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THE REAL PARENTHESIS:
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DID GOD STOP THE PROPHETIC
CLOCK?
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By DAVID VAUGHN ELLIOTT
DANIEL’S 70-WEEK PROPHECY is
one of the greatest proofs that Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah! It is
one of the clearest prophecies to detail the work of the Messiah. It is
also an outstanding prediction of God’s final judgment upon Jerusalem and
the temple.
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As seen in previous articles, the final 70th week of Daniel 9 is
at the heart of this prophetic message. We gave proofs that this "week"
was fulfilled from 26 to 33 A.D. Jesus’ death for our sins occurred in
the very middle of those years, in 30 A.D. We gave further proofs that
the balance of the prophecy was fulfilled by the year 70 A.D., when the
Romans destroyed Jerusalem and the temple. Daniel 9 has been totally and
wonderfully fulfilled.
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"Not so," say today’s popular religious teachers. "They" say that
Daniel’s final week is yet future!
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"The Prophetic Clock Stopped"
According to this popular view, God’s clock ran flawlessly for 69
weeks (483 years). Then suddenly the clock stopped and has not ticked once
since.
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Another metaphor frequently used says that our present church age
is in a parenthesis or gap. By this "they" are saying that God’s major
work of the ages is that which relates to Israel.
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Hal Lindsey is one of the main spokesmen for this popular view. In
his best-selling book The Rapture he says: "God obviously stopped ‘the
prophetic stopwatch’ after it had ticked off 483 years. … Because Israel
failed to accept her Messiah and instead ‘cut him off’ by crucifying him,
God stopped the countdown seven years short of completion. During the ensuing
parenthesis of time, God turned His focus to the Gentiles and created the
Church" (pages 3,4).
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Lindsey is saying that when the Jews crucified Jesus, God had to
change His plans! God’s millennial kingdom for the Jews had been on the
launching pad for 483 years without a problem. The launch was just 7 years
away. Suddenly, God had to stop the countdown. Everything went on hold.
It has been on hold for over 1900 years! That is what Lindsey teaches.
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"At the Rapture, the Clock
Will Start Again"
Today’s popular view further says that God cannot continue His plans
with Israel as long as the church remains in the world. "They" say the
"rapture" must take place before God’s prophetic plan can get back on track.
To quote Lindsey again: "The Lord will Rapture the Church believers before
the beginning of Daniel’s Seventieth Week" (page 184).
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With the church out of the way, "they" say, God can resume His dealing
with the Jews for seven more years—the final week of Daniel. "They" call
this seven-year period "the tribulation." Daniel 9, by the way, is the
only text from which "they" get seven years for the tribulation. The Rapture
tells of "this period, which will last seven years. Students of prophecy
have commonly called this time ‘the tribulation’. . . . The prophet Daniel
gave the framework for the Tribulation era in Daniel 9:24-27" (pages 1,2).
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The popular claim is that the 70-weeks prophecy foretells all the
following. That the antichrist will make a covenant with the Jews for 7
years. That before or during the early part of that period, the Jews will
rebuild the temple. That in the middle of the 7 years, the anti-Christ
will break this covenant and stop the sacrifices. That Jerusalem and the
third temple will be destroyed.
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"They" further say that none or only some of the 6 items mentioned
in Daniel 9:24 were fulfilled by Jesus’ first coming. "They" say Jesus
must return to make fulfillment possible. "They" teach that the church
is not the kingdom, that Israel is still God’s chosen nation, and that
the millennium is a future earthly Jewish kingdom which will begin after
the tribulation.
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In short, this popular premillennial view (Lindsey, et al.), places
a good share of Daniel’s 70-weeks prophecy in the same category that "they"
place most of the book of Revelation and most of all Bible prophecy—somewhere
in the future.
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Some Arguments "They" Use
"They" claim that since the six items listed in Daniel 9:24 were
not fulfilled through Jesus’ first coming, the fulfillment must take place
at His second coming. Therefore, "they" say, a parenthesis between the
69th and 70th weeks is required. Their arguments basically run like this
(taking the second item of Daniel 9:24 as an example): "The prophecy says
‘to make an end of sins.’ Since there is still sin in Israel, the prophecy
is not yet fulfilled; it will not be fulfilled until the Millennium."
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The major portion of a former article of this series, The Jews’ Time
Has Run Out, showed how all six items of Daniel 9:24 were fulfilled through
Jesus’ first coming to earth. Numerous New Testament texts were quoted.
In answer to the example given above: consider a parallel text. John the
Baptist said, "Behold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!"
If we would force John’s beautiful words as "they" force Daniel 9:24, then
we would have to say that John’s words were not fulfilled at Calvary. Why?
