The
Second Coming: Why We Should Still Be Waiting
A Response to Dr. Russ Jurek
by
Don Preston
Dr. Russ Jurek is an elder and the minister of the
EdgeHill Church of Christ in
One can only wonder if this was the only value of Jesus’ debates, Paul’s
debating with the Jews, and Peter’s polemics. Did these debates not help to
establish that Jesus is the Messiah, or did those debates only show us that
these personages were great logicians and polemicists? History has shown beyond
doubt that the cause of Truth has advanced when honest men openly discuss the
truth. As a part of the Campbell/Stone Movement, often known as the American
Restoration Movement, Jurek2 surely knows that public debates greatly spurred
and enhanced the growth of his own movement. To impugn the value of public
debate as simply a demonstration of the personal charisma or oratorical skills
of the given disputants calls Jurek’s own movement into question if his
argument is true.
It
is surely a dishonorable thing to write a book condemning another brother as a
false teacher but refuse to allow that brother a hearing and opportunity to
defend himself. Even the pope allowed Martin Luther the opportunity to defend
himself against the charge of heresy. Jurek has written a book accusing me of
false teaching yet, emphatically denies me, and the audience who has read his
book against me, to hear my response. Of course, as I read his book, I knew for
certain that Jurek would not debate, for his book is based on traditionalism,
presuppositionalism, and ad hominem argumentation, not good exegesis. When this
is all you can offer, then it is best not to debate!
We
will not examine every argument that Jurek makes, for there is no need. The
first installment of our response will refute Jurek’s attempt to respond to my
Can God Tell Time?. His paper shows that he, like his brethren as a whole in
the churches of Christ, have virtually no grasp of Biblical eschatology. Now,
for the record, let it be noted that I am a fifth generation member of the
churches of Christ, and love my heritage. I have publicly debated against Dispensationalism
from the amillennial perspective of Jurek. However, my preparation for those
debates convinced me that my own paradigm was fundamentally flawed. I know
brother Jurek’s position as well, or perhaps better, than he does. And I know
why it is wrong. So, my comments come from the perspective of an “insider” that
is privy to all the nuances of Jurek’s tradition.
JUREK AND CAN GOD TELL
TIME?
Jurek
quotes from my book, Can God Tell Time (hereafter Teltime):
“It
seems to have escaped the notice of many that the Bible was written in the
common languages of their respective authors. The Old Covenant was not written
in some mystical form of Hebrew. It was written in the language spoken in the
homes, in the markets, and work places of the Jewish people.
The
New Covenant is the same. The New Testament Greek is known as the koine,
meaning “common,” Greek of the day. The New Testament Greek, just as the Old
Covenant Hebrew, was the language of fisherman, carpenters, tent-makers,
husbands and wives.”
In
response to this, Jurek says: “With this statement, I wholeheartedly agree. The
problem is that he applies it only to certain passages to support his doctrine”
(Waiting, 4). Now, Jurek says that he agrees that the language of the Bible is
normal every day language and to be understood as we would normally understand
that language. However, he then proceeds to deny that the language of the Bible
means what it says, and says what it means!
Jurek,
lists several examples of time statements that I offer in Teltime that
demonstrate that when God said something was near, it was to occur in the
lifetime of the audience to whom it was addressed. Over and over, this can be,
and is, demonstrated in Teltime. And does Jurek show that any of those examples
did not mean at hand? No!
What
does Jurek do with all of these statements of time that to the normal person
reading the text understands these statements to convey a time message? He
proceeds to argue that when God said something is near, that it did not mean it
was near at all. In fact, “at hand” quickly,” “shortly,” etc. do not mean time
at all! What do these terms really mean? According to Jurek (p.8), when God
said something was near, he actually meant “when God was giving a warning that
something was at hand his intention was to call to the mind the inevitability
of that event, not necessarily the time frame.” Reader, did you know that the
normal, every day meaning of “at hand” is “inevitable?” I dare say you didn’t!
So
there you have it. God who used the normal language easily understood by man.
He used words that most assuredly normally convey a time message to man, but
Jurek says that He did not mean to convey the message of time in those normal
time words!. Although Jurek insists that God says what He means and means what
He says, this is not true of time statements! At hand actually means “it is
inevitable to occur.” The desperation and self-contradiction here is glaring.
But, let’s take a closer look.
