Understanding the New Testament and the End Times, Second Edition. Rob Dalrymple

Understanding the New Testament and the End Times, Second Edition - Rob Dalrymple


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that Jesus was ushering in, and did usher in, the eschaton!

      Thirdly, why are the first words in the Gospel of John, “In the beginning” (John 1:1)? This is a clear allusion to Genesis 1. But why does John cite Genesis 1 when there appears to be no overt reference to the creation account in the Fourth Gospel?

      The Story Is About Jesus and the Inauguration of the Eschaton

      That the new exodus in Mark 1:2–3 is focused on the end times derives from the fact that Mark presents the story of Jesus in terms of bringing to a climax the story of Scripture. Hence, Mark introduces Jesus as the one who proclaims, “The time is fulfilled; the kingdom of God is at hand” (Mark 1:15). Such an event is best described as “eschatological.” In light of this, we are justified in reading the Gospels, and the entire NT for that matter, from the perspective that Jesus is ushering in the eschaton (end times).

      We must understand that the prophecies of the OT regarding the restoration of the people are inherently tied to what we tend to call the end times. To somehow separate the work of Christ in his first coming and the return of Christ to the extent that in his return he ushers in the end is to insert a break that the writers of the NT and the Jewish world at the time of Jesus would never have understood. That is, the prophecies that Jesus fulfills are part and parcel of the prophecies of the end times. It is true, as we see from the rest of the NT and the pages of history, that Jesus did not completely bring about the New Creation in totality—for sin and death remain. But to say that Jesus did not inaugurate the end times is to seriously misunderstand his mission. To say that the Gospels are eschatological and that they present the inauguration of the climax of the OT story does not mean that they are marking the completion of the end also. For we realize that evil, suffering, and death still exist. It is this tension between the continuing presence of evil and the present reign of Christ that has led to much confusion among many Christians in regard to eschatology and the end times.

      Furthermore, many are hindered from understanding Jesus as the


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