Because there is still sin in the world. Who would dare teach that?
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Another argument "they" use deals with the order in which things
are mentioned in the text. "They" notice that the 69th week is first mentioned,
then the death of the Messiah, then the destruction of Jerusalem, then
the 70th week. "They" claim that everything must take place in the order
in which it is mentioned. Therefore, "they" say, some events happen between
the 69th and 70th weeks, thus proving a gap.
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This very text, however, proves their argument to be fallacious.
To appreciate the following, you may need to open your Bible and look at
verse 25. It first mentions 7 weeks, then 62 weeks, then the building of
the street and wall. Neither "they" nor anyone would claim that this word
order proves the events were to take place in that order. All agree, and
history confirms, that the building of the street and wall took place during
the first 7 weeks, not after the 62 weeks. Their argument does not work.
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The Prophecy Does Not Say
"350 Weeks"
The proponents of the gap/parenthesis theory—premillennialists/futurists—explain
that literal interpretation is one of the bedrock principles of their system.
Prophecies about Israel must be interpreted literally, "they" say. The
70-weeks prophecy is one of the major texts about Israel.
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How do "they" apply the literal principle to the 70-weeks prophecy?
"They" claim that days represent years. We agree; but this is not a literal
interpretation. "They" claim that 483 is a literal 483 years, reaching
from the order to rebuild Jerusalem unto the Messiah. Agreed. "They" claim
that the final 7 years are literal years. Agreed. But then "they" place
a gap between the 483 years and the final 7. Is that a literal interpretation?
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The prophecy foretells 70 weeks. Seventy times seven equals 490.
It is a prophecy about 490 years. But "they" stop the prophecy at 483 years,
interject more than 1900 years, and then claim the last 7 years are yet
in the future. Nearly 2000 years interjected! That’s more than 4 times
the total 490 years the prophecy is all about! To be literal numbers, Daniel
should have said, "350 weeks are determined." "They" simply are not as
literal as "they" would have us believe: "70 = 350"?
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The concept of a "prophetic clock" is itself a figure, and indeed
a figure nowhere found in Holy Scripture. What happened to this "clock"?
Why did it stop? Did it fail or was it a deceptive device? Which? Stated
another way, did God know the clock would stop or did He not know? Neither
choice is pleasant. According to "them," for over 1900 years God has not
repaired the clock. What happened, anyway? Which scenario would you be
willing to defend?
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First scenario: The clock failed; it did not work right. God did
not know it was going to stop and was powerless to remedy the situation.
The clock stopped; it was out of God’s control.
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Second scenario: The clock was built to deceive. God knew it was
going to stop but did not want to fix it. God allowed the clock to act
for a while as a trustworthy timepiece, knowing from the start that it
was a faulty product.
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Which scenario could you live with? When you seriously consider the
implications, it is preposterous to say that God’s prophetic clock did
not work right! Was it a surprise to God? Or, did God know that His plan
failed but was a helpless victim? Or, was it God's plan to deceive the
Jews and all mankind?
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Does Seventy Equal Seventy?
Someone has explained the gap theory this way. You plan a trip from
Los Angeles to Chicago. As you leave Los Angeles, you see a sign that says:
"Chicago -- 70 miles." You travel for 69 miles and see another sign. Pointing
back in the direction you came, it says: "Los Angeles -- 69 miles." Pointing
forward the sign says: "Chicago -- 1 mile." Under that there is another
line that says: "(plus 2000 miles)."
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Here is another way to look at it. Take a ruler. Cut off the last
inch. Attach the inch to the rest of the ruler with a piece of elastic.
Now you have a new ruler. Just stretch the elastic as little or as much
as you like. Now this ruler is a very literal ruler: it contains 11 literal
inches plus one last literal inch, total 12 inches. A literal ruler, right?
Oh, the elastic in between? But it’s still a good ruler, isn’t it?
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When this writer was in Guatemala, I was weekly teaching a young
man in his home. Since he was very knowledgeable in the Bible, prophetic
questions kept coming up, including Daniel 9.
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One day I asked him: "Julius Caesar, what would you think if I asked
you to lend me 1000 quetzals? [A quetzal is the national money. It takes
about 6 to equal one dollar.] I promise to pay you back in eight weeks.
When seven weeks pass, I come to you and say, ‘Julius Caesar, there is
a little matter I didn’t tell you. Between the 7th and 8th weeks of our
agreement, there is a space of 10 years.’ What would you think of me?"
Without hesitation, Julius Caesar said, "You would be a swindler."
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Do you remember that it was Jesus’ apostles (not Jesus himself) who
thought that everything came to a halt when their Master was crucified?
