jer 7:4). The issue was never the existence of the temple itself; the issue was mistaking the building for the dwelling.

Then comes Jesus, and the movement becomes unmistakable. He speaks of the temple in reference to His own body, predicts the temple’s destruction, and tells the Samaritan woman that worship will no longer be confined to sacred geography. After Pentecost, the New Testament writers make an astonishing claim: we are now the temple. The Spirit of God no longer dwells primarily in buildings made by human hands, but within a gathered people learning to live in covenant presence with God and one another.

That reality should probably cause us to pause and ask some honest questions. Is it possible that modern Christianity has, at times, unintentionally reversed the movement of the New Testament? Have we sometimes become so focused on buildings, productions, polished environments, and experiences that we have overlooked the very thing Jesus seemed most interested in forming: a people deeply devoted to His presence and genuinely present with one another?

The question, then, is not whether buildings are wrong. The deeper question is whether we have ever confused the building for the dwelling. Because from Pentecost forward, God’s primary concern seems far less about constructing impressive places and far more about forming a covenant people in whom His Spirit actually resides. And if that is true, then presence will always matter more than production.

As I finish this article, I want to speak pastorally and honestly for a moment. I also want to direct some of this towards our local body organic church – the TOV community, whom I deeply love and shepherd.

Part of why I felt compelled to write this on Pentecost is because I have been wrestling with the idea of presence, not simply in a theological sense, but in the life of our community. If God’s story is truly a story of divine nearness, if covenant life has always revolved around dwelling together before the face of God, then we have to ask ourselves an honest question: What does presence actually look like in the body of Christ?

And if I can be transparent, this is something I think we need to grow in at TOV.

TOV was never envisioned as an event to attend, a production to consume, or a place where people simply show up whenever it works best for their schedule and leave once they have gotten what they came for. We are not trying to build a show here. We are not interested in creating a church culture built around performers and spectators, musicians and attenders, servers, professionals and consumers. That is not family. That is not covenant. And frankly, that is not the picture Scripture gives us of the gathered people of God.

I want to speak especially to something specific because I think clarity matters in family.

Part of the challenge, if we are honest, is that many people today struggle with the idea of family itself. For some, family has meant pain, dysfunction, inconsistency, betrayal, distance, or disappointment. Others have simply absorbed the rhythms of a modern culture that increasingly values independence over interdependence, convenience over commitment, and autonomy over covenant. We often protect ourselves by staying loosely connected, keeping one foot in and one foot out, avoiding the vulnerability that real belonging requires.

But the biblical vision of family is something altogether different.

When Scripture speaks of the people of God as brothers and sisters, as a household, as one body, it is inviting us into something redeemed. Covenant family is meant to become a picture of restoration, beauty, healing, and belonging. In many ways, the family of God should become what earthly families sometimes fall short of being. A place where people are known and loved, challenged and encouraged, forgiven and strengthened, seen in weakness yet still embraced. Not perfect people, but a faithful people learning to dwell together in the Spirit of God. A people who remain.

And the truth is, that kind of family only happens through presence.

When someone only shows up to play music and then leaves, or disengages once their “part” is done, something is lost. When people begin packing up during the message, leave before prayer, or mentally check out because worship is over and now the “important part” for them is finished, something is communicated whether it is intended or not. It quietly says: I came to do my role, but I was not really here to dwell.

Please hear my heart because this is not condemnation.

I love every person at TOV deeply, and I am thankful beyond words for every gift, every volunteer, every musician, every servant, every person who walks through the doors. This is not about questioning motives or attacking hearts. It is simply an invitation to something deeper.

Because presence matters.

If Pentecost teaches us anything, it is that God does not merely distribute gifts; He creates a people. The Spirit falls not upon isolated individuals doing their own thing, but upon a gathered body devoted to one another. Acts 2 does not describe consumers of spiritual moments. It describes people lingering, eating together, praying together, worshiping together, carrying burdens together, growing together. They remained.

And I think in our modern church culture we have unintentionally normalized a kind of low-commitment Christianity that says, “I’ll be there when it works,” or “I’ll come when I’m needed,” or “I’ll show up for my piece.” But covenant life asks something more beautiful than obligation. It asks for presence.

Not perfection.

Not guilt.

Not legalism.

Presence.

To stay.

To linger.

To pray for someone after service.

To sit through the teaching even when your role is done.

To worship when you are not leading.

To listen when you are not speaking.

To encourage when nobody notices.

To show up not because you are needed on schedule, but because you belong to a family.

Because a better mosaic of new formed spiritual family changes things.

In family, you do not ask, “When is my part over?” In family, you remain because your presence matters to the whole. You stay because people are hurting. You stay because conversations happen after the gathering. You stay because someone might need prayer. You stay because dwelling together in the presence of God cannot be reduced to a timeslot or role.

I want TOV to be a place where people are fully present. Present in worship. Present in the Word. Present in prayer. Present around the table. Present in each other’s victories and heartbreaks. Present enough to notice when someone is struggling. Present enough to help carry burdens. Present enough to actually become woven together in covenant relationship.

And yes, there will be grace. There will always be grace. We all have busy seasons, family demands, work realities, exhaustion, and complications. This is not about attendance policing or performance expectations. It is about posture. It is about asking ourselves if we are truly dwelling among one another in the Spirit of the Lord or simply orbiting around spiritual moments.

Because maybe one of the greatest things we can offer God and one another in an exhausted, distracted, fragmented world is not another program, another production, or another performance.

Maybe it is simply our presence.

Endnotes

  1. Craig S. Keener, Acts: An Exegetical Commentary, Vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012), 776.
  2. John H. Walton, Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament: Introducing the Conceptual World of the Hebrew Bible, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2018), 114.
  3. Michael J. Gorman, Becoming the Gospel: Paul, Participation, and Mission (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2015), 89.
  4. G. K. Beale, The Temple and the Church’s Mission: A Biblical Theology of the Dwelling Place of God (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2004), 66.
  5. John H. Walton, The Lost World of Genesis One: Ancient Cosmology and the Origins Debate (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2009), 76.
  6. Gordon J. Wenham, Genesis 1–15, Word Biblical Commentary 1 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1987), 63.
  7. Ludwig Koehler and Walter Baumgartner, The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament, rev. Walter Baumgartner and Johann Jakob Stamm (Leiden: Brill, 2001), 246.
  8. John H. Walton, Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament, 101.
  9. G. K. Beale, The Temple and the Church’s Mission, 81.
  10. Walter Brueggemann, Genesis, Interpretation Commentary (Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1982), 49.
  11. Willem A. VanGemeren, ed., New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis, vol. 3 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1997), 641.
  12. John Goldingay, Psalms, Volume 1: Psalms 1–41 (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2006), 399.
  13. Walter Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament: Testimony, Dispute, Advocacy (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997), 662.
  14. Gordon J. Wenham, Numbers: An Introduction and Commentary (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 1981), 93.
  15. John Goldingay, Old Testament Theology: Israel’s Gospel (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2003), 520.
  16. Brevard S. Childs, The Book of Exodus: A Critical, Theological Commentary (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1974), 597.
  17. Willem A. VanGemeren, ed., New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis, vol. 4 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1997), 58.
  18. Walter Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament, 698.
  19. Gordon J. Wenham, Genesis 1–15, 84.
  20. G. K. Beale, The Temple and the Church’s Mission, 78.
  21. John H. Walton, Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament, 123.
  22. Samuel Terrien, The Elusive Presence: Toward a New Biblical Theology (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1978), 19.
  23. John Goldingay, Old Testament Theology: Israel’s Life (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2009), 229.
  24. Walter Brueggemann, Isaiah 1–39 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1998), 251.
  25. Daniel I. Block, The Book of Ezekiel, Chapters 1–24 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997), 352.
  26. Daniel I. Block, The Book of Ezekiel, Chapters 25–48 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), 406.
  27. Ben Witherington III, The Acts of the Apostles: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), 134.
  28. Andreas J. Köstenberger, John, Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2004), 42.
  29. N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), 407.
  30. Craig R. Koester, The Dwelling of God: The Tabernacle in the Old Testament, Intertestamental Jewish Literature, and the New Testament (Washington, DC: Catholic Biblical Association, 1989), 101.
  31. Craig S. Keener, The Gospel of John: A Commentary, vol. 2 (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2003), 964.
  32. Craig S. Keener, Acts: An Exegetical Commentary, Vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012), 779.
  33. Gordon D. Fee, God’s Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit in the Letters of Paul (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 1994), 887.
  34. Ben Witherington III, The Acts of the Apostles, 138.
  35. Craig S. Keener, Acts: An Exegetical Commentary, Vol. 1, 818.
  36. Gordon D. Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1987), 133.
  37. G. K. Beale, The Temple and the Church’s Mission, 248.
  38. Frederick William Danker, ed., A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 3rd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 878.
  39. Andreas J. Köstenberger, John, 454.
  40. Gordon D. Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, 606.
  41. Luke Timothy Johnson, Hebrews: A Commentary (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2006), 264.
  42. Michael J. Gorman, Becoming the Gospel, 90.
  43. N. T. Wright, Paul and the Faithfulness of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2013), 1101.

