WHEN DOES CHRIST RETURN?
Part 1
Part 2
WHAT/WHEN IS THE MILLENNIUM?
Many Christians believe that Christ will
return in the future to establish a one-thousand-year reign called the
millennium. The word thousand is translated from the Greek kilioi,
which means “one thousand.” The word millennium is not an English translation
from the Greek. Millennium is a word from the Latin, which means one thousand
years. The concept of a one-thousand year reign of Christ is obtained from
several passages in Revelation 20.
Revelation 20:1-3: And I saw an angel
coming down out of heaven, having the key to the Abyss and holding in his hand
a great chain. He seized the dragon, that ancient serpent, who
is the devil, or Satan, and bound him for a thousand years. He threw him into
the Abyss, and locked and sealed it over him, to keep him from deceiving the
nations anymore until the thousand years were ended. After that, he must be set
free for a short time.
Revelation 20:4-6: I saw thrones on
which were seated those who had been given authority to judge. And I saw the
souls of those who had been beheaded because of their testimony for Jesus and
because of the word of God. They had not worshiped the beast or his image and
had not received his mark on their foreheads or their hands. They came to life
and reigned with Christ a thousand years. (The rest of the dead did not come to
life until the thousand years were ended.) This is the first resurrection.
Blessed and holy are those who have part in the first resurrection. The second
death has no power over them, but they will be priests of God and of Christ and
will reign with him for a thousand years
Is this thousand-year time frame a
literal one-thousand years or does it represent a different period of time? Is
this one-thousand-year time frame something yet in our
future or has it already happened? If you have read this far, you have seen a
great deal of evidence presented to establish a first-century return of Christ
and the associated events of resurrection, judgment and the establishment of
the Kingdom. The one-thousand-year reign of Christ is also associated with His
return. How can this association be defined within the context of a
first-century return?
The Revelation given to John is
contextually positioned in the first century. This is established in verse one
of the first chapter of Revelation where John is told that the events contained
in the message he is about to receive are to soon take place. In verse three of
this chapter, John writes that the time is near for the events in the
Revelation to take place. In verse nineteen of chapter one, John is told to
write about what is about to take place. The Revelation is written to seven
first-century churches.
After John records the events revealed
to him, his final words in chapter 22 reflect more admonition from Christ that
these events will soon take place, that He is coming soon and the time is near.
Three times, in chapter 22, Christ is quoted as saying He is coming soon.
Unless one is willing to blatantly
ignore these time statements that identify the time frame for the events of the
Revelation to occur, the evidence is inescapable that these events were to
occur during and soon after John received this revelation. In Revelation 1:19,
John was told to write, “Write, therefore, what you have seen, what is now and
what will (Gr. mello, is about to) take place later.”
John was told to write about what he had seen, what was now happening and what
would shortly come to pass.
As seen from the scriptures cited above,
the thousand-year reign is tied to resurrection. As explained in some detail in
the chapter on resurrection, resurrection was a work in progress for the
first-century Christians prior to Christ’s return. Before the return of Christ,
Christians were sealed by the Holy Spirit, which acted as a deposit
guaranteeing salvation.
Ephesians 1:13-14: And you also were
included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your
salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised
Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption
of those who are God's possession.
Resurrection involved a rising up from
the natural body of death into a spiritual body of life. The natural body of
death was defined by the Old Covenant system. This covenant defined sin and
death. As covered earlier, this covenant was being gradually eliminated during
the forty years after the death, resurrection and ascension of Christ. The Old
Covenant became fully removed at Christ’s return in the Judgment of A.D. 66 to
73. At His return, Christ brought redemption to those who had acknowledged His
sacrifice and accepted His rule over their lives.
Hebrews 9:28: So Christ was sacrificed
once to take away the sins of many people; and he will appear a second time,
not to bear sin, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for him.
