Prophet Land

One of the fundamental problems of prophetic futurism is its inability to understand and appreciate the varied types of literature we find in Scripture. Actually, I think it is deeper than that. In my experience, most futurists have an anemic imagination in general. Their eyes glaze over when they read the prophets, automatically jumping to the conclusion that the prophet is saying something that he is really not saying at all. The problem is that those with such weak imaginations cannot possibly see the text in any other way. How do you reason with someone who can't see any possibility other than the one in their own atrophied mind?

I have come to the tentative conclusion that the problem may be cultural more than theological. We, as scientific moderns, don't have a lot of use for aesthetics other than more "practical" things such as advertising theory or marketing method. Aesthetics serve a cruel master we call "the bottom line." Our "aesthetic vision" is withered to the point that we can't see past the end of our nose, so to speak. Sure, there are few "artsy" types who spend big bucks for obscure paintings or historical works of art. Then you find out that a lot of these people are buying the stuff as an investment: it's dollars and cents to them. But the general population finds all this irrelevant to their normal life. Besides, they are out trying put bread on the table [note metaphor-can you count them all in this paragraph?] rather than cultivate an aesthetic sense to the glory of God.

We are also at a disadvantage as moderns who, generally speaking, are not forced to spend a lot of time with nature. We drive an automobile virtually everywhere we go rather than walking from one place to another which allows time to observe the natural rhythms in our surroundings. We live in the comfort of our climate-controlled houses and work places. We see weather reports that tell us what the weather will be like in the next day... or seven. We don't grow our own food or raise and butcher our own animals. Many people have never even been around agricultural animals in any close way so that they experience their nature and personalities.

Now what happens when the Bible, written to people who had intimate, experiential knowledge of the physical world and nature, is handed to urban modern Americans? Well, some pretty bad things. All of a sudden you get the Bible talking about atomic bombs, international politics (at least since the rise of the UN), geological formation, and the linguistic record of the world. Is it too hard to see that modern Christians have forced the Bible into their own image as scientific moderns?

The timing is ironic as I was thinking about these things. This week I ran across a superb article that is a great exercise in training the biblical imagination: an essential element to accurate biblical understanding. This article by Morrison Lee (from South Korea) is called "Prophet Land."

I think this article is worth your time. If you are interested, you can read it for yourself here:

http://www.beyondcreationscience.com/index.php?pr=Prophet_Land

Tim Martin
co-author Beyond Creation Science
www.beyondcreationscience.com

4 comments:

Jesse Ahmann said...

The early church had some crazy ideas also. All though out history, many Christians have speculated on prophecy in accordance to their own cultural lens. In truly amazing how our own culture is about as crazy about prophesy even more so than anytime in history! Great post Tim.

RYAN said...

Hey Tim, I found a great poster for you from our Trailblazerministries blog:

http://www.spurgeon.org/images/pyromaniac/TeamPyro/e-s_035.jpg

very very funny

Thank you for your thoughts here and sharing that article. I've been thinking about intellectual honesty lately and how we are commanded to love God with all our minds. He gave us a mind and he told us to use it, fer cryin out loud. If (for lack of imagination or narrow-mindedness) we can't see what God is trying to tell us through literature, is it not a terrible sin if our own understanding (pride in our knowledge) hinders us from true understanding of prophecy and therefore making it impossible to love God with all our mind?

Tim Martin said...

Jesse,

I agree. One of the more humorous examples is where the things in revelation given to torment men are... U.S. Cavalry riders firing their pistols in a charge. Great 19th century prophetic exegesis!

Ryan,

Dude, not sure what to make of that poster. Wow.

There is another dimension to this. Loving God with all your mind takes work. What happens when you live in a (generally speaking) lazy culture???

Problems.

Blessings,

Tim Martin

RYAN said...

Tim, just thought I'd share that poster since I thought it was kind of funny. I like the bulldog with the little green hat, he's cute. But as for the message... uh yeah. I wasn't implying that I agree with the poster at all. I think this kind of propaganda is sad, but a little funny.

You're right, Tim. There is another dimension to this and there are more words to the verse. The most important commandment: Mark 12:30, to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and all your mind and with all your strength.”

This is a very holistic way to command us to love him. He didn't say just love me with all your heart or all your mind, he wants all our strength as well. The definition of holistic is "the whole is greater than the sum of it's parts," so my contention is that if people are being lazy, they need to buckle down and start doing their homework because Jesus would kind of like them to. People need to accept the challenge to wrap their brains around a non-literal hermeneutic because if they don't try to understand it, they are not submitting their minds to God. Or if they are too lazy to do the research, they are not submitting their strength to God.

Jesus wants us to love him in a holistic manner (heart, soul, mind, strength, our entire being) and he won't settle for anything less.