Rethinking Christian Eschatology: Reading the NT/OT Witness in Context

Few areas of Christian theology generate as much fascination, disagreement, and interpretive diversity as eschatology. Within modern evangelicalism, interpretations of the “end times” have often been shaped not only by biblical exegesis but also by theological systems, popular literature, and attempts to correlate prophetic texts with contemporary geopolitical events.1 While such efforts have captured the imagination of many believers, they have also contributed to a landscape in which competing frameworks—often built upon different assumptions about Israel, the church, the kingdom of God, and the book of Revelation—stand in tension with one another.

This study seeks to approach the subject from a historically and textually grounded perspective. Rather than attempting to predict specific future events or construct a speculative prophetic timetable, the goal is to examine the biblical texts within their literary, historical, and theological contexts. Such an approach reflects a growing emphasis among contemporary New Testament scholars who argue that apocalyptic literature, particularly the book of Revelation, must first be understood within the symbolic world and historical circumstances of the early Christian communities to which it was addressed.2

In doing so, it becomes necessary to acknowledge the major interpretive frameworks that have shaped modern discussions of eschatology. Dispensational premillennialism—particularly in its twentieth-century popular forms—has strongly influenced evangelical expectations regarding a future rapture, tribulation, and restoration of national Israel.3 Yet other traditions within Christian theology, including historic premillennialism, amillennialism, and postmillennialism, offer different readings of the kingdom of God, the millennium, and the relationship between Israel and the church.4 Comparative analyses of these frameworks often begin with questions regarding the timing of tribulation and the millennium, though these categories alone do not resolve the deeper theological issues involved.5

The perspective explored in this article is broadly non-dispensational. While dispensational interpretations have played a significant role in shaping contemporary evangelical eschatology, many scholars question the sharp theological distinction often drawn between Israel and the church within that framework.6 Instead, increasing attention has been given to readings that emphasize the continuity of God’s covenantal purposes across both Testaments and that interpret Revelation primarily as a theological and pastoral document written to encourage faithfulness amid persecution rather than as a detailed chronological map of future world events.7

The purpose of this study, therefore, is not to dismiss alternative perspectives but to examine them carefully while proposing a reading of biblical eschatology that takes seriously the historical setting of the New Testament, the literary character of apocalyptic literature, and the broader narrative of Scripture. By exploring themes such as the present reign of Christ, the role of Israel in redemptive history, and the theological message of Revelation, this article aims to contribute to a more historically informed and theologically coherent understanding of Christian hope.

Any serious discussion of Christian eschatology must begin with the question of Israel. The various modern debates regarding tribulation, the millennium, and the future of the world are ultimately rooted in deeper theological questions concerning the role of Israel within the unfolding narrative of Scripture. How one understands Israel’s covenant identity, the nature of God’s promises to that covenant people, and the relationship between Israel and the messianic community established through Jesus significantly shapes one’s interpretation of prophetic literature and the book of Revelation.8

The biblical narrative opens with a theological vision in which humanity is created in the image of God and commissioned to represent divine rule within creation (Gen. 1:26–28).9 In this sense, humanity functions as a royal-priestly community tasked with mediating God’s presence and governance within the created order. The disruption of this vocation through human rebellion in Genesis 3 introduces alienation from God and disorder within creation, setting in motion the redemptive trajectory that unfolds throughout the remainder of Scripture.10

Within this unfolding narrative, God elects Israel as a covenant people through whom his redemptive purposes for the world will be advanced (Gen. 12:1–3). Israel’s election is therefore missional rather than merely ethnic; it serves as the means through which God intends to restore blessing to the nations.11 The Abrahamic and Mosaic covenants frame Israel’s identity as a people called to covenant fidelity, living in devotion to Yahweh and embodying his character among the nations with the hope of regathering the nations.

This dynamic may also be illuminated through what some scholars have described as a Deuteronomy 32 worldview. In Deuteronomy 32:8–9, the Song of Moses describes a moment in which the Most High “divided the nations” and fixed their boundaries according to the number of the sons of God, while Israel remained Yahweh’s own allotted portion. Many interpreters understand this text—particularly in light of the textual tradition preserved in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Septuagint—to reflect the biblical memory of the dispersion of the nations in Genesis 10–11 and the subsequent ordering of the nations under divine authority.12 Within this framework, the table of seventy nations in Genesis 10 functions not merely as a genealogical record but as a theological map of the world that has fallen under fragmented rule following the rebellion at Babel.13 The call of Abraham in Genesis 12, and the formation of Israel as a covenant people, therefore mark the beginning of God’s redemptive strategy to reclaim the nations that had been scattered. This trajectory reaches a significant moment in Acts 2, where the outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost gathers representatives of many nations and languages, symbolically reversing the fragmentation of Babel and signaling the beginning of the restoration of the nations through the reign of the Messiah.14

Yet the Old Testament repeatedly portrays Israel’s struggle to maintain this covenantal faithfulness. One of the most significant moments in this trajectory occurs in 1 Samuel 8, when Israel demands a human king “like the nations,” thereby signaling a tension between divine kingship and human political authority.15 Although the monarchy becomes integrated into Israel’s story—particularly through the Davidic covenant—the historical and prophetic books portray a gradual decline in covenant fidelity among both rulers and people.

It is within this context that the prophetic literature frequently employs conditional language regarding Israel’s future. Passages such as Jeremiah 17:27 and Jeremiah 22:3–9 illustrate a recurring covenant pattern in which divine promises are intertwined with calls for covenant loyalty. Blessing and stability are promised if Israel practices justice and remains faithful to Yahweh, while judgment and exile follow persistent covenant violation.16 These texts complicate modern theological attempts to rigidly divide biblical covenants into “conditional” and “unconditional” categories. While God’s covenant purposes remain grounded in divine faithfulness, the lived participation of Israel within those promises is consistently framed in relational and covenantal terms.

The Torah itself reflects this relational structure. Covenant identity is not presented merely as an ethnic designation but as a commitment to covenant loyalty expressed through obedience and devotion to Yahweh. This dynamic explains why the Old Testament occasionally depicts non-Israelites being incorporated into Israel’s covenant community when they align themselves with Israel’s God, as seen in figures such as Rahab and Ruth.17 Membership in the covenant people therefore includes both genealogical and theological dimensions.

