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Written by Dr Andrew Corbett, President of ICI Theological College Australia, and author of the popular commentary on the Book of Revelation- The Most Embarrassing Book In The Bible

After years of studying the Book of Revelation, I have become persuaded of the Classical Preterist Position. One of the first objections raised against Preterism (often confused with Hyper-Preterism, or, ‘Pantellism’) is based on Revelation 1:7 — which says that when Christ ‘comes’, ‘every eye will see Him.’ Opponents of Preterism offer what they think is a death-blow to Preterism with this apparent ‘knock-out’ verse. As a Preterist, I have to admit, if their interpretation of this verse is correct, Preterism can not be true. Therefore, how we understand this verse will either destroy the validity of Preterism, or, could it possibly validate it?

Behold, He is coming with the clouds, and every eye will see Him, even those who pierced Him, and all tribes of the earth will wail on account of Him. Even so. Amen.
Revelation 1:7

Another way to render this verse might be: “Behold He is coming with the clouds [in judgment] and every eye will see Him – that is, the eyes of those who pierced Him, and all of the Tribes of the Land [Israel] will wail at this time because of His judgment. Even though this will be devastating, it must happen.”

Rendering the verse this does three things. Firstly, it becomes immediately consistent with the time-frame references in the opening chapters of the Book of Revelation. That is, Christ’s judgment on Jerusalem was seen by those who orchestrated His crucifixion- the High Priest and the Sanhedrin along with all Israel who joined together to kill the Christ.

and plotted together in order to arrest Jesus by stealth and kill him.
Matthew 26:4

It is consistent with the time-frame references in the opening chapters of the Book of Revelation because it plainly states that the events described were to take place soon – “for the time is near” (Revelation 1:3). To argue that verse 7 should be interpreted as referring to the end of time or the end of the world is not consistent with the context and therefore not a literal interpretation. Regarding this verse as forecasting something that was indeed near, at hand, soon, now, about to take place, as it plainly says in Revelation 1:3, is consistent with Revelation’s overall time-frame.

Secondly, rendering verse 7 this way is consistent with the other Biblical uses of the expression coming with the clouds which refer to God’s judgment on a people from Heaven. When the God of Heaven interacted with Moses, He is described as being surrounded by clouds (Exodus 19:9) and He chose to give the Hebrews a picture of His majesty and great glory with ‘clouds’ –

The glory of the LORD dwelt on Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six days. And on the seventh day he called to Moses out of the midst of the cloud.
Exodus 24:16

God gave His people the picture of His glory being represented by clouds. Therefore, when it says that God is coming in, or with, clouds we must be careful not to think of this just in a wooden literal sense. It more often than not is a word picture of God’s glory. On numerous occasions throughout the Old Testament, God’s glory did literally appear as a cloud to people (eg. Numbers 9:19). But as the Old Testament unfolds God takes this concept and creates the metaphor of clouds to speak His glory. Thus, whenever He judged on Israel’s behalf, He is often described as doing so by ‘visiting’ the nation to be judged ‘riding clouds’.

¶An oracle concerning Egypt.
Behold, the LORD is riding on a swift cloud
and comes to Egypt;
and the idols of Egypt will tremble at his presence,
and the heart of the Egyptians will melt within them.
Isaiah 19:1

Thirdly, rendering the verse this way is consistent with the complementary Biblical passages (the broader context) which make clear time-frame references to the generation of Revelation’s original audience. In particular, the Olivet discourse of Matthew 24, which most scholars recognise as a parallel to the Book of Revelation, plainly says this in verse 34 (“this generation…shall see all these things”). Understanding Revelation 1:7 as speaking to and about the first century audience makes any other rendering of this verse as yet future implausible. In what other generation, apart from the original generation to which Revelation was addressed around 65AD, could the qualifying statement about every eye shall see – even those who pierced Him – apply? If we force the interpretation of the text to be prophetic of our future, the fulfilment becomes impossible. That is, far from the Preterist interpretation of Revelation being disqualified by this verse, it is actually only the Preterist interpretation that offers any hope for this verse to be fulfilled!

It is absurd for Futurists to claim that “even those who pierced Him” refers to modern Israel. Futurists pride themselves for being “literalists” when it comes to interpretting the Book of Revelation. But which interpretation of Revelation 1:7 is more literal? I am proposing the most literal interpretation of this verse by saying that when the text says “even those who pierced Him” that is precisely what it means. “Every eye shall see” refers to the qualifying statement identifying this audience as the people responsible for Christ’s death. Again, when Futurists claim that this text prophesies the invention of satellite TV which will televise the return of Christ live around the world, they can barely warrant their appeal as literalists!

 

ALL THE TRIBES OF THE EARTH

The expression ‘all the tribes of the earth’ sounds global. But it is almost certainly not. The Greek word for ‘earth’ is ‘ge’ (geology, geography), which is translated as ‘earth’ or ‘land’. This word is used to designate the Land of Promise, Israel. It is perfectly natural to understand Revelation 1:7 as referring to all the tribes of Israel. This understanding is consistent in the three ways discussed earlier (1. The Textual Time-Frame Indicators, 2. It Is Biblically Consistent, and, 3. The Broad Biblical Context). In this light, we are logically, reasonably, and rationally left to conclude that the author intended to convey to his original audience that this verse was indeed to be fulfilled in their life-time. Indeed, I have already shown, this is the only way to literally take this verse. But, the Futurist might ask- In what way then was this verse possibly fulfilled?

