Most dispensational Evangelicals understand that Judaism changed after the destruction of the Temple in AD 70. However, they often do not fully recognize just how different modern Rabbinic Judaism is from the Temple-centered Judaism of the Second Temple period.¹
Their theological system assumes a basic continuity between the two, even though history shows a major transformation took place. This essay looks more closely at those changes, explains what they actually were, and considers how they have influenced thinking within the Evangelical movement.
Many popular dispensational timelines and charts show Daniel’s “seventy weeks” prophecy with a long gap. They depict the first sixty-nine weeks, then place a long sideways bracket or parenthesis labelled “Church Age,” followed by a future restoration of Israel’s prophetic program in a final seventieth week.²
This way of presenting the timeline makes the sharp distinction between Israel and the Church feel obvious and natural. These charts often treat the destruction of the Temple in AD 70 as simply one important historical event rather than allowing it to function as a decisive covenant-historical turning point.³
Because of this visual setup, the significant differences between Second Temple Judaism (centered on the Temple, sacrifices, and priesthood) and modern Rabbinic Judaism (a post-Temple form of Jewish life centered on synagogue worship, legal interpretation, and oral tradition rather than sacrifice and priesthood) are often minimized or overlooked.⁴ As a result, some readers assume modern Judaism is essentially the same as the Judaism of the Bible, rather than recognizing it as a distinct form that developed in response to the Temple’s destruction.
A covenant-fulfillment approach does not deny Israel’s importance or suggest that God has broken His promises. Rather, it argues that covenant faithfulness must be traced through changes in covenant form over time, not merely through covenant identity. In the Gospels, Jesus repeatedly speaks of the Temple leadership and the Temple system as facing judgment and coming to an end.⁵ Many historians and theologians have argued that Jerusalem’s fall in AD 70 functions as a public historical vindication of those prophetic warnings.⁶
From this perspective, AD 70 is not a minor footnote between biblical history and future prophecy. It marks a major dividing line—the end of the Temple-centered covenant order that had defined Jewish worship and life for centuries. The closing vision of the book of Revelation then presents not a return to those earlier forms, but the consummation toward which they had pointed: God dwelling with His people without temple mediation.⁷
This does not mean dispensational Christians ignore history or fail to value the promises of the Old Testament. It does mean, however, that these charts should be examined carefully. Their visual logic can quietly assume conclusions about Israel, Judaism, and God’s covenants that are not fully supported by first-century evidence.
A more historically attentive approach recognizes both continuity and discontinuity. It acknowledges what remained the same—Scripture, Jewish identity, and the worship of the one true God—while also taking seriously what changed: the loss of the Temple, the end of the priesthood, and the rise of rabbinic authority centered on synagogue life and interpretation. Recognizing both sides of this shift helps readers approach books like Matthew and Revelation with greater historical and theological clarity.
1. Where Dispensational Evangelicals Generally Agree with Covenantal Christians
Before addressing where dispensational frameworks create confusion about Judaism, it is important to acknowledge where real agreement already exists. Most dispensational Evangelicals are not ignorant of biblical history, nor are they dismissive of the Jewish world of Scripture.
Most dispensational Evangelicals correctly understand that ancient Israel is not the same as the Church. They recognize that Israel occupies a unique place in the biblical story and that the New Testament does not simply erase Israel’s identity or history. They also affirm that the Hebrew Bible is essential for understanding God’s purposes and that the Old Testament cannot be treated as irrelevant or obsolete.
Likewise, dispensational teaching generally acknowledges that Second Temple Judaism—the world in which Jesus lived and taught—was Temple-centered. Sacrifice, priesthood, and pilgrimage shaped Jewish religious life in a way that cannot be understood apart from the Temple in Jerusalem.⁸ Dispensational Evangelicals also recognize that the destruction of the Temple in AD 70 was a major historical event, not a minor footnote.
Because of this shared understanding, the disagreement is not primarily about historical facts. Rather, the difference lies in how those agreed-upon facts are interpreted and integrated into a theological framework.
2. Where the Interpretations Begin to Diverge: Continuity Assumed vs. Transformation Recognized
Although dispensational Evangelicals and covenantal Christians often agree on the basic historical data, they frequently draw very different conclusions from it.
Dispensational frameworks typically treat the destruction of the Temple as a significant interruption in Israel’s history, but not as the decisive conclusion of Israel’s covenant forms. The Temple system, priesthood, and sacrificial order are often viewed as temporarily set aside rather than brought to completion.⁹ As a result, Judaism after AD 70 is sometimes assumed to represent a form of continuity with biblical Judaism, even though its structures and sources of authority changed dramatically.