By the time the narrative reaches the New Testament, the language of Israel is not abandoned but reframed around the person and mission of Jesus the Messiah. Early Christian writers present Jesus as the one in whom the story of Israel reaches its intended fulfillment—the faithful representative who embodies Israel’s vocation and brings the covenant promises to completion.18 Within this framework, the expansion of the covenant community to include Gentiles does not represent a replacement of Israel but the gathering of a renewed covenant people united by allegiance to Israel’s Messiah. Paul’s metaphor of grafting in Romans 11 reflects this understanding, portraying Gentile believers as incorporated into the existing covenant people rather than forming an entirely separate entity.19

Central to this theological development is the conviction that Jesus’ death, resurrection, and ascension inaugurate the long-awaited reign of the Messiah. The New Testament repeatedly depicts the exaltation of Christ as his enthronement at the right hand of God, drawing upon royal imagery rooted in the Davidic promises and in texts such as Psalm 110.20 In apostolic proclamation, particularly in Acts 2, Jesus’ ascension is interpreted as the moment in which he assumes the messianic throne promised to David.21 From this perspective, the reign of the Messiah is not postponed to a distant future but begins with the exaltation of the risen Christ.

Consequently, the question of Israel within eschatology becomes inseparable from the question of how the messianic kingdom inaugurated through Jesus relates to the covenant promises given throughout the Hebrew Scriptures. Interpretations diverge significantly at this point. Some theological systems anticipate a future geopolitical restoration of national Israel as a central feature of the end times, while others understand the promises to Israel as finding their fulfillment within the messianic community gathered around the reign of Christ.22 The way one resolves this question inevitably shapes one’s reading of prophetic texts, the structure of biblical eschatology, and the interpretation of Revelation itself.

Before evaluating dispensational interpretations of Israel and the church, it is important to briefly outline the framework itself. Dispensationalism emerged in the nineteenth century through the work of John Nelson Darby and was later popularized in North America through the Scofield Reference Bible and subsequent evangelical teaching traditions.23 At its core, dispensational theology divides redemptive history into a series of administrative eras, or “dispensations,” in which God relates to humanity through different covenantal arrangements. Within this system, a central theological distinction is maintained between ethnic Israel and the church. Israel is understood as the recipient of specific national and territorial promises that remain to be fulfilled in a future earthly kingdom, while the church is viewed as a distinct spiritual community temporarily occupying the present age.24

Within dispensational eschatology, much of the discussion revolves around the interpretation of the millennium described in Revelation 20 and the timing of key events associated with Christ’s return. Several major millennial frameworks have emerged in Christian theology. Premillennialism holds that Christ will return prior to the thousand-year reign described in Revelation 20, establishing a literal earthly kingdom. Postmillennialism interprets the millennium as a period of gospel expansion and cultural transformation that precedes Christ’s return. Amillennialism, by contrast, interprets the millennium symbolically, understanding the reign of Christ as presently realized through his exaltation and the life of the church rather than as a future political kingdom.25

Dispensational theology generally adopts a particular form of premillennialism that includes additional features such as a future tribulation period, the restoration of national Israel, and often a distinction between the rapture of the church and the visible return of Christ. Yet each of these interpretive models faces certain challenges when attempting to synthesize the diverse prophetic imagery found throughout Scripture. Premillennial approaches must wrestle with the highly symbolic nature of apocalyptic literature and the question of how literally such imagery should be interpreted. Postmillennialism faces historical questions regarding the trajectory of human history and the persistence of evil prior to the consummation of the kingdom. Amillennial interpretations must carefully articulate how symbolic readings of Revelation correspond with the broader biblical narrative concerning the future renewal of creation.26

While these frameworks provide helpful categories for organizing discussion, many scholars argue that the deeper theological questions cannot be resolved simply by arranging events along a chronological timeline. The interpretive difficulty often arises because apocalyptic literature—particularly the book of Revelation—communicates through symbolism, imagery, and theological vision rather than through straightforward predictive chronology.27 When Revelation is approached primarily as a coded sequence of future geopolitical events, interpreters frequently find themselves attempting to force symbolic imagery into rigid historical scenarios. This tendency has contributed to the proliferation of complex prophetic charts, speculative interpretations, and competing theories that often generate confusion rather than clarity.

For this reason, many contemporary scholars suggest that the primary weakness of dispensational frameworks lies not merely in their millennial timelines but in the interpretive assumptions that guide them. By insisting on a strict separation between Israel and the church and by reading apocalyptic imagery in an overly literalized manner, dispensational interpretations can sometimes obscure the broader theological message of Revelation. Instead of functioning as a pastoral and prophetic vision intended to encourage faithful witness under the reign of the risen Christ, the book is frequently transformed into a detailed forecast of future world events.28

Consequently, the question facing interpreters is not simply which millennial model best fits a prophetic timetable, but whether the underlying framework adequately accounts for the narrative unity of Scripture, the fulfillment of Israel’s story in the Messiah, and the symbolic nature of apocalyptic literature. It is precisely at this point that many scholars begin to question whether dispensational categories provide the most coherent lens through which to read the relationship between Israel, the church, and the book of Revelation.

A helpful way to visualize the interpretive issue surrounding biblical timelines can be seen in the prophetic structure of the book of Daniel. Daniel’s visions—particularly the seventy weeks prophecy in Daniel 9:24–27—present a remarkably structured chronological framework that many scholars understand as culminating in the events surrounding the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in A.D. 70.29 Within this framework, Daniel’s symbolic chronology functions as a theological map of Israel’s history moving toward the climactic arrival of the Messiah and the judgment associated with the end of the temple-centered order.30 The prophetic timeline in Daniel is therefore closely tied to the historical trajectory of Israel leading into the first century.

Dispensational systems, however, frequently attempt to extend this same chronological structure into the distant future by introducing a prolonged “gap” between the sixty-ninth and seventieth weeks of Daniel’s prophecy. In this reading, the final week is relocated to a future tribulation period that remains disconnected from the historical context in which Daniel’s prophecy originally functioned. Yet many scholars argue that the biblical text itself provides no explicit indication of such an extended chronological interruption.31 Rather, the prophetic structure appears to move toward the climactic events surrounding the first-century culmination of Israel’s covenantal history.

The result is that while the biblical narrative provides remarkably detailed chronological symbolism leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70, the New Testament does not offer a comparable prophetic timeline extending beyond that event. Attempts to construct such frameworks often rely on speculative reconstructions that go beyond the explicit structure provided by the biblical text itself. For this reason, many interpreters suggest that the prophetic precision found in Daniel should be understood as historically anchored in the culmination of Israel’s temple era rather than as a template for mapping distant future events.

For readers who would like to see a visual explanation of this interpretive issue, the following lecture provides a concise overview of how Daniel’s prophetic timeline functions within the biblical narrative:

Video Overview:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Slrdreu2bdM

A central challenge in discussions of eschatology lies not simply in the interpretation of specific passages but in recognizing the literary genres through which those passages communicate their message. Much of the biblical material associated with the “end times” emerges from the tradition of apocalyptic literature, a genre that developed prominently within Second Temple Judaism and is characterized by symbolic imagery, visionary narratives, and theological depictions of cosmic conflict.32 Books such as Daniel and Revelation employ vivid metaphors, numerical symbolism, and highly stylized visions not primarily to construct chronological timetables but to reveal theological truths about God’s sovereignty, judgment, and the ultimate vindication of his people.

Because apocalyptic literature communicates through symbolic imagery rather than straightforward narrative description, careful attention must be given to its literary conventions. Interpreters who approach these texts as if they function like historical prose or predictive journalism often risk imposing a level of literal precision that the genre itself does not intend to convey.33 The beasts of Daniel and Revelation, the cosmic disturbances described in prophetic discourse, and the numerological patterns present throughout these texts frequently draw upon symbolic traditions rooted in the Hebrew Scriptures. Rather than referring directly to modern geopolitical events, these images function as theological symbols that depict the conflict between the kingdom of God and the forces of human empire.34

This principle becomes particularly important when examining passages that are often cited in discussions of the so-called “rapture.” One of the most frequently referenced texts is 1 Thessalonians 4:16–17, where Paul describes believers being “caught up” (ἁρπάζω, harpazō) to meet the Lord in the air. While this passage is sometimes interpreted as describing a secret removal of the church from the earth prior to a tribulation period, many scholars note that the imagery closely resembles the ancient practice of citizens going out to greet a visiting king or dignitary and escorting him back into the city.35 In this sense, the language may be better understood as depicting the public arrival of Christ and the participation of believers in his royal procession rather than a departure from the world altogether.

