September 8, 2016

If He Were a Prophet... by Kyle Butt, M.Div.

http://apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=10&article=2170

If He Were a Prophet...

by  Kyle Butt, M.Div.

The gospel accounts paint a picture of the character of Jesus unrivaled by any other personality in human history. On one memorable occasion, Jesus was invited to eat with a Pharisee named Simon (Luke 7:36-50). During his stay, a woman who was known in the area for her sinful lifestyle approached Jesus. She proceeded to wash His feet with her tears, dry them with her hair, and anoint Jesus with fragrant oil.
Simon, seeing the sinful woman’s behavior, said to himself, “This man, if He were a prophet, would know who and what manner of woman this is who is touching Him, for she is a sinner” (Luke 7:39). Notice two important aspects of Simon’s response. First, he spoke to himself. There is no indication that his thoughts were verbalized or in any way audible to those around him. Second, the criterion he set to determine whether Christ was a prophet was knowledge of the woman’s sinful lifestyle.
Jesus’ response to Simon proved that He was far more than a prophet. He answered the Pharisee by explaining that those who have sinned much and been forgiven of their sins will love God more than those who feel they have few sins to forgive. Jesus then forgave the woman’s sins. His response exhibited a knowledge, not only of the spiritual condition of the woman, but also of Simon’s inner conversation with himself. Not only did Jesus know the woman was a sinner, but He knew the conversation Simon had with himself about Jesus’ reaction to the woman. What did Jesus’ reaction prove? It should have proved to Simon that Jesus was far more than a prophet. When Jesus forgave the woman’s sins, He proved that He was God in the flesh.
The modern application of this story is profound. Jesus has exhibited far more evidence validating His deity than any reasonable person could demand. His life was prophesied in minute detail hundreds of years before He was born, He accomplished miracles that supported the prophesies, He foretold His own death and resurrection, He showed Himself alive to many witnesses after His resurrection, and ascended to Heaven in the sight of many witnesses as the culmination of His earthly ministry. The honest, reasonable response to Jesus’ personality and power is perfectly summarized in Nathanael’s reaction to Jesus’ miraculous knowledge. After Jesus explained to Nathanael that He had miraculously seen Nathanael under the fig tree, Nathanael exclaimed: “Rabbi, You are the Son of God” (John 1:49)!

Are There Degrees of Punishment and Reward? by Kyle Butt, M.Div. Alden Bass, Bert Thompson, Ph.D.

http://apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=11&article=212

Are There Degrees of Punishment and Reward?

by  Kyle Butt, M.Div.
Alden Bass
Bert Thompson, Ph.D.

Q.
Will there be degrees of reward in heaven? Similarly, will there be degrees of punishment in hell?

A.

Any topic relating to the specific nature of man’s ultimate, eternal abode should be of great interest to all accountable people, since every human eventually will inhabit eternity (see Thompson, 2000a, pp. 33-39; 2000b, pp. 41-47; 2000c, pp. 49-55). It is not surprising, then, that questions of what conditions will be like in the afterlife often occupy our thoughts. Whenever questions of spiritual import are under consideration—as they are when discussing the destiny of the soul—the only reliable source of information must by necessity be the One Who is the Originator and Sustainer of the soul. God, as Creator of all things physical and spiritual (Genesis 1:1ff.; Exodus 20:11), and Himself a Spirit Being (John 4:24), is the ultimate wellspring of the soul (Ecclesiastes 12:7). The Bible, then, as God’s inspired Word (2 Timothy 3:16-17; 2 Peter 1:20-21), must be the preeminent authority on this subject. It therefore is to Holy Writ that we must turn to answer any question about eternity.