By contrast, covenantal and fulfillment-oriented readings tend to see AD 70 as a covenant-historical watershed. On this view, the loss of the Temple marks the public end of a Temple-centered covenant administration rather than a temporary pause.10 The disappearance of sacrifice and priesthood is not treated as an accident of history but as a transformation that requires theological explanation.
The disagreement, then, is not over whether God remains faithful to Israel, but whether covenant structures were meant to be resumed or consummated.
3. Where the Misunderstanding Usually Happens
Modern Judaism Assumed to Be Essentially Biblical Judaism:
In practice, many dispensational Evangelicals tend to treat modern Rabbinic Judaism as if it were essentially the same religious system found in the Old Testament and the New Testament period. While this assumption is often unstated, it shapes how prophecy, covenant continuity, and Israel’s future are commonly understood.
As a result, modern Judaism is frequently assumed to be a direct continuation of Old Testament faith, the same religious system Jesus confronted in the Gospels, or a covenant structure that has been temporarily paused rather than fundamentally transformed. These assumptions then give rise to familiar conclusions, such as:
- that Israel remains fully under the Mosaic covenant,
- that Temple worship and sacrifice must eventually resume because they were never truly brought to an end,
- or that Judaism today is essentially “Old Testament religion without Jesus.”
Because of such assumptions and conclusions, dispensational teaching often skips directly from: “Temple destroyed”—to—“Temple will be rebuilt.” This skip is often made without pausing to ask: “What has Judaism actually become in the meantime?”
Modern Judaism is not Temple-centered, does not operate with a priesthood or sacrificial system, and derives its authority primarily from rabbinic interpretation rather than from the covenant structures described in the Torah.11 These differences are not minor adjustments but represent a major reconfiguration of Jewish religious life following the destruction of the Temple.
Recognizing this distinction does not require rejecting Israel’s importance or denying God’s faithfulness. It simply requires acknowledging that Judaism itself changed form, and that treating modern Rabbinic Judaism as though it were unchanged biblical Judaism can obscure how Scripture, history, and covenant development actually intersect.
4. The Theological Reason for the Gap
This misunderstanding is not accidental. It is built into the structure of dispensational theology itself.
Classic dispensationalism depends on several interlocking assumptions about Israel, covenant history, and prophetic fulfillment. Chief among these are the ideas that:
- Israel’s covenant system was interrupted,
not fulfilled,
-
the Mosaic order is on hold, not
concluded,
- the Church age functions as a parenthesis
in God’s plan,
- and that Temple worship including Temple
sacrifice¹² must therefore return in the future.
Within such a dispensational framework, the destruction of the Temple in AD 70 cannot be allowed to function as a decisive covenant ending. It must instead be treated as a temporary disruption—an unfortunate historical event that pauses Israel’s program but does not complete it.
If one were to fully acknowledge that:
- the Temple system ended decisively,
- Judaism itself restructured because that system
could no longer function,
- and covenant forms were replaced or fulfilled,
not merely postponed,
dispensationalism would then lose one of its load-bearing assumptions. The expectation of a future restoration of Mosaic institutions—including Temple sacrifice—depends on the belief that those institutions were never truly brought to their intended conclusion.
For this reason, dispensational systems tend to incentivize continuity language, even where the historical evidence points to profound discontinuity. This is not usually the result of bad faith, but of theological necessity: the system requires continuity of covenant form in order to sustain its prophetic expectations.
5. What Dispensational Evangelicals Usually Miss
As a result of these theological commitments, many dispensational Evangelicals fail to fully grasp several key historical realities.
First, Judaism today is not the religion of the Old Testament. The Torah describes a Temple-centered system of sacrifice, priesthood, and ritual purity that no longer exists and has not existed since AD 70.
Second, modern Judaism is not even the same religious system Jesus confronted. The Judaism of Jesus’ day was diverse but still anchored to the Temple. Rabbinic Judaism, by contrast, emerged only after the Temple’s destruction and reorganized Jewish life around synagogue worship, legal interpretation, and oral tradition.
Third, Judaism as practiced today is best understood as a post-70 AD survival form, shaped by loss rather than continuity of structure. It represents a faithful attempt to preserve Jewish identity and obedience to God in the absence of the institutions the Torah presupposes.