When apocalyptic imagery and pastoral exhortation are instead treated as components of a detailed prophetic timeline, interpretive difficulties quickly arise. Attempts to harmonize symbolic visions across multiple biblical books can lead to increasingly complex systems that rely on speculative connections between texts separated by centuries and written for very different historical audiences.36 This dynamic has often contributed to theological frameworks in which the imagery of Revelation becomes detached from its first-century context and transformed into a predictive chart of future geopolitical events.

For this reason, many contemporary interpreters argue that the most responsible approach to eschatological texts begins with genre sensitivity and historical context. Recognizing the symbolic nature of apocalyptic literature does not diminish its authority; rather, it allows the text to communicate its theological message as it was intended. The visions of Revelation are therefore best understood as prophetic and pastoral revelations designed to encourage faithfulness among believers living within the pressures of imperial power, reminding them that the risen Christ already reigns and that the ultimate victory of God’s kingdom is assured.37

When this genre-sensitive approach is maintained, many of the speculative debates surrounding prophetic timelines lose their central importance. The focus of biblical eschatology shifts away from deciphering hidden codes about the future and toward the theological hope that stands at the heart of the New Testament: the reign of the risen Messiah and the eventual renewal of creation under his lordship.

A further interpretive challenge in reading the book of Revelation concerns how the visions within the text are structured. Many modern interpretations—particularly those influenced by dispensational frameworks—tend to read Revelation as a strict chronological timeline, assuming that the seals, trumpets, and bowls represent a sequential series of future events unfolding one after another. Yet a growing number of scholars argue that the literary structure of Revelation is better understood through the principle of recapitulation, in which the same period of history is described multiple times through different symbolic visions.38 In this view, the cycles of seals (Rev. 6–8), trumpets (Rev. 8–11), and bowls (Rev. 15–16) do not represent successive disasters but rather parallel portrayals of the ongoing conflict between the kingdom of God and the forces of evil.

This pattern is consistent with the broader conventions of apocalyptic literature, where visionary sequences often revisit the same events from different perspectives in order to emphasize theological meaning rather than chronological precision.39 Similar narrative patterns appear in the book of Daniel, where successive visions describe the rise and fall of kingdoms using different symbolic imagery while referring to the same historical realities. The book of Revelation appears to adopt this same literary strategy, presenting multiple visionary cycles that progressively intensify the depiction of divine judgment and redemption.

Understanding this recapitulating structure helps explain why several visions appear to culminate in scenes that resemble the final judgment or the end of the age, even though additional visions follow afterward. For example, both the seventh trumpet and the final bowl judgments appear to describe cosmic upheaval associated with the completion of God’s purposes (Rev. 11:15–19; 16:17–21).40 Rather than indicating multiple “ends of the world,” these repeated climactic scenes suggest that Revelation is retelling the same ultimate victory of God from different vantage points.

Recognizing this literary pattern also helps guard against the tendency to construct elaborate prophetic timelines from symbolic imagery. When the book is read as a recapitulating series of visions rather than a linear chronological sequence, the focus shifts away from predicting specific future events and toward understanding the theological message of the text: the assurance that despite the recurring conflicts of history, the Lamb who was slain ultimately reigns over the powers of the world.41 The purpose of Revelation, therefore, is not to provide a detailed prophetic calendar but to reveal the deeper spiritual reality behind the struggles faced by God’s people and to encourage faithful endurance in every generation.

Within many popular dispensational frameworks, certain figures described in apocalyptic texts—particularly the Antichrist, the Beast, and the Great Tribulation—are often interpreted as singular future events or individuals who will appear at the very end of history. While such readings have become widespread in modern evangelical culture, they are not necessarily the most consistent interpretation when the relevant passages are examined within their historical and literary contexts. A careful reading of the New Testament suggests that these concepts may function less as predictions of a single future individual and more as theological descriptions of recurring patterns of opposition to God’s reign.

The term “antichrist” itself appears only in the Johannine epistles and not in the book of Revelation. Significantly, the language used in these passages already suggests a broader category rather than a single end-time figure. First John states plainly: “you have heard that antichrist is coming, so now many antichrists have come” (1 John 2:18).42 In this context, the term refers to individuals or movements that deny the identity and mission of Jesus as the Messiah. The emphasis, therefore, is not on identifying a single future ruler but on recognizing a recurring pattern of ideological and spiritual opposition to Christ throughout history.

Similarly, the figure of the Beast in Revelation is best interpreted within the symbolic framework of apocalyptic literature. The imagery of monstrous beasts already appears in Daniel 7, where the beasts represent successive empires that oppose the purposes of God.43 Revelation appears to draw heavily upon this earlier imagery, suggesting that the Beast functions as a symbolic representation of imperial power that demands allegiance in opposition to God’s kingdom. Many scholars therefore see a clear historical reference to the Roman imperial system, particularly during the period of persecution faced by early Christians.44 Within this context, the notorious number 666 may function as a cryptic reference to the Roman emperor Nero through a practice known as gematria, in which letters correspond to numerical values.45 While Nero may represent the most immediate historical embodiment of this imagery, the symbolism of the Beast also transcends any single ruler, representing political systems and powers that continually seek to rival divine authority.

A similar interpretive principle applies to the concept of tribulation. Within some modern frameworks, the “Great Tribulation” is treated as a distinct future seven-year period preceding the return of Christ. Yet the New Testament frequently portrays tribulation as a recurring feature of the Christian experience rather than as a single isolated event. Jesus himself tells his followers, “In the world you will have tribulation” (John 16:33), and the early church repeatedly experiences suffering, persecution, and hardship throughout the book of Acts and the epistles.46 In this sense, tribulation is not confined to a single moment in the distant future but characterizes the ongoing tension between the kingdom of God and the powers of the world across history.

These observations point toward a broader issue in the interpretation of biblical prophecy. In the modern imagination, prophecy is often treated as though it functions like a predictive map of distant future events. Yet within the biblical tradition, prophets were not primarily fortune-tellers attempting to decode future timelines. Rather, they were individuals who understood the character and purposes of God and who spoke into their present historical circumstances with theological clarity.47 Their role was not to provide a kind of divine “crystal ball” but to interpret history through the lens of God’s covenant faithfulness and to call God’s people back to faithful obedience.

Indeed, the attempt to access hidden knowledge about the future through mystical or predictive techniques is explicitly condemned within the biblical tradition as divination (Deut. 18:10–12). Biblical prophecy therefore operates in a fundamentally different mode. Instead of offering secret knowledge about distant events, it reveals how God’s character and covenant purposes are unfolding within history. When apocalyptic imagery is forced into rigid predictive frameworks, interpreters may unintentionally shift toward the very type of speculative future-seeking that the biblical tradition itself warns against.

For this reason, many contemporary scholars emphasize that the symbolic figures of Revelation—the Antichrist, the Beast, and the experience of tribulation—should be understood as theological patterns that recur wherever human power seeks to rival the authority of God. Rather than encouraging believers to scan the horizon for a single future villain or catastrophic moment, the book of Revelation calls its readers to faithful endurance in every age, reminding them that the risen Christ ultimately reigns over the forces of history.48

As interpreters wrestle with the difficulties of dispensational timelines and overly literalized readings of apocalyptic imagery, many have turned toward preterist interpretations of biblical prophecy. The term preterist comes from the Latin praeter, meaning “past,” and refers broadly to approaches that understand many prophetic passages—particularly those in the Gospels, Daniel, and Revelation—as referring primarily to events that occurred in the first century, especially the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in A.D. 70.49 Within this general category, however, there are important distinctions that must be carefully considered.

