A Refutation of Dispensational Theology
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On our “Welcome” page I made the statement that “I
follow a literal, historical, grammatical, and somewhat-dispensational approach to
interpreting the Scriptures,” and I have been asked by several individuals to clarify
what I mean by that phrase, and more specifically what I mean by the term “somewhat
dispensational approach.”
But first it is necessary to define
“dispensational” before I can clarify in what ways my approach to Biblical interpretation is
similar and in what ways it is different. “Classic Dispensationalism” is a system
of interpreting the scriptures, of which Dr. C. I. Scofield was the major proponent, and in
which tradition I received nearly all of my formal theological training. This system teaches
that:
The Scriptures divide time (by which is meant the entire period from the creation of Adam
to the "new heaven and a new earth" of Rev. 21:1) into seven unequal periods, usually
called dispensations (Eph. 3:2), although these periods are also called ages (Eph. 2:7)
and days, as in "day of the Lord."
These periods are marked off in Scripture by some change in G-d’s method of
dealing with mankind, or a portion of mankind, in respect of the two questions: of sin,
and of man's responsibility. Each of the dispensations may be regarded as a new test of
the natural man, and each ends in judgment, marking his utter failure in every
dispensation. Five of these dispensations, or periods of time, have been fulfilled; we are
living in the sixth, probably toward its close, and have before us the seventh, and last:
the millennium.
— Dr. C. I. Scofield. The Seven
Dispensations: Rightly Dividing the Word of Truth, Chapter 2
In each of these “dispositions,” this
system teaches, G-d had a different standard of righteousness by which men
would be judged (that is, a different test for, or method of, salvation), each ends with
mankind's failure to comply and an associated judgment, and that each dispensation, along
with its standard of righteousness supplants or replaces its predecessor.
|
The Seven “Dispensations” According to Scofield |
| Dispensation or Age |
Time Period |
Man’s Responsibility |
Man's Failure |
G-d’s Judgment |
|
Innocence |
From Creation of Adam to the expulsion from Eden |
Do not eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil |
Adam and Eve listened to the Serpent and ate from the tree. |
Driven out of the garden, the whole earth cursed, death initiated. |
|
Conscience |
From the expulsion from Eden to the Flood |
Do good and do not do evil (i.e., obey your conscience) |
“The wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every
imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” |
“All flesh” destroyed by the Flood. |
|
Human Government |
From the Flood to Babel |
Establish effective rule of men over the earth |
Disobeyed G-d’s command to disperse and fill the earth; invented
astrology*; “let
us make a name for ourselves” |
Confusion of language and dispersal of humanity across the globe. |
|
Promise |
From Babel to Sinai |
Believe G-d’s promise |
Israel rejected G-d’s grace and “presumptuously” took upon themselves the “burden of
the Law” |
G-d places Israel under “a yoke which neither our fathers nor we have
been able to bear” |
|
Law |
From Sinai to Pentecost, then from the “Rapture” to Messiah’s Return |
Obey G-d and keep His commandments |
Israel repeatedly “abandoned G-d” and fell into idolatry and failed to
obey the “Law” of G-d; Israel “rejected” their Messiah |
The Temple destroyed; Israel disbursed among the Gentiles; Eretz Israel given to the
Gentiles; G-d revokes his “everlasting covenants” with Israel and gives
them to “the Church”; “the Church” replaces Israel as G-d’s chosen people |
|
Grace |
From Pentecost to the “Rapture” — inserted into the Dispensation of Law before
“Daniel’s 70th Week” |
Confess Jesus as Lord and believe in the Resurrection |
Men reject Jesus as Lord |
The Tribulation and Antichrist's reign of terror |
|
Kingdom |
From Messiah’s Return to the creation of the “new heavens and new earth” |
All humanity lives under the personal reign of Christ |
Satan leads the final rebellion and many follow him |
Satan and his followers thrown into the “Lake of Fire”; heaven and earth destroyed; a
new and perfect heaven and earth created |
|
* It is my personal opinion, along with Dr. D.