Finally, the authority structure of modern Judaism is rabbinic, not Mosaic-sacrificial. Its interpretive center lies in the Mishnah, Talmud, and later rabbinic rulings rather than in Temple ritual or priestly mediation.
Put simply, modern Judaism is not “Old Testament faith without Christ.” It is a new form of Judaism that emerged because the old Temple-based system could no longer function. That distinction—while historically obvious—is rarely emphasized in dispensational preaching, where modern Judaism is often treated as though it were simply biblical Judaism awaiting reactivation.
6. Why This Matters for Reading the New Testament (Especially Matthew and Revelation)
How modern Judaism is understood has direct consequences for how the New Testament is read. If Rabbinic Judaism is assumed to be essentially continuous with biblical, Temple-centered Judaism, then Jesus’ warnings about the Temple, its leadership, and Jerusalem itself are often softened or postponed. His words are treated as describing a temporary crisis rather than a decisive covenant turning point.
In the Gospels—especially in Matthew 21–25—Jesus repeatedly frames the Temple system and its leadership as standing under judgment.13 He speaks of authority being removed, stewardship failing, and the house being left desolate. These warnings make the most sense if the Temple-centered covenant order was truly approaching its end, not merely entering a holding pattern until a future restoration.
When the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 is understood as the historical fulfillment of those warnings, the New Testament’s covenant logic becomes clearer. The fall of the Temple is no longer an unexplained tragedy or a prophetic interruption, but a public confirmation that a particular covenant form had reached its conclusion. This helps explain why the apostolic writings never call for the rebuilding of the Temple or the resumption of sacrifice14, even as they continue to affirm the authority of Israel’s Scriptures and the faithfulness of Israel’s God.
The book of Revelation carries this same movement forward in symbolic and visionary form. Rather than anticipating a renewed Temple system, Revelation closes with a vision in which there is no temple, because God Himself dwells directly with His people7. What was once mediated through priesthood, sacrifice, and sacred space is now immediate and complete. This is not a rejection of the Old Testament story, but its consummation.
When modern Judaism is recognized as a post-Temple reconfiguration rather than a paused biblical system, Matthew and Revelation can be read together as announcing and confirming the same covenant transition. The misunderstanding of Judaism, therefore, does not merely affect views of Israel; it reshapes how the New Testament itself is interpreted—especially where judgment, fulfillment, and covenant continuity are concerned.
Conclusion: Why This Shapes Evangelical Readings of Prophecy
These assumptions about Judaism also help explain why Evangelicals often arrive at very different conclusions when reading biblical prophecy. When covenant forms are treated as temporarily interrupted, prophecy is naturally read as pointing toward restoration. When covenant forms are understood as fulfilled and concluded, prophecy is instead read as moving toward consummation.
This difference is not merely about timelines or charts. It reflects a deeper question: whether the structures that once defined covenant life are expected to return, or whether they have already given way to what they were meant to anticipate. How one answers that question shapes how Scripture is read, how history is interpreted, and how the relationship between Israel, the Church, and the New Testament is understood.
Recognizing the historical transformation of Judaism after AD 70 does not diminish God’s faithfulness or Israel’s significance. It clarifies the covenant story Scripture itself tells—and helps readers approach both prophecy and history with greater coherence and care.
Endnotes:
1. Shaye J. D. Cohen, From the Maccabees to the Mishnah, 2nd ed. (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2006), 214–238.
2. The Gospel Coalition, “Dispensational Theology,” https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/dispensational-theology/.
3. SAET, “Dispensationalism,” https://www.saet.ac.uk/Christianity/Dispensationalism.
4. Jacob Neusner, Judaism: The Evidence of the Mishnah (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981).
5. R. T. France, The Gospel of Matthew (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007), 775–812.
6. R. C. Sproul, The Last Days According to Jesus (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1998); N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1996).
7. Revelation 21:22–27.
8. E. P. Sanders, Judaism: Practice and Belief, 63 BCE–66 CE (London: SCM Press, 1992).
9. Charles C. Ryrie, Dispensationalism (Chicago: Moody, 2007).
10. G. K. Beale, A New Testament Biblical Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011), 397–442.
11. Jacob Neusner, Introduction to Rabbinic Literature (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994).
12. John F. Walvoord, The Millennial Kingdom (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1959).
13. N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, 405–443.
14. Hebrews 8–10; Acts 15; G. K. Beale, The Temple and the Church’s Mission (Downers Grove: IVP, 2004).