If
“at hand” means inevitable, or certain to occur, and not when something would
occur, then what did God mean when He said something was “not near”? I pose
this question in Teltime, and Jurek ignores it. Here is why. In Numbers
24:17-18, Balaam the prophet made a prediction of Christ's coming: “I see him
but not now, I behold him but not near.” Notice he said Christ’s coming was not
near, it was not at hand. Why did he say this? Because Christ's coming was 1400
years away, and 1400 years really is a long time! Here is a concrete example
where God referred to a long time as just that.
Do
you see the problem? Do you see why Jurek ignored this? It is easy to see. If
“at hand” means inevitable or certain to occur, then by logical consistency,
“not at hand” means “not inevitable or not certain to occur! That means the
Balaam prophecy actually means “I see him, but it is not certain that he is
coming!” You cannot, logically, demand that “at hand” means inevitable, and
then turn around and say that “not at hand” means “a long time” and not mean
“uncertain.”
Jurek
examines several examples from Teltime in which I note the imminence of the
“Day of the Lord” in the O. T.. He seeks to simply muddy the waters however, by
saying that “there seems to be an attempt by A.D. theorists to make it (the at
hand statements, DKP), a definite time without making it specific” (Wait, 6).
He then complains that because some of the “at hand” statements involved a
matter of years before fulfillment, that this negates the imminence of these
predictions. Not so at all.
Jurek
is correct in one thing though. Preterists do insist, based solely on
scriptural testimony, that “at hand” predictions were fulfilled within the
lifetime of the audience to whom they were spoken. In Teltime, I produced
several examples of exactly this principle. See especially Ezekiel 12:21f. But
did Jurek acknowledge this? No, he only did some mathematical calculations and
noted that fulfillment of some “at hand” predictions was sometimes a matter of
years away, and therefore concluded that since Preterists “can’t say
specifically how short a time” that “at hand” means, that this somehow means
that the event was not truly near.
What
Preterists argue is this: God said the Day of the Lord against
Did
Jurek even mention my argument on this? No. Did he tell his readers of the
other examples I gave of when God said something was near, but man denied the
nearness of the predictions, and God condemned them for that? No. Did he even
acknowledge how God reacted to people who rejected the imminence of the “at
hand” statements” No. Why? There is one reason.
If
Jurek acknowledges for one moment that “at hand” quickly and shortly, with
correlatives actually means the event was near, to occur in the generation of
the audience addressed, then his futurism falls to the ground! He well knows
that if he allows his audience to take “at hand” and “Behold, I come quickly”
at face value, that he is shown to be guilty of denying the word of God.
Ironically, this denial, obfuscation, and redefining of words comes from the
keyboard of the one who demands that we take words at their face value! He
notes the question that I ask: “Can God Tell Time?” and answers: “Yes!” But
then he tells us that God does not use time words in the way that man uses
them. Man knows that “at hand” does not mean centuries, but Jurek says it does.
Man does not write saying that there will be “no delay” in the occurrence of
events, when they mean that it will actually be two millennia before
fulfillment (see Hebrews 10:37; Revelation 10:7f), but according to Jurek, God
does this! Jurek claims that God does indeed use the language of the common man
in scripture, but then claims that the words that the common man would use to
mean something was near, in reality do not convey any idea of when the event
was to occur at all! Those words that normally convey time, in truth convey
inevitability!
This
is nothing less than double-speak. Jurek tells his audience that he insists on
the normal use of language. However, he then invents a totally new definition
for the words in dispute. (Since when is “inevitable” the normal meaning of “at
hand?”)Yet, he tells his audience that it is
I
must say at this juncture that although I have attended and read numerous
debates between members of the churches of Christ and dispensationalists, that
I have never, ever heard or read any church of Christ preacher claim that “at
hand” did not mean near.3 Without fail, in every debate concerning the kingdom,
the claim was made, substantiated by lexicographical evidence–which, you will
notice, Jurek did not offer for his “inevitable” definition– that “at hand”
cannot entail a long period of time. It was not until Preterists began to note
the implications of this argument in regard to the Parousia, that all of a
sudden, the “inevitable, not near” argument appeared! This smacks of “making it
up as you go along” and is deeply disturbing.