DEGREES OF ETERNAL REWARD

First, it is important to note that every faithful follower of God eventually will receive an eternal reward. Writing in the book of Revelation, the apostle John described in striking language the destiny of the righteous when this world finally comes to an end: “Behold, the dwelling of God is with men. He will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself will be with them.... He that overcometh shall inherit these things; and I will be his God, and he shall be my son” (21:3,7, RSV). Earlier, John had encouraged his readers with these words: “Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of life” (Revelation 2:10). John’s coworker, the apostle Paul, referred to those who had served Jesus faithfully as “heirs according to the hope of eternal life” (Titus 3:7). The writer of the book of Hebrews spoke of Christ as having become “unto all them that obey him, the author of eternal salvation” (5:9).
Second, it is equally important to realize that every saint will be rewarded “according to his deeds.” Matthew wrote: “For the son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then shall he render unto every man according to his deeds” (16:27). Paul used practically identical words in Romans 2:5-7: “But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up for thyself wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God; who will render to every man according to his works.” Such a concept was taught even in Old Testament times. Solomon wrote: “If thou sayest, ‘We knew not this,’ doth not he that weigheth the heart consider it? And he that keepeth thy soul, doth he not know it? And shall not he render to every man according to his work?” (Proverbs 24:12).
Parables from the mouth of the Lord similarly demonstrate that every person will be judged according to his or her deeds. The parable of the pounds, recorded in Luke 19:11-27, is a perfect example.
A certain nobleman went into a far country, to receive for himself a kingdom, and to return. And he called ten servants of his, and gave them each ten pounds, and said unto them, “Trade ye herewith till I come.” But his citizens hated him, and sent an ambassage after him, saying, “We will not that this man reign over us.” And it came to pass, when he was come back again, having received the kingdom, that he commanded these servants, unto whom he had given the money, to be called to him, that he might know what they had gained by trading. And the first came before him, saying, “Lord, thy pound hath made ten pounds more.” And he said unto him, “Well done, thou good servant: because thou wast found faithful in a very little, have thou authority over ten cities.” And the second came, saying, “Thy pound, Lord, hath made five pounds.” And he said unto him also, “Be thou also over five cities.” And another came, saying, “Lord, behold, here is thy pound, which I kept laid up in a napkin: for I feared thee, because thou art an austere man: thou takest up that which thou layedst not down, and reapest that which thou didst not sow.” He saith unto him, “Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee, thou wicked servant. Thou knewest that I am an austere man, taking up that which I laid not down, and reaping that which I did not sow; then wherefore gavest thou not my money into the bank, and I at my coming should have required it with interest?” And he said unto them that stood by, “Take from him the pound, and give it unto him that hath the ten pounds.” And they said unto him, “Lord, he hath ten pounds.” I say unto you, that unto every one that hath shall be given; but from him that hath not, even that which he hath shall be taken away from him.
After reading this parable (and the parable of the talents in Matthew 25:14-30), it is clear that certain individuals receive—and thus are responsible for—more pounds/talents than some others. The faithful servant who soundly invested ten pounds was awarded authority over ten cities. The second servant also was recompensed in proportion to the degree with which he fulfilled his responsibility to the master. He wisely invested five pounds, and in return was given authority over five cities. There is no reason to disbelieve, then, that had the third servant been equally faithful, he, too, would have been rewarded commensurate with his investment (which likely would have been authority over one city). This parable, then, teaches the following: (1) all of God’s servants are blessed with varied abilities; (2) all who are faithful stewards of the ability with which they have been endowed will obtain a reward; and (3) God’s stewards will be rewarded based on what they accomplished with the abilities that were entrusted to them. [This is not to say, of course, that heaven is “earned” by any human works (see Thompson, 1999, pp. 47-49). Ephesians 2:8-9 states unequivocally that salvation is a free gift of God, not something bestowed because of any human merit. Rather, the works done in the here and now provide for the Christian an eternal weight of glory—a weight that differs from person to person (2 Corinthians 4:17).]
If believers are to be judged according to their works (Matthew 16:27; 25:31-46; Revelation 20:12), it logically follows that those with the greatest responsibility can expect the strictest judgment. Indeed, the Good Book teaches exactly such a principle. Jehovah charged the prophet Ezekiel:
Son of man, I have made thee a watchman unto the house of Israel: therefore hear the word at my mouth, and give them warning from me. When I say unto the wicked, “Thou shalt surely die,” and thou givest him not warning, nor speakest to warn the wicked from his wicked way, to save his life; the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at thy hand. Yet if thou warn the wicked, and he turn not from his wickedness, nor from his wicked way, he shall die in his iniquity; but thou hast delivered thy soul. Again, when a righteous man doth turn from his righteousness, and commit iniquity, and I lay a stumbling block before him, he shall die: because thou hast not given him warning, he shall die in his sin, and his righteous deeds which he hath done shall not be remembered; but his blood will I require at thy hand. Nevertheless if thou warn the righteous man, that the righteous sin not, and he doth not sin, he shall surely live, because he took warning; and thou hast delivered thy soul (Ezekiel 3:17-21).
What an awesome and terrifying responsibility that ancient preacher and prophet was given. Millennia later, James offered this warning: “Be not many of you teachers, my brethren, knowing that we shall receive heavier judgment” (James 3:1).
Those who suggest that God will reward every saint equally often appeal to the parable that Christ presented in Matthew 20:1-15 for support of their position. There, the Lord told of a certain landowner who was in need of workers to assist him in his vineyard. The man went to the marketplace to find laborers and, when he had located some men, agreed to pay them a denarius each. About the third hour, he went to the market again in order to seek additional laborers. He went out twice more and then, at the eleventh hour, he found still more men to help. This last group worked only one hour, and yet when the end of the day arrived and all the men lined up to be paid, those “eleventh-hour” workers received their wages first—a full denarius. The rest of the men were given equal dues. When the master finally got to the laborers he had hired first thing that morning, he gave them the same amount he had given everyone else. Those “first-hour” workers were outraged! The very idea that they—who had been hired first and worked longest—should receive the same recompense as those who worked only one hour, was more than they could handle. The text in Matthew says that “they murmured against the householder” (vs. 11). But the man who had hired them responded simply: “Friend, I am doing you no wrong. Did you not agree with me for a denarius? Take what is yours and go your way. I wish to give to this last man the same as to you. Is it not lawful for me to do what I wish with my own things?” (vss. 13-15).
Those who teach that God will reward each of His faithful followers equally suggest that the denarius in this parable represents eternal life (see, for example: Wright, 1980, 122:531; Coffman, 1974, p. 307), and since every worker received a denarius, the implication is that there can be no “degrees” of reward. This, however, cannot be what the parable is teaching. In his commentary on the book of Matthew, renowned biblical scholar R.C.H. Lenski explained why.
Those who think that the denarius is eternal life, of course, regard the evening as the final judgment or the hour of death. Even in this verse this cannot be the sense, for eternal life is never earned by any man’s work. The combination of a)po/ with do/j (di/dwmi) means “give what is due.” Eternal life is never due anyone either at the time of its first bestowal in conversion or at the time of its full enjoyment when the believer enters heaven (1943, pp. 772-773, emp. added).
If this parable were speaking about final judgment, it would indeed provide a cogent argument for the equality of each person’s eternal reward. But is the parable addressing final judgment and eternal rewards? No, it is not. In Matthew 20:11 the text clearly indicates that the ones who worked all day “murmured against the householder.” In regard to those who did so, H. Leo Boles commented that “they were envious; their eyes were evil” (1952, p. 400). But the Scriptures make it clear that there will be no envy in heaven (Revelation 21:27). Lenski correctly observed: “Here, it ought to be plain, the possibility of making the denarius equal to eternal life is removed. The thought that a saint in heaven may murmur against God is appalling” (p. 775).
In addition, the master of the vineyard commanded the workers who labored in the field all day: “Take up that which is thine and go thy way” (vs. 14, emp. added). Lenski rendered the phrase, “Take up thine own and be gone,” and then observed:
This lord is done with him. And this is the climax of the parable. This u(/page [be gone] cannot mean, “Go and be content with thy wages!” It is exactly like the imperative found in 4:10, and always means to leave, cf., 8:13; 19:21.... This is a man who works in the church for what he can get out of the church. He has what he worked for—and nothing more. He is treated exactly as the hypocrites are who are mentioned in 6:2,5: “Verily, I say unto you, They have received their reward!” i.e., are paid in full.... Those who will learn nothing about divine grace even when they are working in the church will finally be left without this grace; those who are set on justice and refuse to go beyond it shall finally have justice (p. 777).
If we interpret the parable to mean that the master of the vineyard represents God, and the denarius represents eternal reward, how, then, are we to interpret the fact that those who worked all day received a denarius, but were sent away from the master of the vineyard? Can such a view be squared with Paul’s word in 1 Thessalonians 4:17—“And so shall we ever be with the Lord”?
If this parable is not discussing final judgment (and it is not), and if the denarius does not represent eternal life (and it does not), what, then, is the point of the parable? It appears that Christ was instructing His Jewish listeners about the Gentiles’ place in the Kingdom—a topic that, as we learn from later New Testament writings, became somewhat controversial among first-century Christians. The late Guy N. Woods, former editor of the Gospel Advocate, wrote concerning Christ’s discussion:
It is possible, indeed probable, in the minds of many scholars that it was delivered to show that the Gentiles, who came in at “the eleventh hour,” would enjoy in the kingdom (soon to be established when these words were uttered) the same privileges as the Jews who had been the favored and chosen people of the Lord for many centuries. Though last in point of invitation, they were to become first through their acceptance of, and dedication to, the gospel; whereas, the Jews, through their rebellion and disbelief, would be cut off (1976, p. 231, parenthetical comment in orig.).
Numerous conservative biblical commentators have suggested exactly such a view, including Adam Clarke (n.d. 5:194-197) and H. Leo Boles (1952, pp. 400-401). One writer by the name of Watts put it like this:
It is not the design of this parable to represent the final rewards of the saints at the day of judgment, but to show that the nation of the Jews, who had been called to be the people of God above a thousand years before, and had borne the burden and heat of the day, i.e., the toil and bondage of many ceremonies, should have no preference in the esteem of God above the Gentiles, who were called at the last hour, or at the end of the Jewish dispensation (as quoted in Woods, 1980, 122:532).
While the parable of the laborers established that all who are deserving (Jew or Gentile) would inherit a reward, it also emphasized God’s grace. As Lenski remarked:
The warning represented in this parable suggests our responsibility. If we close eye and heart against grace, no matter how high we stand in the church or how much we work, we shall lose life eternal (1943, p. 781).
But what of the denarius? What does it represent, if not eternal life? Lenski concluded—correctly, we believe—that the denarius represents the blessings one receives here on Earth by being a member of the Lord’s church.
The denarius paid at evening constitutes the temporal blessings connected with our Christian profession and work, and these blessings are made ours already during the entire time that we work. Every one of us gets his denarius; every one enjoys the same temporal benefits that are connected with life in the church. They come to the new convert exactly as they do to the old, to the preacher as well as to the [member], to the child as well as to the octogenarian (p. 772).

REASONS FOR UNEQUAL REWARDS

Lending credence to the idea that Jesus’ parable in Matthew 20 is not discussing equality of eternal rewards is the fact that the Bible plainly depicts certain people being awarded a unique and distinguished position in heaven. Revelation 15:3 notes that in heaven “they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb.” Surely none of us would be so bold as to suggest that the hosts of heaven will sing a song about us as they do about Moses. Furthermore, in Revelation 21:14 John wrote that “the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and on them twelve names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.” While we recognize the somewhat figurative nature of certain terms employed by John, the principle nevertheless remains: the apostles ultimately will occupy a place of greater preeminence in the heavenly abode. Also, Luke 16 portrays Abraham as having more prominence and authority in the afterlife than Lazarus. Consider also Mark 10:40, wherein James and John asked the Lord to allow them to sit next to Him in glory—one on His right side and one on His left. Jesus replied: “To sit on my right hand or on my left hand is not mine to give; but it is for them for whom it hath been prepared.” Some glorified beings (whether angelic or human) will occupy a place of distinction beside the Savior—a unique and special place reserved solely for them.
Some have argued against the idea of differing rewards by claiming that heaven will be perfect, and that something perfect can be neither improved nor diminished. However, Jesus observed that “even so there shall be joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more [joy] than over ninety and nine righteous persons, who need no repentance” (Luke 15:7, emp. added). In at least some sense, then, joy in heaven can differ in degrees. The principle of degrees of heavenly reward—which is taught quite plainly in Scripture—should motivate every Christian to “work while it is yet day, for the night cometh when no man can work” (John 9:4).