I have already shown that the expression the Lord is coming is a Biblical expression of God’s looming judgment. It is the classic understanding of the Church that Christ will return. This is where Classical Preterists and Hyper-Preterists part company. Pantelogists (Hyper-Preterists) regard all Bible prophecies as being fulfilled, whereas, Classical Preterists (Partial Preterists) distinguish between Christ’s coming in judgment on Jerusalem and His eventual return. There is historical support for this view dating back to the second and third centuries. Nearly all Biblical Commentators prior to the 1800s took for granted that the Olivet Discourse (Matthew 24) was fulfilled with the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD. This can be readily verified by sourcing a very commonly available old commentary such as Matthew Henry’s. Both the Hyper-Preterist and the Futurist Dispensational interpretation were unknown prior to the early 1800s. Naturally both schools of interpretation disagree with this assertion, but the challenge for Dispensational Futurists is to find any Biblical Commentator or Scholar who wrote anything about an invisible return of Christ to rapture the Church to then be followed by a physical return of Christ with the Church 3 to 7 years later! The same challenge applies to Hyper-Preterists to show any Biblical Commentator of scholar accepted by the Christian community as orthodox who claimed that Christ had already returned and that the General Resurrection referred to First Corinthians 15 had already taken place. On the contrary, both Paul (2Tim. 2:18) and the corpus of Biblical Commentators and scholars down through the ages have both denounced the heretical view that the Resurrection of all the dead had already taken place!

How then can we claim that Revelation 1:7 has been fulfilled? Having shown that it could only have been fulfilled in the first century AD, we can then integrate it into the whole message of The Book of Revelation and the Olivet Discourse and show two things clearly: (i) Both the Book of Revelation and the Olivet Discourse of Matthew 24 intended to convey prophecies regarding the times leading up to AD70 (note the time-frame language~ “now”, “at hand”, “this hour”, “near”, “shortly”, “this generation”); (ii) It can be shown historically that the events forecast in Revelation 1:1 – 20:5-6 (at this point in the Book of Revelation the time-frame changes) have been fulfilled. That is, the inhabitants of Jerusalem in AD70 literally saw the coming of God’s judgment upon them for their apostasy. “Every eye” saw it. “All the tribes” of Israel saw it.

The Partial-Preterist (Classical Preterist) view of Bible prophecy is completely orthodox. It is Christo-centric. It is Biblical. It conforms to the ancient 4 Creeds of the Church. It is verified by history. It is commended to you in my ebook THE MOST EMBARRASSING BOOK IN THE BIBLE, which you can download immediately.

– – –

The Most Embarrassing Book In The Bible, eBook, by Dr. Andrew Corbett

The Most Embarrassing Book In The Bible, eBook, by Dr. Andrew Corbett

I have written a fuller explanation of the book of Revelation in my eBook- THE MOST EMBARRASSING BOOK IN THE BIBLE (click here to read a preview). The application from the Book of Revelation is that despite what appears to be an impotent Church struggling to serve an apparently impotent Christ, the Church is in reality made up of overcomers who lay down their lives gladly to promote Christ and His Gospel. In so doing, the Kingdom of Christ is extended, prayers are offered and heard, miracles are graced, and the believer can die with infinite hope that their Lord will keep them for eternity and clothe them with a new body which can not be subject to pain, injury, sorrow, or sin. With this knowledge we can endure momentary hardship during the brevity of this life on earth. We can be assured that our greatest delights and deepest moments of fulfilment are yet to come in the life to come.

4 Comments

  1. Don Shirley

    Dr. Corbett,
    You wrote, “In what other generation, apart from the original generation to which Revelation was addressed around 65AD, could the qualifying statement about every eye shall see – even those who pierced Him – apply? If we force the interpretation of the text to be prophetic of our future, the fulfilment becomes impossible.”

    I am afraid you have so focused on the fallacies of popular futurism that you may have neglected the simple truth that comes by means of the doctrine of resurrection. For example, one might say, “But if Abraham had killed his son Isaac, then it would have been impossible for God to have fulfilled His promise to him.” Yet in Hebrews, we see that Abraham’s faith was such that God could could fulfill His promise simply by raising Isaac from the dead. It is in this that Isaac becomes the type of Christ who was resurrected.

    It is by that resurrection of Jesus that another truth comes to bear–that is, the resurrection of the just and the unjust, foretold by Daniel and affirmed by Christ in John 5–“Do not marvel at this, for an hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment.” Thus, there is a future time in which those who pierced Christ shall see Him again, but in final judgment. If those who hold that Matthew 25 is an allegory of that judgment, those that pierced Christ will be resurrected and judged by Him at his return. While this disagrees with popular eschatological systems such as dispensationalism, there is a biblical certainty that every eye of every person throughout history shall see Him in some resurrected state at His return.

    Thank you for your time. I would love to hear your response.

    Reply
    • Andrew Corbett

      Don, thank you for your comment. I agree with what you have stated that there will be an ‘ultimate’ end of time looking upon the One they have pierced, at the last Judgment. However, the process of Scriptural exegesis, of course, is to determine the intended meaning of a sacred text — not just its possible meanings. It seems reasonably contextually clear that John links this particular event with the “soon”, “now”, “at hand”, thrust of the first nineteen chapters of the Revelation, with an impending judgment on those directly reasonable for piercing (crucifying) Christ. In support of this is the lack of this statement being repeated after Revelation’s description of the resurrection in chapter 20, which would have been the appropriate time for it to have been restated.
      -A.

      Reply
      • Marcus Jones

        Well that’s because I think that John REALLY DID ANTICIPATE a return within HIS lifetime. Therefore within his writings he was expressing his divine visions PERHAPS with an heir of his own humanity: seeing the end occurring within his lifetime or soon after.

        Reply
    • Uchenna Okwuonu

      I totally agree with your assessment. Every eye including those who pierced Him will see Him when He returns. This hasn’t happened yet. They will remember what they did to Him.

      Reply

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