You
see, to change the meaning of “at hand” to “inevitable” has several problems:
1.) It is an argument that simply seeks to avoid the problem of a failed
eschatology. After all, if one holds, as I once did, to a literal, out of the
sky on cumulus clouds, coming of Christ to destroy the physical cosmos, then
since Jesus said his coming was to be in the lifetime of his first century
audience, then he clearly failed to do that! But to pervert and deny Jesus’
predictions in order to avoid this embarrassment, while nobly motivated, is
wrong headed and unjustified. 2.) It fails to acknowledge that the Greek
language had many words that conveyed the idea of certainty and inevitability,
but “at hand” and “soon” are not those words! Jurek has created totally new definitions
for these words! 3.) It fails to acknowledge what I show repeatedly in Teltime,
that when God said an event was near or at hand, that it occurred in the
lifetime of the audience to whom it was spoken or addressed. Jurek seeks to
deny this, so, we will take a look at his “proof” momentarily.
4.)
It fails to explain how, if “at hand” means inevitable, that the reverse
statement “not at hand” does not mean “uncertain to occur.” You cannot
logically argue that “at hand” simply means “inevitable” without demanding that
“not near” means “not inevitable” and this means that the very incarnation of
Christ, and the establishment of the church itself was not inevitable to occur!
5.) Jurek seeks to give some examples where an “at hand” event was supposedly fulfilled
centuries later. He fails in this as we are about to see, but we want to raise
this point. If “at hand” can mean centuries, why do we not find “not at hand”
predictions being fulfilled immediately? According to Jurek’s logic (?), this
would be perfectly logical! According to his thinking, “at hand” can involve
centuries. So, why can’t “not at hand” predictions not mean that the event was
to come immediately?
6.)
It opens the door for the millennia lists. If at hand does not mean near, then
the millennia lists can simply affirm that John and Jesus were simply saying
that the coming of the kingdom was inevitable! This eliminates the thorny
“postponement” issue, and allows the millennia lists to merrily go on his way
insisting that the kingdom is yet future! Would Jurek apply his “inevitable but
not near” definition to, “The kingdom of heaven has drawn near”? We dare say
not!
The
reason is obvious, is it not? If God played such games with language, it would
be a hopeless task to understand Him. And, if God played the “reverse game”
i.e. “at hand means a long time, and a long time means at hand,” then how do we
know that, “I love you,” does not actually mean “I hate you”? Jurek would
certainly cry “Foul!” at this suggestion, falling back on his insistence that
he believes that God says what He means, and means what He says. Yet, his
definition of “at hand” and “quickly” belies his claims in this regard. Jurek
does not believe that God says what He means when it comes to time words! That
is undeniable.
So,
how does Jurek seek to mitigate the true imminence of the at hand statements?
He tries what others have tried. He seeks to find examples where Jehovah said
something was near and yet, fulfillment was (supposedly) a long time away. So,
let’s take a look at his examples.
Deuteronomy 32:35
Jurek’s
appeal to Deuteronomy 35 speaks loudly of his desperation to mitigate the time
statements of scripture. To appeal to this chapter shows that he has not
actually read the scriptures for what they say, but, casting desperately around
to disprove Preterism, and thinking, irrationally, he thought he had found
“proof.” So he throws it to his audience either unaware himself of the actual
context, or perhaps hoping that his audience would not read the context
themselves.
Deuteronomy
32 is called the Song of Moses, and it deals with
Note
that the chapter is indeed about God’s intention to punish
The
trouble is that Jurek did not honor what he wrote! Deuteronomy is not about
events to occur in the generation then living and specifically says so! Therefore,
it could not be at hand. As a matter of fact, Moses even says emphatically that
he knew that after his death that in the time to come,
So,
Moses, in Deuteronomy 32, is projecting
Notice
how Jurek has conveniently ignored this critical part of the prophecy. Did he
tell his reading audience that Moses was speaking of what would happen to
Did
Jurek tell his reading audience that verse 35 was telling Israel that many
generations down the line, when they sinned, “Their foot shall slip in due time”
(v. 35), and when they sinned that “the day of their calamity is at hand.” No.
Why did Jurek ignore these contextual qualifiers that tell us when the
predicted judgment would be near? Why did he not point out that Deuteronomy was
not predicting events for Moses day, but spoke of a time “many generations”
away? He did not tell his audience because he either did not take note of these
critical factors himself, or, he did not want his audience to know of these
facts that totally destroy his entire argument. The same is true of his next
example.
The
point is indisputable that Deuteronomy 32 did not say that the judgment was
near when Moses wrote. The Song foretold a time “many generations” away and
foretold a time then, when
Isaiah 13:6
The
next passage that Jurek appeals to in his attempt to mitigate the time
statements is the prediction of the fall of
Furthermore,
brother Jurek is wrong when he says that it was 142 years before the prophecy
was fulfilled. Even non-Preterists, who would love to negate the language of
imminence found in verse 6, agree that within 15 years of the prophecy
Jurek
makes a disturbing accusation on page 7. He says “According to A.D. 70
Theorists, seventy years is a long time so apparently ‘at hand’ or ‘near’ can
mean at least 142 years.” (Perhaps he meant to say “can’t mean at least 142
years,” but that is uncertain. I find this sentence confusing).