DEGREES OF ETERNAL PUNISHMENT

But if there are degrees of reward in heaven, will there likewise be degrees of punishment in hell? Yes indeed. On several occasions, when speaking of eternal torment, the Bible mentions those who will suffer to a lesser or greater degree. And each time such a reference occurs, the punishment is proportionate to the opportunities missed. Those who are blessed with numerous opportunities to obey the gospel and still reject it will receive greater condemnation than those who have little or no occasion to accept Christ. Jesus echoed this sentiment in His rebuke to the inhabitants of the cities of Bethsaida and Chorazin.
Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee, Bethsaida! for if the mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon which were done in you, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. But I say unto you, it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you. And thou, Capernaum, shalt thou be exalted unto heaven? thou shalt go down unto Hades: for if the mighty works had been done in Sodom which were done in thee, it would have remained until this day. But I say unto you that it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for thee (Matthew 11:21-24, emp. added).
Jesus offered this censure to those Jewish cities where He had done much of His preaching, and where, on occasion, He even had performed miracles. The citizens of those towns had more opportunity to accept the Messiah than many others living around them, yet they persisted in their rejection of Him. On the other hand, the Gentile cities of Tyre and Sidon—renowned for their wickedness—would receive a lesser punishment at the Day of Judgment for the simple reason that they had been deprived of direct exposure to Christ’s message and miracles. All were to endure punishment, for all had rejected God’s law. But it would not be equal punishment. The writer of Hebrews further emphasized this point when he addressed the “sorer punishment” that was to befall those who had “trodden underfoot the Son of God” (10:29). Notice also Peter’s stinging statement regarding the terrible fate that awaits unfaithful, backsliding Christians:
For if, after they have escaped the defilements of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein and overcome, the last state is become worse with them than the first (2 Peter 2:20-21, emp. added).
If Peter’s statement teaches anything, it teaches degrees of punishment.
But perhaps the most convincing argument for the concept of degrees of punishment derives from Jesus’ parable of the wicked servant, as recorded in Luke 12:42-48.
And the Lord said, “Who, then, is the faithful and wise steward, whom his lord shall set over his household, to give them their portion of food in due season? Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so doing. Of a truth I say unto you, that he will set him over all that he hath. But if that servant shall say in his heart, ‘My lord delayeth his coming,’ and shall begin to beat the menservants and the maidservants, and to eat and drink, and to be drunken; the lord of that servant shall come in a day when he expecteth not, and in an hour when he knoweth not, and shall cut him asunder, and appoint his portion with the unfaithful. And that servant, who knew his lord’s will, and made not ready, nor did according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes; but he that knew not, and did things worthy of stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes. And to whomsoever much is given, of him shall much be required: and to whom they commit much, of him will they ask the more” (emp. added).
The meaning of the last section of this parable is inescapable. All the wicked will be punished; however, those limited in their opportunities to learn about Christ will be punished “with fewer stripes” than those who knew the truth and obeyed it not.
Does the Bible teach degrees of reward in heaven? Yes, it does. Does it also teach degrees of punishment in hell? Yes, it does. The good news, of course, is that heaven’s offer of salvation is open to everyone (John 3:16; Romans 6:23). No one has to go to hell. When Christ was ransomed on our behalf (1 Timothy 2:4), He paid a debt He did not owe, and a debt we could not pay—so that we could live forever in the presence of our Creator (Matthew 25:46). God takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked (Ezekiel 18:23; 33:11). Nor should we. As one writer put it: “No one who has been snatched from the burning himself can feel anything but compassion and concern for the lost” (Woodson, 1973, p. 32). As we discover the hideous nature of our sin, we not only should desire to save ourselves “from this crooked generation” (Acts 2:40), but we also should be passionate about warning the wicked of their impending doom (Ezekiel 3:17-19).

REFERENCES

Boles, H. Leo (1952), A Commentary on the Gospel According to Matthew (Nashville, TN: Gospel Advocate).
Clarke, Adam (no date), Clarke’s Commentary (New York: Abingdon-Cokesbury).
Coffman, Burton (1974), Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew (Abilene, Texas: ACU Press).
Kurfees, M.C., ed. (1921), Questions and Answers by Lipscomb and Sewell (Nashville, TN: McQuiddy).
Lenski, R.C.H. (1943), The Interpretation of St. Matthew’s Gospel (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg).
Thompson, Bert (1999), My Sovereign, My Sin, My Salvation (Montgomery, AL: Apologetics Press).
Thompson, Bert (2000a), “The Origin, Nature, and Destiny of the Soul—Part III,” Reason and Revelation, 20:33-39, May.
Thompson, Bert (2000b), “The Origin, Nature, and Destiny of the Soul—Part IV,” Reason and Revelation, 20:41-47, June.
Thompson, Bert (2000c), “The Origin, Nature, and Destiny of the Soul—Part V,” Reason and Revelation, 20:49-55, July.
Woods, Guy N. (1976), Questions and Answers (Henderson, TN: Freed-Hardeman University).
Woods, Guy N. (1980), “Editorial Note” accompanying an article by Cecil N. Wright, “Are There Degrees of Reward and Punishment in Eternity,” Gospel Advocate, 122:531-532, August 21.
Woodson, Leslie (1973), Hell and Salvation (Old Tappan, NJ: Revell).
Wright, Cecil N. (1980), “Are There Degrees of Reward and Punishment in Eternity,” Gospel Advocate, 122:531-532, August 21.

Atheism: Contradictory at Best, Hideous at Worst by Eric Lyons, M.Min.

http://apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=12&article=3657

Atheism: Contradictory at Best, Hideous at Worst

by  Eric Lyons, M.Min.

Many atheists often describe certain things as being “deplorable,” “atrocious,” or “wicked.” Arguably the most famous atheist in the world in 1976, atheistic philosopher Antony Flew, confessed that the Nazis committed real, objective moral atrocities during the 1930s and 1940s when they slaughtered six million Jews (Warren and Flew, 1976, p. 248). Many atheists admit that it would be morally wrong to rape a woman or to sexually abuse and torture a four-year-old child. Richard Dawkins, the most recognized atheist in the world today, has even boasted that someone who does not believe in evolution may be “wicked” (1989).
Such recognition by atheists of anything being morally wrong begs the question: How can an atheist logically call something atrocious, deplorable, wicked, or morally wrong? According to atheism, we are nothing but matter in motion. We allegedly evolved from rocks and slime over billions of years. We supposedly arose from animals—living organisms that have no sense of morality. Animals eat their young, kill their mates, and steal the food of any animal from which they can successfully take it—whether friend, foe, or family member. Atheists allege that “we are animals…. We like to think of ourselves as elevated above other creatures. But the human body evolved” from animals (Marchant, 2008, 200[2678]:44, emp. added). Thus, the fact is, as Dr. Thomas B. Warren concluded in his debate with Antony Flew, “[T]he basic implication of the atheistic system does not allow objective moral right or objective moral wrong” (1976, p. 49).
Atheistic philosopher Jean Paul Sartre summarized godlessness well when he said, “Everything is indeed permitted if God does not exist” (1961, p. 485, emp. added). If atheists refuse to admit that real moral objectivity exists, then they are forced to admit that when the Jews were starved, gassed, and experimented on “like the animals” they supposedly were (cf. Marchant, 2008), the Nazis did nothing wrong. If human life really is as worthless as bacteria (as atheist Eric Pianka said naturalism demands), then there would be nothing truly wrong with systematically spreading the ebola virus for the purpose of eliminating 90% of the human population, which Dr. Pianka suggested needed to happen in order to save the Earth (see Mims, 2006). Atheists who theoretically take atheistic evolution to its logical conclusion, are forced to admit what Dan Barker acknowledged in his debate with Kyle Butt in February 2009: that, if need be, he would rape millions of girls to save the rest of humanity (Butt and Barker, 2009, pp. 33-36). After all, if we are nothing but advanced ape-like creatures, and “our male ancestors became ancestors in part because they conditionally used rape,” then, as evolutionist Randy Thornhill confessed, “rape is evolutionary, biological, and natural” (2001; cf. Thornhill and Palmer, 2000)—a sickening thought.
Atheists can say, “We don’t like that,” or “We would never do that,” but they can never logically say that something is objectively wrong or right. If they do, they are making a self-defeating statement. They would be contradicting the very naturalism they espouse. If they actually admit that for atheism no objective standards for “good” and “evil” can exist, then rape could just as well be right, while a virtue like bravery could be bad. Either way, atheism loses. It is either contradictory, and thus self-defeating, or it is too horrible for even the most contemptible to contemplate.
“The fool has said in his heart, ‘There is no God.’ They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none who does good” (Psalm 14:1).

REFERENCES

Butt, Kyle and Dan Barker (2009), The Butt/Barker Debate: Does the God of the Bible Exist? (Montgomery, AL: Apologetics Press).
Dawkins, Richard (1989), “Book Review,” The New York Times, section 7, April 9.
Marchant, Jo (2008), “We Should Act Like the Animals We Are,” New Scientist, 200[2678]:44-45, October 18-24.
Mims, Forrest (2006), “Dealing With Doctor Doom,” The Citizen Scientist, www.sas.org/tcs/weeklyIssues_2006/2006-04-07/feature1p/ index.html.
Sartre, Jean Paul, (1961), “Existentialism and Humanism,” French Philosophers from Descartes to Sartre, ed. Leonard M. Marsak (New York: Meridian).
Thornhill, Randy (2001), “A Natural History of Rape,” Lecture delivered at Simon Fraser University, March 16, http://www.d.umn.edu/cla/faculty/jhamlin/3925/Readings/Thornhill_on_rape.pdf.
Thornhill, Randy and Craig T. Palmer (2000), A Natural History of Rape (Cambridge: MIT Press).
Warren, Thomas B. and Antony Flew (1976), The Warren-Flew Debate (Jonesboro, AR: National Christian Press).