1 Peter 1:3-5: Praise be
to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given
us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from
the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade-kept in
heaven for you, who through faith are shielded by God's power until the coming
of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. [Peter goes on
to say in verse 13] Therefore, prepare your minds for action; be
self-controlled; set your hope fully on the grace to be given you when Jesus
Christ is revealed.
Prior to the return of Christ,
first-century Christians were in the process of passing from death unto life.
This was resurrection in process. This process continued right up until the
return of Christ. I submit that this process was the first resurrection
discussed in Revelation 20. This resurrection went on during the forty years
following the death of Christ and His return. This resurrection period was a
time of much persecution and hardship for Christians. A number were killed. Yet
through the power of God’s Spirit, they overcame. Christ had repeatedly said
that those who overcame and endured to the end would be saved.
Christ had defeated Satan by His death
and resurrection. In John, chapter 12, Christ speaks of the time of His death
having come and that this would be when Satan is cast out. The
Hebrews 10:12-13: But when this priest
had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand
of God. Since that time he waits for his enemies to be made his footstool.
1 Corinthians 15:24-26: Then the end
will come, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father after he has
destroyed all dominion, authority and power. For he must
reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to
be destroyed is death.
Christ is not still waiting to have His
enemies made his footstool. He is not still waiting for the last enemy, death,
to be destroyed. This occurred during this forty-year transition period when
the New Covenant system of life was advancing and the Old Covenant system of
death was being destroyed. At the time of the consummation, Satan was allowed a
short space of time to exercise his power in the events associated with the
destruction of
The thousand-year period is not a
literal thousand-year period of time. John was told to write about things that
were already happening and things that would shortly come to pass. The
thousand-year period was already happening. It was symbolic of the forty-year
transition period when the old system was being replaced by the new system. It
was a time of resurrection from spiritual death unto spiritual life. Christ was
reigning and the Christian saints were reigning with Him as a royal priesthood.
Ephesians 2:4-6: But because of his
great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even
when we were dead in transgressions-it is by grace you have been saved. And God
raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in
Christ Jesus.
1 Peter 2:9: But you are a chosen
people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you
may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his
wonderful light.
Revelation 1:4-6: John, To the seven churches in the province of
A period of forty years is connected
with several significant events in Scripture. The Israelites were tested for
forty years in the wilderness before entering the promised
land. Some view this as a foreshadowing of the trials experienced by the
first-century Church before the full establishment of the Kingdom. David
reigned over physical
A number of Jewish rabbis, writing in
the first and second centuries, believed that the days of the Messiah would be
a transitional period of forty years between this present world and the world
to come. The Rabbis, of course, didn’t consider Christ as their Messiah and
were looking for the Messiah to appear in the future as they still do to this
very day. What is of significance for this discussion is that some Rabbis did
hold to a forty-year transitional period. This lends additional credence to
this concept.
As indicated above, the most significant
consideration in arriving at the proper time frame for the fulfillment of what
John wrote, are the time statements that “bookend” his narrative. John’s
narrative begins and ends with straightforward, clear statements as to when the
events he wrote about would come to pass. Unless one can demonstrate beyond
reasonable doubt that such time statements mean something different from what
they obviously imply, this author sees no alternative but to seek meaning for
the Revelation in the events associated with the covenantal transition that
took place in the first century.
When all the teachings of Christ and the
apostles are considered as a whole, there is one central purpose that comes
through. That purpose involves the change from the Old Covenant system of death
to the New Covenant system of life. Christ died and was resurrected for that
purpose. The first-century Church toiled and suffered for that purpose. God
used the calamity of the Roman-Jewish War to consummate that purpose. The
writings of John provide an overview of this purpose and what its outcome was
going to be. The millennium, as representative of the forty-year transition
period, is just one of many dynamics that John wrote about. The clear time
frame statements tell us when it all occurred.
