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Directory of Theology

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Eschatology

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Topics in this Category
 All Millennial Views (229 links)
 Already/Not Yet (19 links)
 Antichrist & The Man of Sin (22 links)
 Audio and Multimedia (63 links)
 General Essays & Articles (23 links)
 Israel in Eschatology (46 links)
 Personal/Individual Eschatology (7 links)
 Preterism (16 links)
 Prophetic Literature (24 links)
 Reformed Responses to MacArthur (9 links)
 Second Coming (41 links)
 The Book of Daniel (171 links)
 The Book of Revelation (211 links)
 The Olivet Discourse (12 links)


"Within the mainline Jewish writings of this period, covering a wide range of styles, genres, political persuasions and theological perspectives, there is virtually no evidence that Jews were expecting the end of the space-time universe. There is abundant evidence that they knew a good metaphor when they saw one, and used cosmic imagery to bring out the full theological significance of cataclysmic socio-political events. There is almost nothing to suggest that they followed the Stoics into the belief that the world itself would come to an end; and there is almost everything to suggest that they did not.

If we imagine the majority of first-century Jews, and early Christians, as people who were confidently expecting the space-time universe to come to a full stop, and who were disappointed, we at once create a distance between them and ourselves far greater than that of mere chronology.

When Christ warned in his parables and in the Olivet discourse (Matthew 24, Mark 13, and Luke 21) about approaching doom, he was not announcing the end of the world as we know it. He was anticipating the desolation of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Jewish Temple, which occurred in A.D. 70.

This is what early Christian eschatology was all about: not the expectation of the literal end of the space-time universe but the sense that world history was reaching, or indeed had reached, its single intended climax.?"
N.T. Wright

"If Jesus and the early church used the relevant language in the same way as their contemporiries, it is highly unlikely that they would have been referring to the actual end of the world, and highly likely that they would have been referring to events within space-time history which they interpreted as the coming of the kingdom. It will not do to dismiss this reading of 'apocalyptic' language as 'merely metaphorical'. Metaphors have teeth; the complex metaphors available to first-century Jews had particularly sharp ones."
N.T. Wright from Jesus and the Victory of God pg. 321

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Title Notes
Ethics and the Millennium John Frame - In this brief, irenic and wonderfully sane article, Frame applies his "perspectival" approach to theology and doctrine to the three major evangelical views on the millennium.icon
The Millennium – Major Views Aaron Orendorff - Questions and Answersicon
An Open Letter to Evangelicals and Other Interested Parties The People of God, the Land of Israel, and the Impartiality of the Gospelicon
Jesus Christ: The Sum and Substance of Biblical Prophecy Dr. Kim Riddlebarger (.Pdf) Without Christ we are spiritually blind, lame and paralyzedicon
Eschatology Sam Storms - Numerous essays and artilces on both exegetical and topical issues relating to eschatology.icon
Nature in the New Creation: New Testament Eschatology and the Enivornment Douglas J. Moo (pdf)icon
A Comparison of Historic Covenant and Historic Dispensational Theology Charticon
(Re)New(ed) Creation: The End of the Story Michael W. Goheen (.pdf)icon
Death and the Afterlife - Chart Eric Costa (pdf)icon
Two-Age Eschatology Chart Kim Riddlebarger (pdf)icon
The Theology of the End and the End of Theology Daniel Strangeicon
Resurrection and Redemption: How Eschatology and the Gospel Relate Richard B. Gaffin, Jr.icon
Millennium and Unity Ra McLaughlinicon
What is the Purpose of the Millennium? Ra McLaughlinicon
Tribulation and the Antichrist Ra McLaughlinicon
The Unfolding of Biblical Eschatology (MP3) Keith Mathison with panelicon
An Approach to Apocalyptic Literature: A Primer for Preachers (.pdf) David R. Helmicon
Releasing the Hostage: Giving the Apocalypse Back to the Church Thomas N. Smith, Reformation & Revival 6.2 (Spring 1997): 127-146.icon
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Recommended Reading

From Age to Age: The Unfolding of Biblical Eschatology
by Keith Mathison



The Holy Trinity
by Robert Letham

Shared Life
by Donald Macleod


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