Here
is the problem. It is not the Preterists who claim that 70 years is a long
time, it is God Himself! On page 10 of Teltime, I document how God told Judah
that they were about to go into captivity for 70 years, and that according to
verse 28 of Jeremiah 29, that this was called a long time. The people
themselves, based on God’s word that the captivity would last 70 years, said
that it would be a long time! For Jurek to say that Preterists are the ones
calling 70 years a long time is misleading. It gives the impression that Preterists
have falsely reasoned about something, when in fact, it was God Himself that
made the decree and the people understood it perfectly well!
Had
the people understood God’s time statements in the way proposed by Jurek
however, when God said that the people were about to go into captivity soon
(Ezekiel 7), the people would have reasoned, “God is not trying to communicate
how soon we are going to be judged, He is just telling us that judgment is
inevitable!” Oh, wait, that is how the people responded! They denied that soon
meant soon! They denied that “at hand” meant judgment was coming soon, and said
it was in fact far off! Perhaps they calculated that “at hand” might mean 142
years, and figured they had plenty of time!
Jurek
even agrees with the people in rejecting the imminence of Ezekiel 7! Please
catch the power of this! God said the judgment was near. The people denied it,
and now brother Russ Jurek sides with rebellious Judah to reject the nearness
of that judgment by saying: “Though over and over, the clear language that God
used to speak to these people spoke of events getting ready to take place ‘now’
it was still at least 6 years (from B.C. 592 to B. C. 586) before they
occurred” (Waiting, 7). So, according to Jurek, the events were not truly near,
even though the language said it was near, because it took 7 years to occur.
According to Jurek’s logic therefore, if an event took anything over a few
moments to occur from the moment of prediction to fulfillment, then the
language of “at hand” and “soon” was inappropriate! Do we not have the right to
ask: What right does brother Jurek have to challenge God in this situation? God
said that judgment was at hand, and coming soon. And because it took 7 years,
Jurek sides with the rebellious house of
How
did God respond to the peoples’ refusal to see imminence in His warnings? He
condemned them! Jehovah condemned
Furthermore,
God gave the measuring stick to determine what He meant by “at hand” “near” and
“soon.” God said, “for in your days, you rebellious house, I will fulfill
whatever I say.” (Ezekiel 12:22f). So, while brother Jurek castigates the Preterist
view for a failure to put a definite time limitation on the terms of imminence,
God gave His divine definition. When God said something was near, coming soon,
etc., it was to occur in the lifetime of those to whom it was promised.
Furthermore, to protract it beyond that time was emphatically condemned by
Jehovah as a denial of His word and His power.
So,
are we not on safe ground in accepting that standard and definition? God said
that when He said something was near, it was not far off. And, He said it would
occur in the lifetime of the relevant audience. What right does Jurek, or
anyone else, have to deny that definition, and claim that soon might mean
hundreds, or perhaps thousands of years?
Had
God wanted to convey and communicate the genuine nearness of the Parousia of
Christ and the end of the age, what words, terms and phrases could He have used
that would convey that imminence better than “the end of all things has drawn
near”; “in a very, very little while, the one who is coming will come and will
not tarry”; “these things must shortly come to pass...the time is at hand”? Brother
Jurek did not offer any answer to this question, even though I ask it in
Teltime. If the words that God used do communicate time, and not mere
certainty, then Jurek’s entire objection to Teltime, and to Covenant
Eschatology as a whole is destroyed.
One
final thought: Jurek’s objection to the time statements destroys the testing of
the prophets. How is the church to test the prophets? Paul charged the
Thessalonians to, “prove all things, hold fast that which is good” (1
Thessalonians 5.21). When some in
Jurek
tells us that time statements like “the end of all things has drawn near”(1 Peter
4:7), do not indicate temporal imminence at all. They just mean that it is
inevitable that the event will occur. He claims that, “The message is
overwhelmingly, ‘no one knows when, so you must be ready at all times.’”
(Waiting, 8). Please read carefully what I am about to say: if “at hand” simply
affirms the certainty of an event, then there could be no false predictions
about the coming of the Lord, as long as they just said: “The coming of the
Lord has drawn near!”