We presently find three basic views
expressed in the Christian community regarding the millennium. All three views
express belief in a future return of Christ. These views differ as to when the
millennium occurs relative to the return of Christ. Some believe that Christ
will initially return to “rapture” Christians off the earth. Following such
“rapture” will be a time of great tribulation involving catastrophic world
events. Christ will then return to establish His Kingdom and begin a literal thousand-years millennial reign. Those who believe in this
approach are called Premillennialists. Other
Christians believe that the millennium is to follow the evangelizing of the
world, leading to a period of peace on earth for a thousand years or more.
Christ will then return after this period of time. This position is known as
the Postmillennial view. A third view is called Amillennialism. This view postulates that the present
church age is the millennium and Christ will return at some future point to
facilitate resurrection and a final judgment.
It should be noted that premillennialists believe that Christ returns “in the
clouds” prior to the millennium. They also believe the resurrection of the
wicked will take place after the thousand years are complete. With this in
mind, consider the following scripture: “The high priest said to him, ‘I charge
you under oath by the living God: Tell us if you are the Christ, the Son of
God.’ ‘Yes, it is as you say,’ Jesus replied. ‘But I say to all of you: In the
future (Greek arti) you will see the Son of Man
sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of
heaven’” (Matthew 26:63-64).
How future was this event to be? The
Greek word translated “future” in the NIV is arti.
Thayer’s Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament says that arti “properly marks time closely connected with the
present.” The Arndt, Gingrich, Bauer Greek-English Lexicon defines arti as relating to the immediate. This word appears
thirty-six times in the New Testament and contextually is always found to
relate to an event that has just happened, is happening or is about to happen.
The KJV, NKJV and RVSV translations of the New Testament translate arti as “hereafter” in Matthew 26:63-64. Christ was
speaking of an event that would happen in the lifetime of those He was
addressing at the time. This statement by Christ is a very powerful witness to
His first-century return.
Some may argue that when Christ says
“you will see,” He is using the word “you” in an editorial sense meaning that
the “you” He is referring to are the “you” living at a time in the distant
future when He would return. The use of the Greek word arti,
however, completely dispels such a notion. Arti
cannot mean something in the distant future. Use of this word restricts the
“you” Christ was addressing to His accusers whom He was addressing at the time.
These accusers of Christ would be
classified as wicked. Yet they are told that they will see Christ “coming on
the clouds.” If, as the premillennialists believe,
the wicked are resurrected and judged after the millennium and the millennium
is a literal thousand-year period that begins at the return of Christ, how
could these wicked accusers see Christ coming at the beginning of the thousand
years? They wouldn’t be resurrected until a thousand years after Christ
returns. If, however, we are to understand the millennium as a forty-year
transition period that occurred in the first century, then it is very easy to
see how these accusers could see Christ “coming on the clouds.” They would
still be alive to witness His return in judgment.
The three millennialist
views discussed here revolve around the belief that Christ will return in the
future. If as documented throughout Scripture, Christ returned in connection
with the A.D. 66 to 73 judgment, then the millennium must be understood to
occur within that time frame of Christ’s return.
In keeping with the understanding of the
millennium as the time frame between the ascension of Christ and His return
forty years later, or the transition between the Old and New Covenant systems,
a new millennial view is taking shape. It is called Transmillenialism.
Webster defines “trans” as across, through or beyond. Christ facilitated the
transition from the Old Covenant to the New Covenant. Through His first-century
millennial reign, Christ was able to move through and beyond what had been
before. Transmillennialists view Christ as having
returned in the first century and establishing His everlasting Kingdom. This
view advocates a constructive worldview where the goal is to promote Kingdom living
and bring all people to reconciliation with God through Christ. For more
information, visit the
DOES THE DEVIL “MAKE ME DO IT’?
We saw in the previous chapter that the
millennium must be understood within the time frame of the first century, if we
are to honor the time statements that “bookend” the Revelation. The Revelation
of John also shows the destruction of Satan within this time frame. Has Satan
been destroyed?
