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BIBLICAL
PROPHECY |
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Preterism and
Zechariah 12-14
by Thomas Ice |
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In January of this year I taught a course on Eschatology
(Bible Prophecy) in Orange, California at Chafer
Theological Seminary. Since preterist Ken Gentry lives
only a few miles from Chafer Seminary, I invited him to
come and speak to our class. Even though Chafer Seminary
is dispensational, I thought it healthy to expose our
students to the exact opposite of our views with Dr.
Gentry’s visit. Dr. Gentry was gracious enough to come in
and give a presentation of his preterist views on the Book
of Revelation to our class.
During a time of questions I asked him about Zechariah
12—14 and preterism. I first asked him if he believed, as
a preterist, that Zechariah 12—14 was a parallel passage
to the Olivet Discourse (Matthew 24—25; Mark 13; Luke
21:5-36). He answered, "Yes." I agree! I then noted that
Zechariah speaks of "all the peoples" (12:2), "all the
nations of the earth will be gathered against it
(Jerusalem)" (12:3), and "I will gather all the nations
against Jerusalem to battle" (14:2). "This does not sound
like the Romans in a.d. 70," I said. Further, Zechariah
goes on to say, "In that day the Lord will defend the
inhabitants of Jerusalem" (12:8) and "Then the Lord will
go forth and fight against those nations, as when He
fights on a day of battle" (14:3). I concluded that this
does not fit with what happened to Jerusalem in a.d. 70
when the Romans conquered Israel. Finally, it says that
the Lord will rescue Israel, in that day (14:3), whereas,
in a.d. 70 the Lord judged Israel as Luke 21:20-24 notes.
"How does a preterist say that Zechariah speaks of a.d. 70
when the Lord is rescuing His people in that passage," I
asked Dr. Gentry?
Now keep in mind that Dr. Gentry is one of foremost
preterist spokesmen on the planet. His answer, in essence,
was to say that the Church had replaced Israel. This is
similar to what the late David Chilton had said in his
preterist commentary on Revelation:
Another
passage parallel to this is Zechariah 12, which pictures
Jerusalem as a cup of drunkenness to the nations (Zech.
12:2; cf. Rev. 14:8–9), a laver of fire that will
consume the heathen (Zech. 12:6; Rev. 15:2). The irony
of Revelation, as we have seen repeatedly, is that
first-century Israel herself has taken the place of the
heathen nations in the prophecies: She is consumed in
the fiery laver—the Lake of Fire—while the Church,
having passed through the holocaust, inherits salvation.
1
I then told Dr. Gentry that his answer was nothing more
than theologizing. He had merely stated his theological
conclusion on the matter, but failed to give a textual
interpretation. I asked him point blank, "Could you give a
textual interpretation of this passage in Zechariah?" He
responded, "No."
A preterist cannot give a textual interpretation of
Zechariah 12—14 because they believe it is to be equated
with God’s judgment at the hands of the Romans in a.d. 70
upon Israel—error number one. Greg Beale notes that,
"Zechariah 12 does not prophesy Israel’s judgment but
Israel’s redemption." 2
Zechariah 12—14 clearly speaks of a time when Israel is
rescued by the Lord from an attack by "all the nations of
the earth," not just the Romans—error number two. In this
context, Israel must refer to Israel. Since that it true,
then the event of Zechariah 12—14 has not yet happened in
history. This means that it is a future event. Dr. Beale
makes a comment about Daniel that applies to Zechariah as
well:
…the burden
of proof rests on these preterists to provide an
exegetical rationale both for exchanging a pagan nation
with Israel as the primary object of Daniel’s final
judgment and for limiting the last judgment mainly to
Israel and not applying it universally.3
Preterists and Futurists, like myself, both agree that
Luke 21:20-24 prophesied the a.d. 70 Roman destruction of
Jerusalem. Using Luke 21:20-24 as a baseline, notice the
contrasts between it and Zechariah 12—14, as observed by
Randall Price.
Contrasts Between Luke 21:20–24 and
Zechariah 12—14
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Luke 21:20–24 |
Zechariah 12—14 |
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•Past fulfillment—"led captive to all
nations (vs 24)
•Day of the desolation of Jerusalem (vs. 20)
•Day of vengeance against Jerusalem
(vs. 22)
•Day of wrath against Jewish nation
(vs. 23)
•Jerusalem trampled by Gentiles (vs.
