For
anyone who loves Scriptural study of the future, we know that it forbids making
a prophecy about an exact date of the Lord’s return. But how about signs to know it’s close? There is a large group of believers who think
that His return has no signs to warn us at all how near we are to His return. They
say that it is “imminent,” or could happen at any time without any sign. If you have read my blogs on the Last Days,
you know that I discount this theory, believing that while we don’t know the
exact date of His return, God will send us signs that the last day is
coming. This proposition is based on a
quote from Jesus in Matthew 24:30-33:
“Then… they will gather together His elect from the four
winds, from one end of heaven to the other
32 “Now learn this
parable from the fig tree: When its branch has already become tender and puts
forth leaves, you know that summer is near. 33 So you also, when you
see all these things, know that it is near—at the doors!
The fig tree gives us a sign that harvesting is near—the branches
get tender, and the leaves sprout. In
like manner, we can expect signs for mankind’s harvest; we can KNOW that “it,”
referring back to the Parousia, the coming of Jesus for harvesting His own (the
“elect”), is NEAR.
I have a theory about calculating an estimated date of His
return. Please do not assume that the
calculations in it is accurate, but it’s pretty accurate. It probably has flaws. This “close, but not perfect” result is just
as God would intend. He wants us to be
as accurate as the fig tree. There are
signs to excite us, but not the exact date —that would encourage
complacency. This theory I will present
does have a momentous and surprising conclusion.
Before I get into it, I have to give credit to Michael Pedrin, a
pastor in India from the Seventh Day Adventist Church (I’m not of that
persuasion, but I’ll take any great idea from anybody, if it’s realistically
based). I made some changes on his base.
By way of introduction, he tells us that immediately after Jesus
comes for His own, we get to spend a thousand years of freedom from Satan’s
attacks, because he is bound for that time (Rev. 20:1-3). There, we will rest,
finally, from the ravages of sin all around us and from our own nature. This
millennium of one thousand years will be a “great Sabbath of rest” from the
ravages of sin.
The theory’s critical proposition is this: the rest is preceded by
six thousand years of man on
earth.
The key to this theory is simple:
it’s in the 6+1=7 equation. Seven
is God’s number of completeness and rest.
You begin a cycle with six, the number of days you work, followed by one
day of rest. Then the cycle is complete.
Think of Creation: All of earth
and its inhabitants were finished in 6 days.
That was followed by the seventh day for God’s rest (Gen. 1-2). God didn’t have to take six days to create—He
could have done it in a second. Nor was
He tired, and needed a day of rest. He
did it as an example for us to follow. He focused on the 6+1 again by
instructing His people on how to till the ground. You plant and harvest for six years. The seventh, you let the ground rest. Leviticus 25:3-4:
Six years you shall sow your field…and gather its fruit; 4 but in the seventh
year there shall be a sabbath of solemn rest for the land, a sabbath to
the Lord. You shall
neither sow your field nor prune your vineyard.
Jesus has some interesting words on this subject in Matthew 13:38-39:
The field is the world, the good seeds are the sons of the kingdom, but
the tares are the sons of the wicked one. 39 The enemy who
sowed them is the devil, the harvest is
the end of the age, and the reapers are the angels.
He purposely ties in the cycle of earthly harvest with the cycle of
heavenly harvest. Jesus makes a
comparison of land’s harvest, which we just saw to be 6+1, to OUR harvest. There is good reason to believe that man
likely is also on a 6+1 rapture scale.
If the heavenly harvest is followed by a millennium of rest, why not
believe that six millenniums of man working on earth precedes it?
The Apostle Peter gives us some tantalizing verses on this too. In II Peter 3, he is telling us that there
will be many unbelievers scoffing about Jesus’ return. Then, in verses 8 and 9, he counsels us to be
patient. Then it seems that he is laying
on us a big insider hint. II Peter 3:3-4,
8-10a:
….scoffers will come in the last days, walking according to their
own lusts, 4 and
saying, “Where is the promise of His coming? …..But, beloved, do not
forget this one thing, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years,
and a thousand years as one day. 9 The Lord is not slack concerning His promise…but the day of the Lord will come….
Peter hints how important is what he’s going to say, by his phrase “do
not forget this one thing.” And what is
that one thing? In talking about Jesus’
return, God is willing to proportionately lay down the idea of “one day=one
thousand years.” So, just as Creation was six days of work followed by one
day of rest, and then substituting by Peter’s hint, you get six thousand
years of work, followed by one thousand years of rest.
