Relentless School of Theology
Week 4 Jan 28th - Feb 3rd
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Week 4 Assignments:
Views of the Millennium
- This week's assignment, each student will read the views of the Millennium. The reading material is below on this page.
- The assignment is due by Midnight Monday February 3, 2025
- * "Special Notes" Each student must write a minimum of a one-page summary of what you read, and which Millennium views that the New Testament Church under grace believe in.
- This assignment is worth 75 points
- Upload your assignment, by using the attachment link below.
Views of the Millennium
DEFINITION
The Millennium refers to the period of 1,000 year reign of Christ mentioned in Revelation 20:3. The exact timing and nature of what is meant by the Millennium is debated between three viewpoints: A-millennialism, Postmillennialism, and Premillennialism.
SUMMARY
The Millennium refers to the period of 1,000 year reign of Christ mentioned in Revelation 20:1-4. This passage is notoriously difficult to interpret has been the source of debate among three eschatological schools of thought: A-millennialism, Postmillennialism, and Premillennialism. The different eschatologies associated with the Millennium relate to the timing of the return of Christ regarding the 1,000 years and what is the precise nature of the Millennium. A-millennialists do not expect a future literal 1,000, but rather view it as Christ’s reign with his saints during the time between his two comings. Postmillennialists believe Christ returns after the millennium as a golden age when the majority of the world has converted to Christianity. Premillennialists believe Christ returns before the millennium preceded by a period of intense tribulation. This article examines some of the details and characteristics of these three views of the Millennium.
Introduction
Eschatology is the field of Christian theology which concerns the study of last things. It is the study of Christ’s future return, the resurrection, the rapture, the final judgment, the eternal blessedness of the redeemed with Christ, and the eternal punishment of the damned apart from his presence. Upon these rudimentary points, there is considerable agreement, yet with regard to the particulars, there has been a wide diversity of thought among Christians from the very earliest centuries of the Church. The various eschatologies promoted by theologians throughout history can be organized into three general systems: a-millennialism, postmillennialism, and premillennialism. Each term is distinguished by a prefix attached to the word “millennium,” which is a compound of two Latin terms, mille (thousand), and annus (year).1 The reason for this nomenclature is because, over time, each view began to be known by its interpretation of Revelation 20:1-10, particularly the timing of the return of Christ with reference to the period of 1,000 years mentioned therein. Therefore, a-millennialists expect no millennium (The prefix –a means, “no”), postmillennialists believe Christ returns after the millennium (the prefix –post, means “after”), and premillennialists believe Christ returns before the millennium (the prefix –pre, means “before”).
A-millenialism
Although a-millennialists expect no millennial kingdom, this does not mean a-millennialists deny a millennium entirely, as the terminology may seem to imply. Anthony Hoekema provides a concise a-millennial interpretation of Revelation 20:
A-millennialists interpret the millennium … as describing the present reign of the souls of deceased believers with Christ in heaven. They understand the binding of Satan … as being in effect during the entire period between the first and second comings of Christ, though ending shortly before Christ’s return. They teach that Christ will return after this heavenly reign.
A-millennialists believe we are presently living in the millennial kingdom, which is characterized by the simultaneous experiences of gospel victory and suffering for the gospel. This obviously indicates a-millennialists interpret “one thousand” figuratively. The gospel is victorious because Satan is bound, rendering him incapable of preventing the spread of the gospel; yet he is not utterly powerless from persecuting the Church. Just before the end, Satan will again be permitted to deceive the nations and persecution will increase dramatically. Christians are awaiting the visible, bodily return of Christ, which brings an end to all their suffering. The second coming occurs concurrently with the general resurrection and a public rapture of the Church, who immediately returns to earth with Christ. Christ then judges the world, and finally ushers in the eternal state.
Important to the a-millennialist understanding is the tension of “already/not yet.” Christians presently live in the inaugurated kingdom, as Christ reigns from heaven; yet, they await the kingdom’s full realization, when Christ will reign on Earth eternally. The inaugurated kingdom endures tribulation and suffering, but also victory as the Gospel spreads; in the consummate kingdom, the new heavens and new earth, there will be eternal rest. Another key point of this view, is the understanding of Old Testament prophecy, especially as interpreted by the New Testament. Kim Riddlebarger writes, “A-millennialists hold that the promises made to Israel, David, and Abraham in the Old Testament are fulfilled by Jesus Christ and his church during this present age.” Since these promises have been fulfilled, no future fulfillment is required. A-millennialists point to passages which teach that the consummation of history occurs at the second coming, with only the eternal state following. A-millennialists base their interpretation of Revelation 20 as recapitulating or re-present the events described in Revelation 19, rather than following it in chronological succession.