We live in a world of many evils. Most
Christians and many non-Christians believe that Satan is at the root of what is
wrong with the world. Is this really the case? Is Satan the controlling power
in the world today? Is the continuing history of this world a history of the
activity of Satan and his influence over the affairs of men? Does the devil
really “make me do it”?
Scriptural history shows that Satan has
been a controlling influence for a good portion of human history. We see Satan
active in the Garden of Eden. We find in 1 Chronicles 21 that Satan provoked
David to number
In the New Testament we find a lot of
Satanic/demon activity. There is Satan’s temptation of Christ in the wilderness.
We find Christ, and those he sent, casting out many demons. We find Christ in
His parables showing how Satan was active in preventing people from clinging to
the word that Christ was teaching (Mark 4:15).
After the death, resurrection and
ascension of Christ, we still find Satan very active in the developing
Christian Church. Peter indicates that it is Satan that filled the heart of
Ananias to lie to the Holy Spirit (Acts 5:3). In 2 Corinthians 2:11 (KJV), Paul
speaks of the devices of Satan. In 2 Corinthians 12:7, Paul wrote about his
“thorn in the flesh” being from Satan. In 1 Thessalonians 2:18, Paul wrote of
Satan hindering him from coming to see the Thessalonian
Christians. In 1 Peter 5:8, the devil is pictured as a roaring lion seeking to
devour someone. In Mark 16:15-17, Christ instructed the eleven to preach the
gospel to all creation. He said that those who believed would cast out demons.
We see the deacon Philip casting out demons at the city of
It is apparent that Satan was very
active during the time Christ walked on this earth as God incarnate. It is also
very apparent that Satan was very active during the forty years between the
ascension of Christ and his return in judgment of
After the seventy-two returned from
their missionary journey, they were elated that the demons were subject to
them. Christ told them “I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven” (Luke
10:18). In John 12:31, in anticipation of His impending crucifixion, Christ
said, “Now is the time for judgment on this world; now the prince of this world
will be driven out.” “The prince of this world” is considered to be referring
to Satan. In John 16:11, Christ said, “the prince of this world now stands
condemned.” Was Satan going to be suffering only a temporary setback or are we
here looking at something more permanent for Satan?
In Romans 16:20, Paul said, “The God of
peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.” The English word soon is
translated from the Greek word TAKOS. As covered in chapter one, in its various
tenses, this word always means with speed, quickness, swiftness and haste. Are
we some 2,000 years later still waiting for Satan to be crushed? This statement
about Satan was made several years after the crucifixion of Christ. So we see
Christ before the crucifixion saying Satan would be driven out and condemned
and we see Paul after the crucifixion saying Satan would soon be crushed. In
Genesis 3:15, we find it prophesied by God that Satan would be crushed. “And I
will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers;
he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.” This prophecy is
considered a prediction that Satan would strike at Christ’s heel through the
crucifixion and Christ would subsequently crush his head. The crushing of
Satan’s head did not take place at the resurrection of Christ. We find Satan
very active after the resurrection. Yet Paul said that the crushing of Satan
would soon take place. Therefore it had not yet taken place when Paul made this
statement but Paul said it would take place soon. How soon would it take place?
The message of the Revelation was
focused on the judgment to come through the impending Roman Jewish War, A.D. 66
to 73. In the Revelation we see Satan pictured as being cast down to the earth
at the same time that we see salvation and the Kingdom being established. John
is told that Satan has only a short time.
Revelation 12:9-12: The great dragon was
hurled down-that ancient serpent called the devil, or Satan, who leads the
whole world astray. He was hurled to the earth, and his angels with him. Then I
heard a loud voice in heaven say: “Now have come the salvation and the power
and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of his Christ. For the accuser of
our brothers, who accuses them before our God day and night, has been hurled
down. They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their
testimony; they did not love their lives so much as to shrink from death.