Camels and the Composition of Genesis by Eric Lyons, M.Min. A.P. Staff

http://apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=13&article=858

Camels and the Composition of Genesis

by  Eric Lyons, M.Min.
A.P. Staff

Arguably, the most widely alleged anachronisms used in support of the idea that Moses could not have written the first five books of the Bible (a theory known as the Documentary Hypothesis) are the accounts of the early patriarchs possessing camels. The word “camel(s)” appears 23 times in 21 verses in the book of Genesis. The first book of the Bible declares that camels existed in Egypt during the time of Abraham (12:14-17), in Palestine in the days Isaac (24:63), in Padan Aram while Jacob was working for Laban (30:43), and were owned by the Midianites during the time Joseph was sold into Egyptian slavery (37:25,36). Make no mistake about it, the book of beginnings clearly teaches that camels were domesticated since at least the time of Abraham.
According to skeptics (and a growing number of liberal scholars), however, the idea that camels were domesticated in the time of Abraham directly contradicts archaeological evidence. Over one hundred years ago, T.K. Cheyne wrote: “The assertion that the ancient Egyptians knew of the camel is unfounded” (1899, 1:634). In his oft’-quoted book on the various animals of the Bible, George Cansdale stated:
The Bible first mentions the camel in Gen. 12:16, where the presents are listed which the pharaoh gave to Abram. This is generally reckoned to be a later scribe’s addition, for it seems unlikely that there were any camels in Egypt then (1970, p. 66, emp. added).
More recently, Finkelstein and Silberman confidently asserted:
We now know through archaeological research that camels were not domesticated as beasts of burden earlier than the late second millennium and were not widely used in that capacity in the ancient Near East until well after 1000 BCE (2001, p. 37, emp. added).
By way of summary, what the Bible believer has been told is: “[T]ame camels were simply unknown during Abraham’s time” (Tobin, 2000).
While these claims have been made repeatedly over the last century, the truth of the matter is that skeptics and liberal theologians are unable to cite a single piece of solid archaeological evidence in support of their claims. As Randall Younker of Andrews University stated in March 2000 while delivering a speech in the Dominican Republic: “Clearly, scholars who have denied the presence of domesticated camels in the 2nd millennium B.C. have been committing the fallacy of arguing from silence. This approach should not be allowed to cast doubt upon the veracity of any historical document, let alone Scripture” (2000). The burden of proof actually should be upon skeptics to show that camels were not domesticated until after the time of the patriarchs. Instead, they assure their listeners of the camel’s absence in Abraham’s day—without one shred of archaeological evidence. [Remember, for many years they also argued that writing was unknown during the time of Moses—a conclusion based entirely on “silence.” Now, however, they have recanted that idea, because evidence has been found to the contrary. One might think that such “scholars” would learn not to speak with such assurance when arguing from silence.]
What makes their claims even more disturbing is that several pieces of evidence do exist (and have existed for some time) that prove camels were domesticated during (and even before) the time of Abraham (roughly 2,000 B.C.). In an article that appeared in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies a half-century ago, professor Joseph Free listed several instances of Egyptian archaeological finds supporting the domestication of camels [NOTE: The dates given for the Egyptian dynasties are from Clayton, 2001, pp.14-68]. The earliest evidence comes from a pottery camel’s head and a terra cotta tablet with men riding on and leading camels. According to Free, these are both from predynastic Egypt (1944, pp. 189-190), which according to Clayton is roughly before 3150 B.C. Free also listed three clay camel heads and a limestone vessel in the form of camel lying down—all dated at the First Dynasty of Egypt (3050-2890 B.C.). He then mentioned several models of camels from the Fourth Dynasty (2613-2498 B.C.), and a petroglyph depicting a camel and a man dated at the Sixth Dynasty (2345-2184 B.C.). Such evidence has led one respected Egyptologist to conclude that “the extant evidence clearly indicates that the domestic camel was known [in Egypt—EL] by 3,000 B.C.”—long before Abraham’s time (Kitchen, 1980, 1:228).
Perhaps the most convincing find in support of the early domestication of camels in Egypt is a rope made of camel’s hair found in the Fayum (an oasis area southwest of modern-day Cairo). The two-strand twist of hair, measuring a little over three feet long, was found in the late 1920s, and was sent to the Natural History Museum where it was analyzed and compared to the hair of several different animals. After considerable testing, it was determined to be camel hair, dated (by analyzing the layer in which it was found) to the Third or Fourth Egyptian Dynasty (2686-2498 B.C.). In his article, Free also listed several other discoveries from around 2,000 B.C. and later, which showed camels as domestic animals (pp. 189-190).
While prolific in Egypt, finds relating to the domestication of camels are not isolated to the African continent. In his book, Ancient Orient and the Old Testament, professor Kenneth Kitchen (retired) of the University of Liverpool reported several discoveries made outside of Egypt proving ancient camel domestication around 2,000 B.C. Lexical lists from Mesopotamia have been uncovered that show a knowledge of domesticated camels as far back as this time. Camel bones have been found in household ruins at Mari in present-day Syria that fossilologists believe are also at least 4,000 years old. Furthermore, a Sumerian text from the time of Abraham has been discovered in the ancient city of Nippur (located in what is now southeastern Iraq) that clearly implies the domestication of camels by its allusions to camels’ milk (Kitchen, 1966, p. 79).
All of these documented finds support the domestication of camels in Egypt many years before the time of Abraham. Yet, as Younker rightly observed, skeptics refuse to acknowledge any of this evidence.
It is interesting to note how, once an idea gets into the literature, it can become entrenched in conventional scholarly thinking. I remember doing research on the ancient site of Hama in Syria. As I was reading through the excavation reports (published in French), I came across a reference to a figurine from the 2nd millennium which the excavator thought must be a horse, but the strange hump in the middle of its back made one think of a camel. I looked at the photograph and the figurine was obviously that of a camel! The scholar was so influenced by the idea that camels were not used until the 1st millennium, that when he found a figurine of one in the second millennium, he felt compelled to call it a horse! This is a classic example of circular reasoning (2000, parenthetical comment in orig.).
Finds relating to the domestication of camels are not as prevalent in the second millennium B.C. as they are in the first millennium. This does not make the skeptics’ case any stronger, however. Just because camels were not as widely used during Abraham’s time as they were later, does not mean that they were entirely undomesticated. As Free commented:
Many who have rejected this reference to Abraham’s camels seem to have assumed something which the text does not state. It should be carefully noted that the biblical reference does not necessarily indicate that the camel was common in Egypt at that time, nor does it evidence that the Egyptians had made any great progress in the breeding and domestication of camels. It merely says that Abraham had camels (1944, p. 191, emp. added).
Similarly, Younker noted:
This is not to say that domesticated camels were abundant and widely used everywhere in the ancient Near East in the early second millennium. However, the patriarchal narratives do not necessarily require large numbers of camels…. The smaller amount of evidence for domestic camels in the late third and early second millennium B.C., especially in Palestine, is in accordance with this more restricted use (1997, 42:52).
Even without the above-mentioned archaeological finds (which to the unbiased examiner prove that camels were domesticated in the time of Abraham), it only seems reasonable to conclude that since wild camels have been known since the Creation, “there is no credible reason why such an indispensable animal in desert and semi-arid lands should not have been sporadically domesticated in patriarchal times and even earlier” (“Animal Kingdom,” 1988). The truth is, all of the available evidence points to one conclusion—the limited use of domesticated camels during and before the time of Abraham did occur. The supposed “anachronism” of domesticated camels during the time of the patriarchs is, in fact, an actual historical reference to the use of these animals at that time. Those who reject this conclusion cannot give one piece of solid archaeological evidence on their behalf. They simply argue from the “silence” of archaeology…which is silent no more!