Jesus then had to appear to them, not only to prove His resurrection, but
also to prove that nothing had stopped. Everything was on time exactly
as God had prophesied. "Thus it is written, and thus it was necessary for
the Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day, and that
repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name to all
nations, beginning at Jerusalem" (Luke 24:46-47). No clock stopped. No
plans changed. Nothing was thrown in parenthetically. Everything was exactly
on schedule, exactly as "it is written."
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Other Problems with the Popular
View
Besides the "clock" element, there are other problems with the popular
premillennial interpretation of Daniel’s 70-weeks prophecy.
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For example, many of the things "they" claim are found in Daniel
9:26,27 simply are not mentioned at all. There is no mention of the tribulation,
nor of a second rebuilding of the temple, nor of a second restoration of
sacrifices, nor of anti-Christ making a covenant with the Jews, nor of
him later breaking a covenant, nor that Jerusalem is to be destroyed two
times. None of these things are mentioned. Rather, they are theories that
are imposed upon the text.
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Then there is verse 24, which clearly says that six items are to
be fulfilled during the 70 weeks. "They" say they agree with this; but
in fact they do not. Please notice: "They" claim a gap is necessary after
the 69th week precisely because "they" think the 6 items were not fulfilled.
"They" invent a gap of more than 1900 years to try to get 9:24 fulfilled
in the 70th week. But "they" still do not get it fulfilled in the 70th
week.
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Now, some futurist interpreters agree that one or more of the six
items were fulfilled by Jesus at the cross. According to the usual theory,
the 69th week ended at the triumphal entry, five days before Jesus’ death.
Therefore, according to the gap which "they" place between the 69th and
70th weeks, Jesus died in the gap.
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According to their own interpretation, the 70th week is a future
tribulation followed by the millennial kingdom. Whichever of the 6 items
"they" do not see as fulfilled at the cross, "they" claim will be fulfilled
in the millennial kingdom. But that is after the 70th week.
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Thus, "they" say they need a gap in order to get 9:24 fulfilled in
the 70th week. But in reality "they" get 9:24 fulfilled either before or
after their 70th week. Their gap simply does not fulfill its purported
purpose. Rather than accept such a theory, it is much easier to believe
that God knew what He prophesied and that 9:24 was fulfilled by Jesus right
on schedule.
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The New Covenant Temple
The futurists admit that nowhere does the Bible prophesy the rebuilding
of the temple after 70 A.D. On what, then, do "they" base the assumption
that there will ever be a third temple. "They" say that Daniel 9, Matthew
24, 2 Thessalonians 2 and Revelation 11 cannot be fulfilled without a rebuilt
temple.
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The first two texts are excellent examples of the need to examine
prophecy in context. Futurists agree that Daniel 9:26 refers to the destruction
of the second temple in 70 A.D. However, "they" believe that 9:27 refers
to the destruction of a third temple in the future. However, even "they"
know that Daniel 9 mentions only one reconstruction of Jerusalem. Until
someone finds a Scripture that clearly predicts a second reconstruction,
we will have to understand that verses 26 and 27 both refer to 70 A.D.
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In Matthew 24, any statements that Jesus makes about Jerusalem and
the temple must be understood in the light of the context. While Jesus
and His disciples were observing the second temple, Jesus said: "not one
stone shall be left here upon another" (24:2). Jesus talked only about
destruction; He gave not the slightest hint of a later reconstruction.
Until someone finds a Scripture that clearly predicts a reconstruction
after 70 A.D., anything Jesus said about the destruction of Jerusalem and
the temple must refer to the temple He and the apostles were looking at
when He made His remarks.
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The latter two texts (2 Thessalonians 2 and Revelation 11) are excellent
examples of the need to settle sound Scriptural doctrine before attempting
to interpret prophecy. Both texts speak of "the temple of God." Both texts
are part of the New Testament. The stone temple in Jerusalem ceased being
the temple of God when God himself tore the inner veil in two at Jesus’
death. As both Daniel and Jesus prophesied, that temple was doomed to destruction.
No Scripture prophesies a rebuilding after that.
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In the New Covenant there is a new temple. Paul tells the church
in Corinth: "Do you not know that you are the temple of God and that the
Spirit of God dwells in you?" (1 Corinthian 3:16). He told the Ephesian
church: "Now, therefore, you are . . . built on the foundation of the apostles
and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone, in whom
the whole building, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in
the Lord" (Ephesians 2:19-21). With sound apostolic doctrine, there is
no warrant for fabricating another rebuilding of the Jewish temple. Both
2 Thessalonians 2 and Revelation 11 contain prophecies of the Lord’s church.
That church is not in parenthesis. That church is where God now dwells.