James Kennedy and others, that the “Tower of Babel” was built as an astrological
observatory. A literal rendering of
Genesis 11:4 could read, “… a tower, and at its top, the heavens” [i.e.,
the constellations]. Astrology formed the basis of the religion developed by
Nimrod, now know as the
Babylon Mystery Religion, which is the direct source of most of the paganism that
infects Christianity today. “[Astrology] was used as the basis of a religious
system which was integrated into Greek and Roman Paganism [which was, in turn,
integrated into Constantine’s
“Christianity”]. This involved worship of the planets and stars and a belief that
after death (if virtuous) we ascend to the heavens. Other aspects of ancient
star-worship that are still with us are our seven-day week and the transference of the
winter Solstice into the celebration of the birth of Christ.”
Franz Cumont. Astrology and Religion
Among the Greeks and Romans. |
For another chart of the “dispensations”
go here.
Philip Mauro presents an excellent argument against the dispensations
at
GospelTruth.net.
Most dispensationalists (those who accept this
division of the Scriptures) teach that G-d dealt differently with mankind in
each of these time periods, and many go so far as to say that there was actually a different
method of salvation in each of the “dispensations.” For example, see this list from
BibleLife.org.
1. Man innocent.
… Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: Do not eat of the tree of
knowledge.
Genesis 2:16 And the Lord G-d commanded the man, saying, "Of every tree of
the garden you may freely eat; 17 "but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you
shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die."
2. Man under
conscience. … Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: Do good and do not do evil.
Genesis 3:22 Then the Lord G-d said, "Behold, the man has become like one of
Us, to know good and evil. And now, lest he put out his hand and take also of the tree of
life, and eat, and live forever"-- 23 therefore the Lord G-d sent him out of
the garden of Eden to till the ground from which he was taken.
3. Man in authority
over the earth. … Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: Believe G-d
and build an ark.
Genesis 6:16 "You shall make a window for the ark, and you shall finish it to a cubit from
above; and set the door of the ark in its side. You shall make it [with] lower, second,
and third [decks]. 17 "And behold, I Myself am bringing floodwaters on the earth, to
destroy from under heaven all flesh in which [is] the breath of life; everything that [is]
on the earth shall die. 18 "But I will establish My covenant with you; and you shall go
into the ark--you, your sons, your wife, and your sons' wives with you.
4. Man under
promise. … Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: Believe G-d’s
promise.
Genesis 12:1 Now the Lord had said to Abram: "Get out of your country, From your family
And from your father's house, To a land that I will show you. 2 I will make you a great
nation; I will bless you.
5. Man under law. …
Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: Obey G-d and keep His
commandments.
"Again the grace of G-d came to the help of helpless man and redeemed the
chosen people out of the hand of the oppressor. In the wilderness of Sinai He proposed to
them the covenant of law. Instead of humbly pleading for a continued relation of grace,
they presumptuously answered: "All that the Lord hath spoken we will do."
— C. I. Scofield,
op. cit. (Emphasis added.)
Exodus 19:5 Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you
shall be a special treasure to Me above all people; for all the earth [is] Mine.
6. Man under grace.
… Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: Confess Jesus as Lord and believe in the
resurrection.
Romans 10:9 that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart
that G-d has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.
7. Man under the
personal reign of Christ. … [Salvation Gospel in this dispensation: None, only
saints enter this dispensation]
…
[W]hen Satan is "loosed a little season," he finds the natural heart as prone to evil as
ever, and easily gathers the nations to battle against the Lord and His saints, …
There are, I believe, a number of serious problems with this interpretation, the most
obvious of which are these three:
1. G-d holds mankind to a different standard of
righteousness in each “dispensation.”
3. G-d makes and then breaks His covenant with mankind
for each successive “dispensation.”
Mal 3:6 -
Show Context
"But because I, ADONAI,
do not change, you sons of Ya'akov will not be
destroyed.
Jas 1:17 -
Show Context
Every good act of giving and
every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father who made the heavenly lights;
with him there is neither variation nor darkness caused
by turning.
Ge 9:16 -
Show Context
The rainbow will be in the
cloud; so that when I look at it, I will remember the everlasting
covenant between G-d and every living creature of any kind on the
earth."
Ge 17:7 -
Show Context
"I am establishing my covenant
between me and you, along with your descendants after you, generation after generation, as
an everlasting covenant, to be G-d for you
and for your descendants after you.