Therefore rejoice, you heavens and you who dwell in
them! But woe to the earth and the sea, because the devil has gone down to you!
He is filled with fury, because he knows that his time is short.
How short was Satan’s time? John wrote
this message twenty centuries ago. Paul said Satan’s head would be soon
crushed. Did this happen soon after Paul made this
statement? Are we still, 2,000 years later, waiting for this to occur?
Throughout this book I have shown that the bringing of salvation and the
establishment of the Kingdom would take place at the return of Christ. I have
also shown that the return of Christ is seen throughout the New Testament as an
event imminent to first-century Christians. I submit that the “accuser of our
brothers” was cast down to the earth in the first century through the A.D. 66
to 73 judgment. This is when Christ returned to bring salvation and establish
the Kingdom. Satan was allowed one last fling before his demise. That is why he
is shown as being “filled with fury because he knows his time is short.” He
knows that he is about to be cast into the lake of fire. Satan is not still
down on the earth 2,000 years later going about in fury doing his thing.
In Revelation 20 we see Satan bound for
one-thousand years. This millennium, or one-thousand year period can be best
understood as representative of the forty years between the ascension of Christ
and His return in A.D. 70. This 40-year period was the time frame in which the
Old Covenant system of death was being replaced with the New Covenant system of
life. This transition period also led to the demise of Satan. The death and
resurrection of Christ began the demise of Satan, and the return of Christ
finished him off. We are not still waiting for Satan to be crushed. That event
occurred at the return of Christ. This is why Satan sees himself as having only
a short time as recorded in the Revelation.
During the 40-year transition period,
Satan was already bound to the extent that the apostles and first-century
Christians had power over Satan. Satan was unable to prevent the Christian
church from growing even though he made every attempt to do so. Just before the
return of Christ, Satan was loosed for a short period and played an active role
in the events leading to the fall of
The events that describe the destruction
of the temple, the fall of
Revelation 22:14-15: Blessed are those
who wash their robes, that they may have the right to the tree of life and may
go through the gates into the city. Outside are the dogs, those who practice
magic arts, the sexually immoral, the murderers, the idolaters and everyone who
loves and practices falsehood.
Since evil continues to exist, does this
mean that Satan is still active? If Satan is still active then he isn’t really
destroyed. His head hasn’t really been crushed. If that is the case, then
Christ has yet to complete the job of removing death. Let’s read what the
writer to the Hebrews wrote:
Hebrews 2:14-15: Since the children have
flesh and blood, he too shared in their humanity so that by his death he might
destroy him who holds the power of death-that is, the devil- and free those who
all their lives were held in slavery by their fear of death.
Satan is seen as holding the power of
death. The death of Christ is shown to destroy Satan. The word “destroy” is
from the Greek katargeo, which means: “to make
ineffective, powerless, abolish, wipe out” (Arndt, Gingrich, Bauer, Greek-English Lexicon). Christ died, was resurrected, returned to the Father and through His judgment of A.D. 66
to 73 facilitated the full establishment of the Kingdom and restoration of His
covenantal presence. The Kingdom equates with the New Covenant system of life
which equates with entrance into the New Jerusalem. Establishment of the New
Jerusalem represents the culmination of God’s plan to destroy the power of
death by destroying the one who held that power. Any conclusion contrary to
this would be in contradiction to all that scripture says about Christ
defeating and destroying Satan and Satan’s holding of the power of death.
The apostle John plainly said, “The
reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the devil’s work” (1 John 3:8).
If the devil’s work has been destroyed, then the devil is no longer working. He
is no longer prowling “around like a roaring lion looking for someone to
devour” (1 Peter 5:8). Satan was doing this big time prior to the return of
Christ. Once Christ returned and brought salvation with Him to complete the
facilitation of our reconciliation to God, Satan was destroyed by being cast
into the lake of fire. However you choose to view the lake of fire, there is no
scriptural evidence to suggest that Satan is somehow exercising power and influence
from the lake of fire. Neither is there any scriptural evidence to suggest that
Satan has been released from the lake of fire. Christ did not only come to
destroy Satan’s power of death but to drive him from the world (John 12:31).
