"And this gospel of
the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world for a witness to all the
nations, and then the end shall come" (Matthew 24:14).
Many times over the years
when discussing the meaning of Bible prophecy with individuals, someone will
say, "The details don't really matter since everything will pan out in the
end." This view is sometimes called "Panmillennialism." There
are many problems with this perspective; perhaps the most significant problem
is this: What if the details have already happened? What if most or all of
Bible prophecy was fulfilled in A.D. 70, as those who hold to a Preterist (past
fulfillment) view of Bible prophecy think? In fact, in their zeal to show that
Christ's prophetic sermon, the Olivet Discourse (Matt. 24-25; Mark 13; Luke
21), was fulfilled during the apostolic era, they claim that the whole world
had been evangelized within twenty-five to thirty years of Christ's ascension.
Since Preterists claim that
the Olivet Discourse, the book of Revelation, and many other New Testament
prophetic passages were fulfilled through events surrounding the Roman
destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple by August, A.D. 70, this must include passages
like Matthew 24:14 and Revelation 14:6-7. "Matthew 24:14 clearly shows
that the gospel would be preached throughout the Roman Empire before Jesus
returned in judgment upon
The word translated
"world" in 24:14 is the Greek word oikoumene...It is best translated
as "inhabited earth," "known world," or the "
DeMar supposes to provide
biblical proof for his claim by citing such passages as Colossians 1:6 and 23 and
Romans 16:a25-27.3 Do these passages support the Preterist understanding of
Matthew 24:14? I insist they do not. Preterists have distorted the meaning of
these passages in order to defend their twisted view of Matthew 24.
While it is true that
"world," or oikoumene, is used in the New Testament to refer
to "the
Since the core meaning of oikoumene
is "inhabited world," then the scope of its meaning has multiple
possibilities depending upon the referent. If the contextual referent is Roman,
then it will mean the
DeMar uses these passages
to teach that the New Testament itself teaches a first-century fulfillment of
Matthew 24:14. "Paul, without inching and need of further
explanation," claims DeMar, "declares that the gospel had been
preached in his day to 'every creature under heaven' (Col.1:23). This is
probably hyperbole, but it certainly fulfills what Jesus said would happen
within a generation."6 Jesus was not saying that this would happen within
a generation. What are they saying?
The passage reads as
follows: "...the gospel, which has come to you, just as in all the
world..." The verb "to come" pareimi is the word from
which the noun Parousia is derived. It has the core meaning of "to
be present" with an emphasis upon the fact that the person, usually a
dignitary, is present or has arrived.7 "Paul uses the vb. paremi with the
meaning of to be present."8 Paul is saying that the Gospel has come, or
been introduced to the Colossian believers, just as it has come, or been
introduced in all the world. So this is not a statement about whether the
Gospel has been preached to a certain area per se; it is a statement about the
arrival of the Gospel as a global message. "The Colossians are to remember
that its range is world-wide," claims Lenski, "the very opposite of
the little Judaistic sectlet that has somehow appeared in their midst."9
Paul is saying something
similar in Colossians 1:23, which speaks of "...the gospel that you
have heard, which was proclaimed in all creation under heaven." Does
this passage teach that Matthew 24:14 was fulfilled? No it does not. "The
phrase 'in all creation,'" claims Ernest R. Campbell, "is probably
best understood as being in the locative case, i.e., it was preached in the
sphere of or in the midst of all creation."10 In context Paul is
explaining why the Gentiles now have the Gospel coming to them. It is because
its purpose has now been introduced and presented as a global message. J.B.
Lightfoot says, "The motive of the Apostle here is at once to emphasize
the universality of the genuine Gospel, which has been offered without reserve
to all alike..."11 James R. Gray has summed up the point well when he
explains:
"Paul's claim is to
the universal appeal and scope of the gospel. That is bearing fruit in the
world-not that the gospel has been preached in all the world...Paul is talking
about the sphere of preaching, not that every creature was preached unto."12
"We also learn from
Paul that the gospel 'had been made known to all the nations' in his day (Rom.
