Premillennialism and the Reformation :: By Jonathan Brentner

This past October 31st marked the five hundred year anniversary of the beginning of the Reformation. On October 31, 1517, Martin Luther posted his 95 Theses on the door of the Wittenberg Castle Church in Germany. These 95 Theses became the foundation of the Protestant Reformation, which for many restored the biblical ideal of justification by faith and, thereby, the purity of the Gospel message.

As Luther studied Scripture, he saw that God justifies sinners solely by faith apart from any good works on their part. This challenged centuries of tradition within the church that added human merit to God’s grace as a requirement for salvation.

Both Luther and Calvin rejected the allegorical or symbolical method of interpreting Scripture that, along with human tradition, had introduced error into the churches’ teaching on justification by faith—a doctrine critical to our faith.

Luther replaced the allegorical way of looking at God’s Word with two principles of biblical interpretation, which made Scripture the final authority on all matters of faith and practice, and made the Bible a commentary on itself. The latter became known as “Scripture interprets Scripture.”

These two principles became the basis for a literal approach to Scripture through which Luther, as well as Calvin, corrected the errors of the church that had added works to the obtaining of salvation.

They did not, however, apply this literal method of interpretation to the passages dealing with the future.  When biblical scholars did so after them, they overturned the long-held Amillennialism of the church; a belief based on an allegorical approach to prophetic passages in the Bible.

The Reformers and Amillennialism

Amillennialism is the belief that God has rejected Israel as His people, and as such, the church now fulfills “spiritually” the kingdom promises made by the prophets in the Old Testament. As the term suggests, Jesus does not return to restore the kingdom to Israel or reign over the nations for a thousand years. Instead, he comes back at the end of the age to judge humanity and bring in the eternal state.

Although both Luther and Calvin condemned the allegorical method, with Calvin going so far as to call it “satanic,” neither challenged the allegorical interpretations that supported the Amillennialism of their day.

Why did this disconnect exist between how the reformers interpreted passages of Scripture relating to salvation versus prophetic passages? Why did they continue to follow an allegorical interpretation when it came to prophecy despite their clear denunciation of such a method?

I believe God intended for the reformers to bring the church back to a true scriptural understanding of the Gospel without the added burden of also reforming errant beliefs regarding the end times. Their defense of justification by faith alone was enough of a battle, and one that desperately needed to happen first. God knew He had enough time to correct other beliefs also errantly based on an allegorical method of interpretation.

Did the Reformers fail in regard to eschatology? No, I believe that their two key methods of interpretation eventually became the foundation for Premillennialism as biblical scholars after them applied their literal approach to prophecy.

Isaac Newton

Isaac Newton, born a century after Luther died, undertook an extensive study of the books of Daniel and Revelation during the later years of his life. Newton’s commentary on these books, Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St. John, was published six years after his death. In his book, Newton expressed his belief that Israel would someday be a nation again, predicting it would happen before the tribulation and the return of Jesus to establish His kingdom on Earth after this great time of suffering.

Isaac Newton further stated that the study of prophecy would intensify during the latter days of human history as the time of Jesus’ return drew closer. He believed the Lord would reign for a thousand years in Jerusalem, thus literally fulfilling kingdom prophecies found in Daniel and Revelation.

Newton applied the Reformers’ literal method of biblical interpretation to the books of Daniel rather than the allegorical approach that had been in place for over a thousand years. Did he consciously follow their biblical interpretative methods? We do not know that for sure.

We do know Newton let Scripture speak for itself. As a result, his beliefs closely mirror those held by Premillennialists for the past 150 years. While Newton receives much attention for his predictions of dates related to Jesus’ return, once you look past that you see someone who rejected the popular way of allegorically interpreting the books of Daniel and Revelation.

Later Church History

This pattern of applying the literal method of biblical interpretation to prophetic passages became more widespread in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. As conservative scholars used Scripture as their sole source of beliefs and allowed Scripture to interpret Scripture, the church returned in large measure to the premillennial viewpoint that dominated the first three centuries of the church.

Although Luther and Calvin did not apply their literal interpretative methods to prophetic portions of the Bible, when others did so it resulted in the beliefs that God would once again restore Israel as a nation; the temple would be rebuilt; there would be a terrible time of tribulation upon the earth; and Jesus would return after that time to set up His kingdom.

These same principles also helped establish the belief that Jesus will come for His church before this time of tribulation upon the earth. Contrary to popular belief, John Darby came up with his pretribulation rapture idea from his study of the nature of the church; he saw that it did not fit for Jesus to allow His church to endure the wrath of the tribulation.

The view that Jesus would return for His church before the tribulation also exploded in popularity during the early twentieth century as many Bible teachers continued to take a literal approach to the words of Scripture. This view dominated evangelical churches from the early 1900’s until the past couple of decades. Sadly, this view has faded lately as pastors in large numbers have abandoned teaching on this subject.

While many might disagree with me, I see a link between the biblical interpretation methods of Luther and the rise of premillennialism. Isaac Newton rejected the same allegorical approach, as did the Reformers, and came to the same conclusions as the premillennialists who followed him a couple of centuries later.

Premillennialism, as well as a Pretribulational rapture, grew because biblical scholars rejected the allegorical approach in favor of one that interpreted God’s Word literally. They simply followed the two key methods of interpreting Scripture made popular by Luther.

Jonathan C. Brentner

Jonathanbrentner@yahoo.com

Eternity Versus the Moment