REFERENCES

“Animal Kingdom” (1988), The New Unger’s Bible Dictionary (Electronic Database: Biblesoft).
Cansdale, George (1970), All the Animals of the Bible Lands (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan).
Cheyne, T.K. (1899), Encyclopedia Biblica (London: A. & C. Black).
Clayton, Peter A. (2001), Chronicle of the Pharaohs (London: Thames & Hudson).
Finkelstein, Israel and Neil Asher Silberman (2001), The Bible Unearthed (New York: Free Press).
Free, Joseph P. (1944), “Abraham’s Camels,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 3:187-193, July.
Kitchen, K.A. (1966), Ancient Orient and Old Testament (Chicago, IL: InterVarsity Press).
Kitchen, K.A. (1980), The Illustrated Bible Dictionary, ed. J.D. Douglas (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale).
Tobin, Paul N. (2000), “Mythological Element in the Story of Abraham and the Patriachal Narratives,” The Refection of Pascal’s Wager [On-line], URL: http://www.geocities.com/paulntobin/abraham.html.
Younker, Randall W. (1997), “Late Bronze Age Camel Petroglyphs in the Wadi Nasib, Sinai,” Near East Archaeological Society Bulletin, 42:47-54.
Younker, Randall W. (2000), “The Bible and Archaeology,” The Symposium on the Bible and Adventist Scholarship [On-line], URL: http://www.aiias.edu/ict/vol_26B/26Bcc_457-477.htm.

Muhammad or Jesus? by Dave Miller, Ph.D.

http://apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=8&article=5135 

Muhammad or Jesus?

by  Dave Miller, Ph.D.

Muhammad: “Those who say: Allah hath chosen a son…speak nothing but a lie” (Surah 18:4-5).
Jesus (through John): “Who is a liar but he who denies that Jesus is the Christ?... Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father either” (1 John 2:22-23).
*********************
Muhammad: “Allah hath not chosen any son, nor is there any God along with Him” (Surah 23:91).
God: “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Hear Him!” (Matthew 17:5).
*********************
Muhammad: “[T]he Christians call Christ the Son of God.... Allah’s curse be on them: how they are deluded away from the Truth!” (Surah 9:30).
Jesus: “[H]e who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God” (John 3:18). “Jesus…said, ‘Do you believe in the Son of God?’ He answered and said, ‘Who is He, Lord, that I may believe in Him?’ And Jesus said to him, ‘You have both seen Him and it is He who is talking with you’” (John 9:35-37).
*********************
Muhammad: “They slew him not nor crucified, but it appeared so unto them; and lo! those who disagree concerning it are in doubt thereof; they have no knowledge thereof save pursuit of a conjecture; they slew him not for certain, but Allah took him up unto Himself” (Surah 4:157-158).
Jesus: “‘And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all peoples to Myself.’ This He said, signifying by what death He would die” (John 12:32-33).
*******************
Muhammad: “[S]ay not ‘Three’—Cease! (it is) better for you!—Allah is only One God. Far is it removed from His transcendent majesty that he should have a son” (Surah 4:171-172).
Jesus: “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 28:19).
*********************
Muhammad: “They surely disbelieve who say: Lo! Allah is the Messiah, son of Mary…. Lo! whoso ascribeth partners unto Allah, for him Allah hath forbidden Paradise. His abode is the Fire” (Surah 5:72-74).
Jesus: “[I]f you do not believe that I am He, you will die in your sins” (John 8:24).
*********************
Muhammad: Polygamous, having multiple wives, as many as 12 at a time.
Jesus: Remained single, devoting Himself to His divine mission.
*********************
The Jesus of the Quran: A mere human prophet, finite in his attributes, like sinful man, flawed.
The Jesus of the Bible: Perfect, infinite in all of His attributes, unlike sinful man.
*********************
Islam is focused on Muhammad, who was merely a man.
Christianity is focused on Jesus, Who was God in the flesh.
*********************
OBSERVE:
According to Islam and the Quran—
                 If you believe that Jesus is the Son of God, you will be lost eternally in hell.
According to Christianity and the Bible—
                 If you do not believe that Jesus is the Son of God, you will be lost eternally in hell.

Jesus said: “Unless you believe that I AM, you will die in your sins” (John 8:24).

NOTE: The above verses from the Quran were taken from two celebrated Muslim translations:
Ali, Abdullah Yusuf (1934), The Qur’an (Elmhurst, NY: Tahrike Tarsile Quran), ninth edition.
Pickthall, Mohammed M. (1930), The Meaning of the Glorious Koran (New York: Mentor).

"THE BOOK OF REVELATION" Introduction by Mark Copeland

                        "THE BOOK OF REVELATION"

                              Introduction

"The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave Him to show His
servants--things which must shortly take place." (Re 1:1)

So begins the book of Revelation, one of the most challenging books in
the Bible.  It is the first book that many new to the Bible want to
study, while it is often neglected by mature Christians.   It has been
used by false teachers and prophets to lead people into doomsday cults. 
Yet when properly handled, it can be a wonderful blessing to those who
read and meditate upon it.  

Who wrote this book?  How is it unique?   How should we interpret it?  
Why should we study it?  These are questions we will seek to answer in
this introduction.

UNIQUE NATURE OF THE BOOK

Revelation is certainly different from other books of the New Testament. 
It is also very different from any kind of writing that is familiar to
most people today.  Unfortunately, this has caused some people to shy
away from the book; or on the other hand, to misuse it in propagating
wild and fanciful theories.  Most people conclude it is just too
mysterious to understand.  But it was actually written to make things
clearer!  The word "revelation" in the Greek is apokalupsis, which means
"an uncovering" or "unveiling."  It is therefore a book designed to
uncover or unveil, not conceal.

Part of the challenge in understanding the book is that it is written in
a style not familiar to modern man.  It is an example of what is called
"apocalyptic literature" which was quite popular from 200 B.C. to 200
A.D.  As such, it was a type of literature well known to the Jews and
Christians of the first century church.  Features of apocalyptic
literature include the use of highly symbolic or figurative language. It
was normally written in times of persecution, usually depicting the 
conflict between good and evil.

There are other examples of apocalyptic literature in the Bible.  In the
Old Testament, for example, the books of Ezekiel, Daniel, and Zechariah
each contain elements of this style of writing.  In the New Testament,
Matthew 24 contains apocalyptic elements.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK

The early church likely did not have the problem understanding the book
as we do today.  They were well acquainted with the style of apocalyptic
literature.  They were living at a time when the symbols of the book were
likely familiar to them (similar to how a picture of a donkey fighting an
elephant would be understood by us as depicting conflict between the
Democratic and Republican parties).  In fact, I believe the book was
originally intended to be understood by a casual hearing, as implied by
the opening beatitude:

"Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy,
and keep those things which are written in it; for the time is near." (Re
1:3)

This verse suggests a setting in which one is reading while others
listen.  The listeners were expected to understand enough to be blessed
by what they heard.

Our difficulty with this book is due to our unfamiliarity with
apocalyptic literature as a method of communicating a message.  We are
also far removed from the historical and cultural context of the times
which would make the symbolism easier to understand.  To properly
interpret the book, we must try to understand the historical context in
which it was written.  We must also interpret it in a manner that would
have been meaningful to those to whom it was first addressed.  It also
behooves us to pay close attention to those passages or statements which
are clear and easy to understand.

METHODS OF INTERPRETATION

Different methods of interpreting the book generally fall into four
views:

The "preterist" view - The book refers to events that were fulfilled in
the first century A.D., or shortly thereafter.  It was written primarily
to encourage the original readers.  Its value for today would therefore
be didactic (teaching the value of faithfulness to God).

The "historicist" view - The book provides a panoramic view of the
experience of the church as it proceeds throughout history.  This view
finds in the book such events as the rise of Catholicism, Islam, the
Protestant reformation, world wars, etc., ending with the return of
Christ.  As such it would encourage Christians no matter when they lived.

The "futurist" view - Apart from the first few chapters, the book depicts
events which immediately precede the second coming of Christ.  Therefore
most of the book has yet to be fulfilled (or is being fulfilled now), and
its value is primarily for Christians who will be living at the time
Jesus returns.

The "idealist" view - The book does not deal with any specific historical
situation.  Instead, it is simply enforcing the principle that good will
ultimately triumph over evil.  As such the book is applicable to any age.

