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Is the World Just Beginning?

There are many perspectives that believers have on the timing of things that God does with the Earth.  

In terms of when the world started, believers who take the creation story at face value (literal creationists) believe the world was created just six thousand years ago, so it is young.  But believers who take a theistic evolutionary approach think the world is four billion years old.  That’s quite a difference.

In terms of when the world will finish, dispensational believers and many premillennial Christians think the world will be over any day, so it has a short future.  But amillennialists and partial-preterists are open to a longer time frame, some of them up to millions of years into the future before Christ appears.  I will soon write a blog on the scripture that can back the idea of a long future.  

So with those four perspectives, the two variations on the timing of the beginning, and the variations on the timing of the future, you end up with four rough timelines like this.

The Four Views:

  1. TED: Theistic Evolutionary Dispensationalists.
  2. TEP: Theistic Evolutionary Partial-Preterists
  3. LCD: Literal Creation Dispensationalists
  4. LCP: Literal Creation Partial-Preterists.

The first view is those with a long view of history, but a short view of the future.  For them, they have a perspective where for millions (even billions) of years, sin and death have ruled and reigned, and Christ comes basically to change that and finish things up.  The atonement comes as a last gasp right and the end of history as the timeline shows.  Under this viewpoint, what advantage is there for God to wait so long before coming?  And then why is God returning so quickly to wrap things up when billions of people are not aware of him.  

The second view is of those who hold to both a long future and a long history.  For them, the atoning work of Christ comes right in the middle of human history as the timeline shows.  One would ask if this perspective is true, why would God place his work right in the middle, other than perhaps for symbolic reasons?  

The third view is of those who take creation literally, so the Earth has only been around for six thousand years.  They also hold to a short future, which can end as soon as today.  The timeline looks as below.  We would ask, why does an eternal God wait until so late percentage-wise (about 66% of human history) to come?  And why does he return back so soon with billions of people still unaware of who He is, and having no chance of salvation?

The fourth and final view is those who also believe in a literal creation, but consider the idea that Christ has much yet to do, so there will probably still be a long future.  For them Christ has stepped into history immediately at the atonement, and is giving people time to grow and change and find him.  He is as much concerned about individual salvation as he is about nations, and wants to redeem the world and restore it.  So he is concerned about both eternal things, and temporal things.  

Having read the scriptures, and studied it my entire life I am convinced that God is patient and kind, and his heart is the save all who will respond.  For me there is also no reason to doubt the literal creation account.  While some have claimed the early chapters of Genesis to be metaphor, there isn’t evidence for that.  Moses who wrote it came from the only ancient culture that did write regularly in prose and narrative, because it was a straight telling of what happened.  Science also seems to raise more and more doubts about evolution as an idea, and as time advances, the Bible seems to be becoming more and more trustworthy in the minds of academics such as biologists, physicists, archaeologists, linguists and more.  

Believing as I do in a young earth with a long future, I marvel at the genius of God.  As soon as the problem of sin happened he was at work.  His son came at just the right time to bring salvation.  And the grace of God is at work in the world and will continue for as long as it is needed, even if that be for millions of years to come.  

Double Language in Scripture

The Bible is full of language that sounds clear, but turns out to have another meaning.  It’s straightforward once you know what the true meaning or meanings are, and we can recognize that the disciples were confused by this at times, but so often we ourselves get confused too, but often we don’t realise that we are.

A great example of double language is in John’s gospel where Jesus tells his disciples “I have food you don’t know about” (John 4:32)  That comment sparked a conversation about his apparent hidden food and how he got it without them knowing.  Preachers often label this type of thing figurative or metaphorical language, and observe that Jesus often had special spiritual meanings behind his use of everyday language.  

Can I suggest to you that Jesus is not trying to use regular words to hide a special meaning, but instead trying to explain a deep and much more real thing, by using something we relate to.  

Imagine someone born blind, and not having any idea of what light was or what the colors were.  If you had the task of explaining it to them you would try to relate something to them they did understand.  So you would perhaps use the volume and types of sounds to explain brightness and the types of colours.  In reality sound and sight are quite different, but to the blind only knowing one of the things, the other is a “greater reality” which we try to convey to them.  We have to use something similar to point to something a bit different but greater and hard to understand.  

God in the Bible, and Jesus in person both used language like this from the very first chapters of the Bible to speak to us.  But rather than seeing it as an attempt to hide meaning, is it an attempt to explain something much greater using earthly analogies.  There are things going on in the mind and heart of God, but we are much to earthly to get a sense of them, and yet there isn’t any way of explaining them except in terms of things we understand.  For this reason the Jews of Christ’s day thought he was coming as a physical king to sit on a physical throne.  But Christ has a different type of kingdom in mind.  Today there are many people who are still waiting for Christ to come and sit on a physical throne, and waiting for a third physical temple to be built, and waiting for a new Jerusalem that they believe is physical and will come out of heaven.  So often we cling to the apparent meaning, and don’t see the thing which is more real.  

