Revising the
Dispensationalist Ages
Dec
07, 2018 by Dr. Stephen Jones
The
Dispensationalists in the 1800’s divided time into the following ages:
Innocence - Adam
Conscience - After man sinned, up to
Noah’s flood
Government - After the flood, Noah to Abraham
Promise - Abraham to Moses and the giving of the Law
Law - Moses to the cross
Grace - The cross to the Millennial Kingdom
Millennial Kingdom - A 1000 year reign of Christ on earth centered in the earthly Jerusalem, a rebuilt physical temple, and renewal of animal sacrifices
Government - After the flood, Noah to Abraham
Promise - Abraham to Moses and the giving of the Law
Law - Moses to the cross
Grace - The cross to the Millennial Kingdom
Millennial Kingdom - A 1000 year reign of Christ on earth centered in the earthly Jerusalem, a rebuilt physical temple, and renewal of animal sacrifices
Innocence
The
first, which is the time prior to Adam’s sin, is listed as “Innocence.” I have
no quarrel with that designation, except that in my view that was not really an
age but the original condition of man prior to sin. If we are to think in terms
of ages, then it could be argued that we ought to begin even prior to Adam. If
so, it would be the age of Creation, showing the acts of God, rather than the
short condition of man in the time of creation.
Conscience
Dispensationalism
lists “Conscience” as the age from Adam’s sin to Noah’s flood. They were
conveying the idea that men had no revelation of the law at that time, and
therefore, they had to rely upon the conscience alone. Scripture is unclear on
this point, but surely Adam in his original condition was in full conformity to
the laws of God. After all, the law has always been the expression of God’s
nature and character.
Surely
Adam knew God’s character inherently, whether or not he was created in a state
of Innocence. No doubt Adam and Eve lacked experience and were therefore naïve,
and for this reason the serpent, who was “subtle,” was able to take advantage
of her. Even so, we read in 1 Timothy
2:14 that “it was not Adam who was deceived but the woman.” This may
indicate that Eve was deceived and that Adam deliberately chose to join in her
sin so that they would not be separated.
This
suggests that Adam’s conscience knew the difference between right and wrong.
Can we then assign “Conscience” to the time after the first sin but not
beforehand?
In
my view, the law of God as a whole was known from the beginning but men forgot
it over time. Society degenerated into lawlessness until the flood destroyed
it. The flood was like a reset button, starting over with Noah’s family.
More
important, I believe, is to see that from Adam to the flood was 1,656 years,
according to the chronology provided to us in Genesis 5. The time began with
the curse upon the ground (Genesis 3:17) and ended with the reversal of the curse.
When Noah was born, it was said in Genesis 5:29,
29 Now he called his name Noah, saying, “This one will give us rest from
our work and from the toil of our hands arising from the ground which the Lord
has cursed.”
The
ground was on Cursed Time for a period of 4 x 414 years. That, of course, was a
grace period, giving humanity time to repent and to find grace, as Noah did (Genesis 6:8
KJV). Most of the people remained under the authority of the cursed ground,
and so they died when the curse of the law was executed by the flood itself.
We
ourselves are not to be under the dominion of “the flesh,” as Paul would call
it. By transferring our conscious self to the New Creation Man, we transfer our
citizenship to heaven (Philippians 3:20), thus avoiding the divine judgment upon
the flesh that is under the curse. Noah did this, but the people as a whole did
not; hence, they died in the flood.
This
curse upon the ground seems to characterize that age better than any other
factor. So it seems more appropriate to me to label this not as an age of
“Conscience” but as an age of Grace. Though the sentence of the law (i.e., the
“curse”) was issued after Adam sinned, God gave him and his descendants a grace
period before that judgment was executed.
Noah
found grace, but all of the other people were given grace as a feature of God’s
mercy. Noah’s grace was, in a sense, permanent, because it was internalized and
was part of his nature. The rest of the people had temporary grace, which may
be thought of as a probationary period.
This
probationary time period of 4 x 414 years gives us the foundational revelation
of Cursed Time itself. It is how Lalo Cadona’s father discovered the principle
of Cursed Time in 1946. This is remarkable, because this was the only example
that he had of Cursed Time. When I put together my own chronological study in
1991, I came to see at least six major examples of Cursed Time in Scripture,
and at the same time I discovered that I myself had been on Cursed Time twice
in the past (414-day cycles). This confirmed the principle to me.
Government
Dispensationalists
justify this designation by the fact that Noah was given a few laws immediately
after the flood (Genesis 9:1-7). Presumably, having a few laws justified the
formation of “Government.” But one can hardly form a government, even in an infantile
state, based upon a few food laws (Genesis 9:3,
4),
a prohibition of murder (Genesis 9:6), and a mandate to be fruitful (Genesis 9:7).
Was theft still lawful? What about adultery?