24)
•Time of Gentile dominion over
Jerusalem (vs. 24)
•Great distress upon the Land (vs. 23)
•Nations bring the sword to Jerusalem
(vs. 24)
•Jerusalem destroyed (a.d. 70) "in
order that all things which are written (concerning
the Jewish People) may be fulfilled" (in the future),
(vs. 22)
•Jerusalem’s desolation is given a time
limit: "until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled"
(vs. 24). This implies that a time of restoration for
Jerusalem will then follow.
•The Messiah comes in power and glory
to be seen by the Jewish People only after
"these things"—the events of vss. 25–28—which are yet
future to the events of vvs. 20-24.
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•Eschatological fulfillment—"in that
day" (12:3–4,6,8,11; 13:1–12; 14:1,4,6–9)
•Day of deliverance of Jerusalem
(12:7–8)
•Day of victory for Jerusalem (12:4–6)
•Day of wrath against Gentile nations
(12:9; 14:3,12)
•Jerusalem transformed by God (14:4–10)
•Time of Gentile submission in
Jerusalem (14:16–19)
•Great deliverance for the Land (13:2)
•Nations bring their wealth to
Jerusalem (14:14)
•Jerusalem rescued and redeemed
that all things written (concerning Jewish
People) may be fulfilled (13:1–9; cf. Rom. 11:25–27)
•The attack on Jerusalem is the occasion for the final
defeat of Israel’s enemies, thus ending the "times of
the Gentiles" (14:2–3,11)
•The Messiah comes in power and glory during
the events of the battle (14:4–5)4 |
Because of the differences between the above contrasted
passages, it is impossible to harmonize with events that
have already taken place. Impossible as long as two plus
two continues to equal four. But some of the best minds
that preterism has to offer attempt to place round pegs
into square holes.
Preterist Gary DeMar recently attempted an interpretation
of Zechariah 14. 5
Predictably, he says that Zechariah 14 "describes events
leading up to and including the destruction of Jerusalem
in a.d. 70."6
DeMar cannot show from the text of Zechariah the
destruction of Jerusalem. DeMar approached the passage in
what I would call a thematic approach. He
hopped-skipped-and-jumped around the passage, denuding it
of its context. Worse, he repackaged it into a false
context. Dealing only with chapter 14, DeMar fails to
produce any evidence that God is judging Israel, as is
clearly used in Luke 21:20-24. In fact, the Lord is
judging the nations for the text says, "I will set about
to destroy all the nations that come against Jerusalem"
(12:9), and "I will gather all the nations against
Jerusalem to battle . . . the Lord will go forth and fight
against those nations" (14:2-3). Instead, the Lord is
defending (12:8) and rescuing (14:3) Israel from those
nations. Just as in Matthew 24, no where does the text
speak of the Lord coming in judgment against His people.
Both Zechariah and Matthew speak of Israel’s rescue (cf.
Matt. 24:31) and this is why the prophecy of both passages
are yet future.
Conclusion
The only way that preterists can attempt to deal with
Zechariah 12—14 is not by taking the words and phrases of
the passage in its literary context, but by simply
declaring—as done by Chilton and Gentry—that the church
replaces Israel. The text of Scripture is supposed to be
the basis upon which we develop sound theology. Instead,
preterists have to impose their false theological beliefs
upon God’s inerrant Word. Walt Kaiser is on the mark in
commenting on this passage the following:
In no other
chapter of the Bible is the interpretation of the name
"Israel" more important than in Zechariah 14. To say
that "Israel" means the "Church," as many have done,
would lead to a most confusing picture in this chapter
and in the end of chapter 13. For example, 13:8-9
affirms that two-thirds of the land (Israel) will die,
but few would be willing to say two-thirds of the Church
will be slaughtered in the final day. Clearly "Israel"
refers to that geo-political unit known today as the
nation of Israel.7
God’s Word wants His Church to be forward looking to a
secure and certain future of victory. Such a perspective
enables a believer to live faithfully in the present
because of the future. The past is equally important.
However, a false view of the past will rob a believer in
the present of the hope needed to live boldly for our
Lord. Maranatha!
Endnotes
1David
Chilton, The Days of Vengeance: An Exposition of the
Book of Revelation (Fort Worth: Dominion Press,
1987), pp. 385-86.
2 G. K.
Beale, The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the
Greek Text (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), p. 26.
3 Beale,
Revelation, p. 45.
4Randall
Price, Charting the Future (San Marcos, Tex.:
privately published charts, n.d.), n.p.
5 Gary DeMar,
Last Days Madness: Obsession of the Modern Church
(Atlanta, American Vision: 4th edition, 1999), pp.
437-43.
6 DeMar,
Madness, p. 437.
7 Walter C.
Kaiser, The Communicator’s Commentary: Micah—Malachi
(Dallas: Word, 1992), p. 417.
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