Postmillennialism
Postmillennialism holds to the view Christ will return after the millennium. As with a-millennialism the terminology falls short. In a strictly chronological sense, the a-millennialists and the postmillennialists agree that Christ returns after the millennium. In fact, a-millennialists were known as postmillennialists until the twentieth century. Postmillennialists generally agree with the a-millennial interpretation of Revelation 20. The two agree the millennium is figurative, not a literal one thousand year period, and that it “is a time in which the gospel is preached throughout the world” as Satan is currently bound. They also agree on the general course of events in the end times: When Jesus comes, then, the general physical resurrection of the righteous and the wicked occurs, followed by the final judgment, and culminating with the new heavens and new earth.
What distinguishes postmillennialism from a-millennialism is not the timing of the second coming in relation to the millennium but the nature of the millennium. Whereas a-millennialism expects the Church to experience both victory and suffering simultaneously until the second coming, postmillennialism maintains a gradual end to much of the Church’s suffering before Christ returns. They expect a golden age of righteousness on earth, the millennium, in which the church experiences increasing prosperity and great influence on the culture. This golden age is what the postmillennialist understands as the millennium. Loraine Boettner defines
postmillennialism:
Postmillennialism is that view of the last things which holds that the kingdom of God is now being extended in the world through the preaching of the gospel and the saving work of the Holy Spirit in the hearts of individuals, that the world eventually is to be Christianized and that the return of Christ is to occur at the close of a long period of righteousness and peace commonly called the millennium.
Gentry explains, “Postmillennialism expects that eventually the vast majority of men living will be saved.” This will lead to “a time in history prior to Christ’s return in which faith, righteousness, peace, and prosperity will prevail in the affairs of men and of nations.” This increased percentage of the population who become believers who seek to live according to God’s will, which naturally leads to greater and greater degrees of peace and justice within their respective communities. It is important to note that this prosperity is a result of a large percentage of the population of the world living according to God’s word.
Postmillennialists usually point to The Great Commission, arguing that it “will be entirely successful.” They also point to the messianic Psalms, especially Psalm 2, particularly verses 7-9, “… I will make the nations your heritage, and the ends of the earth your possession.” In addition, they draw attention to the parables of Matthew 13, which seem to indicate the prodigious growth of the church.
Premillennialism
There are two premillennial systems: historic premillennialism and dispensational premillennialism. Historic premillennialism is labeled such because it more or less resembles the premillennialism held during ancient times known as chiliasm. Dispensational premillennialism derives its name from the theology developed by John Nelson Darby in the nineteenth century that divides biblical history into a series of ages or dispensations. Both forms of premillennialism follow a chronological and more literal reading of Revelation 20:1-6 as subsequent to the return of Christ and final battle in Revelation 19:11-21.
George Ladd defines Premillennialism as, “the doctrine stating that after the Second Coming of Christ, [Christ] will reign for a thousand years over the earth before the final consummation of God’s redemptive purpose in the new heavens and the new earth of the Age to Come.” According to historic Premillennialists, the present age will continue until a brief period of tribulation, after which “Christ will return to earth to establish a millennial kingdom.” At the second coming there will be a resurrection of believers and a public rapture. These resurrected believers reign with Christ, who will, “be physically present on the earth in his resurrected body, and will reign as King over the entire earth.” During this period, Satan is “bound and cast into the bottomless pit so that he will have no influence on the earth during the millennium.” After the millennium, Satan is released for a brief time, during which he leads astray a portion of the world’s population in rebellion to Christ. Christ destroys this rebellion, judges the world, then ushers in the eternal state. This interpretation assumes, in contrast to the a-millennialist and postmillennialist, that the events described in Revelation 19 and 20 are chronologically successive.
Although Revelation 20 is the only passage to specify a period of 1,000 years, and thus the various positions (a-, pre-, and post-) as “millennial,” this is not the critical question that separates premillennialism from the other two. The critical question is whether this age will issue immediately into the final / eternal state (“the golden age”), or whether a further, intermediary stage of the eschatological kingdom (a “silver” age) lies between. Premillennialists argue that in addition to Revelation 20 passages such as Isaiah 11 and 65-66, Zechariah 14, and 1 Corinthians 15:20-28 also indicate such an intermediary stage, while a-millennialists and postmillennialists will refer these passages either to the church age or the final state.