Ge 17:13 -
Show Context
The slave born in your house and
the person bought with your money must be circumcised; thus my covenant will be in your
flesh as an everlasting covenant.
Ge 17:19 -
Show Context
G-d answered, "No,
but Sarah your wife will bear you a son, and you are to call him Yitz'chak [laughter]. I
will establish my covenant with him as an everlasting covenant
for his descendants after him.
2Sa 23:5 -
Show Context
"For my house stands firm with
G-d -he made an everlasting covenant with
me. It is in order, fully assured, that he will bring to full growth all my salvation and
every desire.
1Ch 16:17 -
Show Context
and established as a law for
Ya'akov, for Isra'el as an everlasting covenant:
Ps 105:10 -
Show Context
and established as a law for
Ya'akov, for Isra'el as an everlasting covenant:
Isa 24:5 -
Show Context
The land lies defiled under its
inhabitants; because they have transgressed the teachings, changed the law and broken the
everlasting covenant.
Isa 55:3 -
Show Context
Open your ears, and come to me;
listen well, and you will live - I will make an everlasting
covenant with you, the grace I assured David.
Jer 32:40 -
Show Context
I will make with them an
everlasting covenant not to turn away from them, but to
do them good; I will put fear of me in their hearts, so that they will not leave me.
Jer 50:5 -
Show Context
They will ask the way to Tziyon;
and, turning their faces toward it, will say, 'Come, join yourselves to ADONAI by an
everlasting covenant never to be forgotten.'
Eze 16:60 -
Show Context
Nevertheless, I will remember
the covenant I made with you when you were a girl and will establish an
everlasting covenant with you.
Eze 37:26 -
Show Context
I will make a covenant of peace
with them, an everlasting covenant. I will give to them,
increase their numbers, and set my sanctuary among them forever.
Heb 6:16-20
Now people swear oaths by someone greater than
themselves, and confirmation by an oath puts an end to all dispute. Therefore, when
G-d wanted to demonstrate still more convincingly the
unchangeable character of his intentions to those who were to receive what he had
promised, he added an oath
to the promise; so that through two unchangeable things, in neither
of which G-d could lie, we, who have fled to take a firm hold on the
hope set before us, would be strongly encouraged. We have this hope as a sure and safe
anchor for ourselves, a hope that goes right on through to what is inside the parokhet,
where a forerunner has entered on our behalf, namely, Yeshua, who has become a cohen gadol
forever, to be compared with Malki-Tzedek.
If it were possible for G-d to break His covenant
with Israel, then He could also break His covenant with “the Church” and there would be
absolutely no assurance that anyone could ever obtain eternal life. It would therefore
be impossible for anybody to “believe (trust) G-d”, in which
case there could be no possible hope for eternal life.
And just so there is no misunderstanding of the duration of
G-d’s covenants ...
From Merriam-Webster's Online
Dictionary
Main Entry: everlasting
1ev·er·last·ing
lasting or enduring through all
time :
eternal
Main Entry: eternal
1eter·nal
1 a: having infinite
duration : everlasting
b: of or relating to
eternity
c: characterized by
abiding fellowship with G-d
2 a: continued without
intermission : perpetual
4 a: valid or existing at all times :
timeless
Now that we have, I believe, shattered the “myth” of dispensationalism,
let me explain what I mean by the phrase: “I follow a literal, historical, grammatical, and somewhat-dispensational approach
to interpreting the Scriptures.”
Literal
I believe that Ruach HaKodesh
inspired the recorders of the Sacred Message in such a way that every sentence, every word,
every letter of the original autographs was delivered to mankind exactly the way that
G-d intended them to be written, without diminishing the personality of the writer in
any way.
I agree with the old adage, “When
the literal sense makes sense, then to interpret in any other sense is to create nonsense.”
Grammatical
I believe that in order to be correctly understood, the interpreter must
strive to determine the correct grammatical context in which the text was written. For
example, poetry must be interpreted as poetry; allegory must be interpreted as allegory;
history must be interpreted as history; prophecy must be interpreted as prophecy. Thus when
the Master said, “I am the bread of life,” He did not mean to imply that he just came out of
the oven, and when He said, “I am the door,” He did not meant to imply that he had a lock
and hinges.