I want to make an additional comment about v 10, “the day of the
Lord.” The Bible has two contexts for
that phrase. First, the Sabbath is
called the day of the Lord (Ex. 20:10). Also,
significantly, the Parousia, or the Second Coming of Christ is also called the
day of the Lord. See I Thessalonians
4:16-5:2, when Paul is comforting believers who were mistaken in their belief
that Christ had already come:
For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout,
with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. And the
dead in Christ will rise first. 17 Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in
the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And thus we shall always be with
the Lord. 5 But
concerning the times and the seasons, brethren, you have no need that I
should write to you. 2 For
you yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so comes…
My point here is, using the “day of the Lord” for both, God is
perfectly willing for us to compare the Sabbath with His Second Coming. The former is six days of work, then a
single-day Sabbath, and God ties it in to the Return, which is followed by one
thousand years of rest. We’re suggesting
that it is reasonable to assume that this is preceded by six thousand years of
work for man on earth.
We thus have three proofs of the 6+1 for Man. The big question is, how long has man been on
earth? Are we close to 6000 years?
Did you know that it’s possible to count, with close proximity,
how long man has been on earth? (PS: As you can tell, we’re ignoring the rantings
of atheistic evolution). After all,
Matthew 1 and Luke 3 give many names from Adam all the way down to Joseph or
Mary, Jesus’ stepfather and mother. It has this thing about genealogy. There are long boring lists of ages in
Genesis. So let’s put to good use, for once, those lists of names in Genesis and
II Chronicles. They go from Adam down pretty
much through the generations to the exile in Babylonian captivity. Sprinkle in some Scriptural shortcuts and
prophecy. From there, a final nod to
secular history. Let’s go:
Event |
Verse #
of yrs Note
From Adam to Seth Gen. 5:3 130
From Seth to Enosh |
Gen. 5:6 |
105 |
1 |
From Enosh to Cainan |
Gen. 5:9 |
90 |
|
From Cainan to Mahalalel |
Gen 5:12 |
70 |
|
From Mahalalel to Jared |
Gen. 5:15 |
65 |
|
From Jared to Enoch |
Gen. 5:18 |
162 |
2 |
From Enoch to Methuselah |
Gen. 5:21 |
65 |
|
Methuselah to Lamech |
Gen. 5:25 |
187 |
|
Lamech to Noah |
Gen. 5:28 |
182 |
|
Noah to Shem |
Gen. 5:32* |
502 |
3 |
Cumulative years Adam to Shem |
1558 |
||
Shem to Arphaxad |
Gen. 11:10 |
100 |
|
Arphaxad to Salah |
Gen. 11:12 |
35 |
|
Salah to Eber |
Gen. 11:14 |
30 |
|
Eber to Peleg |
Gen. 11:16 |
34 |
|
Peleg to Reu |
Gen. 11:18 |
30 |
|
Reu to Serug |
Ge. 11:20 |
32 |
|
Serug to Nahor |
Gen. 11:22 |
30 |
|
Nahor to Terah |
Gen. 11:24 |
29 |
|
Terah to Birth of Abram/Abraham |
Gen. 11:26* |
130 |
4 |
Cumulative 2:Shem to Abram's Birth |
450 |
||
Shortcuts: From birth of Abram |
|||
to promise to
Abraham |
Gen. 12:4 |
75 |
|
From the promise to Abraham |
|||
to the giving of
the Law |
Galat. 3:16-18 |
430 |
|
From the Exodus of Egypt to the |
|||
Beginning of
Solomon's Reign |
I Kings 6:1 |
476 |
|
Back off: From Exodus of Egypt |
|||
to Giving of the
law (counted twice) |
Ex. 19:1 |
-0.1 |
5 |
Solomon's Reign |
I KI 11:42 |
40 |
|
Rehoboam's Reign |
II Chron 12:13 |
17 |
6 |
Abijah's Reign |
II Chron 13:1,2 |
3 |
|
Asa's Reign |
II Chron. 16:13 |
41 |
|
Jehoshaphat's Reign |
II Chron. 20:31 |
25 |
|
Jehoram's Reign |
II Chron 21:5 |
8 |
|
Ahaziah's Reign |
II Chron. 22:2 |
1 |
|
Athaliah's Reign |
II Chron 22:12 |
6 |
|
Joash's Reign |
II Chron 24:1 |
40 |
|
Amaziah's Reign |
II Chron 25:1 |
29 |
|
Uzziah's Reign |
II Chron 26:3 |
52 |
|
Jotham's Reign |
II Chron 27:1 |
16 |
|
Ahaz's Reign |
II Chron 28:1 |
16 |
|
Hezekiah's Reign |
II Chron 29:1 |
29 |
|
Manasseh's Reign |
II Chron 33:1 |
55 |
|
Amon's Reign |
II Chron 33:21 |
2 |
|
Josiah's Reign |
II Chron 34:1 |
31 |
|
Jehoahaz |
II Chron 36:2 |
0.3 |
|
Jehoiakim's Reign |
II Ki 23:36 |
11 |
7 |
Jehoiachin's Reign, then Exiled |
II KI 24:6, 12, 14 |
8 |
|
Cumulative 3 from Abraham |
|||
to Exile in Babylon |
1411.2 |
||
Time in Exile=Sabbath for Land |
Jere. 29:10 |
70 |
|
From Artaxerxes' Rebuild Edict to Palm Sunday |
Ezr1:1,2; Dan 9:25 |
483 |
8 |
Adjust: Birth of Jesus to Palm Sunday |
-31 |
9a |
|
From Jesus' Birth to Today |
2021.9 |
9 |
|
Grand Total: Lines 12,
22, 52-56 |
5963.1 |
Note 5: A small portion
of the exodus trip was counted twice.