PREFERRED METHOD OF INTERPRETATION

I believe a proper interpretation of the book incorporates some of all
these views.  In my estimation, the "preterist" view has the most merit
for the following reasons:

*  The book was written specifically to seven churches in Asia (modern
   Turkey) - Re 1:4

*  Its purpose was to uncover or reveal "things which must shortly come
   to pass" - Re 1:1,3; 22:6,10

*  John was told, "Do not seal the words of the prophecy of this book,
   for the time is at hand" - Re 22:10

Compare the last two points with Daniel 8:26, where Daniel was told to
"seal up" his vision, "for it refers to many days in the future".  We
know that his vision was fulfilled within several hundred years.  John,
however, was told "do not seal" what he had seen, "for the time is at
hand".  How could this be, if the bulk of Revelation refers to what has
yet to occur almost two thousands later?  This is a problem I see with
the "futurist" view, which places primary fulfillment of the book
thousands of years after its composition.

Place yourself in the position of those Christians in the churches of
Asia in the first century.  They were told that the things described in
the Revelation would "shortly come to pass", which should comfort them. 
But according to the "futurist" view, it has been nearly 2000 years and
much of the book has yet to be fulfilled!  That would be like someone
today writing that something is soon coming to pass, when in reality it
will be 4000 A.D. before it does!  How would a book depicting events to
occur thousands of years in the future comfort those who were suffering
in the first century A.D.?

This is not to say there are no "futurist" elements in the book.  I
understand chapters 20-22 to deal with the ultimate destiny of the
redeemed, which would have been of great interest and comfort to the
Christians suffering in the first century.

My approach to the book, therefore, will be primarily from the preterist
viewpoint, with occasional elements from other viewpoints.

THE AUTHOR

John, identified as one "who bore witness to the word of God, and to the
testimony of Jesus Christ" (Re 1:1-2).  While debated by some, he was
most likely the apostle John, brother of James, and author of the gospel
of John and three epistles.  His authorship of this book is supported by
the testimony of Justin Martyr (165 A.D.), Clement of Alexandria (220
A.D.), Hippolytus (236 A.D.), and Origen (254 A.D.).

DATE OF THE BOOK

Dating when the book was written is not without controversy.  When one
dates the book will certainly have a bearing upon one's interpretation of
the book, especially if one follows the "preterist" view.  Two dates are
usually proposed:

*  An "early date", around 64-68 A.D., during the reign of the Roman
   emperor, Nero

*  A "late date", around 95-96 A.D., during the reign of emperor
   Domitian

The external evidence (evidence outside the book itself) is inconclusive.
 In support for the late date, appeal is often made to a statement of
Iraneaus who lived in the late 2nd century A.D.  His statement is rather
ambiguous, however, and can be understood in several ways (see Redating
The New Testament, by John A. T. Robinson, for a detailed examination of
Iraneaus' quotation).

In support for the early date, the Syriac version of the New Testament
(dating back to the 2nd century A.D.) says the book was written during
the reign of Nero.  The Muratorian Fragment (170-190 A.D.) and the
Monarchian Prologues (250-350 A.D.) claim that Paul wrote to seven
churches following the pattern of John's example in Revelation, placing
the book of Revelation even before some of the Pauline epistles
(Expositor's Bible Commentary, Vol. 12; p. 406).

Because of the contradictory nature of the external evidence, I place
more weight on the internal evidence (evidence from within the book
itself).  I believe the book itself supports a date of 70 A.D., before
the destruction of Jerusalem and during the reign of Vespasian. 

This internal evidence includes the following:

*  In Re 11:1-14 the temple, which was demolished in August of 70 A.D.,
   is still standing.  Advocates of the "late date" naturally understand
   this passage in a strictly figurative sense.  While somewhat 
   figurative, the allusion to the crucifixion of our Lord (Re 11:8) 
   compel us to think of the historical Jerusalem (Philip Schaff).

*  In Re 17:9-11, we find mention of EIGHT "kings".  If these "kings"
   are emperors of Rome, then starting with Augustus the first FIVE were: 
   Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero (who died June 9, 68
   A.D.).  Nero's death left the empire in an uproar.  This may be the
   "deadly wound" in Re 13:3,12,14.  Three men (Galba, Otho, and 
   Vitellius) tried vainly to consolidate power over the empire, but it 
   was Vespasian who restored order in 70 A.D.  Thus, the "deadly wound"
   was healed, and Vespasian would be the SIXTH "king" (or the "one is" 
   in Re 17:10).  This would make Titus the SEVENTH emperor and Domitian
   the EIGHTH.

*  Notice carefully, that in Re 17:8,11 John was told that the beast "is
   not".  It "was", and "is about to come" (ASV), but at the time the
   Revelation was being given, the beast "IS NOT"!  If we understand (as 
   I do) that the "beast" represents imperial Rome as personified in its
   emperors Nero and Domitian, then Revelation could NOT have been 
   written during the reigns of either Nero or Domitian!

*  The condition of persecution that had been experienced already by
   those in the book are similar to that mentioned by Peter.  He wrote to
   the Christians in Asia Minor also, just a few years before (cf. 1Pe
   1:1). They were undergoing persecution similar to that described in 
   Re 2 & 3 (cf. 1Pe 1:6; 4:12; 5:9); i.e., persecution by the Jews with
   the help of Roman authorities, something that had been going on since
   the days of Paul's first missionary journey.

Therefore I suggest the internal evidence indicates that the Revelation
was given during the reign of VESPASIAN, the SIXTH emperor, while the
"beast is not".  This would place the date of the book around the spring
of 70 A.D. (as suggested by Philip Schaff, History Of The Church, Vol.
I).   A date between the death of Nero in 68 A.D. and the fall of
Jerusalem in 70 A.D. was also favored by F. J. A. Hort, J. B. Lightfoot,
and B. F. Westcott (John A. T. Robinson, Redating The New Testament, p.
224).  Another advocate of an early date is F. F. Bruce.

Referring to Philip Schaff, who at one time held the "late date", I find
his following quotation to be of interest:

   "The early date is best suited for the nature and object of the
   Apocalypse, and facilitates its historical understanding.  Christ
   pointed in his eschatological discourses to the destruction of 
   Jerusalem and the preceding tribulation as the great crisis in 
   the history of the theocracy and the type of the judgment of the
   world.  And there never was a more alarming state of society."

   "The horrors of the French Revolution were confined to one country,
   but the tribulation of the six years preceding the destruction of
   Jerusalem extended over the whole Roman empire and embraced wars
   and rebellions, frequent and unusual conflagrations, earthquakes
   and famines and plagues, and all sorts of public calamities and 
   miseries untold.  It seemed, indeed, that the world, shaken to its
   very center, was coming to a close, and every Christian must have
   felt that the prophecies of Christ were being fulfilled before his
   eyes."

   "It was at this unique juncture in the history of mankind that St.
   John, with the consuming fire in Rome and the infernal spectacle
   of the Neronian persecution behind him, the terrors of the Jewish
   war and the Roman interregnum around him, and the catastrophe of 
   Jerusalem and the Jewish theocracy before him, received those 
   wonderful visions of the impending conflicts and final triumphs
   of the Christian church.  His was truly a book of the times and
   for the times, and administered to the persecuted brethren the one
   but all-sufficient consolation:  Maranatha! Maranatha!"  (History
   of The Christian Church, Vol. I, pp. 836-837)

THE PURPOSE OF THE BOOK

Its purpose is clearly stated at the beginning and end of the book (cf.
Re 1:1,3; 22:6,10):

          To reveal "things which must shortly come to pass"

In particular, it is a revelation from Christ Himself of the judgment to
come upon those who were persecuting His people (cf. Re 6:9-11; 16:5-7). 
This judgment was directed especially toward those who had been deceived
by Satan to attack the Church of Christ.  As stated by Philip Schaff:

   "Undoubtedly he had in view primarily the overthrow of Jerusalem
   and heathen Rome, the two great foes of Christianity at that time."

Again, I would suggest that the purpose of the book is to reveal how
Christ was going to bring judgment on Jerusalem and Rome for rejecting
God and persecuting His people.  This judgment occurred with the
destruction of Jerusalem in the fall of 70 A.D., and with the final
cessation of persecution by Rome in 313 A.D. when Constantine became an
emperor supportive of Christianity.  

In fulfilling this purpose, the book is designed to warn and comfort. 
For erring disciples, it is a book of warning ("repent" or else, cf. Re
2:5,16).  For faithful disciples, it is a book of comfort ("blessed" are
those who "overcome", cf. Re 1:3; 2:7; 3:21; 14:13; 22:14).