Full preterism argues that nearly all eschatological prophecies—including the return of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, and the final judgment—were fulfilled in a spiritual or symbolic sense in the first century. In this reading, events surrounding the Jewish–Roman War and the destruction of Jerusalem represent the climactic fulfillment of New Testament eschatology. While this view attempts to take seriously the numerous time-indicators in the New Testament that speak of events occurring “soon” or within the lifetime of the original audience (e.g., Matt. 24:34; Rev. 1:1), many theologians have raised concerns that full preterism risks collapsing central elements of Christian hope—particularly the bodily resurrection and the final renewal of creation—into purely symbolic realities.50 For this reason, full preterism remains a minority position and is often regarded by many scholars as extending its conclusions beyond what the biblical text can sustain.

At the same time, the historical events of the first century raise questions that make it difficult to ignore the relevance of that period for understanding New Testament prophecy. The catastrophic destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 marked the end of the temple-centered system that had defined Israel’s religious life for centuries. Contemporary historical accounts, particularly those recorded by the Jewish historian Josephus, describe the immense suffering and upheaval that accompanied the Roman siege.51 Stories from the same historical period—including the dramatic events surrounding the fall of Masada, where nearly nine hundred Jewish rebels are said to have died before Roman forces captured the fortress—have occasionally prompted theological reflection about how God’s people experienced those moments of crisis.52 While such historical episodes cannot be used as definitive proof of particular prophetic fulfillments, they do highlight the extraordinary historical context in which the early Christian movement understood the words of Jesus concerning Jerusalem’s impending judgment.

For many interpreters, these observations make partial preterism an attractive middle position. Partial preterism maintains that many prophetic passages—especially those relating to the destruction of Jerusalem and the collapse of the temple system—were indeed fulfilled in the first century. However, it also affirms that the ultimate return of Christ, the resurrection of the dead, and the final renewal of creation remain future realities.53 In this framework, the events surrounding A.D. 70 represent a decisive turning point in redemptive history and a powerful validation of Jesus’ prophetic warnings, while still preserving the forward-looking hope that lies at the heart of Christian eschatology.

Such an approach aligns with a growing number of scholars who argue that the New Testament frequently speaks into the immediate historical circumstances of the early church while simultaneously pointing toward the ultimate consummation of God’s kingdom. The prophetic language of the New Testament therefore often contains both historical immediacy and eschatological horizon, addressing events relevant to the first-century audience while also sustaining the church’s ongoing expectation of Christ’s return.54

For these reasons, it may be unhelpful to rigidly align with any single eschatological label. Terms such as dispensationalism, preterism, amillennialism, or postmillennialism often function as interpretive shorthand rather than comprehensive explanations of the biblical narrative. While each framework contributes important insights, none entirely captures the full complexity of the scriptural witness. What matters most is allowing the biblical texts to speak within their historical, literary, and theological contexts, recognizing both the profound significance of the first-century events surrounding Jerusalem and the continuing hope that Christians place in the final return of Christ and the renewal of all things.

Another important dimension of Revelation that has gained significant attention in modern scholarship is its function as prophetic resistance literature directed against imperial power, particularly the Roman Empire of the first century. Rather than presenting a coded prediction of distant geopolitical events, many scholars argue that Revelation addresses the immediate pressures faced by early Christians living within a world shaped by Roman imperial ideology. In the Roman world, the emperor was often portrayed as a divine ruler who brought peace and salvation to the empire, and public loyalty to the emperor was expressed through civic rituals, economic participation, and occasional acts of emperor worship.55 Against this backdrop, the imagery of Revelation—particularly its portrayal of the Beast and Babylon—functions as a theological critique of empire. Babylon, described as a seductive yet oppressive power dominating the nations, is widely understood to symbolize Rome and the economic and political systems that sustained its authority.56 The book’s vivid symbolism therefore exposes the moral and spiritual dangers of imperial power that demands ultimate allegiance from humanity. By portraying Rome as a beastly empire in contrast to the true kingship of Christ, Revelation calls believers to resist assimilation into imperial ideology and instead remain faithful to the Lamb, even in the face of persecution or social marginalization.57 In this sense, Revelation is less a speculative map of future world events and more a prophetic unveiling of how political and economic powers can become idolatrous when they claim authority that belongs only to God. The message of the book, therefore, is not fear of the future but faithful resistance in the present, reminding the church that the risen Christ—not any earthly empire—is the true ruler of the world.

This imperial critique also highlights a deeper theological tension that runs throughout Scripture: the question of ultimate allegiance. The kingdoms of the world regularly present themselves as rival claimants to authority, offering security, identity, and prosperity in exchange for loyalty. Revelation exposes this dynamic by portraying empire as a competing kingdom demanding devotion that properly belongs to God alone. In this sense, the challenge facing the early church was not merely political oppression but a spiritual conflict over loyalty—whether believers would give their allegiance to Caesar or remain faithful to the Lamb. The teaching of Jesus himself echoes this tension, warning that “no one can serve two masters” (Matt. 6:24). The vision of Revelation therefore calls the church to recognize that every empire ultimately functions as a rival nation competing for the loyalty of humanity. Christians are summoned to a different kind of citizenship—one grounded not in the power structures of earthly kingdoms but in the reign of King Jesus, whose authority transcends all national, political, and economic systems.

A significant feature of many dispensational frameworks is the expectation that the end times will involve the rebuilding of a third temple in Jerusalem, the restoration of national Israel as the central locus of God’s activity, and the reestablishment of sacrificial worship within that temple. These expectations are often tied to interpretations of prophetic passages in Daniel, Ezekiel, and Revelation. Yet when these texts are read in light of the New Testament’s theological development, serious questions arise regarding whether such expectations align with the trajectory of the biblical narrative.

One of the most striking shifts in the New Testament concerns the theological redefinition of the temple. In the Gospels, Jesus himself reorients the meaning of the temple by identifying his own body as the true dwelling place of God (John 2:19–21).58 The temple in Jerusalem, once understood as the central location of God’s presence among his people, becomes a sign pointing forward to the incarnate presence of God in Christ. Following the resurrection and ascension of Jesus, this theological movement continues as the New Testament describes the community of believers as the new temple in which God’s Spirit dwells. Paul writes that the church collectively constitutes “God’s temple” and that the Holy Spirit now resides within that community (1 Cor. 3:16–17; Eph. 2:19–22).59

Within this framework, the expectation of a restored temple-centered sacrificial system becomes theologically difficult to reconcile with the New Testament’s presentation of Christ’s completed atoning work. The epistle to the Hebrews repeatedly emphasizes that Jesus’ sacrificial offering is both final and sufficient, rendering the earlier sacrificial system obsolete (Heb. 9:11–14; 10:11–18).60 For this reason, many interpreters argue that anticipating a renewed temple with sacrificial practices would represent not a fulfillment of the New Testament vision but a regression to a form of worship that the New Testament itself declares fulfilled in Christ.

Closely related to this issue is the question of Israel’s role within the messianic community. Dispensational interpretations frequently maintain a sharp distinction between Israel and the church, suggesting that God’s promises to Israel remain to be fulfilled through a future national restoration centered in the land of Israel. Yet the New Testament often presents a more integrated picture of God’s covenant people. In passages such as Romans 11, Paul describes Gentile believers as being grafted into the existing covenant tree of Israel, indicating continuity rather than separation between Israel and the multinational community formed through faith in Christ.61 The language of covenant identity is therefore expanded rather than replaced, encompassing all who participate in the messianic faithfulness revealed in Jesus.

This perspective reflects the broader New Testament conviction that the promises given to Israel ultimately find their fulfillment in the Messiah himself. The apostolic writings consistently portray Jesus as the culmination of Israel’s story and the one through whom God’s covenant purposes are extended to the nations (Gal. 3:26–29).62 In this sense, the people of God are defined not primarily by ethnic or territorial boundaries but by allegiance to the risen Messiah. The community gathered around Christ therefore represents the continuation and expansion of Israel’s covenant identity rather than its replacement.