Government
implies organization and structure as well, but we see no attempt to reveal
such basic aspects of government. The only true governmental mandate given is
in Genesis
9:2,
2 And the fear of you and the terror of you shall be on every bird of
the sky; with everything that creeps on the ground, and all the fish of the
sea, into your hand they are given.
This
re-establishes the original authority that God gave man in Genesis 1:26…
26 … let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of
the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping
thing that creeps on the earth.
Government
implies authority, but this was given even prior to the creation of man, for it
is said to be the purpose of God from the beginning. How then can we say that
from the flood to the promise to Abraham God set up a “dispensation” of
“Government”? The Dominion Mandate of Genesis 1:26
was the origin of all authority and government, just as the Fruitfulness
Mandate of Genesis
1:28 established the divine purpose to bring forth many sons (“fruit of the
womb”).
These
two Mandates form the Birthright itself, which was established at the
beginning. Because government was inherent in the Birthright, I think the
Dispensationalists established the wrong mindset in the church by calling this
age “Government.”
In
fact, during this time, it appears that Nimrod was the one who invented the
idea of unrighteous government. As a hunter, he hunted the souls of men and
enslaved them to himself. Nimrod governed not as a steward under God but as a
usurper king. He set the pattern for nearly all future governments of the
world.
That
age of degeneration and usurpation may best be described by the biblical word lawlessness,
both personal and governmental. It was founded by a hunter who sought to devour
the souls of men through governmental authority, and this destroyed the
original purpose of God to establish authority through biblical Unity (Genesis 2:24).
Just as marriage was not supposed to give a man the right to devour the soul of
his wife, so also government was not supposed to devour its people. Unity was
rooted in agreement and love. Nimrod’s government brought slavery and self-interest.
This
descent into lawlessness, led by Nimrod, set the backdrop and contrast to the
righteousness of Abraham, who was Nimrod’s contemporary.
Promise
The
Dispensationalist age of “Promise,” beginning with Abraham, inadequately
describes that age, because people are left with the impression that there was
no real promise until the time of Abraham. But the first promise came as early
as Genesis
3:15, where the “seed” of the woman was to crush the serpent’s head. Yet
the main promise came to Noah immediately after the flood, when God made the
first “covenant” with the entire earth (Genesis 9:9,
10).
This
promise was the first to define the scope of the New Covenant, for it was not
conditional upon the earth making a vow in return. It was simply the promise of
God to the earth, telling us God’s intention, and based upon God’s own ability
to keep his promise.
The
same can be said of the Abrahamic covenant, where God made similar promises but
added the feature that He would fulfill His promise through the seed of
Abraham. That seed was not ultimately a biological seed, Paul explains in Galatians 3:7,
29.
The seed (children) of Abraham are those who follow His example of faith, those
who have faith that God is able to keep His promise (Romans 4:21).
The
New Covenant promises of God, then, can be traced back to the time of Adam and
Eve, and these did not end when Moses gave the law at Mount Horeb. Therefore,
to label this era by the term “Promise” can be misleading, especially if people
are led to believe that God made no promises prior to Abraham.
The
time, in fact, is characterized by the conflict between two forms of government
that were arising in the earth. There was the world government of Nimrod that
usurped power; and there was the Kingdom government of Abraham and his seed who
were truly called to exercise the Dominion Mandate properly in the
earth. In fact, Abraham knew the laws of God, for Genesis 26:5
says,
5 because Abraham obeyed Me and kept My charge, My commandments, My
statutes, and My laws.
Knowledge
of the law was necessary for Abraham and his seed to establish righteous
government. If we think of the promise to Abraham as a betrothal, followed
by the actual marriage at Mount Horeb, we may see the progression of the
Kingdom. Since the marriage principle (Unity) is also the basic principle of
Kingdom government, it is a proper way of viewing this portion of history. The
problem is that Mount Horeb proved to be an Old Covenant marriage, where God
married a “bondwoman,” to use Paul’s terminology in Galatians
4:24, 25, 31.
Hence,
that marriage was destined to end in divorce (Jeremiah 3:8;
Hosea 2:2),
so that the next age might establish a New Covenant marriage.
For
this reason, I prefer to call the age from Abraham to Moses “Betrothal,” rather
than “Promise.” God’s promises came much earlier than with Abraham, but the
betrothal was specific to Abraham. God promised them blessings, honor,
protection, and many children—all features of a betrothal. The feast days
(Passover, Pentecost, and Tabernacles) then give us the main outline of Kingdom
history, which is based upon the principle of marriage. Since marriage is of
two kinds, Old Covenant and New Covenant marriage, the marriage itself took
some twists and turns before the final outcome of Unity could become a reality.
So
up to this point, we can revise the Dispensationalist divisions of time as
follows:
1. Innocence
2. Grace
3. Lawlessness
4. Betrothal
5. Passover
6. Pentecost
7. Tabernacles
2. Grace
3. Lawlessness
4. Betrothal
5. Passover
6. Pentecost
7. Tabernacles
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