Admon Mikha'el
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I have seen many times arguments against dispesationalism......What the dickens is dispensationalism?
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SignUp Now!I have seen many times arguments against dispesationalism......What the dickens is dispensationalism?
The following came from post #25 in the thread "The One Event" as I gave a brief description of dispensationalism.
Dispensations are times throughout history where God dealt with man according to the knowledge man had of God at that particular time.
For example, we have much more knowledge of God now, than those under the Law. Those under the Law had more knowledge of God than those who lived before the Law given, etc, etc.
Through measuring out these times in dispensations we can see how the knowledge of God spread throughout time.
There are 7 dispensations and by chance there are 7 churches given letters in Revelations.
We use the these dispensations to see the letters to the church's in Revelations as a view of the condition of the church's in the past 2000 years, or so.
For example, The first church mentioned in Rev. 2, Ephesus, represents the first church established in the first century. Each church represents a continuous progression of the church's condition until we reach the last church of the 7, Laodicea. This is the last church and is the church we see today, totally rejected by Christ, whereas the previous church's did have some, maybe few but some good qualities.
From acknowledging these periods of time, we can grasp a much better understanding of the Scripture. But it doesn't stop here, it is used in many other Scriptures as to set forth a better understanding to interpret Scripture.
Here's a decent summary of dispensationalism.
Dispensational Theology
Dispensationalism is an evangelical theological system that addresses issues concerning the biblical covenants, Israel, the church, and end times.www.thegospelcoalition.org
Dispensationalism is an evangelical theological system that addresses issues concerning the biblical covenants, Israel, the church, and end times. It also argues for a literal interpretation of Old Testament prophecies involving ethnic/national Israel, and the idea that the church is a New Testament entity that is distinct from Israel.
The two most distinctive ideas are the rapture and a separation of church and Israel. If you meeting someone who believes that the Bible should be read literally, there will be a pretribulation rapture and that the modern nation of Israel is central to the coming Day of the Lord, you're talking to a person who has absorbed dispensationalist theology.
There's plenty of overlap, but not all fundamentalists follow dispensationalist theology. A literal interpretation of the Bible is a mainstay of fundamentalism, but not all fundamentalists believe in a rapture before the great tribulation, and not all separate Israel and the church.That is correct! They are called Fundamentalists.
There's plenty of overlap, but not all fundamentalists follow dispensationalist theology. A literal interpretation of the Bible is a mainstay of fundamentalism, but not all fundamentalists believe in a rapture before the great tribulation, and not all separate Israel and the church.
Dispensationalism is an evangelical theological system that addresses issues concerning the biblical covenants, Israel, the church, and end times. It also argues for a literal interpretation of Old Testament prophecies involving ethnic/national Israel, and the idea that the church is a New Testament entity that is distinct from Israel.
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That's confusing and creates all sorts of problems. For example, you might say murder was not ruled out until the ten commandments were given, yet when Cain killed his brother the Lord pronounced a curse~
Dispensations have their pluses and minuses. For example:
Melchizedek was a high priest back in the days of Abraham, which was something
like +/- 400 years prior to the covenant that Moses' people agreed upon with God
per Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. That covenant penalizes
offenders with a number of curses for non compliance: seen listed at Lev 26:14-39,
Deut 27:15-26, and Deut 28:15-68.
The thing is: Mel was immune to all those curses because the covenant isn't
retroactive. (Deut 5:2-4 & Gal 3:17) So then none of the covenant's curses for non
compliance applied to him. (Rom 4:15 & Rom 5:12-13) And seeing as how
Abraham was within Mel's sphere of spiritual authority (Gen 14:20 & Heb 7:4-10)
then Abraham was exempt from the covenant's curses too.
For example: the covenant prohibits dishonesty (Lev 19:11) and it prohibits
sleeping with one's half-sister. (Lev 18:9) But God couldn't indict Abraham for
those behaviors because in his day, they were not yet codified; not even the Ten
Commandments. Mel and Abraham had quite an advantage that his later-to-come
posterity wasn't afforded.
BTW: Jesus' priesthood is patterned after Melchizedek's (Ps 110:4 & Heb 5:1-10)
which of course implies that everybody within Jesus' sphere of spiritual authority
qualifies for Abraham's advantage.
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That's confusing and creates all sorts of problems. For example, you might say
murder was not ruled out until the ten commandments were given, yet when Cain
killed his brother the Lord pronounced a curse