The scriptures plainly show that Christ came to destroy Satan and his works and
Christ accomplished exactly that.
Most Christians believe that the events
described in Revelation are future in their fulfillment and, therefore, a
future return of Christ is necessary for the destruction of Satan. Some
Christians will grant a past fulfillment of events in Revelation but hang on to
the belief that Satan is still around because evil is still around. The scriptures, however, show that Christ
appeared the first time to destroy Satan (1 John 3:8, John 12:31, John 16:11,
Hebrews 2:14-15).
Many Christians look at the scriptures
that speak of Satan’s destruction and interpret them to mean that Satan is
still around but Christians now have power over him through Christ. This is
not, however, what the scriptures say. The scriptures show Satan to be “driven
out,” “destroyed,” “crushed,” “condemned” and thrown into the lake of fire. To
interpret this as Satan still having power, doing his works as usual and going
around, as a “roaring lion seeking to devour someone” (1 Peter 5:8), is
inconsistent with all that is said about his first-century demise. Christ came
to destroy Satan’s work. He did exactly that.
Others will say that Satan no longer has
power over Christians but is still active in the non-Christian world. If that
is the case, then Christ has not really destroyed Satan’s works. Satan was
destroyed as part of the process of making salvation available to all of
mankind. It is because Satan is destroyed that man can escape spiritual death
and be reconciled to God.
The scriptures teach that it was Satan
who held the power of death. How did he do this? The apostle Paul said, “The
sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us victory through our Lord Jesus
Christ” (1 Corinthians 15:56-57). Paul shows that sin derives its power from
the law because it is the law that defines what kind of behavior is sin. Sin is
defined as lawlessness (1 John 3:4). Paul wrote, “The wages of sin is death”
(Romans 6:23). This is how the “sting of death is sin.” How does Satan factor
into all of this?
Scripture shows that Satan has been
sinning from the beginning (1 John 3:8). Satan has been the tempter and
instigator of sin. He began the process in the Garden of Eden by deceiving Eve.
He was allowed to continue influencing human nature for thousands of years. He
is said to have the power of death because his influence upon human nature
produced sin and sin results in death. Christ came to destroy the influence of
Satan, and through His atoning work, provide man a way to escape death.
Since Satan is destroyed and therefore
his power broken, why do we still have so much evil in the world? Satan was
around for thousands of years influencing human nature. We still have much sin
in the world. If the influence of Satan is gone, why do we have so much sin in
the world? The apostle James made a profound statement about the cause of sin:
James 1:14-15: Each one is tempted when,
by his own evil desire, he is dragged away and enticed. Then, after desire has
conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth
to death.
James points out that our evil desire is
what leads to sin. James wrote, “What causes fights and quarrels among you?
Don't they come from your desires that battle within you?” (James 4:1). James
also made this statement: “Do you think scripture says without reason that the
spirit He caused to live in us tends toward envy?” (James 4:5). James shows
that God placed within us a spirit that tends toward envy. Jeremiah wrote
thousands of years ago, “The heart is deceitful above all things,
and desperately wicked” (Jeremiah 17:9, KJV). Man has a nature that tends
toward sin.
Satan was the instigator of sin from the
beginning. John wrote, “the devil has been sinning
from the beginning” (1 John 3:8). The penalty for sin is death. Through Satan’s
instigation of sin, he held the power of death. The death, resurrection and
return of Christ removed that power from Satan. The righteousness of Christ
applied to us negates the power that sin previously held over us. Not only was
the power of death removed from Satan, but also Satan himself was removed by
being cast into the lake of fire.