The
problem of course is that Jesus said it was possible to give premature
statements about the nearness of “the end.” In Luke 21:8 Jesus warned his
disciples that false prophets would come saying “the end has drawn near. Do not
go after them.” Now, Jurek might say that this was in reference to the fall of
Now,
if Jurek’s contention is correct, and time statements simply mean “the end is
inevitable,” then there would not be any way possible for those prophets to be
premature in their declarations! If all they were saying was, “Hey, the end of
A
final thought on Luke 21. Jurek might say, Well the problem is that false
prophets were claiming that the end truly had drawn near. They were speaking of
the nearness of the time, but God’s prophecies simply convey certainty!” Of course,
this would be nonsensical, because it would mean that the false teachers would
use the term “has drawn near” in its normally understood sense, while God was
using the words in a way that no one would understand!
Does
Jurek, in his preaching proclaim: “In a very, very little while, the one who is
coming will come and will not tarry! (Hebrews 10:37)? Does Jurek urge his
audiences: “Little children it is the last hour! And as you have heard that
anti-christ should come, even now there are many anti-christs, thereby you know
it is the last hour!” (1 John 2:18)? Does brother Jurek claim, “These things
(i.e. the fulfillment of Revelation) must shortly come to pass”...The time is
at hand” (Revelation 1:1-3)? Does Jurek inform his audiences that: “The
appointed time for the judgment has come”?5
We
have it on extremely good authority that Jurek does not use the language of
imminence when he preaches about the coming of the Lord.6 We have been told
that his references to the Parousia are “open ended” without references to its
nearness, and that in fact, Jurek would avoid making any kind of statement that
“the coming of the Lord has drawn near.” If he does not use the language of
nearness, why not? Why does he not say, “the night is far spent, the Day is at
hand” (Romans 13:11f)? Is he afraid that his audience will get the idea that
the Parousia is actually near if he uses that language? Would he respond that
he does not say the coming of Christ is near, because he does not know if it is
near or not? Were he to so argue, this would be an open admission that the
Biblical writers intended, by the inspiration of the Spirit, to convey the true
nearness of the Parousia of Christ in the N. T.! If he is concerned that his
audience might get the mistaken idea that the end is near if he uses the
Biblical time statements, then I wonder what the original audiences thought
when those statements were read in their assemblies, not as mere expressions of
hope, but as divine, inspired affirmations of truth? The fact is that if the
Biblical time statements mean what Jurek and others claim, he could, indeed
should, use the language exactly as they did! He should have no problem saying:
“You will see the Son of man coming on the clouds of heaven”, or, “it is the
last hour”, or “Behold, I come quickly!” His reluctance and refusal to do so is
a powerful demonstration that he knows that those are in fact time words, not
expressions of certainty!
Interestingly,
the Bible gives examples of “prophets” making false time statements, and God
condemning them for it. He actually killed one prophet for making a false time
prediction (Jeremiah 27-29)! Jehovah said when some things were to occur. He
gave a time statement, man rejected it and gave a different time frame. As a
result, God killed the man! Doesn’t that indicate that God can tell time pretty
well, and that He expects man to honor His time statements?
So,
minimizing or mitigating the objective imminence of the N. T. time statements
is a dangerous thing. It destroys any possibility of testing the prophets. Yet,
the church is supposed to test the prophets. Jurek’s position destroys any
possibility of knowing whether declarations of the end are premature. Yet,
Jesus said to reject premature declarations of the nearness of the end.
Only
by acknowledging, that the time statements in the N. T. are objective
indicators of the nearness of the end is there any way to understand the
commands to test the prophets. Only if God can tell time was there a way to
reject those who said the end had drawn near, before it had drawn near.
Summary
In
this first installment of our response to Jurek’s work, we have exposed the
logical fallacies, the scriptural contradictions in his view. Jurek cannot, for
one moment, admit that “at hand” actually means nearness of time for if he does,
his entire eschatological paradigm crumbles to the ground. I fully understand
the frustration of resisting the scriptures in this regard! I was where brother
Jurek is, and tried my best to find a way to explain, counter, mitigate, or
ignore the imminence of the Parousia in the N. T.. But I could not resist the
consistency, the power, and the absolute clarity of those emphatic, repeated,
and numerous time statements.
On
the one hand, Jurek claims that God can indeed tell time, but then turns around
and says that God does not tell time when communicating to man! This is
inconsistency epitomized!
Jurek
insists that the Bible says what it means, and means what it says, but then
denies that “at hand” means what it says!
