Showing posts with label New Jerusalem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Jerusalem. Show all posts

New resource - Section-by-section Commentary on the Book of Revelation

 


A complete Commentary on the Book of Revelation is now available HERE. The site offers a section-by-section exploration and Commentary on the Book of Revelation, completely free. It offers an important and relevant resource for personal study or study groups at this present time. 

New series coming soon

 New series on Paul's letter to the Galatians coming soon.

'God's promise in relation to Covenant Law'

Also coming soon, a link to a new website that will have a complete commentary on the Book of Revelation

Principles of living a set apart, godly life [28] – Divine Law, Priesthood and the Millennium Reign [4]

 There is only one formal order of priests on earth and they are selected from the tribe of Levi within God’s chosen ethnic group – the house of Israel. This is quite consistent with what Ezekiel describes in the last chapters of his book. His description of the use of daily sacrifices demonstrates that Jews will not, as a nation, suddenly convert to Christianity in the sense of dismissing ceremonies and sacrifices. Rather, they will remain under a form of a neo-Levitical priestly order under the New Covenant that God will make with the house of Israel. Within the heavenly realm, the priesthood is being transferred from out of necessity, from out of compelling need, and a transfer of law is coming into being, (Hebrews 7 v 12). As a result, under the New Covenant, the house of Israel will be softened and made responsive to God’s Law, which He will write on their deep inner core. They will become a set-apart godly nation. They will begin to turn back to God and His Messiah, as King of kings, will overthrow of the tyranny of the ‘man of lawlessness’ and his regime with the furious outpouring of passionate anger. This will occur in the last generation of this present gospel age.   


By this time, all those brought forth by God will be roused up again to enter into the heavenly realm. What will be established will be the ‘New Jerusalem’ – the new infrastructure of delegated governance, of delegated rulers, judges and authorities, made up in part of a Kingdom of priests resembling the order of Melchizedek, serving in the heavenly temple. In addition, heaven and earth will draw closer together, with human delegated rulers and judges in Israel, its priests of a neo-Levitical order. This whole new order, including God as the Ultimate Authority and Jesus as King of kings seems to be what is referred to as ‘Zion’, with completed Christians constituting part of the ‘New Jerusalem’. Thus we read, ‘I clearly discerned the city set apart, the fresh, new, unused Jerusalem, coming down from out of heaven away from God, made ready in the manner of a bride very appealingly ordered and adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from out of the throne saying, “Look! The dwelling place of God in company with men - He will be encamping in company with them and they will be His peoples. God Himself, their God, will be in company with them’, (Revelation 21 v 2, 3).


The important thing for us to note in all of this, before we get too distracted by other themes and details, is that all of this is established in company with, in parallel with divine Law. As Jesus said in the gospels, he had not come to abolish divine Law but to complete it. Divine law is not going to be abolished or dissolved, but it is going to be transferred. It constitutes the foundation of God’s justice and righteousness and at no point will God introduce an arrangement of lawlessness, anarchy or permissiveness. 


I have taken a little time to establish this context so that we can better understand what the Apostle Paul has to say about the day-by-day life of Christians and the written codes of Sinai Covenant Law. It also helps us to avoid falling into the trap of excessive freedom or permissiveness. I am certainly not taking an ‘antinomian’ stance – a perspective that stands opposed to, or against, divine law. But neither am I supporting Christian legalism.


Principles of living a set apart, godly life [27] – Divine Law, Priesthood and the Millennium Reign [3]

 There are a number of different perspectives that propose what Israel will be like in the Millennium Reign. This is not surprising because Scripture only presents glimpses here and there as to what this age will be like, and different scholars have drawn out and speculated on different facets of this coming age. 


One of the most comprehensive descriptions is to be found in chapters 40 – 48 of Ezekiel. There we find an account of how Israel will be governed in this new season of the reconciliation and restoration of the household of Israel. We see the division of the Promised Land between Israel’s tribes, and the building of a new Temple. We also see the establishment of a neo-Levitical priesthood, the consecration of the altar and the establishment of daily sacrifices on earth as part of the New Jerusalem. 


Now this creates a problem for many Protestant Christians. Because the Protestant Reformers and their successors divide Sinai Covenant Law into ‘Moral Law’ and ‘Ceremonial Law’. I consider this to be a mistake, a false division. Instead, I consider that Sinai Covenant Law is an integrated whole. But many Protestant Christians then go further. They then propose that the ‘Ceremonial Law’, such as sacrifices, has already been done away with because its purpose is to constitute an outline shadow of the person and work of the Messiah. So they then propose that because the Messiah has come and been made clear, these ‘outline shadows’ have now been done away with. But this means that they have difficulties with these chapters in Ezekiel and often feel obliged to interpret them in metaphorical or allegorical ways.


I also propose that perspectives that Jesus will return in such a way as to enter into and sit within this new Millennium Age Temple are mistaken. So also are perspectives that suggest that all Jews will come recognise or perceive Jesus and in effect become Christians.