Every language has its own idioms, and in order to properly interpret
Scripture we must be aware of the language in which the text was written and the idioms that
were common to that language. We must understand the text in the same way that those to whom
it was originally written would have understood it. Thus when we say in English, “I was just
pulling your leg,” we must understand that an English-speaking reader would understand it to
mean, “I was just kidding.”
Contrary to what most interpreters believe, I believe that the original
Apostolic Scriptures (the so-called “New Testament”) were written in the language in which
those writers would have been most comfortable, probably Hebrew but possibly Aramaic, and
translated from Hebrew into Greek for transmission to the Diaspora. I believe that when
Constantine ordered the destruction of all Hebrew scriptures, those original Hebrew versions
were destroyed and were therefore lost to us. Since the Apostolic Scriptures were written by
Jews, to Jews, about the Jewish Messiah, then need to be interpreted in their original
Hebrew/Jewish sense.
I also believe that when the Master said that Moshe wrote down the Torah
as G-d delivered it to him, He did not mean that twenty or so different
individuals over hundreds of years wrote down scraps that were later assembled into the
Torah and attributed to Moshe Rabenu.
Historical
Every event occurs within its own historical context. In order to
understand the writer’s intent, it is necessary to understand the historical context. For
example, to think of ancient Babylon in terms of modern-day Iraq would be totally
inappropriate. Likewise, to interpret the Apostolic Scriptures outside of their
first-century historical Jewish context produces error. We must remember that when the
Apostolic Scriptures were written, there was no “Church” as we know it today, and there were
no “Christians”; there was only the Temple and the Synagogue, in which Messianic and
non-Messianic Jews and Gentiles worshipped the G-d of Avraham, Yitz'chak, and
Ya'akov together. The great question in the minds of many Christians today is, “Is it
possible for Jews to be saved?” The question in the mind of the first-century Messianic Jews
was, “Is it possible for Gentiles to be saved?”
Somewhat Dispensational
Part of the process of properly interpreting the Scriptures in their
historical content is to understand that G-d did not reveal everything that He
wanted man to know about Him all at once. Although Adam and Eve walked with Him in Eden, it
is highly unlikely that would know that He would become the Sacrifice for their sin. When He
called Avraham out of Ur, even when He had lunch with him by the oaks of Mamre (Genesis 18),
Avraham probably had no inkling of the symbolism that would be provided by the Tabernacle
hundreds of years later.
The Prophets knew that G-d would send His promised Messiah,
but they were probably very confused about how Messiah ben Yosef, the suffering Messiah,
could also be Messiah ben David, the Reigning Messiah.
For me, the time periods that Dr. Scofield defined as “dispensations” are
no more than convenient “markers” in history to remind us of what G-d had
revealed to man up to that time. As we study the Scriptures, it is important to realize
which time period we are reading about, and understand that the books in the Bible are not
in chronological order. For example, the book of Job was probably the first book in the
Tanakh to be written. It is believed that Job was a contemporary of Avraham (ca. 2100 BCE)
who lived approximately 635 years before G-d gave the Torah at Sinai and two
millennia before Yeshua came.
Job said, “But I know that my Redeemer lives, that in the end he will
rise on the dust; so that after my skin has been thus destroyed, then even without my flesh,
I will see G-d. I will see him for myself, my eyes, not someone else's, will
behold him” (Job
19:25-27). Even though Job believed in an eternal G-d and his own
resurrection, we must not make the mistake of assuming that he knew anything about the Torah
or the death and resurrection of Messiah Yeshua.
What we find when we study the Scriptures and pay attention to the
historical context, we find a progressive revelation, in which G-d reveals
Himself to mankind a little at a time,
|
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
“To whom would He teach
knowledge,
And to whom would He interpret the message?
Those {just} weaned from milk?
Those {just} taken from the breast?
For {He says,}
‘Order on order, order on order,
Line on line, line on line, A little here, a little there.’”
Indeed, He will speak to
this people
Through stammering lips and a foreign tongue,
He who said to them, “Here is rest, give rest to the weary,”
And, "Here is repose," but they would not listen.