In Genesis 2:17, God said to Adam not to eat the fruit of a certain tree, saying “you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die.”  In the next chapter both Adam and Eve did eat from that tree, but both continued to live in the way we are accustomed to thinking of living.  So in what way had they died?

It turns out that there is a death worse than the death we are familiar with.  Or there is a death that is more real than the reality of death we know of.  In other words there are two types of death.  Scripture actually does talk about the first death and the second death.  Being thrown into the lake of fire is “the second death.”  (Revelation 20:6)  There are also two resurrections, or two lifes we might say.  The first resurrection is when we are born again and our spirit lives for the first time.  Prior to that we are “dead in our sins.”  The second resurrection is the one that happens on that grand final day when Christ returns.  The first death is the physical death of our bodies, but the second death is the permanent separation from God.  But in a sense many people are already dead with that second death, because they are not alive to God.  

So there is double language used of almost everything in the Bible.  We are told in John 6 to “eat my flesh,” which many have equated to physical things, believing that the communion host actually turns into Jesus body, rather than noting a greater reality at work.  Jesus said he was building another temple, but it is the joining of the lives of his people together… a building not made of hands, which is a supremely more significant thing than another middle-eastern building project.  

The problem with double language is that we think we know what it means, and we settle for the superficial meaning, and don’t find the greater reality of what God is doing.  God is trying to get our attention with big things. 

New Space Images Support My Book

In 2019 I started writing “Flag on the Glacier,” a book-sized letter to atheists a thousand years in the future. One of my goals was to get the book published before the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The reason for that was simple, I had a feeling that the data coming back from the telescope was going to confirm what I would write about. Writing about the future is challenging, and I really wanted to try to be accurate, but in the case of what I was to say about space, and its implications about God, I was certain.

When COVID hit the world in early 2020, we were just months away from the (at that time) launch date of the new space telescope in May. But my book was nowhere near complete. However, due to both COVID complications, and technical issues, the eventual launch ended up being Christmas Day, 2021. I consider that the launch, on that day, represents what the telescope is… a “Christmas gift” to the world.

It took about six months for it to travel to its point in space (lagrange point 2) and to be provisioned, and since then we have started to see some oof the most remarkable images released. To see some of those, go to https://webb.nasa.gov/

My thesis is that as time progresses we will come to a point where everyone will believe the world was created, and that somoe intelligent form (ie God) is behind it all. Even future atheists will concede this point. I postulated that the JWST would demonstrate that the universe is infinite, becuase it shows us what God is like. So now that articles like the below one, are surfacing, it is nothing suprising to me, but a great confirmation oof what I knew to be true. Click the image below to read the full article at Sky & Telescope.

How The World Has Changed

In ancient times human life held little value. Indeed gladiatorial games were even held for entertainment in which people were killed for sport. There was no Emporer more depraved than Commodus when it came to the arena. If someone had suffered a cardiac arrest during a game – it would probably not have raised an eyebrow.

Later in 391AD or so, Telemachius jumped the fence at what was believed to be the Colosseum to try and stop a fight to the death. He was himself killed, but becamse the catalyst for the banning of gladiatorial contests. His Christian values came from scripture, and the teachings of Christ that people do have value because of being made in God’s image.

Sport now exists in many forms, for the purpose of entertainment, with American football (NFL) being an example of a high-risk physical sport where players are routinely injured, hence the helmets that must be worn. Physical contests like the NFL, Rugby, Boxing, Wrestling and more are the closest thing we have to the games of ancient times.

On January 2nd, 2023, in an NFL game between the Buffalo Bills and Cincinatti Bengals, Damar Hamlin was hit in a heavy tackle and dropped to the ground experiencing cardiac arrest. He was resucitated onfield, and taken away in a ambulance and the game was then cancelled. The below image shows his team plus others praying for him, as an ambulance takes him away. Others at the stadium including players and supporters of the other team where in prayer too.

At the same time, even before an ambulance had arrived, posts like this below exploded all over the internet.

Within hours the amount of posts about people praying was in the millions. People who don’t even have faith were saying prayers.

Even news agencies were calling for prayer:

And the Buffalo Bills official website – requested prayer right across the top of its website.

What happened after Damar’s life-threatening injury was an outpouring of prayer, love and concern, which demonstrates how much the world has changed. Human life is more important than any game, as demonstrated by the cancelling of the rest of the event. What began with Jesus Christ and his words to love and value humans, has worked in cultures, languages and groups of people to bring the most profound changes to the world.

What happened in Monday Night Football in just one example of how the world is different because of Jesus. Jesus laid down his life so that the lives of others could be saved, and set an incredible example which has an increasing effect even today.

A week later, Damar Hamlin is out of hospital, having spent days in ICU. This image from an ABC article says it all.