KEY VERSE

If there is one verse that summarizes the theme of the book of
Revelation, it is this one: 

   "These will make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb will overcome
   them, for He is Lord of lords and King of kings; and those who
   are with Him are called, chosen, and faithful." (Re 17:14)

OUTLINE

INTRODUCTORY MATERIAL (Re 1:1-3:22)
   1. Introduction (Re 1:1-20)
      a. Prologue and blessings (Re 1:1-3)
      b. Greetings and doxology (Re 1:4-6)
      c. Prophecy and proclamation (Re 1:7-8)
      c. Vision of Christ among the lampstands (Re 1:9-20)
   2. Letters to the seven churches of Asia (Re 2:1-3:22)
      a. The church at Ephesus (Re 2:1-7)
      b. The church at Smyrna (Re 2:8-11)
      c. The church at Pergamos (Re 2:12-17)
      d. The church at Thyatira (Re 2:18-29)
      e. The church at Sardis (Re 3:1-6)
      f. The church at Philadelphia (Re 3:7-13)
      g. The church at Laodicea (Re 3:14-22)

I. VISIONS OF JUDGMENT AGAINST JERUSALEM (Re 4:1-11:19)

   A. THE THRONE SCENE (Re 4:1-5:14)
      1. God on the throne (Re 4:1-11)
      2. The Lamb worthy to open the scroll (Re 5:1-14)

   B. THE OPENING OF SEVEN SEALS (Re 6:1-8:1)
      1. First seal:  The white horse and its rider (Re 6:1-2)
      2. Second seal:  The red horse and its rider (Re 6:3-4)
      3. Third seal:  The black horse and its rider (Re 6:5-6)
      4. Fourth seal:  The pale horse and its riders (Re 6:7-8)
      5. Fifth seal:  The martyrs under the altar (Re 6:9-11)
      6. Sixth seal:  Cataclysmic disturbances (Re 6:12-17)
      7. Interlude (Re 7:1-17)
         a. Sealing of the 144,000 on earth (Re 7:1-8)
         b. The great multitude in heaven (Re 7:9-17)
      8. Seventh seal:  Silence in heaven (Re 8:1)

   C. THE SOUNDING OF SEVEN TRUMPETS (Re 8:2-11:19)
      1. Seven angels prepare to sound their trumpets (Re 8:2-6)
      2. First trumpet:  Third of vegetation destroyed (Re 8:7)
      3. Second trumpet:  Third of sea creatures and ships destroyed
         (Re 8:8-9)
      4. Third trumpet:  Third of rivers and springs become bitter,
         many die (Re 8:10-11)
      5. Fourth trumpet:  Third of sun, moon, and stars struck,
         affecting day and night (Re 8:12)
      6. Three-fold woe announced (Re 8:13)
      7. Fifth trumpet (first woe):  Locusts from the bottomless pit,
         sent to torment men (Re 9:1-12)
      8. Sixth trumpet (second woe):  Four angels with an army of two
         hundred million, killing a third of mankind (Re 9:13-21)
      9. Interlude (Re 10:1-11:14)
         a. The angel with the little book (Re 10:1-11)
         b. The two witnesses and destruction of Jerusalem (Re 11:1-13)
     10. Seventh trumpet (third woe):  The victory of Christ and His
         kingdom proclaimed (Re 11:14-19)

II. VISIONS OF JUDGMENT AGAINST ROME (Re 12:1-19:21)

   A. THE GREAT CONFLICT (Re 12:1-14:20)
      1. The Woman, Child, Dragon, and rest of the Woman's offspring
         (Re 12:1-17)
      2. The beast from the sea (Re 13:1-10)
      3. The beast from the land (Re 13:11-18)
      4. The Lamb and the 144,000 on Mount Zion (Re 14:1-5)
      5. Proclamations of three angels (Re 14:6-13)
      6. Reaping the earth's harvest, and the grapes of wrath (Re
         14:14-20)
   
   B. THE SEVEN BOWLS OF WRATH (Re 15:1-16:21)
      1. Prelude to pouring out the seven bowls of wrath (Re 15:1-8)
      2. First bowl:  Sores on those who worshipped the beast and his
         image (Re 16:1-2)
      3. Second bowl:  Sea turns to blood, all sea creatures die (Re
         16:3)
      4. Third bowl:  Rivers and springs turn to blood (Re 16:4-7)
      5. Fourth bowl:  Men are scorched by the sun (Re 16:8-9)
      6. Fifth bowl:  Pain and darkness upon the beast and his kingdom
         (Re 16:10-11)
      7. Sixth bowl:  Euphrates dried up, three unclean spirits gather
         the kingdoms of the earth for the battle at Armageddon (Re 
         16:12-16)
      8. Seventh bowl:  Great earthquake, great city divided, Babylon
         is remembered, cataclysmic events (Re 16:17-21)

   C. THE FALL OF BABYLON, THE HARLOT (Re 17:1-19:10)
      1. The scarlet woman and the scarlet beast (Re 17:1-6)
      2. The mystery of the woman and beast explained (Re 17:7-18)
      3. The fall of Babylon the great proclaimed and mourned (Re
         18:1-24)
      4. The exaltation in heaven over the fall of the great harlot
         (Re 19:1-5)
      5. The announcement of the marriage supper of the Lamb (Re 19:6-10)

   D. THE DEFEAT OF THE BEAST AND FALSE PROHET (19:11-21)
      1. Christ the victorious warrior and King of kings (Re 19:11-16)
      2. The beast, his armies and false prophet (land beast) are
         defeated (Re 19:17-21)

III. VISIONS OF THE FUTURE AND BEYOND (Re 20:1-22:5)

   A. THE REIGN OF CHRIST AND HIS SAINTS (Re 20:1-6)
      1. Satan bound for a thousand years, unable to deceive nations
         (Re 20:1-3)
      2. Saints (martyrs and faithful) reign with Christ (Re 20:4-6)

   B. THE RELEASE AND DEFEAT OF SATAN (Re 20:7-10)
      1. Satan released to deceive the nations once more (Re 20:7-8)
      2. Makes one last effort, but defeated once for all (Re 20:9-10) 

   C. THE FINAL JUDGMENT (Re 20:11-15)
      1. Great white throne judgment, with earth and heaven no more (Re
         20:11-13)
      2. Death and Hades cast into the lake of fire, along with those
         whose names were not in the Book of Life (Re 20:14-15)

   D. ETERNAL DESTINY OF THE REDEEMED (Re 21:1-22:5)
      1. The new heaven and new earth, God dwelling with His people in
         the New Jerusalem coming down out of heaven(Re 21:1-8)
      2. The New Jerusalem described (Re 21:9-27)
      3. The water of life, tree of life, throne of God and the Lamb
         (Re 22:1-5)

CONCLUDING MATERIAL (Re 22:6-21)
   1. The time is near, do not seal up the book (Re 22:6-11)
   2. The testimony of Jesus, the Spirit, and the bride (Re 22:12-17)
   3. Warning not to tamper with the book, and closing prayers (Re
      22:18-21)

REVIEW QUESTIONS

1) What is this book called? (1:1)
   - The Revelation of Jesus Christ

2) What is the meaning of the Greek word (apokalupsis) translated
   "revelation"?
   - An uncovering, an unveiling

3) What style of literature is the book of Revelation?
   - Apocalyptic literature

4) What are some of the typical features of such literature?
   - Highly symbolic; depicting conflict between good and evil

5) What is important to know to properly interpret the book?
   - The historical context in which it was written

6) What are the four major views of interpreting the book?
   - Preterist, historicist, futurist, idealist

7) Which view is suggested in this introduction?
   - Preterist, with a little borrowed from the other views as well

8) Who is the author of this book?  (1:1-2)
   - John, who had born witness to the word of God and testimony of Jesus
     Christ

9) What dates are usually suggested for the book?
   - An early date (64-68 A.D.), during the reign of Nero
   - A late date (95-96 A.D.), during the reign of Domitian

10) Which date is suggested in this study? (and by Schaff, McGuiggan,
    and others)
   - The spring of 70 A.D., during the reign of Vespasian

11) What is the purpose of the book? (1:13; 22:10,16)
   - To reveal things which must shortly come to pass

12) Who do I propose to be the two major enemies used by Satan?
   - Jerusalem & Rome

13) What is the key verse that summarizes the book?
   - Revelation 17:14

14) From the outline above, what are the three main divisions of the
    book?
   - Visions Of Judgment Against Jerusalem
   - Visions Of Judgment Against Rome
   - Visions Of The Future And Beyond

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Back To The Future: A study in the book of Revelation, R. E. Bass (Living
Hope Press, 2004)

The Book Of Revelation, Jim McGuiggan (Montex, 1976)

The Book Of Revelation, Foy E. Wallace, Jr. (Wallace Publications, 1966)

Four Views On The Book Of Revelation, S.N. Gundry & C.M. Pate, Eds.
(Zondervan, 1998)