Jurek
claims to have found exceptions to the language of imminence, and claims that
these exceptions falsify Preterism. But, even if we were to grant, for argument
sake, that Jurek has found a few examples where “at hand” entailed a period of
a 100 years (and we do not grant that!), what would that prove? Does a person
build a doctrine based on the exceptional use of language? No, you build your
case on the consistent use of language! Jurek wants to reverse this axiomatic
hermeneutic, and this is a dangerous thing to do.
Jurek’s
“inevitable versus imminent” argument, nullifies and invalidates the ability
and command to test the prophets. If a person says “the coming of the Lord has
drawn near” then per Jurek all that they can be saying is that the coming of
the Lord is certain to occur! From Jurek’s perspective, that cannot be a false
prediction!
Jurek
claims that since Can God Tell Time? cannot tell exactly how much or how little
time is involved in “at hand” that this nullifies any idea of imminence. This
is illogical. Does he believe that since he cannot tell us how little or how
much time might be involved in the “not near” statements that therefore, the
events were not far off?
Jurek
owes it to his readers to explain, if “at hand” means certain to occur, then
does “not near” mean uncertain to occur? And if not, why not? This is a huge
issue Jurek needs to explain.
Jurek
claims that the time words of scripture do not mean time at all, but certainty.
However, in his own preaching, we are told that he does not use the words “at
hand” “quickly” and “shortly” to speak of Christ’s coming. Indeed, he avoids
using this language! This inconsistency reveals that he does not believe his
own argument! If at hand simply means “certain” then according to Jurek’s
logic, he should be proclaiming, loudly, “The coming of the Lord has drawn
near!”
Jurek
needs to explain why it is that he feels justified in calling a fellow believer
a false teacher, but he will not give that brother the opportunity to defend
himself in honorable Christian controversy. It is one thing to cast stones and
lob missiles from a distance; it is another thing to put your charges under the
light of cross-examination: “Debate the cause with thy neighbor!”
In
the next installment, we will examine Jurek’s claims regarding the kingdom. His
reasoning and logic are as bad in regard to that topic as in regard to the time
issue.
Footnotes:
1.
Doug Radcliffe, a Preterist, is a member of Jurek’s congregation, and is
currently being threatened with dis-fellowshipment (i.e. excommunication), if
he does not cease and desist teaching Covenant Eschatology. Radcliffe informs
me that his repeated attempts to get the elders, including Jurek, to sit down
with him and reason together, have resulted in refusal and stonewalling.
Instead, Jurek condemns Preterism from the pulpit and now in the publication of
his book. This is an all too familiar story, and one being repeated all across
the world.
2.
We will refer to brother Jurek simply as Jurek in this work, for brevity sake.
We mean no disrespect to him. This is standard journalistic practice.
3.
This inconsistency is, as a matter of fact, one of the things that initially
presented itself to me. I was involved in studies with dispensationalists, and
incorporated Matthew 3:2 as one of my chief arguments. However, I discovered
that the identical Greek words, in the identical tenses, are used to speak of
the coming of the Lord that are used to speak of the coming of the kingdom! I
did not see how I could argue that the kingdom was objectively near, and then
argue that the Parousia was not truly near! This logical inconsistency drove me
to the consistent view of Preterism.
4.
John Martin in The Bible Knowledge Commentary, Walvoord and Zuck editors,
,(Ontarios, Victor, 1985)1060
5.
Peter’s statement in 1 Peter 4:17 is often overlooked. Yet, he uses the word
kairos, (the appointed time), to indicate that a specific, foretold time of
“the judgment” had arrived. The force of the Greek is that the appointed time of
the judgment had never been present before, but had now arrived. The idea of
“inevitability” is not at stake, for if it were, Peter could not have said that
the appointed time had arrived. Inevitability does not draw near, and does not
arrive. But in Peter, the appointed time had arrived! This destroys Jurek’s
argument about inevitability as opposed to when.
6.
Growing up in the churches of Christ, I never at any time, heard a minister
affirm: “The coming of the Lord has drawn near!” or anything closely resembling
that. There was, and continues to be, a fear of preaching what cannot be known.
Jesus’ statement that “no man knows the day or the hour” has so permeated the
mind-set of most church of Christ ministers that they affirm that if Jesus did
not know the time of his own coming, then even the inspired disciples could not
know if it was near! So, were Jurek to use the language of the Bible to speak
of the Day of the Lord, affirming that the Lord is coming in “a very, very
little while” he would be violating the church of Christ, indeed, the
amillennial tradition.