These theological developments also call into question the assumption that the final consummation of God’s kingdom must necessarily involve a geopolitical restoration centered in the modern nation-state of Israel. While the New Testament may affirm the ongoing significance of Israel within the story of redemption, it simultaneously emphasizes that the reign of the Messiah transcends geographic boundaries. The kingdom inaugurated through Jesus is presented as a universal reality extending to all nations rather than as a localized political kingdom limited to a specific territory.63

Consequently, the central focus of Christian eschatological hope is not the reconstruction of a temple or the reestablishment of a national kingdom but the return of the risen Christ himself. Jesus repeatedly teaches that the timing of this event remains unknown to humanity, emphasizing that “about that day and hour no one knows” (Matt. 24:36).64 The posture encouraged by the New Testament is therefore one of faithful readiness rather than speculative prediction.

In this light, the expectation of Christ’s return should not be tied to the necessity of specific geopolitical developments or architectural projects in Jerusalem. While it remains possible that future events involving Israel may play a role within God’s unfolding purposes, the New Testament does not present such developments as prerequisites for the return of Christ. Instead, the emphasis remains firmly fixed on the person of Jesus himself—the enthroned Messiah whose kingdom already extends across the nations and whose ultimate return will bring the renewal of all things.

If the preceding discussion cautions against speculative timelines and rigid eschatological systems, the New Testament ultimately directs the church toward a different posture—one of faithful expectation. The central image used to describe this posture is the relationship between Christ and his bride, the church. Throughout the New Testament, the people of God are portrayed as those who await the return of the Messiah not through anxious calculation of prophetic events but through lives marked by devotion, perseverance, and faithful witness.65 The imagery culminates in Revelation, where the final vision of Scripture depicts the union of Christ and his people within the renewed creation: “Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb” (Rev. 19:9).

This posture reflects what many theologians describe as the “already and not yet” character of the kingdom of God. Through the death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus, the reign of the Messiah has already been inaugurated. Christ is presently enthroned at the right hand of the Father, exercising authority over heaven and earth.66 Yet the full manifestation of that reign—the complete restoration of creation and the final defeat of evil—remains a future reality. The New Testament therefore portrays the present age as a period in which the kingdom has begun but has not yet reached its ultimate consummation.

Within this framework, the mission of the church takes on profound significance. The people of God are not passive observers waiting for the end of history; they are participants in God’s ongoing work of renewal within the world. The biblical story that began in Genesis with humanity’s vocation to cultivate and steward creation continues through the church’s participation in the kingdom inaugurated by Christ.67 Believers become, in a very real sense, the embodied presence of Christ within the world—living signs of the coming renewal of creation.

This vision is captured powerfully in the language of partnership that runs throughout Scripture. Humanity was originally created to reflect God’s image and to steward the earth in communion with him (Gen. 1:26–28). The redemptive work of Christ does not abolish this vocation but restores and deepens it. Through the Spirit, the church becomes a community that participates in God’s ongoing work of reclaiming the world—anticipating the future renewal of creation by embodying the life of the kingdom in the present.68

Some theologians have described this calling in terms of the beauty of the believing community. The church is meant to function as a visible sign of the kingdom—a community whose life together reflects the character of Christ and draws others into the transforming reality of God’s grace.69 In this sense, Christian mission is not merely the transmission of doctrinal propositions but the cultivation of a community whose shared life reveals the beauty of God’s kingdom.

The culmination of this story, however, extends beyond a simple return to Eden. The biblical vision of the future is not merely a restoration of the original garden but the emergence of a renewed heaven and earth in which God’s presence fills the entirety of creation (Rev. 21–22). The imagery of the New Jerusalem suggests that the story moves not backward toward a primitive beginning but forward toward a transformed creation where the purposes of God for humanity are fully realized.70 What began as a garden becomes a renewed cosmos in which heaven and earth are finally united.

In this light, the church’s task in the present age becomes clearer. Rather than anxiously attempting to decode prophetic timelines, the people of God are called to live faithfully within the story that has already begun through the resurrection of Jesus. The church waits not with fear but with hope, not with speculation but with devotion. As the bride awaiting the return of her king, the community of believers lives in faithful anticipation—participating even now in the work of renewal that will one day be completed when Christ returns and all things are made new.

The aim of this exploration has not been to construct a rigid eschatological system or to settle every interpretive debate surrounding the end times. Scripture itself resists such reduction. Rather, the biblical witness consistently directs the church away from speculative timelines and toward a posture of faithful anticipation grounded in the reign of the risen Christ. The New Testament proclaims that Jesus has already been enthroned as king through his death, resurrection, and ascension, inaugurating the kingdom of God within history.71 Yet it also affirms that the full restoration of creation—the ultimate reconciliation of heaven and earth—remains a future reality toward which the entire biblical narrative moves.

This tension between fulfillment and anticipation is often described as the “already and not yet” of the kingdom. Christ reigns now, and his kingdom is already present wherever his authority is acknowledged and embodied. At the same time, the world still groans for the day when that reign will be fully revealed and all creation will be renewed.72 Within this unfolding story, the church occupies a profoundly meaningful role. The people of God are not passive observers waiting for history to conclude; they are participants in the ongoing work of God’s kingdom, serving as visible witnesses to the reign of Christ within the present world.

In this sense, the church becomes the place where heaven begins to touch earth. Through the presence of the Holy Spirit, believers embody the character of the kingdom in tangible ways—through justice, mercy, reconciliation, and sacrificial love. The prayer Jesus taught his disciples captures this vision clearly: “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” (Matt. 6:10). The mission of the church is therefore not merely to wait for heaven but to participate in the movement of heaven coming to earth through lives that reflect the authority and beauty of King Jesus.73

The final chapters of Revelation reveal that the culmination of God’s story is not an escape from creation but its transformation. John’s vision depicts the New Jerusalem descending from heaven, symbolizing the union of the divine and human realms under the reign of God (Rev. 21:1–3). The biblical story thus moves forward toward a renewed heaven and earth where the presence of God fills all things. What began in the garden of Eden culminates not simply in a return to that garden but in the emergence of a restored creation where the purposes of God for humanity are fully realized.74

This vision reshapes how Christians live in the present. The church exists as the foretaste of the coming kingdom, a community whose life together reveals the beauty of God’s reign and invites the world to participate in it. Through acts of faithfulness, compassion, and creative stewardship, believers participate in the restoration of the world that God has begun through Christ. The vocation first given to humanity—to cultivate and steward creation as God’s image-bearers—is restored and deepened through the work of the Spirit within the church.

The end of the biblical story, therefore, is not one of fear or catastrophe but of joyful anticipation. The people of God await the return of their king as a bride awaiting her bridegroom. History moves steadily toward the great wedding feast of the Lamb, where heaven and earth will be fully united and the reign of Christ will be revealed in its fullness.75 Until that day, the church lives faithfully within the story—participating even now in the movement of the kingdom as the life of heaven continues to break into the world through the people of God.

Christian hope, then, is not centered on escaping the world but on witnessing its renewal. The church lives between resurrection and restoration, between the enthronement of Christ and the day when every corner of creation will reflect his glory. And in that space, the people of God continue their calling—bringing the life of the kingdom from heaven to earth as living reflections of the reign of Jesus.

