Review of Understanding Prophecy: A Biblical-Theological Approach, by Alan S. Bandy and Benjamin L. Merkle, Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2015, 264 pages, paperback
N.B. This review is from the perspective of someone who is less than an enthusiastic supporter of symbolical cum typological interpretations of the Bible, so it will be mainly critical. However, for those in-tune with the approach of the writers, the book can be recommended as a good explication of the redemptive-historical method.
This new book on prophecy comes from two writers who differ on whether or not the millennium is here already or whether it is still to come. Alan Bandy is a historic or covenant premillennialist, while Benjamin Merkle is a covenant amillennialist. The choice to present biblical prophecy from this angle was clever. However, this should not be interpreted as anything more than a mere novelty. As the authors themselves write on the first page of the Preface,
First, we discovered that although our millennial views are different, we actually agree with each other most of the time regarding our interpretation of prophetic texts and our way of seeing the big picture of the Bible. (9)
The admission that the authors “agree with each other most of the time” will not come as a surprise to those familiar with the two eschatological positions, particularly as they are repristinated by the “already-not yet” hermeneutics of G. E. Ladd.
The approach represented here then, is “redemptive-historical” (20 n. 5). This means they promote what has become the usual way of reading the Bible in evangelical seminaries: with theological assumptions applied by use of symbols and types. On the next page the writings of T. D. Alexander, Greg Beale, and others are endorsed as further examples of the method being advocated. These authors admit certain crucial presuppositions in their interpretation which determine their idea of the subject.
From this platform we run into the assertion that the fulfillment of most prophecy is to be looked for at Christ’s first coming (e.g. 10). So,
Christ is the eschatos of prophecy who gives meaning to all that has happened or will yet transpire throughout human history. Our approach to prophecy must always be viewed through the gospel and what Christ has already accomplished. (27-28)
A gospel-centered hermeneutic filters all prophecy through the lens of the resurrected Christ. (29)
While these sentiments contain a forceful and persuasive piety, I think they make biblical interpretation more involved than it needs to be. They also appear to beg the question. In the first instance both quotations assume that the great stress of the prophetic teaching of the Bible is on the first advent. But this seems to be palpably untrue. There are scores of covenanted promises in both Testaments which point to the second advent and events before and (especially) after it. That is, unless one’s hermeneutics are fashioned in such a way that the prophecies come to be seen as pertaining to the first coming. As for viewing all prophecy through the gospel and Christ’s accomplishment, the cross and resurrection can be given all the recognition they certainly require without bending the prophetic corpus into the historic past. For all the world a plain reading of Scripture places an even greater stress upon the coming of the Lord in glory to establish real righteousness and shalom on His earth. Far better then to let the Bible say what it says without making some of its earlier parts pass through a theological “filter” of the interpreter’s making.
To explain their program the writers call upon “progressive revelation” (31-33), although like most evangelicals today they employ language which sounds like double-speak. Later revelation can “add to or modify” earlier revelation, but it does not “necessarily supplant or abrogate” previous scripture. This reader begs to differ. One can nullify earlier statements by declaring they mean something other than their words appear to mean. Citing Beale, the OT texts “undergo an organic expansion or development of meaning.” But when one steps back and looks at the result the meaning of the OT passages have not only “expanded”, they have morphed into something else! As is contended later, “we believe that the text will be literally fulfilled but not necessarily according to the precise wording of the prophecy” (110 n.5). According to the online Oxford Dictionary, “literally” means,
In a literal manner or sense; exactly:
the driver took it literally when asked to go straight across the traffic circle
Notice that the driver in the example above did “fulfill” the direction he was given “according to the precise wording”. So with all the arguments in the book against plain-sense interpretation one will not be surprised to read that,
If John the Baptist was unsure about the fulfillment of prophecies, what assurance do we have regarding predictions related to Christ’s second coming? That unfulfilled prophecy will be fulfilled is certain, but precisely how they will be fulfilled is uncertain. (209).
The thesis of the book could not be stated better. Prophecy as information we can understand is practically mute until God declares it fulfilled. It is revelation that doesn’t reveal. I have taken issue with this depiction of God in another place.
The position is then shored up by poking fun at populist dispensational writers like Tim LaHaye and the wacky fringe who do newspaper exegesis while purporting to read the Book of Revelation literally (58). To show how dispensationalists are mistaken about their understanding of OT prophecy the authors employ Amos 9:11-15 as an example (109ff. This text or Joel 2 is the passage of choice for such discussions). It needs to be noted that when James uses the passage in Acts 15 he does not say the prophecy is fulfilled. The authors’ case would have been more impressive had they tackled Jeremiah 33:14-26, but who does?
Strangely, when it comes to giving guidance on the Return of Christ the texts are simply quoted with the apparent assumption that they are to be taken, well, literally (179-181).
As said above, if you are taken with this school of interpretation the book has much to commend it. If, like me, you are not, it could serve as a helpful introduction to what I might call “first coming hermeneutics.”
The book was supplied to me by the publisher.
6 comments On A Review of ‘Understanding Prophecy’ by Bandy & Merkle
Reblogged this on Talmidimblogging.
I totally agree with you. I recently came this book; and it seems that more and more books come with this approach to prophecy. I hope someday you can publish a book.
Thank you Armando
Paul, I just wonder even if you are not a fullblown dispensationalist, but let’s say I believe as the bottom line the Bible – as my conscience holds it teaches – teaches that Israel as a nation will be restored in The Second Coming of Jesus, and Jesus will be the messiah of the nation of Israel (different from His other role as head of the church), and Israel will believe as Israel (not as part of The Church but still based on their belief in Jesus), will I find anything edifying here, or will it be a bridge too far for the authors of this book?
Joel,
I actually agree with well nigh all dispensational ideas, but I do not believe or teach that dispensations are primary (or even that important overall). I build my theology on the biblical covenants.
As to your question, well, I doubt that you would be “edified” by the book. Frustrated more like. However, it is a good place to go if you want to know what’s being taught many would-be pastors and missionaries.
God bless you and yours,
P
Hi Paul, sorry my words kind of messages up. I was meaning to ask whether this book will be edifying to hypothetically anyone who believes in a future national restoration of Israel even if they are not fullblown dispensationalists, but ended up in playing you aren’t a “dispy”. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Looks like it’s a good book to understand my own local church’s supercessionist understanding of prophecy. Thanks again.