It is His temple.
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The Real Parenthesis
The parenthesis or gap theory is upside down and backwards. Why?
Because the premillennialists/futurists have placed God’s eternal plan
in parentheses, while making God’s parenthetical plan His major plan. According
to "them," God’s plan with the Jews is the major theme of Bible prophecy.
According to "them," the Gospel age in which we live is just a parenthesis
between God’s former and future dealings with Israel.
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However, the Scripture clearly sustains the opposite view. The main
theme of the Bible is God’s eternal plan for this church age. It is the
Old Covenant of the Jews that was in parenthesis. The book of Galatians
was written because some early Christians did not understand the proper
place of the Mosaic Law. They did not grasp what the promises to Abraham
were all about. The third chapter details the true Biblical gap doctrine.
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"And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles
by faith, preached the gospel to Abraham beforehand, saying, ‘In you all
the nations shall be blessed’" (Galatians 3:8). Scripture foresaw the salvation
of the Gentiles. All nations are blessed in Abraham. How? Through the preaching
of the Gospel. The Jews were a vessel used by God to bring us the Savior.
In verse 16, Paul says: "Now to Abraham and his Seed were the promises
made. He does not say, ‘And to seeds,’ as of many, but as of one, ‘And
to your Seed,’ who is Christ." The promise was made to Abraham. The fulfillment
came through Christ.
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The real parenthesis in the Bible is the space of time between Abraham
and Christ. Listen to the next verse: "the law, which was four hundred
and thirty years later, cannot annul the covenant that was confirmed before
by God in Christ, that it should make the promise of no effect." Here is
the order of events:
1 - the covenant and promise to Abraham;
2 - the Jewish nation receives the law;
3 - Christ fulfills the promise to Abraham.
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The law filled in the gap. So the question comes: "What purpose then
does the law serve? It was added because of transgressions, till the Seed
should come to whom the promise was made" (Galatians 3:19). There you have
the gap (parenthesis) that the Bible teaches. The law of Moses is the parenthesis
between the promise to Abraham and the fulfillment of that promise through
Christ.
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God's real parenthesis did not involve any clock stopping. There
was no change of plans. Everything happened according to schedule. "When
the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman,
born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, that we might
receive the adoption as sons" (Galatians 4:4,5).
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God’s Clock is Trustworthy
Jesus’ death was not the start of a parenthesis. It was the end of
the Divine Parenthesis between Abraham and Jesus. When Jesus died, God’s
prophetic clock did not stop. The Mosaic law stopped! It was nailed to
the cross. Acceptable temple sacrifices stopped! The veil of the temple
was rent in two. It all happened according to God’s timetable.
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The Jews were given 70 weeks (490 years). No trick clock can extend
that time. Jesus told the Jews: "For days will come upon you when your
enemies . . . will not leave in you one stone upon another, because you
did not know the time of your visitation." (Luke 19:43,44). Before the
490 years ended, their doom was sealed. There was no problem with God’s
clock. The problem was with the Jews. They could not tell time!
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God knew ahead of time that men would reject His Son. It was prophesied
in Psalm 2: "Why do . . . the people plot a vain thing? . . . And the rulers
take counsel together, Against the LORD and against His Anointed [Messiah,
Christ]. . . . He who sits in the heavens shall laugh." If you are not
sure that this was fulfilled in Jesus’ first coming, read Acts 4:25-28.
God stop His clock? God change His plans? Not at all! Rather, God laughed
at them.
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But wait! This is not the whole story. Throughout the Bible God has
always worked with a remnant, and such is prophesied numerous times regarding
the Jews. So notice: It was in Jewish Jerusalem that the church began.
The 12 apostles were all Jews. The first 3000 converts were all Jews. Soon
after that it was 5000 men, all Jews. Most of the New Testament was written
by Jews. Like Paul asked and replied: "has God cast away His people? Certainly
not! For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of
Benjamin" (Romans 11:1).
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The church and the Gospel are not merely a parenthetically inserted
program. They are God’s real eternal program, open to Jew and Gentile alike.
They are what the promise to Abraham was all about. They are the reason
Jesus came to earth. Daniel’s 70-weeks prophecy has been gloriously fulfilled.
Praise God!
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NOTE: This is the fourth article regarding Daniel’s seventy-weeks
prophecy and Jesus’enlargement upon it. There are others to follow. If
you would like to have copies of the earlier articles, send an E-mail
(click here) with your postal address and they will be mailed to you.
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(Scripture in the preceding article is taken from the New King James
Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission.
All rights reserved.)
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