NEXT STEPS: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqaMIwzEBwbMYak8X3da28QtOwC5j3wkF&si=sQsKEgEuCx-CgQP8

  1. N. T. Wright — Wright critiques popular evangelical end-times speculation and reframes Christian hope in resurrection and new creation. ↩︎
  2. Craig R. Koester — a respected scholarly treatment of Revelation’s historical and literary context. ↩︎
  3. John F. Walvoord — classic dispensational argument for premillennialism. ↩︎
  4. George Eldon Ladd — historic premillennial perspective emphasizing inaugurated eschatology. ↩︎
  5. Scot McKnight — accessible but academically informed interpretation of Revelation’s theology. ↩︎
  6. G. K. Beale — major scholarly commentary emphasizing symbolic and Old Testament background. ↩︎
  7. Anthony A. Hoekema — influential amillennial treatment of eschatology. ↩︎
  8. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 7–12. ↩︎
  9. G. K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology: The Unfolding of the Old Testament in the New (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011), 81–96. ↩︎
  10. N. T. Wright, Paul and the Faithfulness of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2013), 789–798. ↩︎
  11. Christopher J. H. Wright, The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible’s Grand Narrative (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006), 193–205. ↩︎
  12. Michael S. Heiser, The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015), 113–123; Patrick D. Miller, Deuteronomy (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1990), 267–270. ↩︎
  13. G. K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology: The Unfolding of the Old Testament in the New (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011), 192–199; Christopher J. H. Wright, The Mission of God (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006), 199–207. ↩︎
  14. Craig S. Keener, Acts: An Exegetical Commentary, vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012), 789–801; N. T. Wright, Acts for Everyone, Part 1 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2008), 22–27. ↩︎
  15. Walter Brueggemann, First and Second Samuel (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1990), 60–65. ↩︎
  16. John Goldingay, Old Testament Theology: Israel’s Faith, vol. 2 (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006), 406–414. ↩︎
  17. Daniel I. Block, The Gospel according to Moses: Theological and Ethical Reflections on the Book of Deuteronomy (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2012), 53–60. ↩︎
  18. Scot McKnight, Revelation for the Rest of Us (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2023), 21–28.Scot McKnight, Revelation for the Rest of Us (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2023), 21–28. ↩︎
  19. N. T. Wright, Paul and the Faithfulness of God, 1235–1244. ↩︎
  20. George Eldon Ladd, A Theology of the New Testament, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993), 314–318. ↩︎
  21. Craig S. Keener, Acts: An Exegetical Commentary, vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012), 946–952 ↩︎
  22. Steve Gregg, Revelation: Four Views, 2nd ed. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2013), 17–33. ↩︎
  23. Craig A. Blaising and Darrell L. Bock, Progressive Dispensationalism (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 1993), 9–24. ↩︎
  24. Michael J. Vlach, Dispensationalism: Essential Beliefs and Common Myths (Los Angeles: Theological Studies Press, 2008), 27–39. ↩︎
  25. George Eldon Ladd, The Presence of the Future (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974), 17–40; Anthony A. Hoekema, The Bible and the Future (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1979), 173–201. ↩︎
  26. Steve Gregg, Revelation: Four Views, 2nd ed. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2013), 17–54. ↩︎
  27. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 1–17. ↩︎
  28. Scot McKnight, Revelation for the Rest of Us (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2023), 9–18. ↩︎
  29. John J. Collins, Daniel: A Commentary on the Book of Daniel (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 349–361 ↩︎
  30. N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), 339–368. ↩︎
  31. G. K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011), 131–140; Craig S. Keener, The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament, 2nd ed. (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2014), 447–449. ↩︎
  32. John J. Collins, The Apocalyptic Imagination: An Introduction to Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, 3rd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2016), 5–12. ↩︎
  33. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 6–12. ↩︎
  34. G. K. Beale, The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the Greek Text (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 48–56. ↩︎
  35. N. T. Wright, Surprised by Hope (New York: HarperOne, 2008), 132–135; Gordon D. Fee, The First and Second Letters to the Thessalonians (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2009), 178–181. ↩︎
  36. Craig R. Koester, Revelation and the End of All Things, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 25–33. ↩︎
  37. Scot McKnight, Revelation for the Rest of Us (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2023), 14–22. ↩︎
  38. G. K. Beale, The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the Greek Text (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 115–119. ↩︎
  39. John J. Collins, The Apocalyptic Imagination: An Introduction to Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, 3rd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2016), 8–12. ↩︎
  40. Grant R. Osborne, Revelation (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2002), 403–407. ↩︎
  41. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 7–10. ↩︎
  42. Raymond E. Brown, The Epistles of John (New York: Doubleday, 1982), 332–336. ↩︎
  43. John J. Collins, Daniel: A Commentary on the Book of Daniel (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 277–283 ↩︎
  44. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 35–42. ↩︎
  45. Craig R. Koester, Revelation and the End of All Things, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 123–128. ↩︎
  46. George Eldon Ladd, The Presence of the Future (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974), 325–331. ↩︎
  47. Walter Brueggemann, The Prophetic Imagination, 2nd ed. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001), 3–19. ↩︎
  48. Scot McKnight, Revelation for the Rest of Us (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Academic, 2023), 87–96. ↩︎
  49. Steve Gregg, Revelation: Four Views, 2nd ed. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2013), 54–67. ↩︎
  50. Kenneth L. Gentry Jr., Before Jerusalem Fell: Dating the Book of Revelation (Powder Springs, GA: American Vision, 1998), 33–45; Craig R. Koester, Revelation and the End of All Things, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 34–38. ↩︎
  51. Flavius Josephus, The Jewish War, trans. G. A. Williamson (London: Penguin Classics, 1981), 5.1–5.13. ↩︎
  52. Jodi Magness, Masada: From Jewish Revolt to Modern Myth (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019), 115–128. ↩︎
  53. R. C. Sproul, The Last Days according to Jesus (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1998), 158–174. ↩︎
  54. N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), 339–368. ↩︎
  55. Craig R. Koester, Revelation and the End of All Things, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 89–96. ↩︎
  56. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 35–43. ↩︎
  57. Shane J. Wood, Thinning the Veil: Revelation and the Kingdom of Heaven (Joplin, MO: College Press, 2013), 111–119. ↩︎
  58. Craig R. Koester, The Dwelling of God: The Tabernacle in the Old Testament, Intertestamental Jewish Literature, and the New Testament (Washington, DC: Catholic Biblical Association, 1989), 139–145. ↩︎
  59. G. K. Beale, The Temple and the Church’s Mission (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2004), 195–210. ↩︎
  60. David M. Moffitt, Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in the Epistle to the Hebrews (Leiden: Brill, 2011), 215–228. ↩︎
  61. N. T. Wright, Paul and the Faithfulness of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2013), 1235–1248. ↩︎
  62. Richard B. Hays, Echoes of Scripture in the Letters of Paul (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989), 84–98. ↩︎
  63. George Eldon Ladd, A Theology of the New Testament, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993), 111–119. ↩︎
  64. R. T. France, The Gospel of Matthew (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007), 932–934. ↩︎
  65. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 129–136. ↩︎
  66. George Eldon Ladd, The Presence of the Future (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974), 218–224. ↩︎
  67. G. K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011), 744–756. ↩︎
  68. Shane J. Wood, Thinning the Veil (Joplin, MO: College Press, 2013), 181–189. ↩︎
  69. Brian Zahnd, Beauty Will Save the World (Colorado Springs: David C. Cook, 2012), 57–74. ↩︎
  70. N. T. Wright, Surprised by Hope (New York: HarperOne, 2008), 104–115. ↩︎
  71. George Eldon Ladd, A Theology of the New Testament, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993), 111–119 ↩︎
  72. N. T. Wright, Surprised by Hope (New York: HarperOne, 2008), 104–115. ↩︎
  73. Shane J. Wood, Thinning the Veil (Joplin, MO: College Press, 2013), 181–189. ↩︎
  74. G. K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011), 744–756. ↩︎
  75. Richard Bauckham, The Theology of the Book of Revelation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 132–139. ↩︎

Are you leaving Jesus on the Cross?