Experts say God didn’t waste any time, once they started their trip, to get
them to Mt. Sinai to give them the Law. It
took, best estimate, 47 days, which is .129 of a year. So we backed off .1 year because it was
counted twice in the shortcuts.
Note 6: Since Jesus came from the tribe of Judah (Rev.
5:5), we followed only Judah and descendants’ births. Even when the tribes split up, we only follow
David’s line, since he was from the tribe of Judah. His son’s son was Rehoboam. And down from
there.
Note 7: While we
generally assume that once Babylonians took over the government (Jehoiakim was
a “puppet” for the last 8 years), that the exile immediately began, so the land
would get its denied rest. Truth is, it
was delayed. II Ki. 23:36 and 24:6-14
clearly show that the real exile didn’t take place until the eighth year of his
son’s reign.
Note 8: Daniel’s 9:25 prophecy shows that “62+7=69
weeks” was the time period indicated from Artaxerxes’ edict to “Messiah the
Prince.” It is assumed by experts that
“weeks” could be translated as “sevens,” with no explanations as “seven what—weeks,
days, years?” Because the time period from
the Artaxerxes edict to Jesus’ hearing the hosannas on Palm Sunday (i.e, “Messiah the Prince”) was, historically,
483 years, the “weeks” must be years—69x7 years, or 483 years.
Note 9: From Jesus’ birth to today may seem obvious,
but Scriptural things are never that.
It’s not “2020” (which I’m modifying to 2020.9, when I’m publishing
this, OK?) He was born, best guess, 2
BC. Finally, there is no “zero
year.” So, Jesus’ birth to today is
2020.9+2-1, or 2021.9.
Note 9a: We’re counting something twice again. The
note 8 shortcut took us out to Palm Sunday.
Jesus was 32 then. Proof? We have, in another blog, shown that Jesus
was crucified in 30 AD. He was that age
on Palm Sunday too. Note 9 says he was
born 2BC, and there is no “zero year.”
Thus, we have counted 30+2-1, or 31 years, twice. So we’re backing it
off.
So, mankind has been
around for 5963 years, see my totals. So
only 37 years, best guess, til’ 6000 is up and those alive then (and the dead
in Christ) blast off to heaven for 1000 years of rest. Now, if you’re over 70 when you read this (as
I am), this 37-year-away rapture calculation could be considered a buzzkill. It
would be so cool to be alive already when He comes.
But I thought again—I believe that Christians of that time will have to
endure the 7 years of trouble (see my blog elsewhere), so you really want to
miss it. It’s 7 years of persecution and disease and martyrdom before the
rapture. So, subtracting 7, for my younger readers, it’s only 30
years before such terror begins—if my data are accurate, which they are quite possibly
not. If you’re a Scripture thinker,
please comment to me if you find any mistakes. But, hey, if you’re old, that still leaves two
things to consider: Anybody that dies before the last days, if a Christian, his
or her soul goes to a wonderful place.
Your soul is very alive, conscious, and will love it. (It joins the body at the rapture). But you need to MAKE SURE that you’re a
Christian. You tune up your car before a
trip, right? Even if it isn’t making any
telltale noises, right? Just so, I
highly recommend you read some of my many blogs on what it takes to be a
Christian. Or, you can try a much better way: Put all the complacent assurances
you’ve cherry-picked from Paul, and set them aside. Start reading Scripture, hours at a
time. Read with fresh eyes what Jesus said
involving what it takes for heaven—and what kinds of people go to hell. Read Luke, Matthew, the Gospels, writing down
every sentence the World’s Greatest Teacher said about (eternal) life or
(eternal) death. You’ll be surprised at
the result. Please don’t be afraid to
break from your denomination on some points (as I have). Seminarians and pastors have led us into an
“easy believism” which they substitute for the Gospel. It’s not a
conspiracy: It’s just the way the
Western hemisphere is headed. We are sliding, ever so quickly, into downright
Apostasy. A sign of the last days,
wouldn’t you know it.
No comments:
Post a Comment