16:26)," claims DeMar. "This, too, is a fulfillment of what Jesus
said would happen in Matthew 24:14."13
He also says, "Paul
declared that the gospel had 'been made known to all nations,' a direct
fulfillment of Matthew 24:14 (Rom. 16:26, emphasis added). Notice the verb tense
"has been made known." All requirements of a pre-A.D. 70 fulfillment
are met when we let the Bible interpret the Bible."14
Sorry
I believe that Colossians
1:6,23 and Romans 16:26 are speaking about new revelation, called by Paul a
mystery, that salvation is now going to include all the Gentile nations. Thus,
the Gospel should be taken to all nations throughout the world. That is why in
both contexts, Paul speaks of the mystery about the Gentiles (see Col.1:24-2:4;
Rom. 16:25-27). The fullest explanation of the mystery is found in Ephesians 2
and 3.
Paul explains the concept
of a global message in his sermon on Mars Hill. "Therefore having
overlooked the times of ignorance, God is now declaring to men that all
everywhere should repent" (Acts 17:30). This passage has many of the
same elements found in Paul's epistles, in which he explains to the Church what
he meant by that statement. Paul's phrase "the times of ignorance" is
a parallel concept to God's having not revealed the mystery in past times (see
Rom. 16:25; Eph. 3:6; Col. 1:26). Paul's declaration that "God is now
declaring to men that all everywhere should repent" is similar to his
statements that the Gospel message is now going global, for all men everywhere
(see Rom. 16:26; Eph. 3:6; and Col. 1:27). Paul is now announcing a new global
accountability for all men because of the introduction of the Gospel. This
parallels the concepts taught by the same Paul in Romans, Ephesians, and
Colossians.
If DeMar's view of Matthew
24:14 is true, then one could legitimately assign a similar first-century
fulfillment to the phrase "all the nations" in Matthew 28:19. If
DeMar's logic is followed, it would have required the total fulfillment of the
Great Commission by A.D. 70. Why? Our Lord says in the Great Commission that He
will be with us "...always, even to the end of the age" (Matt.
28:20). This is very similar to the phrase "...end of the age"
in Matthew 24:3. DeMar teaches that the end of the age occurred, you guessed
it, in A.D 70.18 Since he applies almost all other uses of the end of the age
to the first century, then why not Matthew 28:20? In fact, fellow Preterist Don
Preston has written a whole book using just such Preterist logic, that the
Great Commission was in fact fulfilled by A.D. 70.19 Apparently; DeMar does not
like the implications of his Preterist position when consistently applied to
the whole New Testament.
The Preterist arguments for
a first-century fulfillment of Matthew 24:14 are much less than compelling.
Their insistence that oikoumene in Matthew 24:14 must refer to the
ancient
Endnotes
1
2
3
4 William F. Arndt and F.W.
Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1957), p. 563.
5 Horst Balz & Gerhard
Schneider, editors, Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, 3 vols. (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1991), vol. 2, p. 503.
6
7 Gerhard Kittel &
Gerhard Friedrich, editors, Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, 10
vols. (Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1967), vol. V, p. 859.
8 Colin Brown, editor,
Dictionary of New Testament Theology, 4 vols. (Grand Rapids, Zondervan, 1986)
vol. 2, p. 899
9 R.C.H/ Lenski, The
Interpretation of
10 Ernest R. Campbell, A
Commentary of Colossians & to Philemon, (Silverton, OR: Canyonview Press,
1982), p.66.
11 J.B. Lightfoot,
12 James R. Gray, Prophecy
On The Mount (Chandler, AZ: Berean Advocate Ministries, 1991), p.62.
13 DeMar,
"Anti-Prophets."
14 DeMar, End Times Fiction,
p.83
15 Leon Morris, The Epistle
to the Romans (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988), p.547, f.n 85.
16 H.P. Liddon, Explanatory
Analysis of St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans (Minneapolis: James and Klock,
[1899] 1977), p.307.
17 Randolph O. Yeager, The
Renaissance New Testament, 18 vols. (Gretna, LA: Pelican, 1983), vol.12, p.
282.
18 DeMar, End Times Fiction,
pp.74-75. 19 Don K.
as of 12-2006