History Of The Christian Church, Vol. I, Philip Schaff (Eerdmans, 1910,
1985)

The Lamb And His Enemies, Rubel Shelly (20th Century, 1985)

More Than Conquerors, William Hendricksen (Baker Book House, 1971)

New International Bible commentary, F. F. Bruce (Zondervan Publishing
House, 1979)

Redating The New Testament, John A. T. Robertson (Westminster Press,
1976)

Revelation, Robert Harkrider (Truth Commentaries, Guardian Of Truth,
1997)

Revelation:  An Introduction And Commentary, Homer Hailey (Baker, 1979)

The Time Is At Hand, Jay Edward Adams (Timeless Texts, 2004)

Worthy Is The Lamb, Ray Summers (Broadman Press, 1951)
 

"THE BOOK OF REVELATION" Chapter One by Mark Copeland

                        "THE BOOK OF REVELATION"

                              Chapter One

The Revelation of Jesus Christ begins with a clear statement of origin
and purpose.  Given to Jesus by God to show His servants things which
must soon take place, it is designed to bless those who read, hear and
keep the words of the prophecy (1-3).  John then addresses the seven
churches in Asia (western Turkey), offering grace and peace from each
member of the Godhead with descriptive terms which become more
significant later in the epistle (4-6).  His greeting is followed with a
declaration concerning the Lord's coming, and a self-designation as
expressed by the Lord Himself (7-8).

At this point John explains how he was commissioned to record the
Revelation.  While on the island of Patmos (likely in exile for preaching
the word of God), he was in the Spirit on the Lord's day when he heard a
loud voice behind him.  The voice identified itself as "the Alpha and
Omega, the First and the Last", and then charged him to write what he saw
to seven churches in Asia (9-11).  Turning to see the voice, John saw
seven golden lampstands and in their midst the Son of Man.  Describing
the awesome appearance of the Son of Man and his own reaction, John then
records how Jesus comforted and then charged him to write what he has
seen and will see (12-19).  The chapter ends with the Lord's explanation
that the seven stars in His right hand represent the angels (messengers?)
of the seven churches, and the seven lampstands signify the seven
churches themselves (20).

POINTS TO PONDER

*  That the book was written to specific churches of things that would
   soon take place

*  The implications of what is said about Jesus, in the greeting by John
   and in the words of Jesus Himself

OUTLINE

I. INTRODUCTION (1-8)

   A. INTRODUCTION AND BENEDICTION (1-3)
      1. Introducing the Revelation of Jesus Christ (1-2)
         a. Which God gave Him to show His servants
         b. Regarding things which much shortly take place
         c. Sent and signified by His angel
         d. To His servant John, who bore witness...
            1) To the word of God
            2) To the testimony of Jesus Christ
            3) To all things that he saw
      2. The benediction (3)
         a. Blessed is he who reads and those who hear this prophecy
         b. Blessed are those who keep those things written in it, for
            the time is near

   B. GREETINGS TO THE SEVEN CHURCHES (4-6)
      1. From John, to the seven churches in Asia (4a)
      2. With grace and peace (4b-6)
         a. From Him who is and who was and who is to come
         b. From the seven Spirits who are before His throne
         c. From Jesus Christ
            1) The faithful witness
            2) The firstborn from the dead
            3) The ruler over the kings of the earth
            4) Who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood
            5) Who made us kings and priests to His God and Father
         -- To Whom be glory and dominion forever and ever!

   C. ANNOUNCEMENT OF CHRIST'S COMING (7)
      1. He is coming with clouds
      2. Every eye will see Him, and they also who pierced Him
      3. All the tribes of the earth will mourn because of Him
      -- Even so, Amen (so be it)

   D. THE SELF-DESIGNATION (8)
      1. "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End"
      2. "Who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty"

II. THE VISION OF THE SON OF MAN (9-20)

   A. JOHN'S CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING UP TO THE VISION (9-10a)
      1. Their brother and companion (9a)
         a. In tribulation
         b. In the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ
      2. On the island called Patmos (9b)
         a. For the word of God
         b. For the testimony of Jesus Christ
      3. In the Spirit on the Lord's Day (10a)

   B. WHAT HE HEARD BEHIND HIM (10b-11)
      1. A loud voice, as of a trumpet (10b)
      2. Saying to him... (11)
         a. "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last"
         b. "What you see, write in a book"
         c. "Send it to the seven churches which are in Asia..."

   C. WHAT HE SAW, AND HIS REACTION (12-17a)
      1. Turning to see the voice, he saw... (12-16)
         a. Seven golden lampstands
         b. In the midst of the seven lampstands, One like the Son of
            Man
            1) Clothed with a garment down to the feet, girded about
               the chest with a golden band
            2) His head and hair white as wool, white as snow
            3) His eyes like a flame of fire
            4) His feet like fine brass, as if refined in a furnace
            5) His voice as the sound of many waters
            6) In His right hand, seven stars
            7) Out of His mouth, a sharp two-edged sword
            8) His countenance like the sun shining in its strength
      2. Seeing Him, John fell at His feet as dead (17)

   D. THE LORD'S WORDS TO JOHN (17b-20)
      1. "Do not be afraid" (17b-18)
         a. "I am the First and the Last"
         b. "I am He who lives, and was dead, and behold, I am alive
            forevermore. Amen."
         c. "I have the keys of Hades and of Death."
      2. "Write..." (19)
         a. "The things which you have seen"
         b. "The things which are"
         c. "The things which will take place after this"
      3. "The mystery of the seven stars...and the seven golden
         lampstands" (20)
         a. "The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches"
         b. "The seven lampstands...are the seven churches"

REVIEW QUESTIONS

1) What are the main points of this chapter?
   - Introduction (1-8)
   - The vision of the Son of Man (9-20)

2) What was Jesus intending to show His servants? (1)
   - Things which must shortly take place (cf. Re 1:3; 22:6,10)

3) How is John described in verse 2?
   - As one who bore witness to the word of God, to the testimony of
     Jesus Christ, and to all things that he saw

4) Who is this book designed to bless?  Why? (3)
   - Those who read and hear the words of this prophecy, and keep the
     things written in it
   - For the time is near

5) To whom was the book addressed? (4,11)
   - Churches in Asia:  Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamos, Thyatira, Sardis,
     Philadelphia, Laodicea

6) How is God described in the greeting from John? The Holy Spirit? (4)
   - Who is and who was and who is to come
   - The seven Spirits who are before His throne (cf. Re 4:5; Zech 4:1-6)

7) How is Jesus Christ described by John in this greeting? (5-6)
   - The faithful witness        
   - The firstborn from the dead 
   - The ruler over the kings of the earth
   - Who loved us
   - Who washed us from our sins in His blood
   - Who made us kings and priest to His God

8) What is said about the coming of Christ? (7)
   - He is coming with clouds
   - Every eye will see Him, and they also who pierced Him
   - All the tribes of the earth will mourn because of Him

9) How does the Lord designate Himself? (8)
   - "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End"
   - "Who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty"

10) How does John identify himself to His readers? (9a)
   - Their brother and companion in tribulation
   - In the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ

11) Where and when did John receive the Revelation? (9b-10)
   - On the island of Patmos for the word of God and for the testimony of
     Jesus
   - While in the Spirit on the Lord's Day

12) What did he hear a loud voice say? (11)
   - "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last"
   - "What you see, write in a book and send it to the seven churches in
     Asia..."

13) When he turned to see the voice, what did he see? (12-13)
   - Seven golden lampstands, and in their midst One like the Son of Man

14) How does John describe the Son of Man? (13-16)
   - Clothed with a garment down to the feet    
   - Girded about the chest with a golden band  
   - Head and hair white as wool, white as snow 
   - Eyes like a flame of fire            
   - Feet like fine brass, as if refined in a furnace
   - Voice as the sound of many waters
   - In His right hand, seven stars
   - Out of His mouth, a sharp sword
   - Countenance like the shining sun

15) What was John's reaction when he saw Him? What was he first told? (17)
   - Fell at His feet as dead
   - "Do not be afraid"

16) How does the Son of Man identify Himself? (17-18)
   - "I am the First and the Last"
   - "I am He who lives, and was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore"
   - "I have the keys of Hades and of Death"

17) What was John told to write? (19)
   - "The things which you have seen"
   - "The things which are"
   - "The things which will take place after this"

18) What is the explanation of the seven stars and seven golden
   lampstands? (20)
   - The seven stars are the seven angels (messengers?) of the seven
     churches
   - The seven lampstands are the seven churches (in Asia)
 
Executable Outlines, Copyright © Mark A. Copeland, 2016