Anyone else sometimes feel like our laser and lightshow, skinny jeans and smoke machine Christian culture has sort of lost the sacred approach that seems to be so rich to the textures of the Bible? One prominent blogger says, “My Father’s House Shall be a House of… Entertainment?”1 I agree with much of his sentiment. I grew up attending the classic white steepled church adorned by stained glass telling the story of the covenant community that had faithfully gone before us, and I have to say when I return to a more traditional looking church building there is just something that feels more sacred than the auditoriums parading led walls bigger than the strip of Las Vegas. But perhaps even more than a steeple and stained glass, I long for an antiquated upper room with a table set for me.2 But at the same time, I love the diversity of the church and find a place for nearly every recipe of the faith.

Recently TKC students went to a Brian Zahnd Prayer school. Brian started in the Jesus Movement3 and shifted into Word of Faith.4 From there he had a deeper bought with Theology and found himself turning back the pages to a more conservative Anglican5, or Eastern Orthodox6 approach. Amongst other things he brought back the liturgy7 into his prayers. One of the other things that you will see in his church is a return to icons8, specifically Jesus on the cross. Before I go any further, I love Brian Zahnd. If you have a chance to attend one of his prayer schools, you will be immensely blessed. I can’t recommend the school or any of his soon to be 12 books enough. All of it is life changing and will bear great fruit for the kingdom.

As much as I LOVED THIS endeavor, I have to admit, I still found myself struggling with the longer liturgy, iconography, beads, repetition and chants (and I chant in Hebrew regularly). I know so many people that were “saved” from all of this. There are some things about the more liturgical experiences I love, and some things that I don’t. I love the sacred approach and the stressing of Biblical theology; but I also don’t want to harness or put the moving of the Holy Spirit in a box (which to be clear I don’t think Brian does.) I also have never felt good about iconography that leaves Jesus on the cross.

I agree with his quote. In fact, I think it is right on. But I am not sure I want to “stay” there or make that my dwelling place. I feel like to do so sort of takes a perspective similar to when those of the reformed mindset that get so bound by total depravity (and the other TULIP ideology)9 that they can never emerge from that mindset, affirm their new life and identity in Christ and live in victorious sanctified life here and now bringing Heaven to earth – in the words of NT Wright.10

As I write this, I am asking myself (as all good theologians should do)11 to be unbiased and consider what is the best approach according to the scripture and the revelation of Jesus Christ. I will invite you to a Mars Hill experience12 with me. Let’s consider the tough questions. Why focus on the image of Jesus on the cross? Some would say we are leaving Jesus on the cross, not celebrating the triumph of the resurrection ascension and enthronement of Jesus that is the completed image of living a complete sanctified life.13

Others will say the cross by itself is an abstraction of Jesus.14

To say it a different way… A beaten, humiliated man dying on a cross doesn’t seem like we “picked a winner…”15 But as you likely know if you are reading this, that is the worlds way of thinking. We as Christian’s see the beauty in the humble sacrifice (Beauty will save the world) and see that through Him the meek will inherit the earth. This is upside down or backwards kingdom ideology – the first shall be last kingdom that Expedition 44 has become known for. Christ (the meek) inherited the earth & we are sons and daughters of God and therefore we also inherit His kingdom. We lead humbly from beneath in peace. Jesus’ way of leading puts devotion and service ahead of prominence and power. This perspective aligns with the concept of servant leadership, where the leader serves others rather than seeking to dominate or assert authority over people. 16

Yes, I know all of that and do my best to live it out. In the same way, I can see how the image of Christ on the cross is a great iconic missional reminder of what we should be doing each and every day.

However, with all that said, so much of the voice of Jesus and message that follows is to claim the full revelation of Jesus which is post enthronement -His spirit poured out into us that we might represent the One that has “won” or “championed” the world.17

Please don’t get me wrong, I don’t think the kick butt Jesus icon18 works. I even sometimes struggle with the battle language in Christianity (when the battle belongs to the Lord not us); but Jesus is both the Lion and the Lamb. Let’s not lose sight of either.

My primary problem with leaving Jesus on the cross is that scripture tells me that my identity isn’t in my former defeated person but is now grafted into the glory of the enthroned Christ. In some ways I see the transformation of the cross as a caricature or mosaic (comparison image) of my personal transformation enthroned by Him as a royal holy ruler -not defeated. To leave Christ on the cross doesn’t seem to match the thrust of 2 Corinthians 5 following my example to be like Jesus in total transformation.19

The Greeks believed that peace (eirḗnē) was simply the small intermission between war (pólemos) and war was (and possibly should be) the natural state of the world.20  This Greek idea stands in opposition to shālôm, the Hebraic idea of well-being that was and is the intended condition of humanity.  shālôm is the gift of YHVH. But shālôm is not just the peace between the wars, but the balance that found revelation in Jesus Christ Himself. “Peace I leave you, My peace I give you; not as the world gives, do I give to you.  Do not let your hearts be troubled, nor fearful” (John 14:27 NASB). 

I want to dwell on the complete revelation of Jesus, that is a balance of the cross and the enthroned king.

Will Ryan Th.D.

  1. https://jaronalexander.medium.com/skinny-jeans-and-smoke-machines-11e3d6ee28b ↩︎
  2. Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Acts 1, “The eleven were the tenants of the upper room, to which the other disciples resorted for conference and communion”. ↩︎
  3. Bustraan, R. A. (2014). The Jesus People Movement: A Story of Spiritual Revolution Among the Hippies. Wipf & Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1620324646. ↩︎
  4. Harrison, Milmon F. (2005). Righteous Riches: The Word of Faith Movement in Contemporary African American Religion. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195153880. ↩︎
  5. “What it means to be an Anglican”Church of England. Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. ↩︎
  6. “The Orthodox Faith – Volume I – Doctrine and Scripture – The Symbol of Faith – Resurrection”http://www.oca.org. ↩︎
  7. Baldovin, John F., SJ (2008) Reforming the Liturgy: a Response to the Critics. The Liturgical Press ↩︎
  8. Erwin Panofsky, Studies in Iconology: Humanistic Themes in the Art of the Renaissance. Oxford 1939. ↩︎
  9. Sproul, R. C. (2016). What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-8010-1846-6. ↩︎
  10. Van Biema, David (7 February 2008). “Christians Wrong About Heaven, Says Bishop”Time. Archived from the original on 9 February 2008. ↩︎
  11. Kogan, Michael S. 1995. “Toward a Jewish Theology of Christianity.” Journal of Ecumenical Studies 32(1):89–106.  ↩︎
  12. Bruce, F.F. The Acts of the Apostles. The Greek Text with Introduction and Commentary. 2nd Ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1952). 335. ↩︎
  13. Philip Edgecumbe HughesA Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, p. 401, 1988: “The theme of Christ’s heavenly session, announced here by the statement he sat down at the right hand of God, .. Hebrews 8:1 “we have such a high priest, one who is seated at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven”)” ↩︎
  14. Clark, Elizabeth Ann (1999). Reading Renunciation: Asceticism and Scripture in Early Christianity. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00512-6. ↩︎
  15. Leithart, Peter (July 1995). “When the Son Is Glorified”Biblical Horizons75. Retrieved 3 May 2012. ↩︎
  16.  Ignatius of Antioch. The Epistle of Ignatius to Polycarp. IV. ↩︎
  17. https://www.faiththeevidence.com/faith-evidence-blog-_1/jesus-our-champion ↩︎
  18. https://thinkchristian.net/jesusfreaks-butt-kicking-christ ↩︎
  19. Dallas Willard – Renovation of the Heart proposes that the human self is made up of several interrelated components: one’s spirit, i.e. one’s “heart” or “will”; one’s mind, or the collection of one’s thoughts and feelings; the body; one’s social context; and one’s soul. Willard argues that one’s identity is largely a function of how those components are subordinated to one another, and whether the whole is subordinated to God. Willard argues that popular rejection of subordination to God and the dominance of the body and feelings has resulted in addictions and futile pursuits of stimulation for the body or feelings. Willard argues that the subordinated alignment of one’s being can be corrected through apprenticeship to Jesus Christ, which renovates one’s heart. ↩︎
  20. Josephus, Jewish War, 1.370 (Loeb ed.) ↩︎