So the word of the LORD to
them will be,
“Order on order, order on order,
Line on line, line on line,
A little here, a little there,”
—
Isaiah 28:9 - 13 |
If we neglect this essential interpretive principle, we forget extremely
important facts, like the fact that Avraham, Yitz'chak, and Ya'akov knew nothing about the
Torah, or we believe that Jews before [or even after] Calvary were “saved” by obeying the
“Law.” We also arrive at very erroneous conclusions like thinking that Paul and Silas went
around “planting churches” or that when Jews become completed in their Messiah they become
“Christians” and stop being Jews.
By neglecting the historical context of the Apostolic Scriptures, we wind
up with such ridiculous assumptions as: “Jesus was a good Christian boy who went to
church every Sunday,” and “the Fourth Commandment has been repealed and the
Sabbath has moved to ‘The Lord’s Day’ on Sunday.” We fail to realize that the Shliachim
(Apostles) who wrote the “New Testament” knew nothing at all of the “Church.”
In fact, the “Church” as we know it did not come into existence in the
first century, the second century, or even the third century of the Common Era. In
approximately 311 CE (which would be the fourth century), Emperor Constantine created
a new Roman state religion by modifying the Roman version of the Babylon Mystery Religion, dressing it up with “Bible
words,” and changing the names of the pantheon of “gods” and “goddesses” to the names of
prominent first-century Messianic Believers, particularly the Apostles [MORE], and called it “the Church” or “Christianity.” Up until that event, Judaism (which included
Messianic Judaism, which was called “the Way,” as a sub-set, or sect of Judaism) was one of
the many “authorized” religions of the Roman Empire.
“Wait a minute!" someone
is saying. My Bible says, “The disciples were called
Christians first at Antioch” (Acts
11:26, NIV).
That is exactly part of
the problem that arises when we ignore the historical context. If we understand that the
writers of the Apostolic Scriptures spoke Hebrew and that the original autographs
were penned in their native Hebrew and then later translated into Greek for
transmission to the Gentile and Hellenized (Greek-speaking) Jewish believers in the
Diaspora, then we can figure out how the word “Christians” wound up in the book of Acts. The
word “Christ” is derived from the Greek word Christos, which means “anointed.” The
Hebrew word for “abnointed” is Mashiach, or Messiah. So what Luke actually wrote is
that “it was in Antioch that the talmidim for the first time were called ‘Messianic.’” That sentence was then translated literally into Greek,
and since before that time there was no concept of (or Greek word for) Messianic, the
Greek-speaking translators had to “coin” a completely new Greek word that could convey the
meaning of the Hebrew word for “Messianic.” To the root word Christos they added the suffix
“ianous.” The intended readers would have had no problem at all understanding what Luke
meant by the newly-coined Greek term for “Messianic.” Centuries later, the Greek word
Xristianouvß (Christianous) was simply transliterated into English and wound up as
Christians (Acts
11:26). It would be grossly unfair to
call this a “translation error,” but for us to think that the first-, second-, and
third-century Messianic believers thought of or referred to themselves as Christians would
be totally anachronistic.
Of course, the same would apply to
the word “Christian” in
Acts 26:28 and
1Peter 4:16.
The Bottom Line
I hope that this has helped clarify my use of the term “somewhat
dispensational” to describe my historical approach to Biblical interpretation, though now
having written this explanation, I wonder if there is not some term that I should use to
better state this method, and in time I will probably find that word and use it. My ultimate
intention for the use of “somewhat dispensational” was to mean that to arrive at accurate
conclusions about the Scriptures, the interpreter needs to remember that G-d
has revealed His will to men in progressives stages, that all of these stages must be
considered in their historic context, and that the so-called “dispensations” provide us with
convenient names to use for those periods of history.
I hope that this has served to clarify my position.
Except where otherwise indicated,
Scripture quotations on this page are from
The Complete Jewish Bible
The Complete Jewish Bible
- Copyright 1998 by David H. Stern.
Published by Jewish New Testament Publications, Inc.
Distributed by Messianic Jewish Resources Int'l.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
For usage information, please read the
Complete Jewish Bible Copyright
Statement.

http://www.familybible.org/Teaching/Theology/Dispensations.htm
was last revised at
10:01 AM on
Friday, 24 October 2008