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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The depiction of these events in apocalyptic language suggests that the biblical writers understood Christ’s first coming in terms of the arrival of the eschaton.

      Thus, we should begin to view the entirety of the NT within an end times context. This explains why Jesus incorporated the language of the apocalyptic prophets. Moreover, the NT clearly places the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus and the coming of the Spirit in an apocalyptic context. In doing so, they relate these events to the inauguration of the fulfillment of the covenant promises of Scripture. With the coming of Christ and his baptism, the kingdom of God has begun and the kingdom of this world is coming to an end.

      Any view, then, that presents the end times as something primarily future fails to account for the presence of apocalyptic language throughout the Gospels and the importance of such for the proclamation that in Jesus the kingdom of God has come.

      Jesus as the End Times Prophet Who Announced the Coming of the Kingdom of God in His Presence and His Summons to Follow Him

      Thus, the NT uses apocalyptic language to describe the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, and the coming of the Holy Spirit. This apocalyptic language associates the events in the life of Christ and the coming of the Spirit in the context of the end. Jesus, also, employed apocalyptic language in his teaching. As a result, we see that in Christ himself the kingdom of God is now present. The end has come—though not fully, for death, sin, and suffering remain.

      The Kingdom of God That Jesus Announced Is the Fulfillment of All God’s Promises: The Eschaton Has Begun to Arrive

      Conclusion

      So, how does all of this relate to the opening questions?: Why then was Jesus baptized? Why was Jesus named Immanuel? Why does Matthew begin his Gospel with a genealogy? Why does the Gospel of John begin with “In the beginning”?

      Jesus is Immanuel (Matt 1:25) because he is himself the embodiment of YHWH returning to the land and the end of the exile. Hence, Mark’s opening citation: “The voice of one crying in the wilderness, ‘Make ready the way of the Lord, Make His paths straight’” (1:3). Mark sees, in John the Baptist’s cry, Jesus as the “Lord” who is returning from the wilderness! Thus, the baby is named Jesus. But it must be understood that Immanuel is who he is.

      Matthew’s


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