If the instigator of sin is destroyed,
why do we still have so much sin in the world? The answer is that we still have
human nature! Also, the past influence of Satan and the demons continues to
affect man to this present day as man, because of the nature that he has,
continues the sinful behavior that has been learned from generation to
generation. Sin is still transgression of law and always will be. Sin still
requires death. Through Christ, however, we can escape death because He paid
the death penalty in our stead.
Christ came to put an end to Satan’s
influence and therefore Satan’s power of death. As the apostle John said, “The
reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the devil's work” (1 John 3:8).
Christ did not fail in what He set out to do. Christ appeared and accomplished
the destruction of Satan as He said He would. Satan tried to defeat Christ by
attempting to have him killed at His birth. Christ escaped. Satan tried to
tempt Christ into worshiping him and Christ resisted. Satan instigated the
death of Christ and Christ rose from the dead. Satan instigated much
persecution against the developing first-century church and Christ returned in
judgment and cast Satan into the lake of fire. The devil and his work have been
destroyed.
I
know that it is difficult to believe that Satan and the demons are no longer
active in the world. We all like to pass the blame for the existence of evil
onto Satan. We need instead to look in the mirror and realize that it is our
nature that is responsible for evil. Christ has provided the means by which we
can have power over our nature. God offers us his spirit when we choose to
follow Christ. The Scripture says that God’s spirit is a spirit of “power, love
and a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7, KJV). Our focus as Christians must be on
utilizing the power of God as the means to controlling our nature.
Some people in the Christian community
and even outside the Christian community believe in present day demon
possession and even claim to cast out demons. It is beyond the scope of this
book to fully investigate the reality of such belief. We should be mindful, however, that human behavior is the result of many
dynamics. Social, cultural, physical, psychological, spiritual, environmental,
educational and genetic factors all play a roll in why we behave the way we do.
It is interesting to note that people with serious psychological/spiritual
problems, who by some standards many be thought to be demon possessed, can have
their problems alleviated through drug intervention. I would not think that
demons, who are spirits, would be affected by drugs, which are of the physical
realm.
While Christ has put an end to Satan’s
influence and power of death, He has not put an end to human nature. Human
nature is as strong as ever. It can manifest itself in some very bizarre ways.
Human nature still tends toward sin as it always has and probably always will.
What Christ has done for us is to remove the death penalty connected with that
sin so we can be reconciled to God and be granted life in spite of our human
nature and the sin it produces. We should thank God for that every day of our
lives!
Satan has been defeated. We should not
look at the activity of Satan and the demons during Christ’s time on this earth
and conclude that such activity is extant today. The demons during the time of
Christ knew that their time was short. Satan was responsible for the binding of
many people. Christ came to loose those bounds. On one occasion when Christ
cast out some demons, they responded by accusing Christ of tormenting them
before the appointed time. What appointed time were the demons referring to?
Matthew 8:28-29: When he arrived at the
other side in the region of the Gadarenes, two
demon-possessed men coming from the tombs met him. They were so violent that no
one could pass that way. ‘What do you want with us, Son of God?’ they shouted.
‘Have you come here to torture us before the appointed time?’
That appointed time for their demise
occurred when Christ destroyed the power of Satan through His death and
resurrection and His return in judgment. Christ told His disciples shortly
before His death, “My appointed time is near” (Matthew 26:18). The apostle Paul
wrote to the Corinthians “Therefore judge nothing before the appointed time;
wait till the Lord comes” (1 Corinthians 4:5). Paul ties the “appointed time”
to the coming of Christ, and the Great Judgment unleashed upon national
What is the status of Satan and the
demons today? They have no status. Satan and the demons have been defeated and
destroyed. They no longer have ability to influence the behavior of man. Sin
continues to exist because human nature continues to exist. However, the power
of the Holy Spirit also exists. Christ dwelling in us grants us power over our
sinful nature. Our focus needs to be on pleasing Christ by making righteous
choices. We can no longer say, “the devil made me do
it.”
Comment RKM: Please read, “Does Satan
Exit Today?”